The Retail Banking Group
Transcription
The Retail Banking Group
Retail Banking Group Shinsei Analyst Day 2005 October 6, 2005 Table of Contents CREATING A UNIQUE BANKING EXPERIENCE ------------------------- 2 CUSTOMERS --------------------------------------------------------------------------- 13 CHANNELS --------------------------------------------------------------------------- 18 PRODUCTS ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 28 STAFF ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 32 IMAGE -------------------------------------------------------------------------- 34 KEY MEASURES CONCLUSION ------------------------------------------------------------------- 45 ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 53 1 CREATING A UNIQUE BANKING EXPERIENCE March 2000 – Where We Started Shinsei Bank is formed when the Long Term Credit Bank (LTCB) is privatized. The Old LTCB Individual Banking was: Funding engine for corporate loan business Sold debentures Not defined as a profit-earning business proposition Had no need to focus on customer service Customer base: Concentration of high net worth individuals 65% of customers over age of 50 Image: upscale bank for wealthy individuals to park retirement money 24 branches across Japan, adjunct to centers of corporate banking, mainly Tokyo and Osaka 3 Retail Banking in Japan An under-served market ATM services are inconvenient and expensive Most banks do not offer 24hx7days ATM access Banks may charge up to 210 yen per withdrawal Cumbersome and difficult – Lots of forms and waiting in queues The post office still dominates Very low penetration of investment products 4 Shinsei Style A set of values that defines Shinsei in customer terms. Responsive Accessible Always available Always understands and when I need it anticipates my needs [24hx 7days] Delivers value Easy & convenient Offers the best solution for me Is easy to deal with Banking that ‘wows’ Overall theme: Empowerment (Customers manage and control their banking needs) 5 Accessible – 24hx7days 6 Easy and Convenient - Extended Hours & Saturdays 7 Responsive - Instant Account Opening 8 Delivers Value NO FEE - ATMS & Funds Transfers* * Customers with a/c balance of ¥10M or more at the end of the previous month are allowed to make domestic fund transfers through PowerDirect free of charge (refundable) up to 30 times per month. Otherwise, up to 5 domestic fund transfers are free (refundable). 9 The story so far Despite the backdrop of a struggling economy we have successfully established a unique and thriving retail banking business: 9 A great brand franchise – with almost limitless potential 9 A tremendous team of people at all levels 9 A proven and flexible “bricks and clicks” business model 9 Robust and constantly improving business processes 9 Technology advantage – the ability to aggregate risk on a real-time basis 9 A fast growing customer base 9 Strong revenue growth 9 A sustainable profit-growth trajectory 10 We have chosen how we want to position ourselves A Mega bank? A Niche bank? A “New kind of bank” 9 Totally customer centric ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ Informed Responsive Accessible A trusted business partner 9 Big but not mega 9 A leader not a follower 9 Fast and flexible 11 Vision and Mission OUR VISION We are creating a new type of Bank OUR MISSION To be the Only One for our Customers OUR VALUE We Care! OUR MOTTO Our Customers’ success is our success 12 CUSTOMERS Customers - Key success factors 9 Acquisition momentum - we have a compelling value proposition 9 Efficient acquisition - remote channels to acquire customers more efficiently 9 Targeted acquisition – segmentation/relationship potential based 9 PowerWelcome and Customer Development process - to optimize customer activity 9 Customer Care – to improve customer loyalty and retention 14 Retail Bank Profile as of June 2005 Mass Retail 100% 0.3% 90% 16.5% 2.6% 4.4% 0.0% Mass Affluent HNW 5.5% 23.5% 80% 70% 63.9% 61.8% 60% 50% 40% 95.6% 67.9% 83.2% 30% 20% 33.5% 32.7% 10% 8.5% 0% Customers Assets Liabilities 15 Off B/S Revenue (FY2004) Customer Segmentation 9 Created 7 demographic segments based upon internal analysis of the customer base 9 Split by age bands to improve targeting within the segments 9 74 sub-segments in total 9 Going forward we will add a psychographic dimension to the segments (eg Retirees Baby Boomers) 9 They will be continuously refined as we learn with the benefit of external input 16 Customer Current Value Customer Segmentation Q1 (Y101K+) Maintain Optimize Optimize Optimize Optimize Q2 (Y51-100K) Maintain Optimize Optimize Optimize Optimize Q3 (Y21-50K) Maintain Cultivate Cultivate Cultivate Cultivate Q4 (Y11-20K) Cost Manage/ Exit Cultivate Cultivate Cultivate Cultivate Q5 (Y0-10K) Cost Manage/ Exit Cultivate Cultivate Cultivate Cultivate Low/ Medium Medium Medium/ High High Low Relationship Potential Indicator 17 CHANNELS Channels – Key success factors 9 “Bricks and Clicks” – the Customer chooses 9 Physical channels y Creating a “sales culture” y Strong sales process management y Focus on consultative sales 9 Remote channels y y y y The Internet is “strategic” Full functionality & capability Growth in transaction (incl Mutual Funds) Growth in income 19 Expanding Presence Financial Centers (SFC) 9 Provide full banking services focusing on consultation to mass affluent customer segment Platinum Center 9 Develop and enhance relationships with wealthy customers ATMs 9 deploy in strategic locations to build brand visibility and minimize off-us transactions BankSpots 9 “mini-branches”, primarily in Tokyo and Osaka, providing both self-service and consultation Physical Distribution Remote Distribution BANKSPOT ATMs PowerCall PowerDirect 20 Financial Center Platinum Center Current Branch Network 30 Financial Centers provide nationwide coverage of major metropolitan centers Carefully selecting new locations with the highest commercial/business concentration and easy access from terminal stations Shinjuku South Shinsaibashi Ginza Corridor GinzaKyobashi Co-located with Starbucks Cafe 21 Sales Productivity – Revenue (Annual Revenue/Sales Staff : JPY Million) 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 FY2002 FY2003 22 FY2004 Productivity : Share of Door - Mutual Funds Shinsei Bank sales staff are far more productive than competitors – A common theme across product categories The Share of Door Index compares Market share with share of branches Efficiency Index 4 3.35 3 2 1.89 1.3 1 0.63 0.49 0 0 100 200 Shinsei Bank 300 400 BOTM SMBC Source: Institute for Financial Affairs Research Center FY2004 23 500 600 UFJ 700 Mizuho 800 # of Branch Remote Channels Prior to June 2001, we had no web site, no Internet banking, and a phone center that operated from 9-5 on weekdays only Since then, we have largely surpassed the local competition 9 24x7x365 telephone banking y Product sales y Balance inquiries y Customer service 9 PowerDirect Internet Banking y Real-time balances and transaction data y Ability to transact almost all products y Free funds transfer service (up to 5 or 30/month)—best offer in the market Remote channels—the Internet and phone—are now primary channels for customers to open new accounts and do transactions 24 Customer Contact Rapid customer growth has been possible essentially through remote channels. 6,000,000 Web 5,000,000 Call Center ATM Branches 4,000,000 3,000,000 2,000,000 1,000,000 0 Mar-02 Sep-02 Mar-03 Sep-03 Mar-04 Sep-04 Mar-05 Apr-05 May-05 Jun-05 6 Month Average 25 Monthly Data Jul-05 Acquisition 450,000 400,000 Remote Channels Branch 350,000 300,000 250,000 200,000 150,000 100,000 50,000 - FY2001 FY2002 26 FY2003 FY2004 Sales Volumes (Billion Yen) 1,200 1,000 Remote Channels Branch 800 600 400 200 0 FY2003 FY2004 27 PRODUCTS Products – Key success factors 9 Needs based profiling 9 Solutions based 9 Continuous Innovation – eg Powered One Plus/Powered Teiki Plus 9 Speed to market 29 Philosophy “IDEA-FULL” Proposals that say, “Why didn’t someone think of this before?” Simple and easy to use Customers transact on their own Covers a wide range of risk and tenor preferences, a mix of currencies and instruments (e.g. deposits, mutual funds and annuities) More complex products are available to sophisticated customers (e.g. hedge funds, structured products) A strong sales process backs each offering 30 High Product Offerings - Japan Trend Select <Bull> - Japan Trend Select <Bear> - Japan Bond Bear - INVESCO OTC&Develop Open - HSBC India Open - Global High Income Stock - Fidelity Japan Growth - Daiwa value equity - 225Index(Nikkou) - 225Index(T&D) - W.Pincus - JF Asia active - HSBC China - Platinum Life - New Adagio - Emerging Sovereign Open - High Yield Corporate Bond Open - Schroders Equity - Fidelity US-REIT A - Fidelity US-REIT B - PowerChance - Daiwa J-REIT - Fidelity Balance - J-World CB - Life Plan 70 - Life Plan 50 - MSCI Index world portfolio - Foreign Currency Time Deposite - PowerLink -FX- - SPJT - GS US neutral - GS Japan Neutral - CITI Australia - Europian Income - Nissay /Putnam Income - Galileo - Life plan 30 - Global Sovereign - Sirius Harmony(5) Middle - Dual Currency Deposit - Foreign Currency Savings - Upside10 - Manu Solution - Sirius Harmony(7/10) - ManuSolution Low Risk - Securities - Power Pocket Overdraft - MMF - Yen SA - Yen Savings Time Deposit Short <3Years - New Adagio Power Life Mass freedom Sonata - PowerSmart HL - Powered One Plus - PowerLink225 - Yen Time Deposit 3Years< Medium < Tenor 31 7Years 7years< Long STAFF “Our People Are The Difference” Career Excitement Center Branch Training 90 Player/trainers Winning the Talent War Sales Skills daily “We hire customer focused people, and train the daylights out of them” Innovative Fridays Internal Communications Shinsei Business School Shinsei Daily Celebration April 2004 Daily Sales Call Sales Management Daily “Why Shinsei?” Management & Leadership Color Your Life e-letter Sales Skills Weekly Power Go Solutions National Monthly & Qtr Sales 33 IMAGE Brand Awareness In the 4 years since new retail banking business launch, brand awareness on Shinsei Bank has significantly increased as compared with the other competitors, and reached 97% in June 2005. 2001.11 2002.06 2003.06 2004.07 2004.12 2005.06 100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 Shinsei Bank Citibank Sony Bank Source: Asatsu-DK Survey 35 BOTM Brand Image Perception Findings through Awareness and Image Survey Shinsei Bank is perceived as unique and innovative, and responsive to customer needs. Shinsei BOTM 97% 99% 81% 92% Stable Business/ Sound Management 2% 48% 1% 7% Good/Favorable Image 2% 41% 1% 11% Innovative 29% 3% 16% 10% Unique 20% 6% 13% 11% Advanced Internet Service 22% 10% 4% 9% 8% 3% 2% 3% 8% 5% 3% 3% (Score as of June 2005) Brand Awareness Will choose even if branch located in the distance Responsive to Customer Needs Source: Asatsu-DK Survey 36 Tokyo Star Citibank CUSTOMER AND MEDIA RECOGNITION The Asian Banker The Asian Banker Best Retail Banks by Country 9 Japan – Shinsei Bank 9 Hong Kong – HSBC (Hong Kong) 9 Indonesia – Bank Central Asia 9 Singapore – DBS Bank 9 Vietnam – ANZ Bank Awards for Excellence in Products and Processes 9 Best Retail Banking Branch Innovation Award – Shinsei Bank 37 CUSTOMER AND MEDIA RECOGNITION Retail Banker International Retail Banker International Benchmark intelligence on consumer financial services Recognising the best in the world Published: December 8th, 2004 Issue: Retail Banker International - RBI524 The winners of RBI’s Retail Bank of the Year awards were announced during the Retail Banking Forum in London on 7 December. In this special feature, RBI lists the winners of all the awards and profiles the victors in the major national and sub-regional markets around the world Country and Sub-Regional Award Winners 。 Retail Bank of the Year – Japan Shinsei Bank A year of strong retail banking growth was capped by Shinsei’s acquisition of Aplus, one of Japan’s leading consumer finance companies. The deal is part of Shinsei’s strategic plan to actively expand its non-bank business and at the same time to generate higher returns and profitability in each of its three key business lines - retail banking, non-bank consumer finance and institutional banking.As a result of the deal, Aplus - which has a nationwide distribution network - has become a leading component of Shinsei’s "non-bank" business. The main task of Aplus has been to enhance the competitiveness of the group’s shopping credit unit - at the same time, the deal will lead to significant cost savings when a common IT platform will be implemented using Shinsei’s technology.Apart from the Aplus acquisition, Shinsei boosted net income by 25.2 percent in fiscal year 2003 (which ended in March 2004) by diversifying its revenue sources and lowering its reliance on interest income - some 56 percent of total customer funding comes from retail customers - up 6 percent on fiscal 2002. Net profits were up 5 percent on the previous financial year.Non-performing loans dropped 58.3 percent, and there was also a corresponding drop in bad debt provisions. Return on equity for fiscal 2003 stood at 9.4 percent, up from 8.1 percent in fiscal 2002. 38 CUSTOMER AND MEDIA RECOGNITION Nikkei Survey on Financial Institutions Nikkei Survey on Financial Institutions - Consumers in Three Largest Metropolitan areas (Tokyo・Osaka・ Nagoya) Shinsei bank 「Ranked first by users’ satisfaction for the 2 years running」 (2004 / 2005) The year 2005 •「Consulting service ・ Teller Counter service・Business hours」 (1st) •「Products・Services」 (1st) •Ranked in the Top 3 in all the items 39 CUSTOMER AND MEDIA RECOGNITION Survey on Financial Institutions Ranked first by users’ satisfaction survey (Consumers in Three Largest Metropolitan areas) 20’s 30’s 40’s 50’s 60’s 城南信用金庫 1st 2nd イーバンク銀行 Sony Bank イーバンク銀行 城南信用金庫 3rd 東京三菱銀行 ジャパンネット銀行 東京三菱銀行 4th UFJ銀行 5th 三井住友銀行 イーバンク銀行 ジャパンネット銀行 東京三菱銀行 城南信用金庫 .The Nikkei Kinyu (The Nihon Keizai Shimbun), September 6&7, 2005 40 東京三菱銀行 東京三菱銀行 CITIBANK 住友信託銀行 郵便貯金 郵便貯金 CUSTOMER AND MEDIA RECOGNITION Next to Disney Land / Disney Sea! Ranked Second by ’Users’ “Consumer Relation Index” Rank 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 Brand Name Tokyo Disney Land / Sea SHINSEI BANK Tokyu Hands Mos Burger Louis Vuitton Franc franc (Furniture & sundries) Y okohama Zoological Gardens Zoorasia Afternoon Tea TEAROOM Seven-Eleven The Daiso - 100YEN PLAZA Singapore Airlines Japan Post office Henri Charpentier (Confectionery) The Imperial Hotel Hermes Bvlgari Coach Rolex Starbucks Coffee MUJI Score Rank 87.68 83.26 82.60 81.95 77.72 76.87 76.21 75.99 75.54 73.07 72.38 72.10 71.45 71.21 70.58 70.28 70.08 68.84 68.54 68.19 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 Brand Name Bakery Restaurant Saint-Marc Freshness Burger Wacoal SHOP99 Seijo Ishii (Supermarket) Burberry one's (Curtain) Japan Air Lines (JAL) DUO (Volkswagen dealer) Excel Hotel Tokyu Beard Papa's (Confectionery) Sony Plaza All Nippon Airways (ANA) a.v.v (Apparel) Kinokuniya (Book store) ACTUS (Furniture) Create Super Drugstore Subaru Store Tiffany Triumph (Lingerie) Research on “Store & Service Brand 500” by Nikkei Research 41 Score 68.03 67.42 67.06 67.03 66.70 66.61 66.46 66.22 66.13 66.09 65.97 65.96 65.92 65.42 65.23 64.74 64.40 64.33 64.19 64.05 Image 42 Color Your Life SHARE Information, dreams, worries, aspiration, future… with our colleagues, customers, families CARE Respond flexibly, speedily, hospitably, based on others’ needs “IDEA-FULL” Proposals that say, “Why didn’t someone think of this before?” WAKUWAKU Exhilarating at every contact. 43 “When I am feeling sad, or things don’t go my way, I always look up into the sky. The big sky makes my troubles seem so small This encourages me to paint my dreams across the big blue sky” 44 KEY MEASURES Customer Database We have achieved 1.5 Million customer mark. (Trillion Yen) # of customers 4.00 1,600,000 Total AUMs 3.50 1,400,000 # of customers 3.00 1,200,000 FY2001 FY2002 FY2003 46 FY2004 June March December September June March 0 December 0.00 September 200,000 June 0.50 March 400,000 December 1.00 September 600,000 June 1.50 March 800,000 December 2.00 September 1,000,000 June 2.50 FY2005 AUM Composition Debentures are being replaced by yen deposits and risk products Debenture Yen Deposit Structured Depo. + FCY + MF + VA/FA 100% 90% 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% Apr-98 Apr-97 Apr-00 Apr-99 Mar-02 Apr-01 Sep-02 Jun-02 Mar-03 Dec-02 47 Sep-03 Jun-03 Dec-03 Sep-04 Mar-04 Jun-04 Dec-04 Mar-05 Jun-05 Cross Sell Through active cross selling we have doubled the number of customers holding risk products in a year # of customers 400,000 350,000 300,000 250,000 200,000 150,000 100,000 50,000 0 Apr-03 Jun-03 Sep-03 Dec-03 Mar-04 48 Jun-04 Sep-04 Dec-04 Mar-05 Jun-05 PowerSmart Housing Loan (Billion Yen) 350 14,000 Monthly Fundings (Billion Yen) 300 12,000 # of customers 250 10,000 200 8,000 150 6,000 100 4,000 50 2,000 49 05 n- 5 Ju M ar -0 04 4 De c- p0 04 Se n- 4 Ju M ar -0 03 3 De c- p0 Se 03 n- 3 Ju M ar -0 02 2 De c- p0 Se nJu -0 ar M 02 0 2 0 Revenue Growth (Million Yen) 40,000 30,000 20,000 10,000 0 FY2002 FY2003 50 FY2004 Expense Growth (Million Yen) 40,000 30,000 20,000 10,000 0 FY2002 FY2003 51 FY2004 OBP (Margin) Growth (Million Yen) 10,000 5,000 0 FY2002 FY2003 (5,000) (10,000) 52 FY2004 In Conclusion In just 4 years we have successfully established a “New Kind of Bank” Looking forward, market conditions are increasingly positive Shinsei Retail is ideally positioned for rapid growth: 9 We have a unique and clearly defined business model which cannot be easily copied by our competition 9 Our brand proposition gives us differentiation and competitive advantage 9 We are centered around the customer in everything we do 9 We will continue to innovate and lead the market We know what we have to do to be successful and we have clear strategies for all key aspects of the business: 9 9 9 9 9 Customers Brand/Marketing Products Channels People Retail is a key component of the overall Shinsei strategy Our financial results are strong Shareholder returns from Retail will continue to grow rapidly 53