Title: OPERATIONS IN FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS - WHY IT
1OPERATIONS IN FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS - WHY ITS
MORE THAN JUST PROCESSES
- B60.2315.20 OPERATIONS IN FINANCIAL SERVICES
Spring 2002
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2THREE OPERATIONS-RELATED THEMES FOR FINANCIAL
INSTITUTIONS
- How to apply manufacturing techniques to
reengineer and rethink the operations processes - How to use offshoring to redefine the traditional
operations location and operating model - How to respond to industry planned next-day trade
settlement (T1) initiative
3THREE OPERATIONS-RELATED THEMES FOR FINANCIAL
INSTITUTIONS
- How to apply manufacturing techniques to
reengineer and rethink the operations processes - How to use offshoring to redefine the traditional
operations location and operating model - How to respond to industry planned next-day trade
settlement (T1) initiative
4LEAN MANUFACTURING GENESIS AND KEY PRINCIPLES
Key principles of lean manufacturing
- A workforce that is waste aware and skilled in
reducing/eliminating waste - Level production load from matching demand to
capacity/supply - A just-in-time production process that produces
only when needed and in quantities required - A process designed to deliver quality the first
time using robust, in-process mechanisms - An energized organization with the processes and
capabilities to achieve continuous improvement
year after year
5LEAN MANUFACTURING LEVERS TO ACHIEVING OPERATIONS
EXCELLENCE
Main lever
Specific improvement
Example
Migrate to lower cost channels
- Reduced channel cost in credit card company by
50 due to migrating inquiries from call center
to Web
Optimize/manage complexity
- Segmented volume based on customer profitability
to maximize contribution margin
Manage demand at the source
Level load incoming demand to match supply
- Created measures encouraging branch loan
applications to arrive on an ongoing basis during
the workday
Capture information and correct errors one time,
accurately, at the source
- Reduced labor costs 40 in check processing due
to one-time, quick capture of information
Understand customer preferences/tradeoffs
- Conducted customer interviews to optimize
required decision time of loan application
Standardize and stabilize work processes
- Reduced variability on incomplete application
handling to a no tolerance approach which
improved completion rate by 50
Streamline critical path
- Ordered appraisals on homes for equity loans
earlier in the decision process
Optimize process, layout, and flow
Operations excellence
Build in quality
- Created data entry forms that have restricted
fields to reduce incoming errors
Create one-piece synchronized flow
- Redesigned the underwriting process to a single
piece, first-in/first-out flow which reduced
turnaround time from hours to minutes
Organize around processes, not tasks
- Created end-to-end accountability for
performance not department/task-based
accountability
Set clear process metrics
- Created a performance scorecard including
timeliness, service quality, and
cost/productivity measures
Manage perfor-mance
Determine stretch targets
- Designed stretch targets based on theoretical
limits, not incremental performance
Tailor incentives and consequences to results
- Tied process metrics to team-level performance
and to team compensation
6MANAGE DEMAND CHANGE SCHEDULES TO MATCH DEMAND
Number of applications
Fax demand
Current schedule capacity
New schedule capacity
140
120
100
80
60
40
20
0
7 AM
8
9
10
11
12 PM
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
7OPTIMIZE PROCESSES, LAYOUT AMD FLOW LISTED
EQUITIES TRADE FLOW
Automated
A
Automated
Eliminated
Manual
Sales/trading
Exchange floor
Middle
Order
Cash-
Daily
PS
Office
Room
iers
PL
Messengers/data
Sales/traders
Block traders
Booth
Brokers
entry operators
1. Enter order into A
4. Acknowledge order
8. Write down order (or print order from B)
A
A
A
5. Write down order on pad
2. Select block trader from pull-down menu
9. Beep 2 or house broker
10. Pick up order at booth
A
Rejected by D
11. Execute order in crowd
3. Send order to trader through A
6. Decide exe-cution strategy
Call order into
D
sales/trader
Executed by D
7. Call order to floor/enter order into D
12. Call verbal to booth
Client
A
A
15. Write down execution check against pad
13. Deliver written to booth
14. Call back execution (or type into B)
A
A
16. Enter execution into A
20. Write floor execution report
21. Pick up floor reports and deliver for punching
17. Send/allocate execution to sales/trader
22. Type floor report into
18. Call execution to client
A
19. Print house execution report
A
Systems
B
A
C
Rolesinvolved
Sales/ traders
Assistant
Booth
House brokers
Key punch
traders
clerks
2 brokers
operators
Block traders
Runners
Support block desk and other products
8IMPACT FROM REDESIGNING LISTED EQUITIES TRADE FLOW
Steps in trade flow process
- Description of opportunity
- Trade flow involves over 70 steps, 40 of which
are manual - Manual steps and the resulting errors requires
hiring costly FTE and limits capacity - Large numbers of systems increasing the level of
complexity and steps - Numerous reconciliations based on multiple
sources of data entry
- Financial impact
- 10 reduction in FTEs
Total steps
Manual steps
-13
- Key success factors
- Walking the process to see each activity
first-hand - Willingness to redesign the process from scratch
rather than generating changes to current system - Make sure the trade flow is right before
introducing technology
-33
- Assumptions
- Service levels to customers would not decline
- The majority of manual steps do not require
complex decisions that cannot be automated
Before
After
Before
After
- Implementation time
- 12-18 months
New design also reduced flow through 18 of
remaining steps
9OPTIMIZE PROCESSES, LAYOUT AMD FLOW UNDERWRITING
ACTIVITY
From convoluted physical flow
PC
Order
x
x
Denial
PC
Printer
Printer
x U/Ws x
x 6 x
PC
PC
Printer
PC
Printer
PC
x
x
x
PC
x
3 regional underwriting queues
PC
x
PC
Fax
Fax
Fax
10OPTIMIZE PROCESSES, LAYOUT AMD FLOW NEW
UNDERWRITING PROCESS
Production flow
Phone U/W
X
X
Single queue
X
X
X
X
PC
PC
10 paces
Printer
Printer
Processors
Fax
11IMPACT OF REORGANIZING UNDERWRITING ACTIVITIES
- Eliminated transportation time, increasing
underwriting capacity by 6 - Moved all clerical work to processors, increasing
underwriting capacity by 11 - Transitioned all first and second decisions to 4
underwriters (and reprioritize tasks), decreasing
through-put time - Created phone underwriters positions (for 2
staff members) to handle all communication and
non-time-sensitive underwriting, allowing other
underwriters to focus exclusively on first and
second decisions
12OPTIMIZE PROCESSES, LAYOUT AMD FLOW CURRENT
CHECK PROCESSING
Checks are transported from branches to
centralized processing site
Each check is read by a proof operator who enters
the amount which is MICR encoded onto the check
The checks are then run through a sorter equipped
with a MICR reader and microfilm camera data
from each check is sent from the sorter to the
banks IP servers
Checks are then prepped and put into trays
13OPTIMIZE PROCESSES, LAYOUT AMD FLOW IMAGE
TECHNOLOGY
Checks are transported from branches to
centralized processing site
Checks are prepped and put into trays
Each check is run through a sorter equipped with
a MICR reader and a digital camera which captures
an image of the front and back of the check
Jane Doe 123 Main Street Anywhere, PA 11111
123
Date
The images are then run through OCR software to
determine the amount the amount and other
infor-mation on the check are sent to the banks
server
For checks where the image cannot be read, a
person at a terminal reviews the image and enters
the amount
14IMPACT OF NEW TECHNOLOGY ON CHECK PROCESSING
Operational lever
Time to get 1 entry through process
Selected changes
FTEs
Optimize/ manage complexity
Improve labor utilization by introducing
cross-training and workcells
Build in quality
Reducing the number of touches will provide fewer
opportunities or errors
Before new process
Since new process
Before new process
Since new process
Organize around processes, not tasks
Team-based accountability improves total system
quality
15THREE OPERATIONS-RELATED THEMES FOR FINANCIAL
INSTITUTIONS
- How to apply manufacturing techniques to
reengineer and rethink the operations processes - How to use offshoring to redefine the traditional
operations location and operating model - How to respond to industry planned next-day trade
settlement (T1) initiative
16RECENT SIGNIFICANT REDUCTION IN INTERACTION COSTS
Advancing technology
Easing regulation
Maturing markets
Supplier base India Billions, revenue
Reduction in bandwidth costs
- Strong financial incentives (Malaysia example)
- 100 tax exemption for 10 years
- No VAT
- Aggressive operating incentives (India example)
- State-sponsored training in soft and domain
specific skills - Privacy protection act to protect offshored
customer data - SLAs between state and telecom providers to
ensure dedicated, high quality supply
Thousands PA for 2 Mbps fiber leased line,
half circuit
CAGR 69
Mar 2000
85 drop in India as state monopoly faces
competition from private satellite providers
Mar 2001
Mar 2002E
Employment in offshoring industry India
Thousands
Philippines
CAGR 53
Mar 2000
India
Ireland
Mar 2001
U.S.
Mar 2002E
Cost of international leased line for India
cost of long distance domestic leased line in the
U.S. costs are for January each year for India,
based on Mumbai or Cochin U.S. half
circuit data is derived by dividing full circuit
data by half Source VSNL press releases
literature search Lynx, Goldman Sachs estimates
McKinsey analysis
17REMOTE SERVICING HAS BECOME A LEVER FOR DRIVING
PERFORMANCE
From physically co-located end-to-end operations
. . .
18THREE DIMENSIONS OF BENEFITS FROM REMOTE SERVICING
Cost
- Dramatic reduction in cost (10-30)
- Increased flexibility permitting greater
capacity/demand balancing - Improved transparency and predictability
Operational improvement
Quality
Time
- 24 x 7 service
- Faster turnaround times from learning curve
benefits - Continuous production possible with effective
synchronization
- More established processes and metrics for
meeting higher performance standards - Access to basic and specialized skills
- Minimized baggage of outdated infrastructure,
e.g., software
19LOCATIONS USED TO REMOTE SERVICE DIFFERENT
SERVICES
- Ireland
- Software development
- Call centers
- Shared services
- India
- Call centers
- Data entry
- Software development
- Engineering design
- Back-office operations
- Philippines
- Software development
- Call centers
- Data entry
- Singapore
- E-commerce hub
- Shared/financial services
- South Africa
- Financial services
Source McKinsey analysis
20LARGE OPPORTUNITIES IN BANKING AND INSURANCE
Areas of greatest opportunity
High (300)
U.S. cost base industry US Billions
Medium (100-300)
Low (0-100)
Low (0-1)
Medium (1-5)
High (5)
Remote serviceable processes share of cost base
Source U.S. Census Bureau team analysis
21INITIAL FOCUS ON LOWER END PROCESSING/DATA ENTRY
ACTIVITIES
Current activities Future activities
Support activities (IT, HR)
Asset management
New business processing
In-force transactions
Customer acquisition
( )
Source Press searches GE Remote services case
study
22EARLY MOVERS ARE ALREADY SEEING BOTTOM-LINE
IMPACT
2001 Forecasted savings (public statements)
Cost savings Millions PA
Current employees
Main activities
340
9,500
Call center, mortgage and insurance, accounting,
bill payment
14
6
20
300
Back-office processing, e.g., payments, account
services, support
2,050
Trade finance, check processing, data entry,
customer services, loans, bills, credit cards,
cash management
70
35
105
6
54
60
Transaction processing, e.g., accounts opening,
mortgage clearing
300
18
17
35
730
Data processing, accounts, check clearing
16
70
54
800
Accounting services, operating services, and call
centers
14
55
41
400
Insurance claim processing, call center
Total pretax operating cost savings based on
labor cost savings for main activities adjusted
for higher other costs (e.g., telecommunication)
not adjusted for startup inefficiencies Source L
iterature search industry interviews team
analysis
23CITIGROUP EXAMPLE
Corporate philosophy/thinking
- Plan to become biggest outsourcing centre within
Citigroup. - Works for over 22 overseas units - current
geographies covered are CEMIA (Eastern Europe,
Africa, South Asia). US and UK operations
recently announced plans to use India as source
base - Ensure at least 10 of total business comes from
third party sources - Operate as a cost centre. Billing is on a cost
plus basis for services offered. Billing per
employee currently is 25,000-30,000/year
Start of year Source Press searches,
Interviews, McKinsey analysis
24AMERICAN EXPRESS EXAMPLE
Background/corporate philosophy
- One of the three global financial resource
centres (FRCs)of AMEX - 100 owned by AMEX. Caters only to AMEX internal
requirements - Key geographies covered are Australia, New
Zealand, Singapore, Japan, Hong Kong, Philippines - Future plans are to
- Expand into higher value added work such as
planning and forecasting, account consolidations,
risk modeling - Increase service lines especially in TRS for
activities such as voice based customer support
etc.
Start of year _at_30000/FTE/year Source
Press searches, Interviews, McKinsey analysis
25HSBC EXAMPLE
Corporate philosophy/thinking
- Created a separate 100 owned subsidiary (HDPI)
of HSBC, UK to provide services - Provides support for select back office
operations of UK and US bank operations - Caters to more than 17 business areas
- Plans to
- Expand into high-end retail banking processes and
expand to wholesale banking processes, and other
branches in Europe, and Australia - Reach 3000 FTEs by 2002
- Add another global processing center in Hyderabad
- Invest additional 10 million
_at_40000/FTE/year Source Interviews, press
searches, McKinsey analysis
26EXAMPLE PROCESS END-TO-END LENDING
Fully remote serviceable Partially remote
serviceable
Origination
Servicing
Payout
Application to closing
Fund disburse-ment to coupon delivery
Description Cost Percent of
total Savings Percent of cost
- Initial customer contact
- Data entry of applications
- Underwriting/ credit decision- ing
- Communication and upsell to applicant
- Document preparation
- Disbursements/ closing
- 45-50
- 15-20
- Review of closing document for compliance
- Booking of document to system
- Funding
- General ledger reconciliation
- 25-30
- 6-10
- Scan and index of file
- File management
- Assist in internal and customer inquiries
- Research of issues
- 10-15
- 15-25
- Processing final payments
- Releasing collateral
- 5-15
- 20-25
Source Team analysis
27FIRMS ADOPTING A UTILITY VIEW TO IDENTIFY
OPPORTUNITIES
28POTENTIAL BARRIERS AND CONCERNS
- Perceived issue/risk
- Reliability of telecom
- Lower quality
- Lower productivity
- Cultural differences
- High bandwidth costs
- Unsustainable labor cost advantage
- High government/ regional risk/ instability
- Current status/method for management
- Reliability has improved over the last 5 years
satellite now at about 99 percent fiber at 95
percent - Significant further improvements are likely
addition of 14 TBps of international capacity
addition of 270,000 miles of domestic fiber - Players experiencing increases in quality due to
lower turnover and higher skill level - Higher productivity and quality can be achieved
through investment in training, compensation and
labor pool rotations between on-shore and
off-shore locations - Bandwidth costs have significantly declined due
to deregulation and investment in capacity - Supply of talent in some locations ensures cost
advantage will exist for 20-30 years - Unlikely given not harmful to domestic
constituencies - Government supports action e.g., U.S. and
Indian government agreed to decouple information
technology trade from politics - Can manage through multiple location operations
(e.g., India and Philippines) - Early development of public relations strategy
General concerns
Infrastructure
Service levels/ responsiveness
Cost advantage
Political/country
Operations and community
29COMMON QUESTION WHERE TO LOCATE?
- Skills
- Availability of frontline skills
- basic/language
- specialized (as appropriate)
- Availability of senior management skill
- Cost
- Telecom/other infrastructure
- Telecom bandwidth and reliability
- Availability of IT service providers
- Reliability of power sources
- Regulatory environment
- Mode of entry
- Fiscal incentives
- Operating area compliances
Attractiveness of a location for remote services
- Political risk
- Stable government
- No domestic conflict
- Legal enforcement
- Bureaucratic transparency and limited corruption
Source Team analysis
30COMMON QUESTION WHAT IS THE APPROPRIATE BUSINESS
MODEL?
At scale
Size of operation
Significant sub-scale
High
Low
Degree of control desired
31THREE OPERATIONS-RELATED THEMES FOR FINANCIAL
INSTITUTIONS
- How to apply manufacturing techniques to
reengineer and rethink the operations processes - How to use offshoring to redefine the traditional
operations location and operating model - How to respond to industry planned next-day trade
settlement (T1) initiative
32WHAT PRODUCTS ARE COVERED BY THE T1 INITIATIVE?
Included in T1 effort
Source Streetside Fixed Income Working Group
(The Bond Market Association, SIA)
33WHAT ARE THE BENEFITS OF MOVING TO T1?
Average daily transactions grew from 150M to
350M in the same period, a CAGR of 24
Source SIA T1 Business Case
34ACHIEVING T1 WILL REQUIRE OVER-COMING
SIGNIFICANT LIMITATIONS OF CURRENT PROCESSING
ENVIRONMENT
35SOLUTIONS PROPOSED BY INDUSTRY (SIA) TO THESE
CHALLENGES
36MODULE 1 CREATE NEW MATCHING UTILITIES
From . . .
. . . to
Allocations
Confirm
Investment manager
Broker/dealer
Investment manager
Broker/dealer
Matching utility (central point of reference)
Confirm
Confirm
Affirm
Confirm
Custodian
Custodian
Affirm
Depository
Depository
37SIA ESTIMATES OF T1 INVESTMENTS AND COST SAVINGS
- Majority of T1 investment and benefits fall on
market participants, particularly broker-dealers,
who also gain vast majority of cost savings - Payback period of 3 years expected with a 28 IRR
on total investment - 99 of total investment within four walls
focusing on internal changes (e.g., IT
infrastructure and applications) - Similarly, 78 of investment focused on two of
ten building blocks internal STP and
standardizing reference data and protocols
Note Based on surveys interviews and industry
data. Over 200 surveys were sent to different
industry institutions across participant types.
More detailed investment surveys were sent to
targeted brokers/dealers, asset managers, and
custodians to provide a better estimation of T1
investments Source SIA T1 Business Case
38ECONOMICS OF T1 BY PARTICIPANT
Millions
Estimated T1 investment for large participant
Payback period Years
Comments
- B/O operations major cost for brokers/dealers and
requires significant investment for T1 - Brokers/dealers making majority of investment,
but receiving largest benefit - Investment likely for large brokers/dealers given
short payback period and business importance of
B/O capabilities - For medium and small brokers/dealers, however,
outsourcing B/O more attractive due to economies
of scale in investment
Brokers/ dealers
60-100
- BO operations small portion of costs and not
perceived as core activity - T1 likely viewed as compliance event
- Although investment per company less than
brokers/dealers or custodians, relative savings
even less resulting in longer payback period - Despite little economics incentive for asset
managers, industry needs their cooperation to
move to T1
Asset managers
40
- B/O operations important cost area and key
business capability for custodian requiring large
T1 investment per participant - Significant investment and benefits shared by
small number of players with short payback period - Large role in institutional trades combined with
better risk management provide strong incentives
to make investments required by T1
Custodians
60
Source SIA T1 Business Case
39T1 IMPLICATIONS FOR BROKER-DEALERS
Approach to back-office partnering
Joint
Individual
Option 3 Share common tasks and resources for T1
Option 1 Implement changes to meet T1
compliance requirements
T1 as compliance event
Approach to back-office redesign
Option 4 Share/create a single back office
processing platform
Option 2 Leverage and extend T1 changes to
broader redesign program
T1 as catalyst for broader design
40POTENTIAL INDIVIDUAL APPROACHES FOR BROKER-DEALERS
Individual changes (no JV)
Option 1 Implement changes required to stay in
business after T1
T1 as compliance event
Approach to back-office redesign
Option 2 Leverage and extend T1 changes to
broader redesign program
T1 as catalyst for broader design
41POTENTIAL JOINT APPROACHES FOR BROKER-DEALERS
Approach
Individual
Joint
Option 1 Implement changes required to stay in
business after T1
Option 3 Share common tasks and resources for T1
T1 as compliance event
Approach to back-office redesign
Option 2 Leverage and extend T1 changes to
broader redesign program
Option 4 Share/create a single back office
processing platform
T1 as catalyst for broader design
42POTENTIAL END GAMES