Tasya Rahman - GAMAICEB Manuscript Rev
Tasya Rahman - GAMAICEB Manuscript Rev
Tasya Rahman - GAMAICEB Manuscript Rev
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Corresponding Name: Tasya Rahman
Email: tasyrahman@gmail.com
Author
Institution: Universitas Bakrie
Faculty: Department of Management, Faculty of Economics and Social
Science
Status: Student S1
Contact Email: tasyrahman@gmail.com
Mobile Phone/ WA: +62-815-7338-8688
Other authors
Name University Email Mobile
Phone
Imbang Jaya Universitas Bakrie ijmangkuto@bakrie.ac.id +62-811-
Mangkuto 9038-17
THE FUTURE OF BANKING INSTITUTIONS WITH THE RISE OF FINANCIAL
TECHNOLOGY: A CONTENT ANALYSIS
Tasya Rahman
Faculty of Economics and Social Studies, Universitas Bakrie, Indonesia
(tasyrahman@gmail.com)
ABSTRACT
Introduction/Main Objectives: The purpose of this study is to identify the risks and benefits of fintech
and interpreting the predicted future of banks with the rise of fintech by scrutinizing the contents of the
Big 4 and consulting firms’ annual fintech and banking industry reports and the contents of blog posts
from global and Indonesian platforms to better represent the market. Background Problems: Over the
past few years, fintech has proven themselves to break the entry barrier of the banking industry as their
adoption rate continued to grow rapidly and it has triggered the discussion of banking industry’s future
as fintech competitor. Novelty: Thus far there is little to no independent study that explores this issue
except the annual reports released by the Big 4 or notable consulting firms to which the methodology is
undisclosed and carry a potential of conflict of interest. This study combines the reports with the voice
of the consumers from blog posts to minimize biases in predicting the future of the banking industry.
Research Methods: This study utilized content analysis method and the contents are drawn from the
reports published no later than 2014 to maintain relevancy of findings and from blog posts by utilizing
Google SEO. The contents are then analysed through NVivo 12 software. Finding/Results: The result
identified convenience as the most important benefit to fintech adopters and they viewed operational
risk as the most threatening one. The possible futures that banks can explore are digitalizing their
products and service and partnership, acquisition, or investment to fintech companies. Conclusion:
Despite the rise of fintech, the final finding of this study reveals that banks will not cease to exist in
many years to come. This study, although limited in scope, will be of interest to any academic
researchers and industry practitioners who are seeking to better understand the nature of banks and
fintech.
Keywords: Bank, Fintech, Content Analysis, Disruption
JEL Classification: G20, M13
INTRODUCTION
The banking industry historically has been the most resilient industry to ever be disrupted. With its
complex regulations, the industry expected to withstand its glory and immunity towards changes.
According to an interview conducted by Accenture in 2010, no influential banks’ executives believed that
the industry would be digitally disrupted. They believed in the impregnable nature of their business model
and that fast-following strategies would remain the most successful (Skan, Julian, 2015). Over the span of
nine years since the study was conducted, the overriding belief that complex regulations and risky market
would threaten new players to enter the banking industry ceased to exist.
In 2018, KPMG recorded USD 57.9 billion investment in financial technology (fintech) globally,
sealing the deal with 875 ventures (Blackman, 2018). This number has increased significantly from just
USD 38.1 in 2017, as reported by KPMG. Out of USD 57.9 billion invested within last year, around USD
30.8 billion was funded by Venture Capital (VC). The VC industry specializes in investing in innovative
companies with a huge potential for growth. As stated by Ian Sigalow, co-founder and partner at
Greycroft VC, their fintech portfolio is also more global than other sectors they invest in. This is because
there are opportunities to achieve billion-dollar outcomes in fintech, even in countries that are much
smaller than the United States and that is not mutually exclusive in many other sectors (Tabatai, 2019).
VC faith towards fintech firms has come to fruition because backed by venture capitalists that provide not
only financing but also mentorship, strategic guidance, network access, and other support (Strebulaev &
Gornall, 2015), the fintech industry has proven to topple down the market-entry barrier due to high
adoption and engagement rate by the market itself, reaching 64% of global adoption rate in 2019 (Bull et
al., 2019). Protection of complex regulations might now become a false sense of security for those in the
banking industry.
EY Global Fintech Adoption Index revealed that the strength of fintech lies in their more attractive
rates and fees, easy account setup, access to different and more innovative products and services, better
experience, better product features and quality of service (Bull et al., 2019). From the five categories of
fintech; money transfer and payments, budgeting and financial planning, savings and investment,
borrowing, and insurance (2019), borrowing, or better-known as peer-to-peer (P2P) lending in fintech
industry, is the service that possesses almost all of the strength of fintech. P2P lending is appealing
because it is relatively easy to setup an account, granting an overall better experience and quality of
service. In comparison, to set up and approve a credit card or loan, banking institution usually takes 2-3
weeks processing time, meanwhile fintech financing and lending service promises one-day and even 1-3
minutes processing time and approval. The processing time is a crucial deciding factor and its speed is
threatening the banking industry as many have drifted away from banks to rely on fintech financing and
lending service for its convenience. As per September 2019, Bank Indonesia via Otoritas Jasa Keuangan
(OJK) recorded a total of IDR 5,580 trillion loans have been provided by banks . At the exact same time
of the month and year, OJK reported fintech lending have loaned IDR 60.41 trillion throughout the year.
Fintech lending indeed has grown significantly over the past five years but amount-wise, it only makes up
for 1.08% of retail banks’ total loan. Thus, the declining interest income for European, North American,
and APAC banks throughout 2014 to 2017 as reported by BCG may have other contributing factors other
than the rise of fintech (Grasshoff et al., 2019).
Now banking institutions may argue that the slow processing time is necessary to thoroughly examine
and manage credit risks, hence convenience of applying for a credit is not how banks play. It could be
hard for fintech to fight back when a case such as the likes of UangTeman that must stop its lending
service in June 2019 due to poorly managed capital becomes more prevalent in the fintech industry. And
yet, despite banks may be heavily regulated and thus risks are supposedly well-managed, they still have a
gaping loophole in their competitive advantages to attack their fintech challengers. Whilst fintech may
fall short in terms of managing credit risks or funds, fintech service mobile-phone payment is far ahead
on the run and banks have not yet pulled up a fight. Despite all the complications fintech bring, it is still
worth noting that the industry will likely determine which banks will survive through the next decade
(Grasshoff et al., 2019).
From the background above, this study aims to explore the emerging world of fintech and its
implications and influences towards the future of the banking institutions by scrutinizing the contents of
annual fintech reports from Big 4 and reputable consulting firms and blog posts.
LITERATURE REVIEW
1. Financial Technology
KPMG defines fintech as a portmanteau of finance and technology. The term refers to businesses who are
using technology to operate outside of traditional financial services business models to change how
financial services are offered. Fintech also includes firms that use technology to improve the competitive
advantage of traditional financial services firms and the financial functions and behaviours of consumers
and enterprises alike (KPMG, 2019). In 2017, Ernst & Young argued that the changes fintech bring to
how financial services are offered will enable, enhance and even disrupt financial services (EY, 2017).
That argument resonates with McKinsey’s belief that with fintech union comes both disruption and
synergies (Galvin et al., 2018). With their definition of fintech, EY embraces fintech as an industry that
includes not only early-stage start-ups and new entrants, but also scale-ups, maturing firms and even non-
financial services firms (EY, 2017), putting a good faith towards the incumbents that they may once again
rise as the dominant power.
2. Retail Banking: Competition of The Future
The position of banks, particularly retail banking in the market, has been challenged by the rise of
financial technology companies that provide similar financial services to retail banks’ products and
services but with a better economic benefit, convenience, and service experience in general. Keith Pond
(2017) noted that the risks to retail banks are ever changing and ever increasing in complexity, with
threats arising from areas as diverse as criminality, competition, repayment capacity and technology. In
his analysis of retail banking competition using Michael Porter five-forces model of competition, he
recognised the threat from new entrants. Retail banking markets such as payments markets can be
threatened by new entrants who specialize in one aspect of the business (Pond, 2017) and that proves to
be true as fintech mobile-payment and transaction service is dominating the others.
In a discussion of whom will win the competition of the future, EY attempted peace by arguing that
unless banks and fintech firms get better at working together, neither will reap the full benefits of
innovation (EY, 2017). Lex Zhao, an early stage investor in One Way Ventures, also disregarded the
concept of a one-true winner because the reality is that both sides need each other just as much as they
need to compete with one another (Zhao, 2018) – and therefore peace can be compromised. This scenario
singles out the potential future of banking industry to operate alongside with fintech providers. This study
will explore the other possible future for the banking industry.
3. Fintech Adoption Intention
The process of adopting or using a service is divided into three stages: pre-encounter stage, encounter
stage, and post-encounter stage (Lovelock & Wirtz, 2010). During pre-encounter stage, Lovelock and
Wirtz identified information search as one of the elements that contributes to the first stage of Service
Consumption Model (2010). Kotler and Keller (2016) also incorporated information search into their
Five-Stage Model of Consumer Buying Process that they acknowledged as the starting point for
understanding consumer behaviour towards a product or service. From the perspective of consumers, the
primary role of information search is to comprehend or gain better understanding of a product or service
to make a well-informed choice so as to reduce the risk. Lovelock and Wirtz (2010) also implied that
information search could lift uncertainties about the outcome of a service that positively correlates to the
level of perceived risk consumers theoretically face during pre-purchase stage because Kozup (2017)
concluded that perceived risk is inherent in consumer product evaluations and decisions.
Johnson (2003 cited in Fischer 2017) argued that to understand the risk in context, consumers also
need to understand the perception of the positive impact because Alkahami and Slovic (1994) theory of
inverse relationship between perceived risk and perceived benefit revealed that there is a negative
correlation between the two. Although perception can be subjective, Stone and Winter (1985 cited in
Kozup 2017) argued that the distinction between objective and perceived risk and benefit is meaningless
because during information processing, concepts are not only dealt with to the degree perceived but also
most probably ‘exist’ to that degree (p. 12).
METHOD, DATA, AND ANALYSIS
1. Research Method
To date, there is little to no independent research that studies the potential future of the banking industry
in respect to the rise of fintech. The Big 4 and some notable consulting firms regularly release reports on
how the two industries’ growth affect each other with each of the report carrying a potential bias or
conflict of interest. However, their reports are still the best source currently available to understand the
competition of banks and fintech from a wider perspective as the general public’s knowledge of the two is
still fairly limited. Therefore, this study aims to compile the data and discussions from the report to draw
a possible scenario of the banking industry’s future and attempts to incorporate consumers’ opinions in
the form of blog posts into the data set to minimize biases and the conflict interests of the reports. Hence,
this study is categorized as a qualitative descriptive study leveraging on secondary data. The descriptive
qualitative studies are generally characterized by simultaneous data collection and analysis of a specific
event under study. Due to this characteristic, the nature of the data is likely to be unstructured (Lambert &
Lambert, 2012). Thus, content analysis method is used to analyze the data because of its ability to
produce a systematic and comprehensive summary or overview of the data set as a whole. Content
analysis is based on examination of repeatedly appeared data. These data then are systematically
identified across the data set and grouped together by a means of coding system. The base of developing
the coding system is the unit analysis and the researcher has to decide on the unit of analysis (Silverman,
2004), therefore deep explorations by the author are mandatory to craft hypothesis regarding the
phenomenon being studied (Indahsari, 2017).
An iterative process of content analysis is followed. The reports and blog posts are coded using two
units of analysis: the aspects of adoption intention model as depicted in the conceptual framework and
positive and negative connotations of the sentences towards the future of banking industry with the rise of
fintech. To analyze word frequency, the full text of all the reports and selected blog posts are run
separately for the purpose of comparing. Words commonly used in constructing sentences such as “after”,
“the”, “I”, and other words that would not contribute to a meaningful interpretation should be eliminated
(Indahsari, 2017). Plural and singular words are also merged. NVivo 12, a software for qualitative data
analysis, was used to perform content analysis of the reports and blog posts data. Figure 1. outlines how
the research is conducted.
Content
Review
Site Analysis
Blogposts
Preliminary Analysis
(NVivo Coding)
Research
Findings
After content review or site analysis, the data is then analyzed through the first analysis technique:
preliminary analysis. Preliminary analysis is conducted by purposely grouping frequently appeared data
and using the groups as a coding system. The code is known as unit analysis and in this study, the unit
analysis is tailored to each of the purpose of the study: identifying fintech adoption intention and
predicting the future of the banking industry. Figure 2 displays the unit analysis for fintech adoption
intention.
Economic Benefit
Perceived Convenience
Benefit
Operational Risk
According to preliminary analysis, operational risk turned out to be the highest risk of fintech with
47.46% domination. The challenge of viable business model, growing competition from within financial
and non-financial industry, poor risk management, delivering the promise of innovation and reliable
services, and the most recent one is the question if automation of credit scoring really is the best outcome
and if it holds the best interest of the consumers in mind. The discussion of operational risk generally
leads to the question of sustainability of the firms according to preliminary analysis references.
However, Word Frequency Analysis from perceived risk coding revealed that the word “regulatory”
and “regulators” significantly appeared, followed by the word “governance”, and “protection”, signalling
that regulations and poor or lack of protection are the biggest risk of fintech that the consumers perceived
and not operational risk. Table 3 presents the NVivo result of common concerns of using fintech.
Table 3. Perceived Risk Word Frequency Analysis
Word Length Count Similar Words
regulatory 10 11 regulatory
technological, technologies,
technology 10 11
technology
increasing 10 7 increasing, increasingly
regulation, regulations,
regulators 10 6
regulators
governance 10 5 governance, government
effectively 11 4 effectively
protection 10 4 protection
challengers, challenges,
challengers 11 3
challenging
Legal risk is indeed always become the main topic of the discussion regarding fintech risks since the
threat of new regulations may limit its growth or even exterminate some of its existence – and operation –
altogether. The most vulnerable service to legal risk is P2P lending with their issue of loan sharking
business due to their exorbitant interest rate with no ceiling rate to protect the consumers as a result of
credit-scoring system. The issue has first concerned regulators, particularly in Indonesia with OJK, in the
early days of P2P lending in 2018 that the lending platform may actually be a loan sharking business
disguised in a façade of technology. If regulators were concerned, it is expected that they immediately
establish a regulation that protects all parties involved in P2P lending practice but that is unfortunately not
the case. Thus far there is only one regulation for P2P lending business established in 2016 by OJK itself.
But not only the POJK 77/2016 regulation is very much outdated, the content barely grazes over the
surface. Prevention and mitigation of risks is singlehandedly transferred to the platforms and therefore
regulators bear no liability of failures. In the end, instead of protecting the consumers, the government is
laying them bare for the vultures.
Fintech needs to be equally regulated as banking institutions with a respective regulation to their
products or services with an exceptionally strict regulation for the lending business. Fintech P2P lending
serves the subprime and the underbanked, a very sensitive target market which has triggered the financial
crisis in 2008. Over the years of fintech P2P lending, their service has indeed proven to work and even to
the extent of driving a country’s economy through financial inclusion, including Indonesia according to
PwC, but learning from the Great Recession where opportunity is given to someone or to a group of
people who actually cannot afford it will create more disasters rather than benefits to society and the
economy. Therefore it is crucial for regulators to take fintech seriously and equally regulate it as banking
institutions because it contributes to the rise and the downfall of financial industry the same way banking
institutions do, so to let them play under the regulation radar – not entirely unregulated but still not
sufficiently regulated – may trigger another history of financial devastation.
2. Perceived Benefit
Unlike perceived risk result, perceived benefit result showed a consistent pattern. At the preliminary
stage, convenience are the highest benefit perceived as shown in Table 4 below.
Table 4. Number of Perceived Benefit References
Percentage
Benefit Aspects Frequency
(N = 28)
Economic Benefit 6 21.43%
Convenience 17 60.71%
Transaction Process 2 7.14%
Others 3 10.71%
References that do not belong to any of the unit analysis are classified as others. The references belong
to this unit analysis are the benefit of fintech firms playing in an emerging and initially unregulated
industry. To further analyze, Word Frequency Analysis was also conducted for perceived benefit. Table 5
displays the frequent words used to address fintech perceived benefit.
Table 5. Perceived Benefit Word Frequency Analysis
Word Length Count Similar Words
experience 10 3 experience, experiences,
experiments
functionality 13 3 functionality
innovative 10 3 innovative
attractive 10 2 attractive
management 10 2 management
technology 10 2 technology
From the total 28 benefit references coded, the words “experience”, “functionality”, and “innovative”
are the most prominent. The three words revolve around the perceived benefits of fintech having better
experience as a result of various options of innovative products and services and a good range of
functionality from better product features and quality. The question that hovers around fintech is how
long will the benefit remain benefits? In 2017, easier to set up an account was the top benefit. In 2019, it
became obsolete as it is now a prerequisite. In 2019, attractive rates and fees became the top benefit (Bull
et al., 2019) although this is possible to last a little bit longer than convenience as it is an economic
benefit and everybody loves economic benefit. However, based on this study, attractive rates and fees
have become secondary and convenience is what really defines the game now. That was from the fintech
perspective. Banks themselves have begun digitalizing their products and services in order to be
accessible anywhere and anytime, providing better consumer-oriented service. Banks have also started to
develop innovative products either by producing and/or launching it in-house or through partnership deals
with fintech. It appears that it will not be long that these benefits become mutually exclusive to fintech.
3. Interpretation of Banking Institutions’ Predicted Future
The word of bank has quite a few type of businesses, such as Consumer Banking, Corporate Banking,
Trade and Finance, Wealth Management, Credit Cards, and Payment Services. While they are
interrelated, they are different to each other. The Trade and Finance and Corporate Banking are the most
unlikely for fintech. Whereas Consumer Banking for their lending products, Wealth Management, Creditc
Card, and Payment services are vulnerable to fintech competition.
The competition of fintech and banks is the talk of the town – but on a global scale. Analysts, experts,
and consumers alike are so immersed in discussing how the future of both parties is going to play out.
People from all over the world voice out their opinions on the internet, creating a pool of meaningful data
source. Table 6 presents the total references of implications of the predicted future of banking institution
from 10 reports and 30 blog posts.
Table 6. Number of Implication of the Banking Future References
Percentage
Implication Frequency
(N = 160)
Positive 113 70.63%
Negative 47 29.38%
The result in the table shows that there is a significant amount of positive implications (70.63%)
towards the future of banking institution despite the rise of fintech. It seems that banks have not lost the
faith of the people and that banks will continue to do its part in competing with fintech without ever being
eliminated – like the word disruption suggests. That is to say, competition and/or collaboration between
them will see no end because the positive implications that refer to banks outliving the fintech disruption
suggests that they will have to coexist and walk alongside each other to rise stronger.
The following research finding attempts to outline the sentiment of each references to identify the
significance of the positive implications and the severity of the negative implications. Table 7 provides
the summary for the NVivo auto code sentiment results on positive and negative implications towards the
future of banks.
Table 7. Auto Code Sentiment on Implication of the Banking Future
Very Moderately Moderately
Implication Very Positive
Negative Negative Positive
Positive 6 23 22 7
Negative 9 14 7 3
On positive implication, the auto code sentiment presents the result that there are 22 moderately positive
references and 7 very positive references. The distribution of the sentiment is displayed on Figure 3.
CONCLUSION
The study reveals that preliminary classification from the word frequency analysis result can develop a
pattern to identify each and every attribute of risks and benefits of fintech clearly. From the reports and
blog posts, the number of risk references is higher than the benefits. The most significant benefit is
convenience and the most risk perceived is operational risk. Despite the scrutiny, if fintech players
wanted to wipe banks off of the market, the result of this study has proven that it is going to take the life
out of fintech to do that. To put it simply, banks are untouchable. If banks successfully overcome their
issues of slow to adapt new technology and complex organization, they will be able to live out their days
withstanding their glory. The suggestions of what banks can do to survive the fintech disruption are
digitalizing their products and services, which is the most feasible, and partnership, acquisition, or
investment to fintech firms.
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APPENDICES