Mixing Wholesale and Retail Banking on the Internet
November 24, 1998
CFO Alert: Richard Crone is vice president and general manager of Cybercash, Inc. Based in Reston, Va., Cybercash is one of the world's leading providers of electronic commerce payment solutions. The second part of this article will appear in next w eek's CFO Alert.
Get ready for a sea change. Up to now, a defining feature of most home banking deployment strategies has been the decision to outsource bill payment.
Today, however, with the advent of Internet bill presentment and payment (IBPP), a growing number of senior financial executives within bank management are re-evaluating the impact of this outsourcing decision on a bank's overall profitability--particularly as it relates to offering cash management services to major billers. The CFO's objective comparison of the cost and revenue components of on-line bill paying can play an instrumental role in profitably realigning the retail home banking and the wholesale electronic commerce strategies of a financial institution.
Consider first the cost and revenue ramifications of offering home banking services. Only a handful of banks in this country perform their own home banking and bill payment processing services in-house-- all the others outsource the function. This outsourcing approach affects both a bank's costs and its level of service.
For example, retail banks that outsource their home banking and bill payment services are essentially value added resellers (VARs) for nonbank home- banking service and software suppliers. As resellers, banks are at the mercy of an outside third party for the cost structure of these services.
Is it any surprise that rather than offering these services on a per- transaction basis, nearly all the major third-party bill payment providers have chosen to price their services on a per-account basis? When evaluated objectively by the bank's CFO, the economics of this pricing should appear very worrisome. For example, the normal bundled rate charged by non-bank suppliers of bill payment services is approximately $5.00 per retail demand deposit account (DDA) per month. This typically includes up to 20 electronic payments per DDA per month. If you assume that all 20 electronic payment requests are made in a month, the retail bank's transaction costs equal $0.25 per item. However, the typical household pays only 12 to 17 bills per month, so that the effective cost- per-transaction to the retail bank actually ranges from a barely acceptable $0.29 to a staggering $0.42.
And the Loss Leader Is ?
The above costs are many times higher than what a bank would typically incur for merely processing paper checks. And they are an order of magnitude higher than what a wholesale bank incurs when processing automated clearing house pre-authorized payments or deposits (ACH PPD). This exorbitant pricing structure, combined with the hefty acquisition and maintenance costs of " bill pay"-enabled checking accounts, has brought into question the overall profitability of "reselling" retail bill payment services for non-bank providers.
This is why many bank CFOs are now commissioning customer and account profitability analyses for accounts linked to the bill payment services of third parties. As a former consultant and banker chartered with conducting such reviews, I can tell you that I found these accounts to be loss leaders at best, principally because of the costs and outside dependency imposed by the third- party suppliers. Today's competitive checking account environment makes it extremely difficult to recover the costs imposed by third-party bill payment providers, either in the form of added fees and/or compensating balances from consumers.
This is not, however, the case with payment services "sold" to billers by the wholesale side of the bank. In the case of ACH PPDs, the bank is the supplier of the services, and costs and processing are under its own control. Rather than functioning as a VAR, as in the case of the retail bank, the wholesale bank functions as an original equipment manufacturer (OEM). As an OEM, you control your own costs, distribution and, most importantly, margins.
Consider the following critical differences summarized in the table below. These differences make it clear why retail home banking, with its reliance on third-party payment services, is a shaky foundation on which to base a strategy aimed at capturing a profitable share of the emerging electronic bill-payment marketplace:
Retail Home banking
Bank is a reseller of bill paying services to consumers (a VAR).
Processing costs dictated by suppliers per account.
Cost per account priced at $5.00 per month:
20 transactions = $0.25
17 transactions = $0.29
12 transactions = $0.42
Receiving depository financial institution (RDFI).
Third parties work with billers.
Vs. Wholesale IBPP
Bank is a supplier of cash management services to billers (an OEM).
Processing costs controlled in-house per transaction.
Revenue garnered per transaction while also fostering the commercial deposit relationship.
Originating depository financial institution (ODFI).
Bank works directly with its billers.
Enter IBPP--A New Point of Wholesale Collection
Fortunately for wholesale bankers and the senior financial managers responsible for maximizing returns from all parts of the bank, a marketplace has developed for IBPP services that allows the wholesale bank to exploit its leading OEM position vis a vis major billers. IBPP presents banks with a hope of new profits because it creates an entirely new distribution channel for low-cost ACH PPDs and their equally low-cost Internet equivalent, electronic checks. When deploying electronic bill payment capabilities through its billers-- instead of through third-party "bill pay" suppliers as a retail bank offering--a bank can leverage its ACH PPD processing infrastructure to enjoy processing costs that are a fraction of those charged by third- party suppliers of bill payment services.
To exploit this opportunity bankers need to be aware of the current market landscape for IBPP services and where to best position their services. There are presently six viable IBPP distribution channels available to your billers:
Channel 1: Biller's own Web-site (biller direct).
Channel 2: Electronic mail (lowest common
denominator).
Channel 3: Browser subscription (PUSH and XML).
Channel 4: Shared link (AOL Digital Cities).
Channel 5: Thin concentration (requires OFX).
Channel 6: Thick concentration (closed delivery).
These six channels can be divided into two broad categories: channels controlled by the biller and his wholesale bank, and channels controlled by third-party bill payment suppliers, or nonbank concentrators.
Biller-controlled channels, also known as "biller-direct" channels, include the biller's own Web site (where biller-registered customers come to directly view and pay bills), electronic mail browser subscription (using push technologies), and shared link (light concentration) channels such as AOL's Digital Cities. Home banking- based, or "shared" channels, include thick concentration (where a biller sends all its billing information to a service bureau that presents bills on behalf of many billers) and thin concentration (where a biller spreads its IBPP capabilities among several payment concentrators or portals). The last two channels, unless your bank is one of the five banking institutions in the country that performs its own bill payment processing, are controlled by nonbank service providers with a cost structure upwards of $0.42 per transaction or more.
It is the four biller-controlled channels that will deliver banks' hope for new profits stemming from IBPP. While it is possible for a bank to work both sides of the IBPP street by supporting a mix of biller-direct and home banking- based models, payment services provided directly by the wholesale bank to billers provide far greater ROIs and opportunities for growth. This is because when a bank outsources bill paying to a third party, it literally throws away many of the opportunities it has for fostering its valuable wholesale customer relationships.
Strategies That Protect the Payment Franchise
When a bank outsources its home banking and bill payment services to an outside party, it is also outsourcing its relationships with its commercial depositors. In the retail home banking scenario, the outside third party facilitating payment processing and settlement for the retail bank is also the entity processing the payments on behalf of the biller, instead of the biller's current wholesale or commercial bank. In terms of the cost dynamics described above, this paradigm is akin to robbing Peter to pay Paul. If Peter is the wholesale bank, it is sacrificing its own profitable bank-supplied cash management services to pay for the services of an outside third-party supplier, typically at a loss.
It does not have to be this way. All banks have to do is remember their own experiences in deploying earlier electronic distribution channels. With ATMs, for example, supply created demand and the bank registered its own customers. Then came home banking, which only truly took off when the Internet allowed customers to go straight to the bank's Web site and avoid third parties when enrolling to view their bank statement. Finally, there is direct debit, where payment follows the bill.
Banks need to marshal this experience on behalf of their billers today to craft IBPP strategies that enable:
1. Billers to enroll their consumers for IBPP services.
2. Billers to control content and posting.
3. Payment to follow the bill.
Ultimately, each individual bill payer will decide which of the six IBPP channels is most convenient, and banks and their billers need to be prepared to eventually support them all for maximum market coverage. But the channel that a biller selects first in order to get its foot in the door will largely dictate its future IBPP success, and the future of its relationships with its commercial bank. |