Etude
Are Banks Prepared to Take Customers’ Financial Health Seriously?
Are Banks Prepared to Take Customers’ Financial Health Seriously?
A manifesto for providing people with the right tools to meet their financial needs.
Etude
A manifesto for providing people with the right tools to meet their financial needs.
The coronavirus pandemic is an immediate crisis with likely long-lasting repercussions. The fragile economy of nonpermanent employment, short-term contracts and cheap credit have exposed the lack of resilience in household incomes and budgets. And the price of asking for good citizenship from everyone during the lockdown period will be a huge and enduring fiscal burden.
Almost certainly, the pandemic’s response will reopen the debates on societies’ approach to household financial resilience (universal basic income, statutory sick pay) and the future of taxation, and of income inequality more generally. Hopefully, banks will also come to take seriously the view that their core purpose is helping customers lead financially healthy lives.
While this isn't a new idea, banks' responses to this have ranged from the frivolous (spending trackers, savings goals) to the paternalistic (financial education, financial heath checks). Implicit in these responses is the presumption that financial ill-health results from customers' indiscipline or ignorance. What banks haven't focused on is how their products and services fall short of what's required for managing a financially healthy lifestyle.
Reimagining banking based on real customer needs isn't straightforward. And, offering customers existing products and services with add-ons like interesting data and alerts and better servicing controls won't be sufficient to promote healthy financial habits.
Future banks will likely need to innovate using rather different sources for inspiration. For example:
Ultimately, though, future banks will be defined by how they address or remake banking in four key areas:
Studies of unbanked households consistently highlight three core needs of daily financial management.
The digitalization of banking means that a financial-health provider can unbundle balance sheet-centric banking products and redesign them to serve customers’ core needs in ways that are disciplined, cost-efficient and resilient. Following these core points are five themes relevant to the reinvention of day-to-day financial management.
Managing access to, and use of, credit is central to customers’ financial health. Disciplined use of debt, such as reverse savings, is one strategy to mobilize income to support household working capital management, lump-sum financing and rainy day protection, as well as investing for the long term (see Figure 2).
To support this effort, financial-health providers are increasingly unbundling borrowing around five distinct services:
A number of companies are experimenting with aspects of borrowing as a service, such as Anyfin and ClearScore on credit accessibility, and American Express and Klarna on debt configuring.
A glaring omission in the traditional banking product suite, and in most banks’ approach to design, is financial management’s role in protecting customers against unforeseen emergencies and repairs. Banks may have viewed themselves less as protectors and more like vendors. In practice, though, having savings and credit buffers, as well as practical insurance in place, is central to a customer’s financial health.
Further, general insurance as a sector is being extensively disrupted through digitalization and artificial intelligence, something banks are well placed to support. Overall, there may be four broad types of protection companies emerging from this disruption:
Customer protection is a significant topic for financial health companies that will need to provide customers with easy access to protection against the unexpected. Top categories of unexpected expenses include: medical expenses, car repairs, pet emergencies, home repairs, gadget replacements, work-related expenditures, unexpected gifts and lawsuits, which can all receive new forms of digitally enabled protection. A number of banks have already begun integrating everyday protections into their services.
The biggest challenge with remaking savings is to break down the product silos that ask customers to make upfront liquidity or interest-rate trade-offs (between current accounts vs. time deposits) that cut across customers’ needs. To address this, banks can prioritize rewarding longer-term savings, not the initial upfront outlay. A manifestation of this has been the successful trials involving first-in, first-out (FIFO) savings, where higher interest rates are provided to long-term savings, but the money is always accessible. Digital disruption enables banks to create these kinds of savings services, which wouldn’t be possible with legacy core banking systems.
Managing household financial health requires the ability to manage interdependent banking involving both relationships with children and other dependents, and sharing and pooling relationships (say, with people outside the immediate family) that may be more fluid than in the past. There’s a wealth of innovation in this area, breaking down the barriers to effective sharing of banking services and responsibilities.
Having unbundled and then rebundled banking products to help households manage working capital, finance large purchases and protect themselves against rainy days, financial-health providers will be better able to offer customers services that can be used in a disciplined and healthy way. Thus, financial health is about good habits, and a personal CFO should earn the permission to intervene in customers’ lives to promote good lifelong financial habits.
This intervention can promote one or more of the following good habits for customers:
Research has shown that people will stick with physically healthy habits if they feel energized and confident about managing their health, and won't if they don't. Similarly, it’s likely that promoting financially healthy habits also requires helping customers to feel energized and confident about managing their finances.
While digitalization and regulatory changes are disrupting the payments process in numerous ways, financial health is better served by focusing on where the provider can address barriers to greater economic exchange. But exchange in the real world is limited by the extent of trust—trust in the process, trust between the counterparties, and trust in the product or service. The provider can empower exchange to extend trust and protection to the customer in the following ways:
The wealth management industry prioritizes asset allocation—conserving and growing pools of wealth—over the more everyday challenges of accumulating and decumulating wealth over a lifetime. This focus on managing wealth creates some blind spots for the sector. First, mortgages and home ownership aren't viewed as a core part of wealth management, even though they’re the most disciplined form of accumulation we observe. Second, the reason mortgages are so effective as a savings product—the endowment effect of getting the house when you start the mortgage, not when you complete the payoffs—has never been mirrored in pension arrangements or other long-term asset-building products.
Other long-term savings, such as pensions, are more difficult to treat as a form of wealth accumulation. Therefore, a solution might be to create mortgaged pensions, where a 30-year-old customer purchases a $1 million pension that he or she pays off for 35 years until reaching age 65.
Also, houses, like pensions and life insurance, seem better suited to a time of a single-career, single-household lifestyle with little change. However, most people today will:
Therefore, an important aspect of the financial-health provider’s role is to reshape the wealth industry, to focus less on effective wealth management and more on effective accumulation and decumulation of wealth. This will address the challenges of indivisibility and illiquidity that make access to wealth unequal.
Having done that, the provider will be better positioned to rebuild financial advice (robo-advice, social group advice, automatic/semiautomatic investing) to help people address the obvious fact that some of what they earn needs to be available when they aren’t earning.
Financial-health providers also need to recognize their context in the wider transformation of peoples’ digital lives, which involves three aspects:
While banks already attempt to assist their customers to be financially healthy, the current state of banking remains superficial at best. Rather, banks should reconsider their role and how they can better assist all customers, regardless of income level, to improve their financial health. They need to shift the focus away from their own profits and more toward promoting healthy financial habits of their customers.
This plan centers on four themes: managing daily finances; empowering exchanges based on trust and engagement; managing financial accumulation and decumulation of assets; and putting customers in control their money, relationships and data. It can serve as a map for success for both banks and their customers.
Herman Spruit is a partner with Bain & Company’s Financial Services practice. Alastair Campbell is an advisor to the practice. They’re based in the London office.