SCOTT GALLOWAY: Fintechs Are Taking Over the Banking Industry – Business Insider

Posted: July 10, 2021 at 3:39 am

My north star(s) for philosophy, management, and politics are "Star Wars," "The Sopranos," and "Game of Thrones," respectively. The Iron Bank (GOT) is a metaphor for today's financial institutions, if present-day banks didn't need bailouts or to inventfake accountsto juice compensation. Regardless, it was well known throughout Braavos thatThe Iron Bank will have its due. If you failed to repay, they'd fund your enemies. So today's Iron Bankers are the venture capitalists funding (any) incumbents' enemies. If this makes VCs sound interesting/cool, don't trust your instincts.

Lately, I've spent a decent amount of time on the phone with my bank in an attempt to get a home equity line, as I want to load up on Dogecoin. (Note: kidding.) (Note: mostly.) If Opendoor and Zillow can use algorithms and Google Maps to get an offer on my house in 24 hours, why does it take my bank which underwrote the original mortgage so much longer?

Read more: I sold Credit Karma to Intuit for $8.1 billion in what was the biggest decision of my career. Here are the 4 most important lessons I learned.

How ripe a sector is for disruption is a function of several factors. One (relatively) easy proxy is the delta between price increases and inflation, and if the innovation in the sector justifies the delta. Think of the $200 cable bill, or a $5.6 million 60-second Super Bowl spot, as canaries in the ad-supported media coal mine.

Another, easier (and more fun) indicator of ripeness is the eighties test. Put yourself smack dab in the center of the store/product/service, close your eyes, spin around three times, open your eyes, and ask if you'd know within five seconds that you were notin 1985. Theaters, grocery stores, gas stations, dry cleaners, university classes, doctor's offices, and banks still feel as if you could run into Ally Sheedy or The Bangles.

It's hard to imagine an industry more ripe for disruption than the business of money.

Let's start with this: 25% of US householdsare either unbanked or underbanked.Half of the nation's unbanked households say they don't have enough money to meet the minimum balance requirements. 34% say bank fees are too high. And, if you're trying to get a mortgage, you'd better hope the house isn't cheap.

Inequity is a breeding ground for disruption, leaving underserved markets for insurgents to seize and launch an attack on incumbents from below. We have good reason to believe that's happening in banking.

A herd of unicorns is at the stable door, looking to trample Wells Fargo and Chase. Fintech is responsible for roughly one in five (17%) of the world's unicorns, more than any other sector. In addition, there are already several megalodons worth more than financial institutions that have spent generations building (mis)trust.

How did this happen? The fintechs are zeroing in on everything big banks aren't.

Example No. 1: Innovation. Over the past five years, PayPal has issued 26x more patents than Goldman Sachs.

Example No. 2: Cost-cutting. " Neobanks " offer the basic services of a bank, with one less expensive and cumbersome feature: the branch. Historically, the branch wasthe bank. But ground-level real estate staffed by people is expensive, and now that money is a digital construct, the "vault" is in our pockets. A traditional bank branch needs$50 million in deposits to generate an adequate return. Yet nearly half (48%) of branches in the US are below that threshold. Not surprisingly, banks are closing branches as fast as they opened them: In 2020 alone, 3,300 bank branches closed, a quarter of all retail closures.

There's a big opportunity for branchless banks to expand. Already, there are at least177 neobanks. Founders frame these offerings as more progressive, less corporate.Dave, a new banking app, offers a Founding Story on its website (illustrated with cartoon bears) about three friends "fed up" with their banking experience, often incurring $38 overdraft fees. As it turns out, "Dave" is/areserial entrepreneurswho sold their last company for $85 million. Dave provides free overdraft protection and has 10 million customers.

Example No. 3: Less inequity. NYU Professor of Finance Sabrina Howell's research found fintech lenders gave 18% of PPP loans to Black-owned businesses, while small to medium-sized banks provided just 2%. Among all loans to Black-owned firms, Professor Howell found 54% were from fintech startups .

Racial discrimination is the most likely explanation, as lenders faced zero credit risk. In addition (my thesis), just as people of color have embraced crypto (48% of Bitcoin buyers are nonwhite) there may be increased comfort among minority groups to deal with technology versus institutions that have a history of racist lending practices. At a base level, systemic racism creates friction on several dimensions. I'm an investor in Better Mortgage, which leverages AI to remove friction from the supply chain of financing a home (e.g., approval in as little as three minutes). This results in lower fees for the borrower and better pay for jobs that have suffered from high turnover. As every CEO tries to channel their inner Bezos, and obsess over the consumer, there's a huge opportunity to mimic Hastings and build a model that achieves something few firms have managed over the last 30 years; give their rank and file workers a raise.

Example No. 4: Serving the underserved. Unequal access to banking is a global botheration. Almost a third of the world's adults, 1.7 billion, are unbanked. In Argentina, Colombia, Nigeria, and other countries, more than 50% of adults are unbanked.

Why? Again, many don't have enough money to meet minimum balance requirements, and it's more profitable to service wealthy customers. However, a lower-cost, technology-driven model coupled with a market that provides cheap capital to growth firms results in a much-needed example of how capitalism is the worst economic system of its kind except for all the rest.

Take Argentine fintech Ual, whose CEO Pierpaolo Barbieri I spoke with on thePod last week. In just four years, more than three million people have opened an account with his company about 9% of the country and over 25% of 18 to 25-year-olds now have a tarjeta Ual (online wallet). Ual recently launched in Mexico, where, as of 2017, only 2.6% of the poorest 40% had a credit card. This is more than an economic issue it's a societal issue, as financial inclusion bolsters the middle class and forms a solid base for democracy.

Chase savings accounts are offering, no joke, 0.01% interest. Wells Fargo? The same, though if you keep your investment portfolio with Wells, they'll double that rate to 0.02%. Meanwhile, neobanks including Ally and Chime offer 0.5% 50x the competition.

There is also blood in the water for fintech unicorns that have created a debit, versus credit, generation: The buy-now-pay-later fintech Afterpay has more than 5 million US customers just two years after launching in the country. As of February, its competitor Affirm has 4.5 millioncustomers.

Unicorns are also coming for payments. The megasaurus in this space is PayPal, which has built the first global payments platform outside the credit card model and is second only to Visa in payment volume and revenue. Square's Cash app is capturing share, and Apple Cash is also a player, as it's Apple.

Square, Apple, and a host of other companies are taking the "partnership" approach, bolting new services onto the existing transaction infrastructure. Square's little white box is a low-upfront-cost way for a small merchant to accept credit cards. It's particularly interesting that Apple teamed up with Goldman Sachs instead of a traditional bank. Goldman is looking to get into the consumer space (seeMarcus), and Apple is looking to get into the payments space this alliance could be the unsullied fighting with air cover from dragons. It should make Wells and BofA anxious.

The Big Four credit card system operators (Visa, MasterCard, Discover, and American Express) are still the dominant payment players, and they have deep moats. Their brands are global, their networks robust. Visa can handle 76,000 transactions per second in 160 currencies, and as of this week it had settled$1 billion incryptocurrency transactions.

Still, even the king of payments sees dead people. In 2020, Visa tried to buy Plaid for $5.3 billion. Plaid currently helps connect existing payments providers (i.e. banks) to finance software such as Quicken and Mint. But it plans to expand from that beachhead into offering a full-fledged payments system. Visa CEO Al Kelly initiallydescribed the deal as an "insurance policy" to neutralize a "threat to our important US debit business." In an encouraging sign that American antitrust authorities are stirring, the Department of Justice filed suit to block the merger, and Visa walked.

Fintech is also coming for investing with online trading apps (Robinhood, Webull, Public, and several of the neobanks) and through the crypto side door (Coinbase, Gemini, Binance). Insurance is under threat from companies like Lemonade (home), Ladder (life), and Root (auto).

In sum, fintech is likely as underhyped as space is overhyped. Why? The ROI on your professional efforts and investing are inversely proportional to how sexy the industry/investment is, and fintech is boring. Except for the immense opportunity and value creation for multiple stakeholders. "Half the world is unbanked, but we need to colonize Mars," said no rational investor ever.

Re investing in fintech: What has, and will always be, a good rap? The guy/gal who owns the bank.

Life is so rich,

Scott

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SCOTT GALLOWAY: Fintechs Are Taking Over the Banking Industry - Business Insider

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