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Banking in a transforming economy IDRBT Foundation Day November 6, 2012
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2 Agenda Technology & disruptive change in banking A transforming India The future of Indian banking
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3 Agenda Technology & disruptive change in banking A transforming India The future of Indian banking
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4 Improve operational efficiency Minimise costs Enable high-speed processing Allow data capture and data mining Banking sector early adopters of technology Improve customer experience with enhanced internal efficiency Disruption in banking
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5 Developments post the year 2000 Advent of retail banking Growing presence of foreign banks Emergence of a universal banking model Banks and non banks competing to serve similar customer needs Technology driven innovation in products and access to services Focus shifting to inclusive banking
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6 Technology impact on banking post 2000 Infrastructur e RTGS (2004) 1 NEFT (2005) 2 Interbank Mobile Payments System (2010) ATM installed base of over 100,000 (over 27% compounded growth from 2006 to 2012) POS terminals over 700,000 1. Real time gross settlement system 2. National electronic funds transfer
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7 ICICI Bank Internet ATMs Branches Call centre Share of transactions in 2012 35% 41% 12% 2% The disruptive power of technology Mobile 2% POS 7% Share of transactions in 2001 2% 3% 94% 1% - -
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8 Technology is in a continuing state of flux Higher capacity and processing capability Software to run the devices Ability to connect through broadband and wireless Mobility, new platforms and the ecosystems in handheld devices From mainframe to minicomputer to desktop PC And now, mainframe in a pocket New platforms such as for payments are now challenging the traditional bank channels
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9 The next wave: being connected 2.25 bn (32%) of world population is online today, and 1.10 bn users are on 3G Mobile internet is ramping up dramatically 57 mn 3G users in China, y-o-y growth of 115% 39 mn 3G users in India, y-o-y growth of 840% Mobile internet now makes up 50% of internet traffic in India Out of 1.80 bn mobile users in China and India One billion will go online in two years Source: KPCB
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10 Connectivity in India.. 100 mn internet users, 800 mn mobile subscribers Broadband connectivity a catalyst Consumers are becoming part of the cloud seamlessly without consciously realising it Device costs will continue to drop More and more capabilities would be available at lower costs.. would have a significant impact on banking Third largest internet user base Second largest mobile subscriber base
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11 Agenda Technology & disruptive change in banking A transforming India The future of Indian banking
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12 India’s current positioning China (USD) 2003200520102012 (E) GDP (bn)1,6412,2575,9307,992 Per capita GDP1,2701,7263,7385,899 Population (bn)1.291.311.341.35 (E) - estimate Note: GDP is on nominal basis Source:IMF India (USD) 2003200520102012 (E) GDP (bn)5908081,5981,779 Per capita GDP5497291,3421,455 Population (bn)1.071.111.191.22 India in 2010 was at the juncture where China was in 2003
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13 Rapid urbanisation Source: Mckinsey GDP USD bn India’s metros in 2030 will be as large as some countries were in 2005 India’s large metros in 2030: by GDP Assuming an annual GDP growth of 8.0% between 2009-2018 and 7.0% between 2018-2030
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14 Over 700 mn people across 600,000 villages Rural growth supported by: Changing characteristic of rural economy with reduced dependency on agriculture Rising wealth creation with estimate of 40 mn middle & high income households by 2010 Resurgent rural India
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15 Looking ahead: impact of per capita GDP growth Per capita GDP < US$ 500 Per capita GDP at US$ 500 -1,500 Per capita GDP at US$ 1,500 -2,500 Demand for better living environment Limited aspirations Low affordability Increased affordability Aspirations of a better lifestyle Per capita GDP at US$ 2,500-4,000 Accelerating consumption cycle Early 2000 2002-2011 2012-2017 2018-2021
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16 Agenda Technology & disruptive change in banking A transforming India The future of Indian banking
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17 Technology for the masses Only 10% have life insurance < 1% have general insurance Only 2% have a credit card 59% of India’s households avail of banking services Only 13% have an ATM + Debit card The challenge is in banking 700 million people in 600,000 villages in close to 600 districts
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18 Channel innovation Driving scale and profitability Opening and operating savings accounts Easy KYC Smart cards POS machines Low cost ATMs Mobile phones Low cost branch Used by branchless banking channels Resource efficient branches To bridge distance and ease transactions For all banking operations Steadily gaining traction
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19 Smart cards have simplified data capture Biometric Transaction Card Biometric smart card for secure validation Overcome distance by setting up service points close to customers Most effective for the poor and uneducated
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20 Branch in a box POS based solution offering banking transactions like balance enquiry, cash withdrawal, deposit Cheque payment (with capability to display signatures for verification) RTGS 1 / NEFT 2 Can support transactions like pass book printing, opening of fixed deposits and bill payment Low bandwidth GPRS connectivity 1. Real time gross settlement system 2. National electronic funds transfer
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21 Unique identity number Preliminary KYC and wider acceptance Instant identity verification Basis for Know Your Customer Build credit history Improve service delivery to the poor Customer management to avoid issues of over- leveraging
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22 Financial services for all Direct payment of benefits such as NREGA, Social Security Pension schemes Subsidy transfer Payment ecosystem Credit Cashless payments through mobile wallets Account history from electronic transactions for data driven lending
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23 Customer engagement Customer acquisition and on-boarding Branches ATMs Onlinechannels Products that address needs of diverse customer segments Strong distribution backing products Development of new channels by leveraging technology Consistency in experience across channels
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24 Customer engagement Servicing customers through the life cycle Analytics Consistency of customer experience across channels of distribution Analytics to understand and address customer needs across diverse segments Development of banking history for underbanked and unbanked customers for cost effective credit
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25 In summary Technology has transformed banking globally and in India Technology adoption by Indian consumers is proceeding at dramatic pace India itself has transformed and will transform even more in the years ahead Technological innovation in India will lead the way for innovation in banking Banks will use technology to attract and serve customers across the pyramid
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26 Thank you
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