BankThink

The Seven Deadly Pricing Sins of Corporate Banks

Growth isn't a given in U.S. corporate and commercial banking. In fact, second-quarter earnings released to date show that revenues are shrinking at many leading banks while margins continue to tighten. Despite the urgent need to boost financial returns, however, few corporate banks today think to systematically scrutinize their pricing practices and performance.

That is a costly mistake.

Banks need to make sure that they have well-executed pricing initiatives. These involve reviewing, optimizing, and monitoring prices charged for loans and fee services such as treasury management and interest-rate derivatives. Such initiatives are a low-risk, low-cost way to improve top- and bottom-line growth, even when return on equity and organic revenue growth are stalled.

Instead, most commercial and corporate banks remain mired in the industry's pricing status quo of weak strategies, anomalous and counterproductive pricing practices, adverse sales incentives, and little governance or discipline to enforce price targets.

Our client work, including comprehensive case studies of more than a dozen global, U.S., and regional firms, shows that banks often fall victim to seven classic pricing sins that undermine their margins and growth potential.

1. Marginal-Cost Pricing
Banks with high fixed costs focus on raising incremental revenue to defray those costs. But when that incremental revenue covers only the marginal cost, banks accumulate clients that don't meet margin thresholds — sometimes lots of them. At one bank we studied, 17% of clients were unprofitable on a variable basis and an additional 15% were unprofitable on a full-cost basis.

2. Failure to Segment
Wholesale contracts allow banks to price clients individually, based on competitive intensity and bargaining power. Still, many firms fail to segment their customers in even the most basic fashion — for example by size, price sensitivity, or growth potential. As a result, pricing and discounting become random. Smaller customers are sometimes charged less than large clients that provide more business. Or relatively "price insensitive" segments are assessed low prices while growth segments are hit with flat fees.

3. Bungled Bundling
Bundled pricing can boost revenue by supporting cross-sales, but it costs banks a bundle when it is poorly structured or executed. One common scenario: a bundle discount is negotiated with a client, but there is no follow-up monitoring. The bank fails to track the client's business and never revisits the discount — even after the client drops the profitable products and retains the subsidized ones.

4. 'One Way Street' Volume Discounts
Similarly, a client's transactions may decline over time while the pricing level remains unchanged. This can result when the original pricing was not "tiered" to volume ranges, or when a bank doesn't effectively track changes in actual volumes over time. In one set of banks we studied, there was almost no correlation whatsoever between price and actual volume.

5. Service Creep and Other Omitted Charges
Service creep is common — and costly — in corporate banking, as it is in other industries with recurring revenue streams. As much as 15% of revenue can be lost as a result of "leakage" (not billing for all services rendered) and "slippage" (failure to charge for services appearing in the fee schedule). The usual culprits are waived fees, creeping client-requested customization of services at no charge, and pricing that fails to factor in all costs of service.

6. Pricing Senility
In our experience, very few banks systematically track and update prices charged to each client. Most firms depend on generic, across-the-board pricing adjustments. At many banks, in fact, up to 20% of client contracts hadn't been revised at all in more than 10 years — and sometimes not even in 20 years. Based on inflation alone — roughly 3% percent per year — prices could otherwise have increased by a third during that lost decade.

7. Adverse Sales Incentives
In pursuit of market share, sales incentives often blindly reward revenue growth over margins. This leads relationship managers to retain or chase clients at any price. The result is soft pricing and reduced margins. Many banks have inadequate governance or discipline to establish and enforce agreed price levels and targets. Price "exceptions" get approved almost automatically and are not tracked systematically.

Fortunate are the relatively few banks that reject the pricing status quo and choose instead to undertake systematic repricing initiatives. They methodically scrutinize, measure, and optimize every element of their pricing performance — from discounting to fee levels and structures, sales incentives, and overall governance. The results can be spectacular. Focused repricing efforts can boost total revenues by 5% to 10%, net of attrition — a no-cost, low-risk gain that drops straight to the bottom line.

Pieter van den Berg is a New York-based partner in the financial institutions practice of The Boston Consulting Group and is the leader of the firm's corporate banking practice in North America.Deepak Goyal is a senior partner in BCG's financial institutions practice.

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