Oliver Wyman International Banking Strategy

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  • Financial Services

    INTERNATIONAL BANKING STRATEGY

    THE QUEST FOR EL DORADO?AUTHORS

    Alan McIntyre

    Chaitra Chandrasekhar

  • Table oF ConTenTS

    exeCuTive Summary 4

    The need For an inTernaTional STraTegy 6

    The explorerS map 12

    The inSTiTuTional lenS 22

    CharTing a CourSe 28

    ConCluding ThoughTS 34

  • you could be forgiven for thinking that the

    story of international banking over the last

    five years has simply been one of retreat,

    retrenchment and penance. The challenges

    posed by the aftermath of the global financial

    crisis have certainly caused many banks

    to pull back and limit their international

    ambitions. Some have needed to shore up

    their capital positions; others have disposed of

    international assets as a condition of state aid;

    while others have retreated from international

    businesses simply because they see a rising

    regulatory burden, increasing complexity, and

    unattractive operating economics. Whatever

    the motivation, the result has been a clear

    trend towards the re-localization of banking

    and many management teams who have

    been focused on returning core domestic

    franchises to profitability.

    although this headline story is undoubtedly

    true, it also conceals a more nuanced and

    interesting sub-text in which a more positive

    view of international expansion is evident.

    While many of the pre-crisis global banking

    powerhouses have been putting their houses

    in order, there has been a group of large

    financial institutions (mostly outside the uS

    and Western europe) that have actually done

    very well over the last three to four years

    and are now acting from positions of relative

    strength. They recognize that this position

    of relative strength may not last, so they are

    now starting to re-evaluate and rethink their

    international strategies.

    There are also many banks, even within

    europe and the uS, who - although wounded

    by the financial crisis - now find themselves

    on more solid ground and are facing the

    challenge of where earnings growth will

    come from over the next decade. From large

    multi-local institutions looking to optimize

    their international footprint, through global

    product specialists, to smaller domestic

    players looking to benefit from their clients

    overseas expansion, our observation is that

    international strategy is now back on the

    agenda in many bank boardrooms.

    Compared to the last major expansion in

    international banking a decade ago, the

    players today face a changed landscape

    and are caught between two macro trends

    pulling in opposite directions. on one

    hand, many of what were once emerging

    markets in the middle east, latin america

    and asia have now matured into material

    profit pools with medium-term growth

    rates that far outstrip those anticipated

    in europe and north america. but on the

    other hand, enthusiasm about market

    fundamentals now needs to be tempered

    by a regulatory environment that is driving

    increased localization, higher operating

    costs and prohibitive barriers to entry in

    many of the most attractive markets. So

    just as international expansion becomes

    more attractive on a pure economic basis,

    the degree of difficulty and inherent risk in

    executing such a strategy is beginning to

    look prohibitive to many bank boards.

    ExEcutivE Summary

    4 Copyright 2013 oliver Wyman

  • With this as the market backdrop, this report

    attempts to do three things:

    provide an objective view of where the attractive market opportunities may be

    for internationally ambitious banks. in

    assessing attractiveness, we consider

    not only the economic fundamentals

    of a market, but also the structural

    considerations that play a critical role in

    evaluating whether a particular geography

    or segment represents a good risk-

    adjusted opportunity for an outside entrant

    given this opportunity set, we outline why each bank needs to develop its own

    personalized lens that allows it to assess

    opportunities in light of its institution-

    specific capabilities and constraints

    Finally, from an executive management and board perspective, we describe a

    framework for defining an international

    strategy that effectively leverages

    differentiated capabilities whilst both

    respecting and managing the constraints

    that exist in the post-financial-crisis world

    These are interesting times for the global

    banking industry. many players are content

    to hunker down and focus on optimizing and

    rebuilding profitability within their current

    business model and geographic footprint.

    however, we also think that - despite the

    obvious challenges - this could be a period of

    opportunity for those with both the financial

    resources and the clarity of thought to take

    some risks and go exploring.

    There are interesting parallels to be drawn

    between the banks of today and the european

    explorers of the golden age of discovery five

    hundred years ago (and we attempt to draw

    out those parallels in the remainder of this

    document through an extended sidebar to

    the main text). Constrained by poor domestic

    market conditions, but unwilling to accept a

    low-growth scenario, the great explorers went

    looking for growth, profits and expansion

    opportunities by pointing their ships over

    the horizon. Some of those adventures paid

    off handsomely and were the basis of trading

    empires that lasted hundreds of years. others

    discovered to their cost that there were dangers

    and challenges associated with international

    expansion that required very specific skills and

    a disciplined mind-set to overcome. and some

    - even though they were experienced and well

    prepared - found that the el dorados they

    were seeking turned out to be nothing more

    than myths and legends.

    in the world of international banking,

    the winners over the next decade will

    be those institutions who have a clear-

    sighted view of the opportunities in front

    of them and can separate fact from fiction.

    They will also be the institutions capable

    of tailoring their international strategy to

    their unique capabilities while recognizing

    and respecting their own limitations and

    constraints. not all will succeed, but those

    who do may look back on this period of

    post-crisis realignment in the global banking

    industry as indeed an age of opportunity.

  • The Need for aN INTerNaTIoNal STraTegy

    1The Need for aN INTerNaTIoNal STraTegy

  • Drawing a parallel to the Age of Discovery in the 15th to 17th centuries,

    many banks today are evaluating foreign markets, figuring out how they

    should navigate the world, where (if at all) they should lay anchor and

    what they should build there.

    A key driver of the Age of Discovery was the 15th Century version of a

    regulatory intervention. The demise of the Byzantine Empire culminating

    in the fall of Constantinople to the Ottomans in 1453 denied Western

    Europeans easy access to the lucrative overland trade routes to Asia,

    and the Silk Road which Marco Polo had travelled in the 13th century

    was effectively closed to them. Faced with stagnant domestic markets,

    yet fully aware of the promise of riches to the East, Europeans embarked

    on explorations by sea in the hope of establishing new trade routes for

    spices and precious metals.

    Explorers viewed this opportunity in different ways some looked at

    foreign lands simply as mutually beneficial trading partners, while

    others had more ambitious plans that went beyond trading to staking

    ownership rights to land and natural resources. In both scenarios, the

    true value lay in being able to sustain an economic relationship over the

    long term. While the Vikings may have indeed reached the Americas well

    before any other Europeans, their inability to replicate their journeys

    and establish permanent settlements consigned their adventures to a

    historical footnote when compared to the Spanish explorers of the 15th

    and 16th centuries.

    One quest that captivated generations of European explorers was the

    search for the legendary golden city of El Dorado. The name is probably

    derived from Muisca chiefs who were reputed to have covered themselves

    in gold dust before jumping into Lake Guatavita to appease an underwater

    god. Over time, rumors of a city of gold lured many treasure hunters

    including Sir Walter Raleigh. Numerous Spanish explorers also scoured the

    region, but no evidence of the city of gold was ever found. However, the

    legend did attract many capable explorers who went on to settle in South

    America with more modest and realistic ambitions. As Edgar Allan Poe wrote

    in 1849, the quest for El Dorado was above all an invitation to adventure.

    Over the Mountains of the Moon, down the Valleys of the Shadow, ride,

    boldly rideif you seek for El Dorado.

    edgar allan poe, eldorado, The Works of the late edgar allan poe (1850)

    The Need for aN INTerNaTIoNal STraTegy

    7

    The Need for aN INTerNaTIoNal STraTegy

  • given the trauma of the global financial crisis, the ongoing uncertainty around the future of the euro, and sundry other challenges from mortgage foreclosures to money laundering, it is hardly surprising that most global financial institutions have spent the last five years looking inward. The result has been the forced or voluntary disposal of many foreign assets, the increased localization of many large banks, and a general retrenchment of the global banking industry. in some cases, the principal driver has been regulatory pressure around capital adequacy and liquidity. but in many other cases retrenchment has simply been a response to low returns and the conclusion that marginal businesses in poorly understood emerging markets are a management distraction and a source of disproportionate operational risk.

    in the united States, the dodd-Frank act represents a far-reaching policy shift in regulation, with the Tarullo Fbo1 rule, in particular, having major implications for large foreign banks operating in the uS. meanwhile in the uK, the independent Commission on banking (vickers) report proposed the ring-fencing of retail activities and a definitive move away from the universal banking model. While unlikely to be implemented in its original form, the liikanen report also suggests that similar ring-fencing could be in the cards for the rest of the eu.

    These market and regulatory forces have created an environment that has been increasingly inhospitable to internationally active banks. The result, as shown in exhibit 1, has been a five year period during which bank

    1 Foreign banking organizations

    exhibiT 1: Share oF Foreign-oWned aSSeTS globally and SeleCTed inTernaTional reTrenChmenTS

    14

    12

    10

    16

    PERCENTAGE OF FOREIGN BANK ASSETS AMONG TOTAL BANK ASSETS%

    2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2013e2012e

    Retrenchment Expansion

    Citi divests several businesses in Japan for $7.8 BN

    HSBC sells French mutual fund operations

    SocGen sells asset management subsidiary in London (AUM $8.2 BN)

    Citi sells part of consumer loan portfolio in Europe and Canadian MasterCard business, a $2.1 BN credit-card portfolio

    WestLB sells French private bank

    SEB sells German retail banking business for 555 MM

    BNP Paribas sells Cayman and Panama WM

    Citi sells Egg UK credit card business (1.8 BN gross assets) and divests Citibank Belgium

    HSBC sells US card business to Capital One for $2.6 BN and 195 branches in NY for $1BN

    RBS sells 1.8 BN Spanish real-estate portfolio

    Dexia sells Luxembourg subsidiary for 730 MM

    ING sells ING Direct USA for $9 BN to Capital One

    HSBC exits 8 Latin American countries and scales back/exits in 6 Eastern European markets

    SocGen sells stake in US and Canadian investment/wealth management firms and Greek, Egyptian and Indian subsidiaries

    RBS scales back capital markets activity in 4 Asian countries and sells private banking business in Latin America and Africa (total AUM $2 BN+)

    Dexia sells DenizBank in Turkey for $3.5 BN

    ING sells ING Bank of Canada (ING Direct) for $3.1 BN

    Citi announces scale back of operations in 21 countries

    HSBC sells US personal unsecured and homeowner loan portfolios for $3.2 BN

    RBS may sell Citizens in US and is scaling back operations in India

    1

    2

    3

    4

    5

    1

    2 3 4 5

    Source: imF, dealogic, Snl, oliver Wyman analysis

    8 Copyright 2013 oliver Wyman

  • exhibiT 2: CompariSon oF Top 10 banKS reTurn on equiTy (roe) aCroSS Key marKeTS

    15

    20

    5

    10

    25

    0

    TOP-10 BANK RETURN ON EQUITYROE %

    Ind

    ones

    ia

    Ch

    ina

    Bra

    zil

    Can

    ada

    Turk

    ey

    Ru

    ssia

    Ind

    ia

    Mex

    ico

    Au

    stra

    lia

    USA

    Euro

    pe

    Pre-crisis ROE

    Post-crisis ROE

    Global average (post-crisis)

    Global average (pre-crisis)

    Change in ROE (pre to post crisis)

    Source: imF, Thomson reuters datastream, oliver Wyman analysis

    assets have re-localized to a level last seen in the early part of the last decade.

    but this big picture masks a more nuanced and interesting story. as exhibit 2 shows, in profitability terms the brunt of the global financial crisis was born by uS and european institutions. While returns have bounced back from the lows of 2009, banks in these geographies continue to struggle to return their cost of capital to shareholders and also face persistent litigation and liability issues.

    but if you look beyond the uS and europe, in many markets you find a markedly different picture. in these markets, post-crisis returns are still attractive (and actually above average global pre-crisis levels) and in some markets the profitability of the banking

    industry has actually risen post-crisis. in relative competitive terms, many of the major banks in these markets are leaving the crisis stronger than when they went in, and some have moved from being local leaders to being true international institutions with global ambitions. While there is no single reason for their success, these institutions tend to be characterized by a relatively stable and healthy macro-economic environment in their home markets. These home markets are also often stable competitive environments that, in a number of cases, border on being strong oligopolies. Finally, conservative and sometimes intrusive home market regulation coupled with robust internal risk management often limited the amount of

    risk that these banks took pre-crisis.

    9

  • looking forward in exhibit 3, the relative

    valuations of major banks also show this

    bifurcation between an industry in the uS and

    Western europe still struggling to come to

    terms with the post-crisis world, and markets

    where there is more confidence in the ability

    of financial institutions to deliver attractive

    future returns to shareholders.

    This performance gap and the procession

    of asset disposals by the uS and Western

    european players most badly-hit by the crisis

    has already created some unique opportunities

    for banks with international ambitions.

    Santander has made a number of acquisitions,

    including Sovereign bank and the auto loan

    portfolios of Citi and hSbC in the uS, Sebs retail

    banking business in germany and two banks

    in poland. Canadian banks have also been

    acquirers, as evidenced by Tds uS acquisitions

    of Commerce bank and Chrysler Financial Corp,

    bank of montreals uS acquisition of marshall

    & ilsley, and Scotiabanks serial acquisitions

    in latin america, the Caribbean and asia.

    other recent and notable international

    expansions include Sberbanks foray into

    eight Cee countries, banco itaus nascent

    growth efforts in peru, Colombia and Chile,

    Cimbs acquisition of most of rbSs investment

    banking operations in asia, and mitsubishi

    uFJs expansion in the uS with the acquisition

    of pacific Capital bancorp and the addition of

    several project finance books. recent asset

    sales in attractive markets like Turkey have also

    drawn bids from multiple banks, for example,

    Sberbank, Commercial bank of qatar, and

    burgan bank have all made Turkish acquisitions.

    however, it isnt all good news for the winners.

    Some of the factors that were the foundation

    of their recent outperformance now present

    a challenge for future growth. many of the

    most successful post-crisis banks, such as the

    Canadian, australian and brazilian market

    leaders, are now facing economic, regulatory

    or competitive constraints which limit their

    growth at home. at the same time, global

    regulatory changes are signaling increasing

    protectionism on both the retail and wholesale

    sides of the business. regulations such as

    vickers in the uK and dodd-Frank in the uS

    will result in more domestic capital markets

    businesses, limiting cross-border and

    international activity. as recent significant

    fines for money-laundering indicate, there is

    also a high cost associated with arms-length

    international banking relationships. merely

    dipping a toe in international banking waters

    has become an increasingly dangerous activity.

    So many of the most successful global banks

    of the last five years now face a quandary.

    They are often operating in either low-growth

    and or highly concentrated domestic markets

    and the medium-term economic returns

    from these markets are unlikely to satisfy their

    shareholders. because of their past success,

    they now have the financial strength to enable

    them to look internationally for opportunities.

    yet the regulatory tide is clearly moving

    against them, making it harder to pick off

    niche international opportunities and take a

    low-risk approach to foreign expansion. The

    result is a renewed interest in international

    portfolio strategy to both boost and

    diversify earnings.

    broadly speaking, the banks we work with are

    considering two approaches to international

    expansion. The first is essentially flag planting.

    in this approach, foreign banks satisfy

    regulatory demands for localization by building

    or acquiring full-service operations that look

    and act like domestic institutions. The glocals

    or multi-locals we have studied who follow

    this approach hope to benefit from strong

    market fundamentals by being a domestic

    institution in many different markets.

    The second approach is a trader or enabler

    strategy. This model involves limited on-

    the-ground presence in foreign markets

    and instead develops the products and

    capabilities necessary to serve an increasingly

    international customer base. The target client

    base includes both domestic clients (consumer

    10 Copyright 2013 oliver Wyman

  • and commercial) conducting international

    transactions, but also foreign clients establishing

    themselves in the domestic market of the

    bank through Fdi flows, trade or migration.

    of course, these two approaches are not

    mutually exclusive. both hSbC and Citi have

    shown that it is possible to have both multi-

    domestic local franchises while also pursuing

    a broader enablement strategy predicated on

    trade flows and cross-border payments. but for

    the purposes of this paper, we see these two

    models as useful archetypes of an international

    banking strategy. it is also not uncommon for

    trader strategies to morph into a stronger

    on-the-ground business as clients demand

    more domestic cash management and

    wealth management services in addition to

    trade-oriented products.

    an exception to these models are the large

    global wholesale banks who generally

    operate as consolidated capital markets

    players from a small number of international

    hubs. We have separately addressed the

    specific challenges faced by these already

    highly international players in our annual

    report on the outlook for wholesale banking2.

    in this report we outline a disciplined approach

    for banks evaluating their international

    strategy, whether they favor a multi-

    domestic approach, a trader model, or

    a combination of the two. in Chapter

    2, we provide an overview of market

    fundamentals, highlighting attractive

    opportunities for banks from an outside-

    in perspective. in Chapter 3, we focus on

    understanding the bank- specific overlay or

    lens that individual institutions need to

    use when evaluating these opportunities.

    in Chapter 4, we provide an illustration of

    a structured approach or playbook for

    formulating an international strategy and

    walk through some examples. in Chapter

    5, we summarize key considerations and

    suggest some next steps for banks with the

    appetite to go exploring.

    2 oliver Wyman-morgan Stanley report outlook for Wholesale and investment banking 2013, april 2013 for more detail

    exhibiT 3: CompariSon oF Top banK priCe To booK raTioS (p/b) aCroSS Key marKeTS

    3

    4

    1

    2

    5

    0

    PRICE-TO-BOOK RATIO

    66 percentile price-to-book

    33 percentile price-to-book

    Price-to-bookof top banks

    Ru

    ssia

    USA

    Ch

    ina

    Bra

    zil

    Can

    ada

    Au

    stra

    lia

    Ind

    ia

    Euro

    pe

    Ind

    ones

    ia

    Turk

    ey

    Mex

    ico

    Note: price-to-book data for 2012. percentile price-to-book lines indicate that one third of top 10 banks in the target countries shown had price-to-book ratios higher or lower than the 66 percentile or 33 percentile price-to-book ratio respectively

    Source: Thomson reuters datastream, Capital iq, company reports, oliver Wyman analysis

    11

  • The explorers Map

    2The explorerS Map

  • While some explorers like Magellan and Columbus just headed off on

    a compass bearing with the hope of reaching their destination, most

    explorers benefit from a good map to guide their journey. The map provides

    an objective description of the current state of the world: Where are the

    largest treasures? How difficult is it to get there? Once you get there, how

    do you access the bounty? Are the locals going to be friendly or hostile?

    What strategies and technical capabilities will you need to succeed?

    As ships became increasingly seaworthy and the science of navigation

    advanced, cartographers came into their own. No longer was it enough

    to signal there be dragons at the edges of a crude local map. The

    increasing demand for exotic products and precious metals demanded

    a more disciplined approach that could identify potentially lucrative

    locations and the best trade routes to get there (and get back).

    a successful international strategy starts with a good understanding of

    the global banking landscape. Where are the attractive markets now

    and in the future? how are those markets connected to each other?

    Where is the potential return worth the financial and reputational risk?

    as many investors in Chinese banking over the last decade have

    discovered to their cost, market attractiveness is not just an issue

    of revenue potential and profit pools. instead, outsiders should

    evaluate market attractiveness along two dimensions economic

    and structural. economic fundamentals include size, expected

    growth and current and future profitability. Structural factors

    determine international players ability to access this raw economic

    opportunity and include considerations such as customer buying

    patterns, entry barriers, regulatory environment and competitive

    structure, as well as broader geopolitical stability issues.

    13

  • exhibit 4 shows the factors we have used

    to construct indices of economic and

    structural attractiveness for the major

    global banking markets.

    For institutions taking a multi-domestic

    approach (i.e. banks who aspire to play on-

    the-ground in multiple markets), economic

    and structural analysis can help you build

    a comprehensive market map as shown in

    exhibit 5.

    This type of analysis provides a consistent

    view of global banking opportunities from

    the perspective of an outsider looking in;

    recognizing that domestic players may have

    a very different perspective, particularly on

    the structural dimension.

    Sub-segments within these markets, such

    as wholesale or high-net-worth, require

    another deeper level of analysis. but at the

    macro-level, this type of map begins to

    segment the market opportunities. Some

    conclusions are unsurprising. For example,

    exhibiT 4: eConomiC and STruCTural index FaCTorS

    EcoNomic iNdEx

    Factor description Key determinants

    market potential market size of the banking sectors as measured by banking revenue pools in each market

    Future growth of the banking sector in each market based on the underlying economy, market demographics, expected wealth creation, state of the banking sector and overall financial market development

    provides a view of the size of the opportunity in the short and long-term

    2011 revenues

    expected 10 year Cagr

    profitability expected returns these must be reviewed by segment as profitability varies considerably by product, segment and model in most markets

    Sustainability of returns over the mid- to long-term

    roe

    margin expansion/compression trends

    Structural iNdEx

    Factor description Key determinants

    market concentration Structure of the banking industry in terms of level of concentration or fragmentation of the market

    Competitive considerations affecting new entrants ability to succeed

    Top 5 bank/top 10 bank market shares

    hhi index

    regulation & openness of market

    local regulatory environment may limit or encourage foreign entry and participation

    Certainty or lack thereof of the regulatory environment also affects attractiveness of markets

    quantitative scores based on financial sector regulation

    Foreign bank participation levels

    geo-political environment

    institutional frameworks and the rule of law affect attractiveness from a structural perspective

    Some markets, particularly those with higher returns, may be plagued by higher volatility which affects attractiveness of markets

    quantitative scores based on rule of law and business regulation

    14 Copyright 2013 oliver Wyman

  • many european markets are unattractive

    as a result of poor economic fundamentals

    and some are further hindered by the

    lack of opportunities for entry by foreign

    banks. other markets where the economic

    fundamentals are undoubtedly strong

    such as india and China continue to be

    difficult places for foreign banks to make

    profits or build a meaningful franchise. but

    the good news is that there are markets

    where economic and structural factors

    combine to create attractive opportunities

    for foreign institutions.

    Some of these attractive markets, such

    as mexico or poland, fit well with

    conventional wisdom.

    but others, such as the uS and uK, may be

    more counter-intuitive given recent history.

    in the uS, the green shoots of a real economic

    recovery are now becoming apparent and

    the sheer size of the market makes it worthy

    of consideration on the economic dimension.

    however, the more interesting perspective

    is that despite its reputation as a litigious

    market with complex and overlapping

    regulatory agencies, the uS is structurally

    very attractive to foreign entrants. The

    key drivers of this attractiveness include

    its market fragmentation, minimal

    restrictions on foreign ownership, history of

    technological innovations and the plethora

    of specialist business models, all of which

    create multiple entry options. given the

    current status of the uS dollar as the worlds

    reserve currency (and the dominant currency

    for international trade) there are also unique

    benefits to uSd funding that should also be

    taken into consideration.

    exhibiT 5: The explorerS map

    Medium potential markets due to significant structuralissues such as entry barriers, unequal playing field

    High potential markets with attractive financial sectoreconomics and favorable market structure dynamics

    such as ease of entry, fragmentation

    Low potential markets with poor financial sector dynamicsas well as limited structural advantage for foreign banks

    Medium-low potential markets with moderatelyfree market structures but limited financial

    returns primarily due to economic stagnation

    FAVORABLEUNFAVORABLE

    ECONOMIC INDEX

    HIGH

    LOW

    United States

    Canada MexicoBrazil

    Colombia

    Peru

    United KingdomFrance

    Germany

    Spain

    Italy

    Russia

    Poland

    Switzerland

    Scandinavia

    ChinaIndia

    Japan

    Korea

    Indonesia

    Malaysia

    Thailand

    Singapore

    Hong Kong

    Australia Taiwan

    Turkey

    GCC

    South Africa

    2011 Total revenue

    STRUCTURAL INDEX

    Note: gCC refers to the gulf Cooperation Council and includes bahrain, Kuwait, oman, qatar, Saudi arabia, and the united arab emirates

    15

  • We also think the uK is potentially attractive, although

    for different reasons. While the macroeconomic

    fundamentals are potentially as challenging as the rest of

    Western europe, the uK is unusual in being a market in

    competitive transition. having been a pre-crisis oligopoly,

    forced asset disposals, government encouragement of

    new entrants (including the promise of lower capital

    requirements) and public antipathy towards established

    players have created a potential window of opportunity

    to reshape the traditional branch-based retail banking

    sector. We also believe that, despite increasing conduct

    and product regulation, the core economics of uK retail

    banking are likely to remain amongst the most attractive in

    europe; a fact that has been largely obscured by the furor

    around past mis-selling issues and the well documented

    problems of the uK banks wholesale operations3.

    3 refer to oliver Wyman report perspectives on the uK retail banking market, november 2012 for more detail

    diSaggregaTing The eConomiC dimenSion

    In the 21st century, China is still an emerging economy, but

    the situation was quite different in the 16th century when the

    idea of the middle kingdom placed China at the heart of

    pan-Asian trade routes. With a large population and a trading

    infrastructure that could handle everything from silks to spices

    to precious metals to fine art, China enjoyed high growth rates

    and had the necessary surplus wealth to manufacture luxury

    goods. High margin items such as spices and fine chinaware

    attracted the attention of the Portuguese, Dutch, Spanish and

    English who established permanent settlements with the hope

    of becoming trading partners with China. However, the 1000%

    margin on certain spices also made it worth taking the risk of

    bypassing the land-based trade routes that crisscrossed China

    and instead take to the seas to go directly to the Spice Islands.

    exhibiT 6: expeCTed banKing revenueS in maJor marKeTS aT The end oF The deCade

    Americas Europe Middle Eastand Africa

    Asia and Oceania

    Revenue in 2020

    % of worldrevenue

    (estimated)38%4%28%30%

    Source: oliver Wyman analysis

    16 Copyright 2013 oliver Wyman

  • looking top down, even though some emerging markets

    such as China and brazil now have sizeable domestic

    banking sectors, developed markets continue to dominate,

    accounting for 70% of current global banking revenues.

    over the next ten years, banking in emerging markets

    is expected to grow three times as fast as in developed

    markets, resulting in the emerging markets accounting

    for nearly half of global banking revenues in 2020.

    at the regional level, asia continues to outgrow other

    regions and is expected to account for half of all

    global deposits by the end of this decade. This growth is

    underpinned by faster economic growth and increased

    buying power, demographic dividends in many markets,

    and the presumed continued liberalization of critical

    markets such as China and india. The reserve bank

    of indias upcoming grant of a limited number of new

    banking licenses is expected to be 10 times over-

    subscribed, underscoring the fundamental economic

    attractiveness of these types of markets.

    but for shareholders, revenue - while indicative of overall

    opportunity - is clearly less important than profits. retail

    banking profits are highly dependent on asset margins,

    which are in turn dictated by interest rates (both the

    level and shape of the yield curve). emerging markets

    exhibit higher profitability today, partly because of high

    interest rates associated either with the underlying

    economic conditions (as in brazil and indonesia) or

    with government regulations that result in managed

    interest rate regimes (as in China where the central

    bank sets floors on lending rates and ceilings on deposit

    rates). over time, we expect asset margins in emerging

    markets to decrease as competition intensifies and the

    underlying economies develop and mature.

    in contrast, current low margins in developed markets

    are partly driven by post-crisis interest rates which

    remain stubbornly close to zero. although historically

    low rates are likely to be sustained for several years to

    come, rate spreads are expected to rise as the underlying

    economies recover, which in turn should widen

    spreads and close the relative profitability gap between

    developed and developing markets.

    unpaCKing The STruCTural ConSideraTionS

    Market concentration has historically been a good defense

    against foreign commercial threats. Chinas 16th Century

    economy was heavily centralized and regulated and hence

    difficult for foreign traders to penetrate. In contrast, the

    native North Americans seem to have had weak trade

    networks between tribes and this fragmentation made

    it relatively easy for Europeans to dominate commercial

    activity and eventually dominate the continent.

    Restrictions on foreign players entering developing markets

    are not new. The economic doctrine of mercantilism

    dominated Western Europe in the sixteenth century with

    high tariffs being used to protect trade-flows between

    foreign colonies and domestic markets. This bonded

    the colonies to the home country and also protected the

    home countries merchant class from developed world

    competition. The inability of many European countries such

    as the Netherlands and Germany to access the markets

    of the Americas ultimately led them to develop their own

    trading empires in less attractive geographies like the South

    Seas and Africa. Despite its dominant trading position, it

    can be said the inability of the UK to establish an equitable

    sharing of the spoils with its American colonies ultimately

    lead to the American Revolution.

    our structural index measures industry-specific dynamics

    that affect the entry and performance of foreign institutions

    in a given banking market. Though most markets have

    tended towards liberalization over the last 20 years, many

    markets remain hard to access and even harder to make a

    good profit in. The barriers to entry may be regulatory,

    as in the case of China and india, or due to the competitive

    structure of the industry, as in the case of Canada and

    Japan. There can also be hurdles with respect to customer

    buying behavior, for example the tight interlinkages in

    germany between the industrial and banking sectors.

    While well-functioning oligopolies in general pose serious

    challenges for new market entrants, uncertain or changing

    market dynamics may open up new opportunities, such as in

    the uK retail sector. large scale government participation in

    the financial sector may also distort industry economics (for

    example politically motivated credit decisions in China) and

    create an unequal playing field which deters foreign entrants.

    17

  • regulatory restrictions on foreign ownership,

    licensing and market participation present

    major barriers that can be difficult to circumvent.

    For example, foreign participation in the

    Chinese market remains low due to regulatory

    restrictions (although that hasnt stopped

    many Western institutions from making

    sizeable equity investments in Chinese banks).

    regulation can also impose requirements that

    dampen economic attractiveness either in home

    markets or target foreign markets. most of the

    emerging regulations, such as basel iii or dodd-

    Frank, are moving in this direction and in some

    emerging markets interest rates and capital

    restrictions can directly impact the outside-

    in economics of the banking business.

    broader market stability concerns also need

    to be considered. in developed markets the

    level of central bank intervention and the long-

    term interplay between fiscal and monetary

    policy remains uncertain. despite the certainty

    that interest rates will eventually rise, the

    timing remains uncertain and any strategy

    predicated on rising rates could have material

    short-term downside. While emerging

    markets have increasingly implemented

    sound economic policies and built stronger

    institutions to reduce volatility, many of these

    measures focus on taxes and limits on foreign

    investment flows, which again potentially limit

    the attractiveness of foreign bank expansion.

    The final structural factor is around the

    broader market framework primarily the

    rule of law and market infrastructure. The

    data clearly indicates that markets with

    a weak rule of law and poorly defined or

    enforced property rights struggle to develop

    a market for long-term credit products

    such as mortgages. but probably more

    important for potential foreign entrants are

    corruption, money laundering and other

    dubious activities, which may pose serious

    reputational or regulatory risks.

    Trading noT Colonizing

    Many empires like that of the Spanish in the

    Americas were built on conquest, but some of

    classical historys most successful commercial

    empires were built on the idea of free trade.

    The Phoenicians dealt in commodities such as

    wood, glass and Tyrian purple dyes, but they

    actively avoided hostilities with their commercial

    partners. Instead they focused on wealth

    creation by dominating the southern shore of

    the Mediterranean and coexisting with the

    Greeks who focused on the northern shore.

    Although the Phoenician trade infrastructure

    was initially based on a scarce specialized

    product (the Tyrian dye), over time they added

    precious metals and other goods to their

    distribution network. As merchants, they

    deployed diplomacy rather than firepower to

    expand their reach. They also recognized the

    value of technology in protecting and increasing

    the productivity of their trading routes with

    innovations (mostly borrowed from other

    cultures like the Egyptians) such as mechanical

    clocks, harbor cranes, the dry compass and

    stern-mounted rudders all playing a role in

    keeping them ahead of the competition.

    all banks, and especially those that are

    inclined to adopt a trader rather than a

    multi-domestic international strategy, will

    benefit from understanding bilateral trade

    and investment flows both their direction

    and their size. Corporate clients today have

    increasingly international needs driven by a

    more global customer and supplier base and

    increasingly international supply chains. in

    some geographies and customer segments,

    enabling international transactions has

    become table stakes. We identify three

    broad areas of opportunity for the traders:

    enabling trade flows around the supply

    chain, financing longer-term foreign direct

    investment flows and facilitating remittances

    and individual wealth flows.

    18 Copyright 2013 oliver Wyman

  • despite international retail remittances now

    amounting to half a trillion dollars a year, the

    bulk of international financial flows involve

    business-to-business transactions. on the

    commercial side, there are two types of

    opportunities; providing international banking

    services to domestic clients, or providing

    domestic banking services to foreign or

    multi-national clients who are active in your

    home geography. Compared to these flows,

    international retail flows (investments and

    remittances) remain a niche opportunity

    accounting for less than 5% of the total.

    bilateral flows outside developed markets

    have been increasing with globalization

    as seen in exhibit 7. The size and direction

    of flows are also seeing major shifts. For

    example, foreign investment in the uS

    dwarfed uS investment abroad by the biggest

    margin on record for much of last year. The

    $4.7 trillion4 gap in the second and third

    quarters of 2012 is the biggest since tracking

    began in 1976. on the global stage, Fdi flows

    to emerging and developing economies

    exceeded those to developed economies for

    the first time in 2012. not surprisingly, given

    economic fundamentals, asia will continue

    to increase its proportion of international

    trade and is expected to surpass europe to

    become the crossroad of global trade by 2020

    4 as reported by the Commerce department, americas international investment position calculates how much the value of foreign investments in the u.S. exceeded its investments abroad

    exhibiT 7: Trade and Fdi groWTh (2009-2011)

    GROWTH IN TRADE VOLUMES (20092011)

    10%

    GROWTH IN FDI POSITION 20092011

    20%

    0%

    4%

    8%

    12%

    16%

    20% 30% 40%

    North-APAC

    Global avg trade growth=20%

    Global avg FDI growth=8%

    South-APAC

    APAC-North

    South-North

    APAC-South

    North-South

    South-South

    >50%

    25%50%

    10%25%

    5%10%

  • in a reprise of its position centuries ago. an

    estimated 60% of trade flows will have asian

    involvement when compared to europes

    40% by the end of this decade, so any trader

    strategy without a strong asian presence is

    unlikely to be a good long-term bet.

    given that customers are increasingly pursuing

    business abroad or sourcing product from

    overseas, banks have an opportunity to

    expand alongside their clients by providing

    financing, transaction banking, and wealth

    management services, ideally capturing

    both ends of the transaction. There is also

    increased demand from smaller businesses

    for international products and services as the

    internet-enabled world is allowing even small

    businesses to develop both foreign suppliers

    and customers. as a result, an increasing

    number of domestic players worldwide are

    developing a suite of international banking

    products. The challenge is to develop cost-

    effective options to serve smaller clients;

    hence the white labeling of Fx and trade-

    finance products to primarily domestic

    banks is a growth area. The success of

    this type of strategy may also be limited

    over time by the lack of domestic cash

    management and payments infrastructure

    and hence it may be natural for a trader

    strategy to evolve into a multi-local model or

    a formal alliance structure with a local bank

    in order to effectively serve customers.

    moving beyond single customer

    enablement, there are also opportunities

    along the full supply chain where a single

    institution takes an end-to-end view that

    spans multiple customers. a number of asian

    banks are moving vertically along the supply

    chain to provide this type of financing for

    import and export partners and are seeking

    to dominate certain bilateral trade routes in

    specific industry segments.

    While long term Fdi is still dominated by flows

    within the developed world, the projected

    need is primarily in high-growth emerging

    markets. For internationally ambitious

    banks there are opportunities to provide

    services at both ends of these investment

    flows. many specialist infrastructure

    players are expanding internationally to

    provide opportunities for their customers

    to invest in markets with growing private

    and public construction industries. There is

    also a trend for long-term developed world

    investors such as pension funds to make

    direct real asset investments in emerging

    markets, forcing the banks to move from

    being a funding intermediary into an

    advisory and facilitation role that is more

    fee income than balance sheet-oriented.

    Clearly, if you are a trader, analyzing these

    types of flows is a vital step in developing an

    international strategy. grouping countries

    based on inter-connectivity can also facilitate

    better cross-border coverage and execution.

    There may also be opportunities to enhance

    the scale of business across smaller

    markets with centralized operations and

    management, for example, taking advantage

    of middle eastern free trade zones to create

    regional trading hubs.

    20 Copyright 2013 oliver Wyman

  • 21

  • The InsTITuTIonal lens

    3The INSTITuTIoNal leNS

  • The InsTITuTIonal lens

    Having a good map is only one piece of the puzzle for a smart explorer.

    The other essential requirement is a healthy dose of self-awareness in

    order to assess capabilities and constraints. In the Age of Discovery, an

    explorers starting location determined the distance to his destination

    and the potential routes that he could take. Portugals proximity to

    Africa and the desire to find a sea-based route to Asia led to Portuguese

    exploration south along the African coast. This process started with the

    occupation of strategic islands such as Madeira and the Azores, followed

    by staging posts along the coast in Mauritania and Ghana, culminating

    famously with Vasco da Gamas landing in India.

    a banks assessment of any international opportunity needs to take into

    account its own starting point, as institution-specific capabilities and

    constraints make some markets more or less attractive. Capabilities can

    confer a competitive advantage and include business synergies, product

    strengths, customer segment advantages, operational excellence or

    simply the hard lessons garnered from past experience. Constraints

    on the other hand (whether self-imposed financial hurdles or external

    regulatory issues) can restrict an institution, making some markets or

    business models less viable, more risky and ultimately less attractive.

    CapabiliTieS

    Without technological innovation, the Age of Discovery wouldnt have

    been possible. With the invention of the compass and the sextant,

    navigation now relied on mathematics instead of celestial observation.

    Shallow draft Mediterranean ships also evolved into ocean-going

    carvel ships with a planking method that enabled a stronger hull and

    fully-rigged masts. In the annals of the great explorers, there is clearly

    a survivor bias that reflects superior capabilities - both technical and

    personal - as no one memorialized those adventurers whose masts broke

    and hulls cracked somewhere in the great Southern Ocean.

    Just like in todays banking market, another factor impacting exploration

    was the availability of capital. As Columbus (an Italian) famously

    showed, sometimes you needed to go outside your home market to be

    bankrolled for these risky expeditions and find an investor willing to take

    the risk (in his case the Spanish monarchs) in the hope of high returns.

    The power of capabilities is that they can allow an institution to overcome

    structural difficulties in a market, and help them see opportunities where

    other institutions see only challenges.

    business synergies are created when a new venture can leverage current

    operations. Cost synergies are particularly important in scale businesses

    such as payments or transaction banking, where shared services and

    transferable human capital can be deployed in new markets with only

    The INSTITuTIoNal leNS

    23

  • minor tweaks. Synergies may also be realized

    if new markets are material trading partners

    with a banks domestic home base, raising the

    probability that a new entrant can capture both

    ends of a transaction. Standard Chartereds

    build-out of its international trade finance

    platform through investments in technology

    as well as select portfolio acquisitions is

    an example of international expansion

    capitalizing on synergies across markets. over

    time, this strategy has built scale and achieved

    critical mass, which in turn has generated a

    strong track record of double-digit growth.

    Strong product design and product

    management capabilities can also provide

    a rationale for international expansion. a

    proven ability to achieve economic returns

    where others struggle can transform a

    superficially unattractive market into a

    viable expansion opportunity. a good

    example of a product-led strategy is uS

    bancorps specialist merchant services arm,

    elavon, which has developed a significant

    international presence by leveraging its

    relationships with airlines and hotels and

    offering dynamic currency solutions that

    reduce Fx costs for those merchants.

    Service expertise can also be a viable

    platform for market entry. The private wealth

    and hnW customer segments are examples

    of businesses where brand and history can

    play a major role in shaping customers

    perceptions of competence and service

    quality (sometimes unduly). hSbC premier

    is a clear example of an international affluent

    banking proposition that leverages brand

    and a global service platform to tap into

    this profitable segment across markets. on

    a smaller scale, Scotiabanks stated intent

    of targeting affluent asians investing in

    Canada in collaboration with local Chinese

    institutions is another example of a bank

    taking a service-led and segment-specific

    approach to penetrating a foreign market.

    The confidence to enter new markets can also

    be based purely on operational excellence that

    cuts across products and customer segments.

    in retail banking, the difference in cost-income

    ratios between leaders and laggards can be

    measured in tens of percentage points, so

    there is scope for operational excellence to

    serve as a key differentiator and profit driver.

    experience offering high service levels with

    thin network and direct banking models can

    also offer the opportunity to leapfrog existing

    bank branch network models and become a

    disruptor. For example, in the north american

    retail market the ability to harness customer-

    facing technology to reduce branch network

    costs while increasing perceived service levels

    is emerging as a key differentiator. Canadas

    Td bank is using its own experience plus what

    it gleaned from its acquisition of Commerce

    bank in the uS to roll out branch performance

    initiatives simultaneously on both sides of the

    border. in wholesale banking, strong cross-

    border payments or trading platforms can offer

    distinctive execution abilities and the hard

    lessons learned from past m&a can also confer

    advantages when buying into new markets.

    an important but softer capability relates

    to culture. When considering international

    expansion, national culture can be a double-

    edged sword, but it can be leveraged as a

    capability. When the target market has a similar

    culture, synergies increase as business practices,

    product expertise and human capital become

    more transferable across borders. institutions

    who can use existing infrastructure and time-

    tested operations with minor adjustments, can

    create both structural and economic advantages

    vis--vis other entrants. While dissimilar in

    many ways, the cultural linkages between Spain

    and mexico have made the latter an attractive

    expansion market for major Spanish banks.

    While familiarity with national culture can

    be an important capability, the same can

    also be true of a banks own internal culture.

    24 Copyright 2013 oliver Wyman

  • hSbC has established itself as the worlds

    local bank with an organizational culture

    that prides itself on being adaptive to local

    markets and understanding the subtleties

    and nuances of each, and thus is able to

    operate successfully in major markets

    spanning asia, the middle east, europe and

    north america. organizations like hSbC and

    Citi with an established international business

    can also build on an organization structure

    that is used to dealing with the complexities of

    global/region/country matrices, centralized

    regulatory oversight and a mobile talent

    base, all of which can lower execution risk

    when looking at new markets.

    ConSTrainTS

    The history of commercial exploration shows

    that a good idea is not enough. The plans for

    the Scots to establish a trading post at Darien

    on the Isthmus of Panama in the late 17th

    century and trans-ship goods from the Pacific

    to the Atlantic was a great idea that preceded

    the Panama Canal by nearly two centuries.

    Stuck in a low-growth home market with limited

    international trading opportunities, the Scottish

    nobility decided that it was time to branch out

    internationally. However, limited funding, poor

    preparation for the hostile climate and an inability

    to establish constructive relationships with the

    indigenous population doomed the venture to

    disaster and ultimately bankrupted the Scottish

    nobility, which in turn led soon after to the union

    of the Parliaments of Scotland and England.

    While capabilities tilt the international

    playing field in your favor, constraints are the

    institution-specific challenges that make life

    difficult for banks with international ambitions.

    They can be internal, like short-term risk/return

    requirements, or external, such as regulatory or

    cultural considerations. Whatever their source,

    they serve to raise the degree of difficulty

    of international expansion by reducing the

    attractiveness of particular markets.

    one of the most important internal constraints

    can often be an institutions own financial

    ambitions. international forays dont typically

    offer a short-term profit boost and the

    most successful international players are

    generally playing a long-term game, so often

    a constraint comes in the form of risk-return

    parameters designed for short-term domestic

    profit optimization. While the returns from

    foreign expansion can be attractive, they

    can also require a high tolerance for risk

    and shareholder capital that is patient and

    long-term in nature. For example, while the

    business has waxed and waned, Citibank has

    had a presence in india for over a century.

    in addition to return requirements, the

    availability of capital and investment dollars

    can also act as an internal constraint. in

    some markets, the most viable entry strategy

    may be through an acquisition that requires

    significant upfront investment. When exploring

    international opportunities, banks with a

    solid capital base and the ability to raise

    more will have a clear advantage. With most

    of the european banking sector still needing

    to recapitalize to international regulatory

    standards, they may have precious little capital

    left for any meaningful international plays.

    looking externally, home regulator concerns

    can also limit banks international ambitions.

    State banks may have explicit limitations

    on foreign activity, but more common is the

    pressure to bolster domestic operations at

    the expense of international businesses; a

    condition of state aid that has been relatively

    common over the last five years.

    at a more basic level, existing licenses

    or grandfathered rights in a structurally

    unattractive market may put certain foreign

    institutions in an advantaged position

    vis--vis other potential entrants. Simply

    having stayed the course in many emerging

    markets and not having been an institution

    25

  • that has dipped in and out can confer its own advantages

    over the long term through both legal positioning and

    well-developed relationships with local regulators and

    politicians. The flip side of course is that those who

    are late to the international party can suffer from a

    structural disadvantage that is very difficult to address,

    as evidenced by the bidding frenzy for new banking

    licenses in india.

    Finally, the double-edged sword of culture can also

    be an under-appreciated constraint. The history of

    international banking is littered with the careers of

    ambitious executives who strongly believed that if it

    works here it will work there and saw their careers cut

    short as a result. even when there are strong surface

    similarities of culture and language, the true business

    realities can often be very different, as many of the

    uK banks found with their forays into uS retail and

    commercial banking in the 1980s. When an institution

    has limited experience with international expansion, any

    synergies predicated on cultural overlap should come

    with a health warning.

    impaCT oF CapabiliTieS and ConSTrainTS on The marKeT map

    a clear sighted understanding of both capabilities

    and constraints will change the way a bank views the

    attractiveness of a particular international market. Some

    impacts will be positive and some will be negative, but

    the important thing is that there is a disciplined and

    comprehensive attempt (as indicated in exhibit 8) to

    understand the full range of issues and their net impact.

    in exhibit 9, we try and give some examples of how

    this exercise can change the international map

    for a specific bank and alter the perception of a

    markets attractiveness.

    regulatory barriers that make certain markets

    unattractive may not be as relevant for players with

    an existing presence in those markets. For example,

    banks with a banking license or grandfathered rights

    in a typically closed market such as india may not

    consider these markets as structurally unattractive as

    a de novo market entrant would.

    exhibiT 8: inFluenCe oF inSTiTuTional CapabiliTieS and ConSTrainTS on TargeT marKeT SeleCTion

    EcoNomic coNSidEratioNS Structural coNSidEratioNS

    market potential profitability market concentration

    regulation macroeconomic and political stability

    ca

    pab

    ilit

    iES

    business synergies brand affinity/lift Transferable Capabilities

    Fungible hC

    product strengths new products growth potential

    niche products higher margins

    differentiated products

    Customer segment advantage

    proprietary customer insights

    affinity with select customer segments

    executional advantage

    executional excellence

    m&a experience

    experience in similar markets

    experience in similar markets

    Culture Familiarity with working environment

    co

    NS

    tra

    iNtS

    risk/return risk-return profile render markets unfavorable

    regulatory impact on returns

    investment level/time horizon

    Capital controls

    no capacity to deploy capital

    Time horizon required for returns

    Stability concerns

    regulatory restrictions

    regulatory barriers

    unequal playing field

    26 Copyright 2013 oliver Wyman

  • on the execution dimension, a bank with a strong m&a track record should have an operational advantage in

    markets where acquisition targets are plentiful. For

    example, in the fragmented uS market becoming a

    serial acquirer is a viable approach to market entry.

    m&a experience can also be advantageous in high-

    growth emerging markets like indonesia, as rapid

    market entry allows an institution to get material

    benefits from short-term market growth.

    The cultural angle comes into play in countries with historical or language links. For examples, banks from

    Spanish-speaking countries could have an advantage

    in markets with a common language, but as the uK

    to uS example quoted above highlights, a common

    language alone is not enough to ensure success.

    For institutions looking to pursue a multi-domestic

    international strategy, this disciplined process of

    applying the institutional lens to identify competitive

    advantages (and unique constraints) may be the

    difference between success and failure.

    in contrast to the banks pursuing a multi-local flag

    planting approach, banks that focus on a customer-

    enabling or trader strategy will typically be relatively

    unconcerned with individual market attractiveness. They

    will instead place far greater weight on international

    trade and investment flows and will tend to think more

    in terms of regions like latin america or Southeast

    asia rather than individual countries. in their case, the

    institutional view of market attractiveness is likely to be

    determined by where their customers are expanding

    and conducting business. institutions that maintain

    a presence in major international trade or investment

    hubs can more easily follow their customers into new

    markets e.g. by providing financial services to the same

    customers in different countries, providing international

    products from the home market, or financing foreign

    suppliers. For them, key capabilities are likely to come in

    the form of robust operational platforms in transaction

    banking and trade finance and a strong presence in

    selected trading hubs to maximize access to potential

    customer flows. Constraints on the other hand may be

    quite similar to the multi-local institutions, especially

    around the need for patient long-term investment and

    the challenges of accessing particular geographies from

    a licensing and regulatory perspective.

    exhibiT 9: appliCaTion oF The inSTiTuTional lenS

    Original position on the market map

    Change in marketattractivenessbased on institutionscharacteristics

    Executional advantage of strong M&A experience in similar markets

    Regulatory advantage of existing licenses or other grandfathered rights

    Cultural advantage of common language, culture and trade links

    Examples of institutions capabilities:

    US

    Japan UK

    Germany

    France

    China

    Mexico

    Peru

    Malaysia

    Canada

    Switzerland

    Singapore

    South Africa

    Brazil Hong KongTurkey

    Australia

    Thailand

    Italy

    India Indonesia

    Spain

    Russia

    GCC

    Scandinavia

    Mexico

    Brazil

    Colombia

    Peru

    Spain

    China

    India

    Indonesia

    Malaysia

    Peru

    Thailand

    Turkey Mexico

    US

    UK

    Poland

    Korea

    Taiwan

    STRUCTURAL INDEX

    ECONOMIC INDEX

    FAVORABLEUNFAVORABLE

    HIGH

    LOW Illustrative

    Colombia

    27

  • Charting a CourseCharTINg a CourSe

    4

  • Charting a Course

    Clearly, the search for a value-adding international banking strategy

    has no single answer and no silver bullet. defining an international

    strategy is a complex process and each bank comes to the question

    from a unique starting point. however, that being said, we do think

    there are some strategic models that are worth considering as

    examples of how different types of institutions have resolved this

    challenge and charted a distinctive course. The four archetypes we

    discuss in this section are certainly not comprehensive (and in some

    cases not even mutually exclusive), but we do think it is instructive to

    walk through how a specific strategy can emerge from the interplay

    of broad market opportunities and bank-specific factors. none of

    these case studies are intended to represent the strategy of a single

    real institution, but they are intended to be specific enough to be

    able to draw parallels to real world examples rather than just be

    theoretical exercises.

    The reTail repliCaTor

    In the early nineteenth century, Britain was the pre-eminent cultural

    and commercial replicator, adding over 10 million square miles of new

    territory with a population of over 400 million in Asia, Canada, Australia

    and Africa. After the defeat of Napoleon, the British had few challengers

    on land or at sea, allowing it to fully utilize technologies such as steam-

    powered ships for transport and the telegraph for communication. The

    British effectively managed this scattered empire through a combination

    of local cultural assimilation, martial rule, and technological innovation.

    Even after post WW2 decolonization, the UK continued to maintain its

    commercial and cultural linkages through the Commonwealth of Nations;

    a set of relationships which still shapes trading patterns to this day.

    CharTINg a CourSe

    29

  • reTail repliCaTor

    retail replicators aim to export domestic retail success to

    international markets. a glocal like hSbC and other multi-

    local players such as Citi, Standard Chartered, Santander and

    bbva exemplify this strategy. The genesis is often a successful

    full-service domestic bank recognizing that it has hit a

    market share ceiling at home; that earnings will stagnate as

    a result; and that looking overseas may offer opportunities to

    duplicate domestic success. going forward, we see increased

    opportunities for more agile replicators who embrace new

    business models such as thin network or fully mobile banking

    in markets where mobile is already transforming society. in

    many cases rather than just replicating a successful business

    model, new markets can be the opportunity to evolve and

    improve the model without the fear of cannibalization that

    often plagues a home market. in the case study below, we

    outline the strategy definition process for just such a bank a

    large developed-market leader that is looking to diversify its

    earnings via a twin-home market retail strategy.

    SiTuaTion

    a large north american domestic with a broad retail proposition operates as part of an oligopoly in its home market. The home market is extremely saturated in the retail segment with limited capacity to capture share from other players. The bank is well capitalized and is seeking expansion opportunities outside of its home market.

    capabilitiES

    business synergies potentially leverage existing human capital and operations due to similarity in cultures through e.g. transfer of staff, retraining, operation shifts

    product strengths Strong retail proposition: longer business hours, additional banking services at branch increasing engagement, alternate language offerings, cutting-edge mobile and internet offerings

    Strong reputation for quality of service to retail customers with increased customer stickiness

    customer segment advantage

    good understanding of mass affluent/high net worth customers in providing services for retail banking, and wealth and asset management

    expected cross-sell opportunities with cross-border customers

    Execution/inorganic growth advantage

    Superior execution managing large retail branch networks and achieving above average margins and high branch utilization

    StratEGY

    Footprint expand into uS due to risk-return alignment, market size and cultural similarities

    operate internationally under a twin-home model but adopt a thin-network approach in the uS with more emphasis on mobile technology and remote servicing

    potential for continued expansion into select attractive markets may be considered in the long-term move towards a multi-local bank

    Entry enter through mid-sized retail bank acquisition with regional reach / key mSa coverage

    rebrand branches, restructure branch infrastructure/ layouts, and deploy retraining programs to align with winning business tactics

    competitive advantage operate uS branches, applying executional know how to achieve above average utilization rates

    expand outside of core market using thin-branch network model to target attractive mSas

    use well-run traditional branch network as foundation for aggressive mobile and thin-network expansion which also provides important learnings for management of home country bank

    coNStraiNtS

    culture Strong preference for countries with common language and cultural affinity

    risk/return requirement low to moderate risk profile preferred

    aim to keep returns broadly in line with current business model

    investment capability and time horizon

    no constraints due to recent sale of toxic assets after financial crisis

    no explicit regulatory constraints in home market

    regulatory restrictions regulatory reform in home market may negatively impact revenues and increase compliance costs

    5 as of march 2013

  • CaTegory Killer

    in contrast, Category Killers are specialist players who use

    their product or sector dominance to expand internationally.

    in asset management, blackrock has capitalized on its scale to

    expand outside the uS into 27 countries, with ~40% of its total

    $3.9 Tn assets under management attributed to international

    clients. Cme group has expanded from a domestic uS

    commodities exchange to become a global derivatives

    powerhouse that has benefited from post-crisis regulatory

    requirements for central clearing. and while payment

    solutions provider First data still derives the majority of its

    revenues from the uS, it continues to grow internationally

    with partnerships and processing agreements in countries

    as diverse as poland, Turkey and China. While it is natural

    for domestic category killers like First data to adopt the

    same model overseas, this play can also be used by broader

    domestic institutions that recognize that their best chance of

    being successful internationally is to play to a specific strong

    suit; which in the example below is payments processing.

    given the rapid advances in payments technology,

    international expansion can also be an opportunity to skip a

    generation from a technology perspective and experiment in

    a controlled way with new approaches that may be applicable

    in home markets if they prove successful overseas.

    SituatioN

    a large north american regional universal, with most operations confined to uS and Canada, is re-evaluating its international strategy post- crisis. its primary international presence is through its specialist merchant acquiring arm. due to impending saturation in the uS and european markets, where the merchant arm maintains significant market share, the bank is seeking further growth opportunities in new markets.

    capabilitiES

    business synergies internationally enabled payment processing platform that can be easily adapted and leveraged in multiple markets

    product strengths Specialist arm leverages robust cross-border payment processing platform with strong fraud management system

    experience in developing regional payment solutions

    innovative mobile payments offering with experience in increasing merchant take-up

    customer segment advantage Strong understanding of Sme sector with tailored solutions for banking and payment needs

    Execution/inorganic growth advantage

    Successful track record in smaller acquisitions

    numerous successful partnerships in the payments business domestically and in europe

    StratEGY

    Footprint Target markets have established payments infrastructure, favorable regulatory environments and dynamic retail sectors

    expansion into neighboring markets such as mexico, brazil and potentially other latam markets, with double digit annual credit card growth

    operate under hub-and-spoke model to centralize processing and capture volume through global banks

    Entry partnerships or joint ventures with global banking institutions and local players to benefit from established brand recognition during initial entry

    acquire local payment solutions providers in markets with limited participation by global banks

    drive technology innovation in the local payments market without fear of cannibalizing an existing business

    over time use payments and merchant acquiring relationships and the data that flows from them as a basis for developing innovative small business lending products

    competitive advantage deploy iT platform and processing systems

    Continue to explore and innovate payment and mobile products, utilizing Sme know-how to deliver specialized solutions to small merchants

    coNStraiNtS

    culture not considered as a constraint as entry model adapted to minimize cultural differences

    risk/return requirement Scale is priority over return in short term to gain market share in new markets

    investment capability and time horizon

    no investment constraints given strong capital base

    long-term time horizon necessary to achieve scale

    regulatory restrictions regulatory reform in home market may negatively impact revenues and increase compliance costs

    3131

  • CulTural ConneCTor

    Cultural Connectors have strategies predicated on

    regional, cultural or trade-flow led links. Weve already

    discussed Santanders leverage of a common language

    and culture to expand from Spain across South america.

    another good example in the region is bancolombia

    which has expanded into panama, guatemala, and el

    Salvador, capitalizing on common culture and strong

    regional business links to diversify its footprint and

    create growth options. in europe, French player bnp

    paribas has maintained a banking presence in colonial

    French-speaking West africa, with retail operations

    in Cte divoire, mali, burkina Faso, guinea, and

    Senegal. in todays changing environment, cultural

    affinity can go beyond the obvious to newer types of

    cultural understanding such as the buying patterns of a

    particular hnW wealth segment or at the other end of

    the spectrum the social media behavior of millenials in

    asian markets like South Korea and Taiwan. The Cultural

    Connectors not only have confidence in their ability to

    understand and operate a good business model in a

    market but they also often leverage historic political and

    business links to help them overcome barriers to entry

    and constraints that may be off putting for those not

    familiar with the culture they are entering.

    SituatioN

    a top 20 latin american bank has a leading position in both retail and wholesale segments of its home market. The bank has a strong capital base and can access international capital markets (both debt and equity). due to the high concentration of profits generated from the home market, the bank seeks geographic diversification.

    capabilitiES

    business synergies potential for cross-selling given broad range of products developed in home market

    access to international capital markets provides lower funding costs, which can be leveraged in other countries

    product strengths large variety of specialized retail and commercial banking products

    Service-oriented proposition

    customer segment advantage universal banking model with experience across all segments (retail, wholesale, capital markets, insurance, pensions)

    Execution/inorganic growth advantage

    Strong m&a capabilities based on domestic transactions

    experience through all stages of development of banking sector in home market

    StratEGY

    Footprint expand in latin america given common language, cultural affinity and trade flows

    preference for smaller countries with less developed banking sectors and lower competition due to past successful experience in home market in similar conditions

    operate under a portfolio model

    Entry expand through acquisition to build scale more rapidly and benefit from short-term growth and margins

    competitive advantage leverage retail and commercial banking expertise to gain competitive advantage by implementing best practices developed in home market

    improve funding opportunities for target acquisitions through capital markets access

    coNStraiNtS

    culture Strong preference for countries with common language and cultural affinity

    risk/return requirement return required similar to home market

    need to reduce risk of geographic concentration

    investment capability and time horizon

    despite strong capital base, large transactions would require raising additional capital

    regulatory restrictions no explicit regulatory constraints in home market

    Copyright 2013 oliver Wyman

  • The hiTChhiKer

    Finally, The hitchhikers are banks who adopt a follow

    your customer model by providing enabling products

    to their increasingly globalizing customer base. This

    is a strategy typically used by mid-sized domestics or

    relatively smaller players globally, but when successful it

    can be a first step towards a larger international presence

    in the future. With rising exports and greater international

    connectivity in supply chains, more and smaller companies

    are participating in cross-border activities driving up

    demand for international products in the corporate sector.

    Wells Fargos international corporate banking presence

    was driven in part by the international expansion of uS

    mid-market companies, offering products such as trade

    financing, cross border lending, and supply chain finance.

    in other examples, regional uS bank pnC provides global

    advisory services, leveraging its team of ex-treasurers to

    help clients with global challenges, such as adapting to local

    business customs and evaluating the creditworthiness of

    trading partners. Japanese bank Sumitomo mitsui banking

    Corporation has developed joint ventures and partnerships

    in countries such as Turkey, india, and Cambodia, to provide

    services for its Japanese corporate customers. on the retail

    remittance side of the equation, the opportunities remain

    niche, although they are increasingly being used as a starter

    product for banks with bigger ambitions on either side of

    the flow. examples include South asian banks tapping

    into the remittance flows from the gulf, Canadian banks

    tapping into the immigrant communities from China, and

    uS banks seeking to benefit from the mexican community

    in the uS sending funds to family south of the border.

    SituatioN

    a mid-sized bank in a large developed market with strong position in the Sme/middle market segment. The bank does not operate in foreign countries, but its customer base is increasingly global: local clients are now dealing with international suppliers or customers while, at the same time, foreign multinationals are establishing subsidiaries in the banks home market. The bank seeks to adapt to its changing customer base.

    capabilitiES

    business synergies no significant international synergies

    product strengths Strong products for local Smes and middle market companies

    however, weaker product offerings for customers conducting international businesses

    customer segment advantage Strong position and brand with middle market companies and Smes

    Execution/inorganic growth advantage

    lack of presence in foreign markets suggest, low execution advantage

    StratEGY

    Footprint Stay in home market, which remains attractive given market fragmentation and large potential in the underserved Sme segment

    Entry potential for white-label partnerships with other domestic players to expand product offerings

    competitive advantage defensive strategy to retain current customers and enable growth of their global businesses:

    expand product mix to offer multi-currency accounts payments and Fx solutions

    expand corresponding bank network to increase reach of trade finance capabilities

    offensive strategy to expand customer base domestically, delivering core commercial banking products (e.g. lending and treasury) to subsidiaries of foreign companies entering home market

    coNStraiNtS

    culture lack of experience operating in foreign countries

    high sensitivity to political and economic stability

    risk/return requirement low risk and moderate returns preferred

    investment capability and time horizon

    Capital base under some pressure due to increased regulatory burden

    regulatory restrictions higher regulatory burden in home market

    33

  • concluding thoughtSgiven the regulatory drive towards localization and the

    wounded state of the banking industry in much of the

    developed world, it may seem counterintuitive to be

    discussing international strategy. however, for many high-

    performing institutions in consolidated markets the time to

    look abroad is now if they want to sow seeds to be harvested

    in 2020. With the prospect of sustained low economic growth

    and low interest rates in much of the developed world,

    international expansion provides a route to deploying capital

    in high-growth markets and creating diversified earnings.

    regardless of where you are starting from, the challenge

    can look daunting and fraught with risks. For every success

    story, the history of international banking is littered with

    failures and aborted expansion attempts. The next big thing

    has often turned out to be a bear-trap of regulatory and

    cultural complexities that can absorb huge investment for

    little return. an analysis of the common pitfalls indicates that

    focus and discipline are absolutely essential. So the decision

    to rethink international strategy must be approached with

    objectivity and caution. For banks still dealing with the

    aftermath of the crisis, it may make perfect sense to focus on

    rationalizing and optimizing your existing business footprint

    and possibly retrenching from current international markets.

    however, for multi-locals in positions of strength and even

    for successful domestic institutions with no international

    footprint, evaluating the alternatives in the new normal will

    ensure they go forward with their eyes open. For some, this

    may lead to a positive decision on international expansion,

    while for others the best course may indeed be to stay home

    and concentrate on the domestic franchise.

    a structured and disciplined approach that combines

    accurate market information and a strong awareness of your

    own strengths and weakness as an organization will serve

    an institution well in the long run. given the potential of the

    global economy, opportunities for international growth do

    clearly exist. The starting point will make a big difference to

    the relative attractiveness of those opportunities, but this

    may be a point in time where fortune favors the brave and

    where an institution can make its own luck by being better

    informed and more self-aware than its competition.

    The