Banking with a social cause
Latin American banks and fintechs are racing to lower costs and access for the unbanked millions.
Just over half of all Latin American adults now have bank accounts. But credit and debit card ownership and usage lag that in the US and Europe. This has a subsequent effect on e-commerce purchases: 41% of internet shoppers paid cash on delivery last year.
However, an increasingly confident fintech sector that puts simplicity, low cost and social inclusion at the top of the agenda means that digitisation is a tool for improving access and equality in Latin America. Banks have responded by accelerating their digitalisation strategies.
Much of this regional change is being driven by changing customer behaviour and demands—often at a phenomenal pace.
But with over 200m potential new customers also at stake, Latin American banks see a bigger impact coming from new entrants than their peers see in the rest of the world (48% v 36% globally).
However, for the established banks, new payment players are the biggest threat, according to 51% of respondents. This is followed by neo-banks (23%), which offer bank-like transaction services without a full service current account.
Mobile money operators have also taken root in Latin America, with the number of registered accounts growing by 35% in the year to December 2016. Yet, just 10m mobile money accounts were active at the end of that year, leaving many consumers still without the means to make online, mobile or point-of-sale payments electronically. Accordingly, just 21% of Latin American bankers think that non financial firms, such as telecommunications or retailers, could become the biggest competition threat by 2020.