Banks – Mobile Financial Services have brought inclusion (financial inclusion) to millions of people who have no access to traditional methods of banking. In most cases, the African countries banking infrastructure is simply missing. Banking systems/services for financial inclusion from the bank in the traditional way does not exist. Where banks exist, people do not dare to enter into the big banking halls due to killing charges, complicated & tedious KYC need and time to travel to these bank branches.

This article is meant for healthy discussion and arguments, it’s not a conclusion. All the arguments as based on assumption and any current picture focused on African & few other markets in Asia-Pacific.

 

Financial Services and Financial Inclusion

MFS service providers in the name of Financial Inclusion are doing a wonderful job by cutting all the traditional banking barriers. So the question here is “Will banks ever be successful in mobile financial services” with their hundred-year-old mindsets and business rules. Payments industry of today has transformed into Payment-Intelligence and this intelligence came after a handshake with artificial intelligence and its bundle technologies. It would not be wrong if we compare it with either payment war, payment jungle or even just payment storm.

The disruption in mobile payments domain brought in by well-known technology campus boys i.e. Apple, Android, Microsoft & Samsung can’t be ignored. Though all of them have no prior experience or knowledge in the banking industry. Yet these guys manage to force us to adopt digital money and discard the papers.

Will Banks ever be successful in Mobile Financial Services

This blog post is a polite and respectful attempt to showcase what is happening in the payments, financial inclusion (Finclusion), cross border remittance (Domestic and International) industry. The impact of MFS providers like MNO, Mobile payment services, Mobile wallet companies is commendable and sustainable at the same time. Banks do have well-known campuses for all types of payments i.e. mobile, internet, paper, plastic cards and even vouchers but it looks like a graveyard.

If any Global “Ministry of innovation for regulation and control” would have existed then for sure cash would the single king of payments. In a country like Germany, the heart of Europe still heavily relies on Cash where America’s more than 55% of payments are non-cash.

 

Financial Intelligence & FinTech

Mobile financial services come in to boot out cash king corruption and dominance. Access financial services or banking services (Not necessarily from banks) should be treated and actually, it is, “A basic human right”. Have to allow small-scale farmers, low-income community, financially excluded community to be able to send, receive and spend their earnings on time and with safety (transaction without cash automatically exclude 50% risk).

As on date (still many places across the globe), people have to wait overnight in queues to use cash which they get in return of hard work. As soon as cash comes in their hand second worry starts which are security & safety as they travel with the money. Through services like mobile money, mobile payments, savings etc people are now able to use their money from their mobile phones, receive payments, make transactions and even send their relative’s money.

In the changing banking (Led by non-Bank financial service providers) landscape, whilst banks are trying and in with full frustration enforcing their financial husbandry, they are merely making an effort to engage on how to deal with the impact of Fintechs.

Fintechs majority of them fall under one of the two categories – Payments or Lending. Given that these have been the strongholds of financial services institutions, long-term sustenance of the institution would depend on addressing these twin areas effectively. Having their focus on the long-term stability of the institution, FinTechs increasingly need to take steps to evaluate the following. Convergence is the new language of money. Money needs to follow you and not the other way round like the traditional brick and mortar channels.

Time has changed and with change comes opportunity and this is where non-banks like MFS providers have swooped in with their higher rates of innovation. Interestingly almost all of them are coming or have come out of financial or payment industry. Security relative stability and trust in the consumers’ eyes, more efficient and transparent cost structures and exciting new models of banking (Not related to Bank) are on their agenda as master success keys. However, to say when banks will be successful against non-bankers seems a bit difficult.

 

Banks and Banking Service are Separated Now

Banks are believed that they can, but only if first they accept the change (50% problem solved here), secondly radically innovate and change their business models. But this is where the catch or show gets stop as well and it’s not all easy. The task at hand is quite monumental (Yes monumental meaning about to be historical) to get answers for our main question; “Will banks ever be successful in Mobile Payments or Mobile Financial Services”.

Banks have to start playing catch-up to the nonbank’s banking services providers. But it can be done (So not impossible), as we have an excellent example shown by Equity Bank of Kenya which launched an MVNO solely to have a new and efficient distribution channel for its banking products. Over the past few years, the face of financial payments in most developing countries has taken a radical change from a bank-led model to non-bankers dominated model. This change has brought about financial inclusion to most marginalised citizens and has greatly brought efficiency in the payment industry. This article will focus on why banks mobile banking will struggle to come at par with non-banker (FinTech) mobile financial services suite and happy to get feedback in agreement or against with reasons as these are purely my own views.

Accessibility is a critical success reason for any service. Financial technology will make banks more vulnerable and less profitable. But there is neither an ability nor a will as on date to kill them off. The role of informal institutions in providing financial services to the members of the community, and concludes by highlighting the opportunities these are present for formal financial service providers but to make sure accessibility of banking services, a bank has to have a wide branch network of fully branded brick and mortar marble banking halls with all the necessary security systems. The setup costs of these are so high and to recoup the same, the bank has to pass on the cost to the final consumer.

Non-bank financial services providers, on the other hand, have embraced the concept of an extensive agent network at minimal cost. Nonbanks agent network is usually dense with at least 1 to 3 agents for every 1km radius. Usually, the cost of setup and signage is borne by the agent itself in a bid to be more visible and to attract more customers as revenue is highly dependent on the volume of transactions pushed by the agent. This is another key reason for success where others have very high interest in your business as part of their business. Artificial intelligence has helped and will help banks more aggressively though.

 

Banking Services out of Banking Halls

A subscriber does not need to travel long distances or fork out any money access an agent and do agent centred transactions. Due to the nature of the business, nonbank’s have excelled in “24×7, around the globe, use me” phenomena. This assures timeless and borderless access to services which provides for ease of use, more transactions and higher revenue for the non-banks. Banks, on the other hand, have limited operating hours and for those who have utilised technology by diffusing access to service from banking, halls have a great limitation of country borders. Non-bank financial service providers make money on transactions but banks earn on money stay in the account (Traditional Banking Model, may be different now in different countries).

In order for any business to thrive, it has to see a wide cost to revenue ratio, however, banks are subject to a high customer acquisition cost at $10 to $100 per customer because non-banks stand at between $2 and $10. This acquisition cost has a ripple effect on the charging structure throughout the life cycle of the relationship between the bank and the customer. Naturally, when the cost of customer acquisition is high, the resultant transactional cost will follow the same trend. The cost of transacting on a banking platform is very high compared to transacting on a Mobile Money platform. Nonbanks interest in retaining subscriber is more than banks by giving service which may or may not generate revenue and always try to run promotions around the same to win back.

The world is currently facing an economic crisis and most people are living on a hand to mouth basis. Banks go against the economic tide by encouraging savings (Which is correct and required for country economy and betterment of each person life) while non-banks encourage spending. There are little savings and investment in most countries hence most citizens spend whatever they earn on basic survival requirements. Non-Banks were quick to realise this and enabled ease of payment for most commodities through merchant payment facilities and pay for most utilities and bills through bill payment services.

In the case of a new startup – non-bank helped boost GDP by helping people with the will to start up their own business and grow, free consultation and support – “You Grow – I Grow” philosophy. For distribution channels money distribution should be treated as distribution of cigarettes, coke & water bottles; which MNO’s can do easily with flexibility and banks never thought of creating Agent networks where nonbank’s key success factor is agent banking only, on Limits side mobile money services limits set on upper limit and for banks it’s on lower values. So non-banks financial services whole game is on volume and the bank only wants value.

 

Mobile Network Operators & Mobile Financial Service Providers

MNO and few other companies (Later known as Mobile Financial Service Providers) saw the difference and jumped in between banking and bank and successfully got them divorce or at-least manage to find their relationship with banking. Unfortunately, most bankers are still not convinced that these scenarios will play out. These bankers are hoping that their retirements hit before they have to make a decision. The board of directors of a lot of community banks feel that they are the pillar of the community and the relationship will continue to be the answer. Bankers must face facts and learn what is going on outside of their four walls. They may wake up too late.

The so-called “haircut” imposes comes along the way that helps in worsening the problem in a negative smiley way. The solution that is hastily designed to fall with large sums in offshore accounts can be avoided very well with MFS. Mobile Payments expected to explode beyond 3 trillion euros by 2020, Mobile Money save 2 billion USD for a few African countries, Mobile Money is not just cash in, cash out via agents any more or P2P money transfer Africa have given new and very different dimension and speed of like blink of eyes, getting Money from the UK, US or anywhere in the world within seconds around 24X7 directly to your wallets, all bill payments, merchant payments, loans, insurance and never stopping or ending story.

In order to improve profitability and gain relevance in the mobile payment space, banks should invest more in market research and gather the requirements of the markets they run in. this is easily achieved by setting up a dedicated R and D division and allocating an adequate budget for this cause. Basing on the closed nature of core banking systems, banks can separate a mobile money system from the core banking system to achieve the flexibility required from a mobile payment system. The restrictive KYC requirements can also be applied in a tiered approach depending on the value at risk and the transactional volume of the account. A number of banks in Africa have embarked on agency banking to increase their footprint in the operating countries. Banks need to take a radical change from their current modus operandi to beat non-banks in the field of mobile payments.

Fintech’s also known as banks lunch-eaters. FinTech services are a really new phenomenon that is fundamentally different from the earlier 4000 years of banking. The forces moving this revolution ahead are also known to almost every single bank which are consumer needs, speed, less complex KYC and customer demand “Give me what I want” and “Stop pushing what you have and repainted for me”. Identifying the services as hotspots are daily FinTech activity. Which areas of banking do Fintech covers as on date; most likely retail banking.

Most interesting scenarios to see is to see how do major global banks reacting to this (Like HSBC, Citi, Santander and others). To see how these major institutions are reacting to FinTech. We need to learn about cooperative-competitive techniques and take a specific look at innovation labs and dedicated FinTech VC arms run by major banks.

 

Integration, Mergers, Partnerships – Financial Inclusion

The Fintegration (financial services integration) and delivery of fin-services are changing and coming out as service and platform which can house new channels, products, partnerships and opportunities. Banking as a Platform (BaaP) and Banking as a Service(BaaS) are new alternatives. Strategies around BaaP and Baas require a different approach to architect business and services. Most of the innovations in financial services including Insurance are coming through leaders who are very new to the industry or come from outside the industry. Saas (Software as a Service), IaaS (Infrastructure as a Service) and PaaS (Platform as a Service) might give birth to industry-specific services and platform in future such as Baas and BaaP (Banking as a Platform).

The correlation between income and access to formal financial services is still very strong; however, this landscape is now changing with incumbents and mobile/internet innovators now integrating with the mainstream banking system & support through central banks relaxed regulatory frameworks i.e self-regulation up to an extent by FinTech service providers really pushing hard to change the world; entrepreneurs are leading a pack of disrupters, most of them raised in the shadow of companies like PayPal, who wants to change business relationship to money forever.

BaaS came as friend which a package of best deals i.e best analytics blended with artificial intelligence & payment intelligence, Big Data with help of deep learning platform is doing software(BaaP), for all such companies to break bank’s attitude as they were long seen as a highly technical, highly complex with rocket science technology using industry, employing Finalists (Financial Scientists), highly regulated industry dominated by giant banks that were only doing one thing that was to resist disruption. Banks should take back seat as the clerk for reconciliations and accounting units and the regulator should allow MFS companies to innovate and bring new solutions and products in no time and make customers life easy, less costly and much faster. Your views and comments are welcome.

 

Points to Note:

All credits if any remains on the original contributor only. We have covered all basics around adapting cashless payment models. The importance of such a quality system with full of big data are the backbone of any digital economy. In the next upcoming post will talk about implementation, usage and practice experience for markets.

 

Books + Other readings Referred

  • Research through open internet, news portals, white papers and imparted knowledge via live conferences & lectures.
  • Lab and hands-on experience of  @AILabPage (Self-taught learners group) members.

 

Feedback & Further Question

Do you have any questions about AI, Machine Learning, Telecom billing/charging, Data Science or Big Data Analytics? Leave a question in a comment section or ask via email. Will try best to answer it.

 

Machine Learning (ML) - Everything You Need To KnowConclusions: Running on the unknown path without roadmap or direction with due respect running like a headless chicken often result in disasters. I personally have seen and taken part in programs to build my experience or hands-on mastery in such situations where Mobile Payments or Mobile Wallet based Cross Border remittances support country economy and proven in 100% confidence level that when it came to the crunch, many countries including Greece, Cyprus & Italy had no choice but to accept rescue terms that affected not only bank bondholders and shareholders – but many thousands of private deposit holders. Their cash or savings were simply scalped and went to help fund the closure of one bank and the propping up of others. Though banks are now running behind artificial intelligence, machine learning and deep learning to create its own cognition. In case needs detailed information or deliberation is needed in any part, please feel free get in touch directly. Read about Author at: About Me

HashTags : #payments, #mobilepayments, #mobilemoney, #money, #mobile, #Banking, #Banks, #Mobilebanking.

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By V Sharma

A seasoned technology specialist with over 22 years of experience, I specialise in fintech and possess extensive expertise in integrating fintech with trust (blockchain), technology (AI and ML), and data (data science). My expertise includes advanced analytics, machine learning, and blockchain (including trust assessment, tokenization, and digital assets). I have a proven track record of delivering innovative solutions in mobile financial services (such as cross-border remittances, mobile money, mobile banking, and payments), IT service management, software engineering, and mobile telecom (including mobile data, billing, and prepaid charging services). With a successful history of launching start-ups and business units on a global scale, I offer hands-on experience in both engineering and business strategy. In my leisure time, I'm a blogger, a passionate physics enthusiast, and a self-proclaimed photography aficionado.

5 thoughts on “Will Banks ever be successful in Mobile Financial Services”
  1. Financial Services Company says:

    Yes they can

  2. I totally agree with what you said. I think that running on the unknown path without roadmap or direction will definitely result into disaster. I think that it is very important to plan things out in order to have a good outcome. Thanks for sharing this article.

  3. Yes,I totally agree with what you said. I think that the world is currently facing an economic crisis and most people are living on a hand to mouth basis. That’s why I think that it is very important that we are aware of ways on how to avoid or solve it. Thanks for sharing this article.

  4. Yes, I totally agree with what you said. I also think that running on the unknown path without roadmap or direction with due respect running like a headless chicken often result in disasters. I think that it’s very important to plan things out and decide well to avoid issues.

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