500 likes | 670 Views
?Bankers have been saying for years that they are in the information business .......... but they fail to realize how deeply they are in an information business. Bankers also over rate their ability to use information.". Alvin Toffler-AuthorFUTURE SHOCK,THE THIRD SHIFT,POWER SHIFT. .
E N D
1. PERFORMANCE MEASUREMENT/PROFITABILITY ANALYSIS
Organizational/Branch/Line-of-Business/Product/Customer/Relationship/Market Segment
Funds Transfer Pricing/Cost-Capital Assignment
Robert E. Kafafian, President & C.E.O.
Office - (973) 299-0300 Ext. 106 Fax (973) 299-1002
RKafafian@KafafianGroup.com
www.KafafianGroup.com
Financial Managers SocietyNew York-New Jersey ChapterAll Day SeminarSeptember 14, 2005
2. Bankers have been saying for years that they are in the information business .......... but they fail to realize how deeply they are in an information business. Bankers also over rate their ability to use information.
3. In the business world those that have information will prosper. Those that dont will face great obstacles in achieving their goals. Nowhere is this more true then in the banking industry. Ironically, much of the information banks need to compete effectively is already in their possession. The trick is learning how to compile it and use it successfully.
4. A profitability reporting system that shows risk-adjusted return on equity by business unit is essential. Banks should use such management information systems in strategic planning, budgeting, risk management, performance measurement, and incentive compensation. The best banks, with useful MIS and disciplined management processes are moving away from the pack ........ this is no longer optional .
5. MAKE YOUR BANK EASY FOR WALL STREET TO UNDERSTAND
Specifically, this means each bank must:
Define the markets into which it sells products
Define the products sold
Indicate the profitability of product lines
If investors do not get such information, they will continue to see banks as undefined packages of assets. As a result, bank stocks will not attain high multiples. The prices will reflect investors feeling that they cannot reliably predict banks rates of return.
6. EIGHT FUNDAMENTAL MOVEMENTS:
De-Regulation/Re-Regulation
Asset Liability Management
Performance Measurement
Product Diversification
Service/Sales Culture
Risk Management
Industry Consolidation/Convergence
Technology-Information Management
7. 1. DE-REGULATION/RE-REGULATION:
Product/Rate
Industry Mix
CRA/Privacy
Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act/ Financial Modernization Act
Sarbanes/Oxley
Money Laundering/USA Patriot Act
Cross Industry/Regulatory Control
8. 2. ASSET LIABILITY MANAGEMENT:
Balance Sheet Management
GAP Management
Interest-Rate Risk
Focus on remaining maturity
Front-end to Budget/ Planning Process
Limited slicing of data
Limited NIE analysis
Usually presented at a high-level
9. 3. PROFITABILITY ANALYSIS:
More detailed analysis of various organizational components and slices
More detailed expense analysis and breakdown to the bottom-line
Organizational/Product/Customer
Relationship/Market Segment
Focus on original maturity
Rank/Compare/Trend
Usable throughout all
areas of the organization
10. 4. PRODUCT DIVERSIFICATION:
Loan & Deposit
Fee-Based
Trust
Brokerage
Insurance
Delivery Channels
Internet Banking
Sales Culture (Trusted Advisor Culture)
11. 5. SERVICE/SALES CULTURE:
Cross-Selling
Products Per Customer
Service Opportunities
Sales Opportunities
Incentives/Disincentives
Service/Sales Training
Service/Sales Tools
12. 6. RISK MANAGEMENT:
Traditional Risk
Credit-Oriented
Current View of Risk
Risk-Adjusted Return
on Capital (RAROC)
Types of Risk
13. 7. INDUSTRY CONSOLIDATION/ CONVERGENCE:
Financial Services
Mortgage
Credit Card
Brokerage
Insurance
Communications
Technology
14. 8. TECHNOLOGY-INFORMATION MANAGEMENT:
Encompasses the Other Six Movements
Technology Lag
Sourcing Opportunities
Information Systems
Accounting/Marketing/IT
Delivery Channels
The Internet
15. Keys to Profitability & Survival Success
Marketing effort or study to determine what products and services do our customers want, through what delivery channels
Internal analysis to determine what products and services do we sell that they want in what combination of delivery channels
.
.AT A PROFIT
16. PREREQUISITES TO MEANINGFUL
MANAGEMENT INFORMATION:
Senior managements support
Reflect managements operating philosophy
Provide management information, not just regulatory information
Understandable to the end-user
Consistently applied
Provide value as well as benefit
17. MANAGEMENT INFORMATION:
1. Asset Liability Management
2. Budget and Planning Process
3. Responsibility Reporting
PROFITABILITY ANALYSIS:
4. Organizational Profitability Reporting
5. Product Profitability Reporting
6. Branch Profitability Reporting
7. Customer/Relationship Profitability Reporting
8. Market Segment Profitability Reporting
9. Opportunity Profitability Reporting
SUPPORT FUNCTIONS:
10. Funds Transfer Pricing
11. Cost-Capital Assignment/ABC/Performance Measurement
12. Data Warehousing/Mining/Mapping/MCIF/CRM
18. REPORTING CONSIDERATIONS:
Reconcilable
Audit Trails
Ranking Reports
Comparative Reports
Trend Reports
Summary and Detailed Levels
Macro versus Micro Approach
Rate/Volume Analysis
ROA/ROE, Efficiency, Risk Based Capital, etc.
Peer Group Analysis
19. LINE-OF-BUSINESS PROFITABILITY:
Similar and or part of responsibility reporting
Organization structure - hierarchy table
Part of, or roll-up of all other profitability
Financial information about profit centers
Assessing performance of groups of staff engaged in profit-producing activity
21. TYPES OF PRODUCTS:
Fund Providing:
Demand Deposits
Savings Deposits
Time Deposits
Other Borrowings
Fund Using:
Investments
Short-Term Assets
Loans
Non-Fund/Fee-Based:
Safe Deposit Boxes
Mortgage Servicing
Trust, Insurance, Brokerage, etc.
22. FUND PROVIDING PRODUCTS:
Fund Providing Products (FPP) are primarily an accumulation of fund sources or deposits. Branches typically generate the majority of deposit products, however, borrowed funds, or purchased or brokered deposits, are also sources of funds available to banks.
23. EX: FUND PROVIDING PRODUCTS:
Regular Savings Time Deposits:
Statement Savings 0-3 Months
Money Market 6-12 Months
IRA Accounts 1-2 Years
Club Accounts 2-5 Years
DDA-Individual 5+ Years
DDA-Business CDs $100,000+
Now Accounts Public Funds
FF-Purchased Other Borrowings
24. FUND USING PRODUCTS:
Fund Using Products (FUP) are primarily earning assets, normally consisting of loans or investments typically found in a special purpose revenue center, and often consisting of several homogeneous products.
25. EX: FUND USING PRODUCTS:
Liquidity Portfolio Commercial-Fixed
Investment Portfolio Commercial-Floating
Fed Funds Sold Commercial-Adjustable
Mtg-Adjustable Commercial-SBA
Mtg-Fixed Home Equity
Mtg-Commercial Second Mortgages
Consumer-Auto Overdrafts
Consumer-Personal
Consumer-Floor Plan
26. NON-FUND/FEE-BASED PRODUCTS:
Non-Fund Products (NFP) generally have only incidental balances. The sole source of revenue for these products is typically fees for services.
27. EX: NON-FUND/FEE-BASED PRODUCTS:
Trust Services Safe Deposit Boxes
ATM Services Brokerage Services
Secondary Market Mortgage Servicing
Travelers Checks Series E Bonds
Checkbook Services Insurance Services
28. CUSTOMER PROFITABILITY:
Account Level Profitability
Individual Relationship Profitability
Extended Relationship Profitability
Market Segment Profitability
29. MARKET SEGMENT PROFITABILITY:
WWII Generation (65 and Over)
Swing Generation (56-64)
Baby Boomers (33-55)
Generation X (19-32)
Baby Boomlets (Under 19)
Other Categories (Empty Nesters, DINKS, etc.)
30. MCIF-MARKERTING CUSTOMER INFORMATION FILE:
Connectivity of Data
Matching Markets/Products/Sales/Service
Market Demographics
31. CRM-CUSTOMER RELATIONSHIP MANAGEMENT:
Contact Information
Sales and Service Tracking
Performance Measures
32. MINING AND MAPPING DATA:
Where are the opportunities?
Where should the focus be?
Geographic
Customer type
Advertising/marketing/promotion/sales and service
33. PROFITABILITY EMPHASIS:
CMTY
BKS MEL
Fund Using/
Fund Providing
83% Products 31%/15%
- - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Interest Income/
Interest Expense
Non-Fund Products
17% - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 69%/85%
Non-Interest Income
34. FUNDS TRANSFER PRICING:
Single Rate/Pool
Specific Matching
Multiple Pool Matching - Actual Cost of Funds
Matched Maturity Coterminous
36. Cost Basis CQTR LQTR DIFF
Interest Income 7.81% 7.75% 0.06%
Interest Expense 3.45% 3.43% 0.02%
Net Spread 4.36% 4.32% 0.04%
37. Market Basis CQTR LQTR DIFF
Fund Using
Interest Income 7.81% 7.75% 0.06%
FTP-Charge 6.25% 6.15% 0.10%
Spread 1.56% 1.60% (0.04%)
Fund Providing
FTP-Credit 6.11% 6.07% 0.04%
Interest Expense 3.45% 3.43% 0.02%
Spread 2.66% 2.64% 0.02%
Maturity Gap 0.14% 0.08% 0.06%
Net Spread 4.36% 4.32% 0.04%
38. Cost Basis CQTR LQTR DIFF
Interest Income 7.81% 7.75% 0.06%
Interest Expense 3 45% 3.43% 0.02%
Net Spread 4.36% 4.32% 0.04%
Market Basis CQTR LQTR DIFF
Fund Using
Interest Income 7.81% 7.75% 0.06%
FTP-Charge 6 25% 6.15% 0.10%
Spread 1.56% 1.60% (0.04%)
Fund Providing
FTP-Credit 6.11% 6.07% 0.04%
Interest Expense 3.45% 3.43% 0.02%
Spread 2.66% 2.64% 0.02%
Maturity Gap 0.14% 0.08% 0.06%
Net Spread 4.36% 4.32% 0.04%
39. TRANSFER PRICING-
PRODUCT CHARACTERISTICS:
Original Maturity
Stated Maturity
Stated Repricing
Duration
Cash Flow
Blended Rate
40.
CURVES:
Treasury
FHLB
Swap
LIBOR
Build
Other
Supplemental Margins
41. SUPPLEMENTAL MARGINS:
Incremental Margins
Market Risk
Credit Risk
Risk Based-Capital
Prepayment Penalties
Early Withdrawal Penalties
Other
42. HIGHLIGHTS OF MATCHED MATURITY:
Places focus on original maturity, duration, cash-flow, or blended rate
Levels playing field by consistently pricing to market driven indices
Isolates fund using, fund providing, and treasury responsibility and contribution
Induces managers to make incremental decisions
Forces managers to actively manage interest spread
Enables management to assess true profitability for each product and line-of-business
Illustrates effects of changes in product mix within lines-of-business
Identifies negative and positive trends, problems and opportunities
Permits easier comparisons to industry/peer groups
43. Marginal Contribution CDs One Year Maturity
44. Marginal Contribution CDs One Year Maturity
45. Marginal Contribution CDs One Year Maturity
46. Marginal Contribution CDs One Year Maturity
47. PERFORMANCE MEASUREMENT-
COST/CAPITAL ASSIGNMENT:
Activity-based-costing
Full absorption versus standard costing
Variable/fixed-direct/indirect costs
Isolating efficiencies/inefficiencies
Capacity utilization
Allocations methodologies:
Average balances
Fixed percentages
Statistical databases
Regulatory/Risk-Based Capital
Internally developed capital assignment (RAROC)
49. OVERALL OBJECTIVES OF MIS:
Assist in strategic decision making and the budget process
Provide information to manage GAP, Organizational Units, Products, Branches, Customers, Relationships, Market Segments, Exposures, etc.
Assist in the measurement of performance (i.e., units/people)
Assist in the determining of performance rewards, i.e. compensation, bonuses, incentives
Provide the detail to understand and evaluate complex issues and problems
Remembering the 80/20 rule ..... Get enough information to be accurate ..... not all inclusive information, which can cause needless complexity and sometimes misleading results
50. MEASURING AND ACHIEVING SUCCESS:
Develop meaningful management information to make more informed decisions and manage risk
i.e., the users use the system
Productivity will be increased
Performance should be rewarded
The Bottom-Line is improved
All constituencies are satisfied
51. PERFORMANCE MEASUREMENT/PROFITABILITY ANALYSIS
Organizational/Branch/Line-of-Business/Product/Customer/Relationship/Market Segment
Funds Transfer Pricing/Cost-Capital Assignment
Robert E. Kafafian, President & C.E.O.
Office - (973) 299-0300 Ext. 106 Fax (973) 299-1002
RKafafian@KafafianGroup.com
www.KafafianGroup.com
Financial Managers SocietyNew York-New Jersey ChapterAll Day SeminarSeptember 14, 2005