Solutions For RealSolutions For Real
  • Home
  • News
  • Personal Finance
    • Savings
    • Banking
    • Mortgage
    • Retirement
    • Taxes
    • Wealth
  • Make Money
  • Budgeting
  • Burrow
  • Investing
  • Credit Cards
  • Loans

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest finance news and updates directly to your inbox.

Top News

Can You Raise a Family Without Sacrificing Retirement?

June 1, 2025

5 Money Secrets From Billionaire CEOs That Anyone Can Use

June 1, 2025

Why Teaching Your Child Music Builds Financial Success

June 1, 2025
Facebook Twitter Instagram
Trending
  • Can You Raise a Family Without Sacrificing Retirement?
  • 5 Money Secrets From Billionaire CEOs That Anyone Can Use
  • Why Teaching Your Child Music Builds Financial Success
  • 9 Money Saving Habits That Secretly Signal You Don’t Trust Your Partner
  • Pillar To Post Home Inspectors is a Trusted Franchise in the Growing Home Inspection Industry
  • Improve Your Productivity with Windows 11 Pro for Just $15
  • What Every Brand Gets Wrong About Using AI
  • This $200 MacBook Air Handles Your Hustle Without Complaints
Sunday, June 1
Facebook Twitter Instagram
Solutions For RealSolutions For Real
Subscribe For Alerts
  • Home
  • News
  • Personal Finance
    • Savings
    • Banking
    • Mortgage
    • Retirement
    • Taxes
    • Wealth
  • Make Money
  • Budgeting
  • Burrow
  • Investing
  • Credit Cards
  • Loans
Solutions For RealSolutions For Real
Home » The Banking Crisis Has Only Just Begun
Banking

The Banking Crisis Has Only Just Begun

News RoomBy News RoomAugust 5, 20230 Views0
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Email Tumblr Telegram

OBSERVATIONS FROM THE FINTECH SNARK TANK

In an article titled Is the Banking Crisis Over? We Are About to Find Out, the Wall Street Journal identified three concerns that could determine if the banking industry is out of the crisis or still in one:

  • Deposit costs. High interest rates have forced many banks to pay more to retain deposits (often via brokered deposits), while many institutions have seen deposits flee to higher-yielding money market funds.
  • Bond losses. Rising interest rates depress the value of low rate securities and loans. Banks had more than $500 billion in unrealized losses on their securities at the end of March. Holding these assets can impact profitability because banks can’t lend those funds out or invest them at higher rates.
  • Commercial real estate loans. Banks are anticipating losses in their commercial real-estate portfolios. Many mid-size institutions, with a heavy concentration of commercial real estate loans in their portfolios, could be impacted by the low occupancy rates in commercial real estate.

One bright spot for the banking industry is Americans’ rising appetite for credit card debt. The Credit Card Competition Act of 2023 could negatively impact banks’ ability to generate interchange fees and reduce the amount of capital they issue, however.

Out of the Frying Pan and Into the Fire

Even if Q2 results are rosy beyond expectations, bankers shouldn’t delude themselves into thinking the industry is out of crisis mode. The crisis the WSJ is alluding to is the short-term “crisis of 2023.” The industry, however, is in the throes of the “Crisis of the ‘20s,” a crisis that will last the entire decade.

This crisis touches banks’ products, technologies, people, processes, and the political climate. Here are five elements of the Banking Crisis of the ‘20s:

1) Checking accounts ain’t what they used to be. In the first half of 2023, nearly half of the “checking accounts” opened in the US were opened by digital banks and fintechs.

There are quotes around checking accounts because bankers don’t see offerings from companies like PayPal and Square as checking accounts. But young consumers don’t know the difference between a checking account and the Square Cash App account or PayPal payment account. They all enable consumers to make payments.

Square’s and PayPal’s product, however, enables consumers to do a range of activities that would require them to open multiple accounts at banks.

In addition, banks have learned—or are learning—that the checking account isn’t the anchor product (for a broader relationship) they once thought it was.

Without reinventing their product set, banks won’t survive the Crisis of the ‘20s.

2) Zombie cores. A person’s core has to be in shape—and so does a bank’s. Getting their core systems into shape has become either a nightmare or an impossibility for banks. The bank technology landscape is littered with what Cornerstone Advisors’ Brad Smith calls “zombie cores”—core apps that haven’t been sunsetted but are no longer supported by or enhanced by the tech companies that sold them.

Banks have two options throughout the rest of this decade: Core replacement or core modernization. Neither option is cheap and neither option is fast.

The good news for banks is that this situation has given rise to a new category of tech firms like Core10, PortX, Constellation, and Sandbox Banking—let’s call them core integration platforms—that promise to make it easier to integrate ancillary systems to existing cores and create a strategy for core replacement.

3) The people shortage. Core integration platforms are a good thing for banks, but the new reality is that banks will still need people to put things together. The (mid-size) bank IT department has evolved from being a builder to a vendor management team and will evolve further in this decade to becoming an integration team.

Finding these people—and others who bring expertise in technologies like machine learning, conversational AI, and generative AI—will be the number one challenge for banks throughout the rest of the decade.

A new reality facing banks throughout the Crisis of the ‘20s: The four walls of a bank are no longer there.

The amount of work and positions that will need to be outsourced or partnered for means the typical bank may find that nearly half of the people working “with the bank” don’t work “for the bank”—or even “at the bank.”

4) The creativity imperative. Every management fad has a life cycle and the innovation fad is on its last legs. For the past five years or so, banks have obsessed over “innovating.” Other than an ad hoc innovation team led by someone with a lofty Chief Innovation Officer title, few banks have truly created any innovations.

That isn’t to say that they haven’t made a lot of internal changes and improvements, but the vast majority of these efforts don’t live up to the innovation label.

Banks need to stop playing innovation charades. With the influx of new technologies, the challenge isn’t “innovation” but “creativity”—how can they, at an organizational level, make more creative use of data and technology than their competitors, and how can they help their people become more creative in getting their jobs done.

5) The political element. For some politicians (you know who they are), banks are the scapegoats for society’s ills. Increased regulations from a bank-unfriendly government works against all the things banks need to do the survive and thrive in the Crisis of the ‘20s.

Overcoming the Crisis of the ‘20s

Two types of banks will be winners come 2030: The lucky and the smart. It’s always good to be one of the lucky 1%, but most banks will need to be smart and that means:

Lengthening the strategic planning horizon. Too many banks only plan out one to two years—and pay lip service to ensuring years. Banks need to pay more attention to years three through seven (focusing on the the five elements of the Banking Crisis of the ‘20s).

Building new strategic capabilities. Too many banks go into the annual planning process and identify projects they intend to complete in the coming year. But they typically don’t assess their internal ability to get the project done. So they rely on third-party resources when they should have developed the skills internally.

Determining a new strategic focus. Community-based financial institutions can no longer rely on their geographic communities for growth. They’ll need to carve out niches that they believe they can serve better than other institutions and look for members of that niche where ever they are.

Read the full article here

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Articles

The Beginning Of The End Of Bank-Fintech ‘Partnerships’

Banking December 6, 2023

Swiss Banque Pictet Admits Conspiring With Americans To Hide Funds

Banking December 5, 2023

One Of America’s Longest-Serving CEOs Has Advice On Humor And Risk

Banking December 2, 2023

6 Resources Investors Can Be Thankful For This Holiday Season

Banking December 1, 2023

From Fintech’s Top Founders To Wall Street’s Best Dealmakers: 30 Under 30 Finance 2024

Banking November 30, 2023

The Evolution Of Bank-Fintech Partnerships

Banking November 29, 2023
Add A Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Demo
Top News

5 Money Secrets From Billionaire CEOs That Anyone Can Use

June 1, 20250 Views

Why Teaching Your Child Music Builds Financial Success

June 1, 20250 Views

9 Money Saving Habits That Secretly Signal You Don’t Trust Your Partner

June 1, 20250 Views

Pillar To Post Home Inspectors is a Trusted Franchise in the Growing Home Inspection Industry

June 1, 20250 Views
Don't Miss

Improve Your Productivity with Windows 11 Pro for Just $15

By News RoomJune 1, 2025

Disclosure: Our goal is to feature products and services that we think you’ll find interesting…

What Every Brand Gets Wrong About Using AI

June 1, 2025

This $200 MacBook Air Handles Your Hustle Without Complaints

June 1, 2025

How Retirees (And Teens) Can Find Their First Side Hustle Customers

May 31, 2025
About Us
About Us

Your number 1 source for the latest finance, making money, saving money and budgeting. follow us now to get the news that matters to you.

We're accepting new partnerships right now.

Email Us: [email protected]

Our Picks

Can You Raise a Family Without Sacrificing Retirement?

June 1, 2025

5 Money Secrets From Billionaire CEOs That Anyone Can Use

June 1, 2025

Why Teaching Your Child Music Builds Financial Success

June 1, 2025
Most Popular

3 Ways To Get Paid To Advertise On Your Car

November 2, 20232 Views

AustralianSuper rejects Brookfield’s ‘best and final’ $10.5 billion bid for Origin Energy

November 2, 20231 Views

Can You Raise a Family Without Sacrificing Retirement?

June 1, 20250 Views
Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest Dribbble
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Press Release
  • Advertise
  • Contact
© 2025 Solutions For Real. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.