Small banks face a stark choice: evolve or perish.
Big Banks are wielding vast resources and economies of scale to woo customers.
Fintechs are redefining customer expectations.
Big Tech is eyeing the financial sector with keen interest, armed with massive user bases and unparalleled data and software expertise.
And looming open banking regulations threaten to democratize financial data, potentially eroding traditional customer relationships.
In this tumultuous environment, small banks risk becoming the next Blockbuster or EDS – once-mighty companies that failed to adapt to shifting competitive landscapes.
Remember, Blockbuster could have bought Netflix, and EDS passed on acquiring Microsoft for a mere $80 million.
The cost of complacency in the face of innovation can be extinction.
Many small banks, sensing these headwinds, have eyed partner banking as a lifeline.
But partner banking is no Swiss picnic.
The regulatory environment is downright hostile.
And the customer base of many potential fintech partners? Not exactly a banker’s dream.
We’re talking average account balances of $70 and fraud rates that would make even the steadiest risk officer lose sleep.
To succeed in this arena, small banks need to think big.
Serving fintech consumers profitably requires massive scale, a fully digital approach, and investment in state-of-the-art operational and compliance controls.
It’s about leveraging technology to turn high volume, low-balance accounts into a viable business model.
Is it easy? Absolutely not.
But for small banks willing to embrace change, invest wisely, and navigate the regulatory maze, partner banking could be the key to not just survival, but relevance in the digital age.
Toys “R” Us thought online shopping was child’s play.
Now it’s game over.
Fair Lending Analysis
Identify and overcome tradeoffs between performance and disparity.