Project Report On::: Retail Banking Strategy
Project Report On::: Retail Banking Strategy
Project Report On::: Retail Banking Strategy
SUBMITTED BY:
BATCH – 2008-2011
PROF. S N SAWAIKAR
We would like to acknowledge and extend our heartfelt gratitude to Prof. S N Savikar
for his support, guidelines and encouragement which has made the completion of this
project possible.
We would also like to thank the library staff of Lala Lajpatrai Institute of Management
for the use of their collections without which this project would have been most difficult.
Finally, we would like to thank my classmates & friends for providing their valuable
advice, guidance and support which made me complete this assignment efficiently.
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CONTENTS
1. INTRODUCTION 4
2. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 5
3. CURRENT SCENARIO 8
8. CONCLUSION
9.
10.
11.
12.
: INTRODUCTION :
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Retail banks have traditionally provided intermediation and payments
services
the nature of a retail bank. Firstly because many banks now combine
both
retail deposits and lend in the retail loan markets. In the UK, Australia, US
and
many other developed countries the large banks combine retail and
wholesale activities. Technological developments are also changing the
nature of retail
machines and the growth in telephone banking, postal accounts and more
recently internet banks has allowed new types of retail bank to emerge
that do
Meaning
Retail banking is a banking service that is geared primarily toward individual consumers.
Retail
Unlike wholesale banking, retail banking focuses strictly on consumer markets. Retail
banking
entities provide a wide range of personal banking services, including offering savings and
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checking accounts, bill paying services , as well as debit and credit cards. Through retail
banking,
consumers may also obtain mortgages and personal loans. Although retail banking is, for
the
most part, mass-market driven, many retail banking products may also extend to small
and
medium sized businesses. Today much of retail banking is streamlined electronically via
Automated Teller Machines (ATMs), or through virtual retail banking known as online
banking.
Executive Summary
All around the world retail lending has been an established market; however its rise in
emerging
economies like India has been of recent origin. If recent statistics on consumer finance
are any
indication, the last few years have been trend setting. The traditional debt-averse,
middle-class
Indians who lived within their thrifty means, never to venture beyond their means, seem
to have
given way to a new middle-class that is free from all inhibitions regarding conspicuous
consumption. Unlike its predecessors, the middle-class of today has donned a new
attitude; it
Indian retail banking is up and kicking. During 2004-05 retail contributed 42% of overall
credit
growth. Growing at the CAGR of 35% over last 5 years the retail asset touched Rs1,89,000
crore.
Major product segments of retail credit include housing finance, auto finance, personal
loans,
consumer durable loan and credit cards to name a few. Housing constitutes the biggest
segment of
48% of the entire retail credit; followed by the auto loans segment which constitutes
almost
27.8%. While the balance retail credit is used by consumer durables at 7.2%, educational
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and
Banks are increasing their dominance in housing finance and capturing the market share
of the
housing finance companies. During 2004-05, the market share of banks stood at 62%,
against the
33% by Housing finance companies; Rs 2-5 lakhs margins constitutes almost a third of the
loan
size. All the players in this market are adopting an aggressive attitude and the housing
loan
availability is playing into the players hands. Despite this phenomenal growth in India, the
housing loan as a percentage of GDP at 4.91% indicates low penetration when compared
to other
countries like Malaysia (17%) and Thailand (9%). But again this coupled with the
population
Following the housing loans, it is the auto loan which is also giving the growth of retail
credit the
necessary boost. In Asia Pacific, India has emerged as the third largest market for cars
and MUVs
i.e. only after Japan and China. Low interest rates, easy finance, up-gradation of rider from
two-
wheeler to 4-wheelers and opening up of second hand car finance are growth drivers of
this
segment.
The consumer durable loan follows the auto loan market in the third position, constituting
approximately 7% of total credit. Metro centres continue to dominate the market with
29% of total
retail credit, closely followed by the rural market at 27% of total retail market. Urban and
Semi
Urban centres contribute around 22% each. The rural market uprising is a recent
phenomenon,
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which has immense growth potential. While private sector banks have dominance in
metropolitan
areas, nationalized banks have their hold in the urban and semi-urban areas. The rural
areas are
dominated by RRBs.
The last few years have witnessed a high increase in students aspiring for management
and
professional courses, leading to a spurt in educational loans. Banks are now having a
direct tie-up
with the educational institutions to cash in on the opportunity. Public sector banks (PSBs)
are
more focused on the educational loans segment. In the educational loan segment,
disbursement
of domestic banks has surged by 13% to Rs.2249 crore in 2004-05; up from Rs1983
crores in 2003-
04. The number of students availing education loans has increased to 1,40,000 from
1,08,000
The other personal loans market is characterized by intense competition and the players
vie with
one another to get business. These loans are driven by urgent and short-term needs and
banks
have to act swiftly to cash in on that need. Metropolitan and urban areas together
constitute two
third of total loans under this category. Private sector banks lead in metropolitan areas,
whereas
In India, all the retail banking segments are expected to witness a tremendous growth
owing to
the low cost of borrowing, changing customer attitudes towards borrowing and optimism
regarding economic growth. Retail lending constitutes just 12.36% of the Indian banking
system.
Given this macroeconomic scenario, the share of retail banking will grow dramatically and
it is
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expected that about 35% of the incremental growth in net credit will come from retail
banking. In
the next five years i.e. till 2010, retail banking is expected to grow by a CAGR of 25% to
touch the
figure of Rs.5,75,000 crores This requires expansion and diversification of retail banking
product
portfolio, better penetration and faster service mechanism. Hitherto, the growth had
come from
metros and tier I cities. While the loan requirement from larger cities will continue to
grow,
explosive growth in credit is expected to register in tier II cities, semi-urban and rural
areas.
However, there are some areas of concern like rising NPA in consumer loans
particularly,
the delinquency rates in credit cards, and frauds in home loans. Housing prices
have
growth in retail has increased the requirement for measuring and managing this risk.
These require extremely skilled workforce and highly evolved credit delivery and
This is bringing the margins under pressure. Though rational pricing is critical, the
competitive market shall continue to see the pricing pressure. There is also a need
for a
Keeping pace with explosive changes will pose challenge to regulatory authorities. This
will not limit only to increase of risk weight of consumer loan by 25 basis points which the
regulator announced in mid-term policy review 2004-05. Revision of credit cards issue
regulations, and recent draft guidelines on outsourcing are the steps in the right direction.
Lack of consensus on definition of retail and transparency in declaration by the players as
well the coverage of retail by the central banker in its reports; all of this needs a thorough
re-look.
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: CURRENT SCENARIO :
• Retail assets are just 22% of the total banking assets of India
India 6% China 15 %,
STRATEGIC PREREQUISITES
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• Process efficiency and ease of scalability
CHALLENGES
Customer segmentation/differentiation
Hospitality Education
Retailers Automobiles
The majority of new entrants under categories 2 and 3 have so far chosen
to offer only a subset of retail banking products, namely credit cards,
savings accounts, personal loans and mortgages. The main retail banking
product missing from this list is the current (or cheque) account. In
addition, many of the new entrants from the insurance industry have
chosen to offer retail banking services/products through new delivery
channels. In most cases the establishment of these new banks has only
come about as a consequence of the ability to offer banking services
through non-traditional channels. Retail banks have traditionally operated
through branch networks. These are costly to establish and to maintain.
The introducton of automated teller machines (ATMs) was the first
development that allowed delivery of certain elements of retail banking
services outside the branch. ATMs were first located inside or on the
outside wall of the branch. They are now located in shopping malls,
workplaces, universities, petrol stations etc. Telephone banking was the
next innovation in delivery channels and many of the recent entrants into
the banking industry are based completely on telephone transactions. The
pioneer in the UK was First Direct, a subsidiary of Hong Kong and Shanghai
Banking Corporation (HSBC). The most recent innovation in delivery
channels is the internet. Many retail banks in the UK have introduced
online banking allowing customers access to account information, to make
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payments and to transfer money between accounts. As more households
gain access to the internet and gain confidence in using it to conduct
banking transactions, then new banks are likely to emerge basing their
delivery of banking services solely on the internet. Developments in
interactive digital television also offer a new means of delivering retail
banking services.
All these developments do not imply an early demise for branch networks.
First, many customers will resist using the new technology. Second,
branches allow banks to cross-sell other financial products to customers
who go into the branch to undertake a banking transaction. In addition, a
danger with telephone or internet based banking is that it is likely to
encourage customers to trade more on price so becoming more fickle. This
has implications for banks’ ability to manage liquidity risk.
Activity
What are the implications of the growth in internet banking for a bank’s ability
to manage liquidity risk?
Activity
Identify the main products/services provided by a retail bank in your country.
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“ MARKETING MIX – RETAIL BANKING STRATEGIES “
Modeling can help optimize marketing mix resource allocation to maximize customer equity.
Financial institutions have traditionally based their marketing budgets on a percentage of last
year’s
revenues or budget, which often results in suboptimal results and wasteful spending. Better
results can be
allocates spending across appropriate media to increase customer equity and shareholder
value. One bank
found that a 100% increase in direct mail spending would yield a 7% gain in customer equity
through
How should marketing dollars be allocated? The question is one that financial services and
other industries
have been wrestling with for more than 100 years. Many organizations in 2005 find
themselves in the same
situation as Sir William Hesketh Lever, the soap-maker and eventual founder of Unilever, who
in the late
1800s commented: “Half the money I spend on advertising is wasted, and the trouble is I don’t
know which
half.”
Traditionally, marketing budgets are based on a percentage of last year’s revenues or budget.
Such
budgets are easy to create, but this is an approach that falls short. It fails, for example, to
address how
much should be invested in customer acquisition or retention, which customer segments and
products
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should be targeted, and even the type of marketing media to be used. Because it does not
challenge
analysis and optimization modeling. The former examines the relationships over time between
marketing
mix variables that are controlled and performance measures, such as sale or market share,
that represent
Optimization modeling is the ideal allocation of resources to maximize objectives. The bank
that tracks its
marketing spend across media and customer acquisition/retention can gauge the
effectiveness of its
key is to find the point where the expense of marketing in a channel creates the highest
shareholder value.
For example, one bank found that increasing marketing dollars spent on direct mail by 100%
increased
“customer equity” by 7%, or $5.3 million. This was accomplished by extending the average
customer
lifetime — customers who stay longer with the bank can yield more long-term value even if
the annual
Underlying the marketing productivity boost is the concept of “customer lifetime value,” which
is the net
present value of a customer’s current and future contributions to profit. The sum of all
customers’ lifetime
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values is customer equity. There are four sources of customer equity:
Long used in the catalog industry, customer lifetime value is becoming increasingly prevalent
in the
financial services industry as executives recognize that marketing success is not just the
number of
customers but the value of those customers over the course of their “lifetime” with the bank.
Savvy
management aims to increase customer equity as a means of enhancing the long-term value
of the
financial institution.
Marketing instruments have a differential impact on the four components of customer equity.
These
• Marketing communications, whether broad such as national TV, or very focused such
as direct marketing;
• Other controllable factors, including branches per capita or service employees per
branch;
In addition, external economic factors such as the consumer price index, stock market index
and housing
Econometric methods, which are used to develop market response models, indicate how
marketing media
such as TV, radio, print ads, direct mail, etc. impact the various performance metrics,
specifically
acquisition rate, retention rate and revenues. For example, if television advertising doubled,
there would be
a simultaneous impact on several metrics in the short run — the effects of which can be
simulated. The
long-term implications of these short-term movements indicate how sound the strategy is in
the long run.
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Development of these models requires a bank’s IT department to gather prescribed data that
econometricians or statisticians can use to create the response models. The response models
are the basis
of optimization or simulation software developed for use by the bank’s marketing department.
How “should” marketing dollars be allocated? An optimization routine can find the “best”
combination of
media expenses to give the institution the highest customer equity value. By taking the major
elements of
the marketing mix and performing a customer equity optimization, the optimal allocation can
be calculated,
both for the short- and long-run in concert with the bank’s strategic goals. A plan to build
market share will
Short-term goals may focus on media that increase acquisition, but these new clients may
stay only a few
months, decreasing long-term metrics such as customer equity. Most likely, the optimizations
and
refocused marketing spend will have a beneficial effect on short- and long-term objectives.
The critical question for customer equity maximization value is: how does the short-term
revenue from new
customers translate into long-term revenue? For financial institutions, the answer depends on
two
important metrics: the customer retention rate, which is never 100%, and therefore gradually
decreases
the size of the existing customer base, and the discount factor, which ranges from around 6%
to 12%
annually. The retention value of the institution’s customers diminishes over time as the effects
of attrition
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ESTIMATING CUSTOMER EQUITY
Financial institutions are in the relationship business and thus have comprehensive customer
data that can
be used to optimize marketing mix resource allocation to maximize customer equity. This data
includes the
branches, designated marketing areas, and customer segments gathered on a weekly basis.
Econometric modeling uses changes in marketing activities such as direct mail, TV, Web
activities, etc., so
that the effects of those specific spending changes on acquisition, retention and revenues can
be
statistically isolated. The revenue from acquisition and retention in the long term creates both
top-line
Banks can estimate customer equity for 10 or more years out. After 10 years there is severe
discounting of
the cash flows. For example, at 12%, a $100.00 cash flow in the 11th year is worth only
$28.75 in today’s
value. The patterns of acquiring and losing customers and generating revenues, along with the
gross
margins on the various financial products, yield both the short-term and the long-term
estimated
contributions to profits. Then, by properly discounting these gross profits back to the present,
the
institution can get an estimate of customer equity. Naturally, these are estimates or
projections that are
subject to revision as, for example, economic and competitive conditions change. Even so, the
projections
are strategically useful as they provide a trajectory of future business performance based on
current and
projected marketing investments that management can evaluate and improve upon.
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For the optimization, the economic factors are typically held at their most recent levels,
though it is possible
to test the effects of different scenarios such as a gradual improvement in the economic
environment.
The first step is to consider marketing spending at its current level and allocation, and to
derive the
implications of this policy for customer-equity development. The second step is to compare
this trajectory
with the marketing investment strategy that is suggested by the optimization. The
optimization will indicate
that the financial institution should allocate its resources in proportion to their effectiveness.
As a result of
allocating scarce marketing dollars more productively, the financial institution should enjoy an
increase in
customer equity.
Recommendations may increase spending for certain marketing activities and cut others. For
example,
cable TV spending may increase at the expense of print advertising or vice versa. These
changes reflect
different positions on the market response curve, which is subject to diminishing returns to
scale. For
example, the higher the lift in response at the current level of spending, the more marketing
investment is
The shape of the entire market response curve is generated using the techniques of
econometrics, and
results in estimates of response elasticities for each marketing medium. For example, a print
advertising
elasticity of 0.2 implies that, for every 10% increase of print spending, revenue increases by
2%.
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In cases where the recommended spending for a specific marketing activity is far outside the
current
spending range, it is prudent to engage in a marketing experiment to verify that the response
level is in line
with that anticipated by the optimization model. For example, a bank uses e-mail as a direct
marketing
channel. The analysis indicates gross under-spending in this channel and recommends a 500%
increase.
Since a 500% increase has not been previously tested, this would constitute a risk. So, a 100%
increase is
After the completion of the marketing period, actual results are compared with the predicted
results.
Assuming the actual results are close to the predicted, the model is recalibrated, appending
the last
period’s data. The institution now has more confidence in the model’s recommendation for e-
mail spending.
As a result of the econometric and optimization modeling, banks can see how different
customer segments
and product categories will generate revenues and gross margins. This is a very useful tool
strategically,
because the financial institution can analyze the consequences of top-line growth verses
bottom-line
growth. For example, the bank may find that, by spending more aggressively, it can expand its
customer
base with customers whose acquisition costs are nearly the same as their marginal revenue.
In that case,
there will be top-line growth, but not necessarily customer equity growth.
A realistic market response model obeys the laws of diminishing returns to scale. If a financial
institution’s
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direct mail is currently yielding a 3% response rate and if the direct mail budget is doubled,
the institution
should expect a lower response rate on the additional budget allocation. These results will, of
course, vary
with the quality of execution within each medium, which relies upon the creative component
in marketing
communications.
Such qualitative changes may be accounted for in an econometric model. However, the
easiest way to
a financial institution is more successful in increasing lift due to higher execution quality, it
follows that the
institution should spend more on that medium. The optimization generally assumes that the
quality of the
financial institution’s marketing execution remains the same, and thus its marketing spending
is subject to
the laws of diminishing returns. Different scenarios can be used to test the sensitivity of
customer equity to
the impact will be beneficial for both short-term and long-term profitability. Pursuing a
strategy of top-line
growth — expanding total customers and total revenues — can be consistent with customer
equity
maximization, although not always. The result depends on the customer equity drivers and
especially the
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optimization modeling can guide financial institutions to determine their optimal marketing
budget and then
optimally allocate that budget for heightened customer equity and shareholder value.
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