Ethereum, Dogecoin and Polkadot shed upto 7%, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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New Delhi: Major Cryptocurrencies were trading lower on Friday in the crypto market. The digital token market has turned jitter ever since Beijing’s regulatory crackdown. The crypto market tanked as much as 7 per cent from the previous day, with all top-10 digital currencies trading lower at 9.30 hours IST.

The past 24 hours witnessed quite a sell-off across the cryptocurrency spectrum. Multiple factors contributed to this profit booking. Barclays in the UK stopped its customers from depositing money into crypto exchanges.

Global Financial institution, Bank of America Corp. created a new team dedicated to researching cryptocurrencies, marking Wall Street’s latest push to capitalize on investors’ frenzy for digital assets. Alkesh Shah will lead the effort, which will also cover technologies tied to digital currencies.

” As per the technical indicators, the long positions on Bitcoin started dropping. It was just a matter of time before the markets witnessed a sell-off. Polkadot, Solana remained subdued as they tanked by almost 8%. Bitcoin’s downside was a bit capped and is currently hovering around the $33,000 mark.” said Edul Patel, CEO and Co-founder of Mudrex.

Back home, Many cryptocurrency traders, shut out of the Indian crypto market by local banks, are now being restrained from buying virtual currencies from overseas markets.

India’s largest private sector bank ICICI is telling customers remitting funds to invest abroad to give a declaration that the money will not be used to buy Bitcoin or other cryptocurrencies.

Crypto Cart: Quick Glance (Source: coinmarketcap.com, data as of 09.30 hours, IST on July 09, 2021)

Crypto Price % change
Bitcoin $32,975.24 -1.17%
Ethereum $2,120.97 – 6.07%
Tether $1 – 0.10%
Binance Coin $308.79 – 4.13%
Cardano $1.32 – 4.80%
XRP $0.6155 – 3.52%
Dogecoin $0.2034 – 7.23%
USD Coin $1 – 0.08%
Polkadot $15.37 – 4.95%
Uniswap $20.76 -2.11%

Note: Price change in last 24 hours

Tech View by ZebPay Trade Desk
Bitcoin is likely to move out of its seven-week trading range of $30,000 to $40,000. Analysts believe that several indicators tracking the cyclical nature of price volatility suggest that a big move is on the horizon. Bollinger bandwidth, which is a measure of volatility, and is calculated by dividing the spread between its band, by the 20-day average of the asset’s price, has declined to a 2 month low of 0.15.

BTC saw similar action in December and April after the bandwidth fell to 0.15, and during both periods major movement was seen. Bollinger analysis places volatility bands 2 standard deviations away from either side of the 20-day price average. BTC has witnessed this phenomenon repeatedly in the past too, when it saw big moves during the 2017 bull run, namely when each time the bandwidth fell to 0.15.

The upside is likely to play out, above the 50-day moving average (MA) resistance, which currently sits at $36,000 levels. Most analysts believe that BTC has factored in most, if not all of the negative news during the May sell-off when the price fell from $60,000 to $30,000. Hence, the downside, if any, is likely to be fairly limited.

Time is in UTC and the daily time frame is 12:00 AM – 12: 00 PM UTC

(Views and recommendations given in this section are the analysts’ own and do not represent those of ETMarkets.com. Please consult your financial adviser before taking any position in the asset/s mentioned.)



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BofA debuts cryptocurrencies research team led by Alkesh Shah, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Bank of America Corp. created a new team dedicated to researching cryptocurrencies, marking Wall Street’s latest push to capitalize on investors’ frenzy for digital assets.

Alkesh Shah will lead the effort, which will also cover technologies tied to digital currencies, and report to Michael Maras, who leads fixed-income, currencies and commodities research globally, according to an internal memo seen by Bloomberg. A spokeswoman for the firm confirmed the contents of the memo, declining to comment further.

“Cryptocurrencies and digital assets constitute one of the fastest growing emerging technology ecosystems,” Candace Browning, head of global research for Bank of America, said in the memo. “We are uniquely positioned to provide thought leadership due to our strong industry research analysis, market-leading global payments platform and our blockchain expertise.”

Banks have been increasingly looking to expand into the wild world of cryptocurrencies, with many pushing to offer wealth-management products or custody services for the asset class. Some banks, including JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Goldman Sachs Group Inc., have begun offering crypto-futures trading.

Shah joined Bank of America in 2013 after stints at Morgan Stanley and Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. and previously led Bank of America’s global technology specialist team. Mamta Jain and Andrew Moss will also join the lender’s research arm as part of the changes and continue to report to Shah, Browning said in the memo.



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BofA debuts cryptocurrencies research team led by Alkesh Shah, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Bank of America Corp. created a new team dedicated to researching cryptocurrencies, marking Wall Street’s latest push to capitalize on investors’ frenzy for digital assets.

Alkesh Shah will lead the effort, which will also cover technologies tied to digital currencies, and report to Michael Maras, who leads fixed-income, currencies and commodities research globally, according to an internal memo seen by Bloomberg. A spokeswoman for the firm confirmed the contents of the memo, declining to comment further.

“Cryptocurrencies and digital assets constitute one of the fastest growing emerging technology ecosystems,” Candace Browning, head of global research for Bank of America, said in the memo. “We are uniquely positioned to provide thought leadership due to our strong industry research analysis, market-leading global payments platform and our blockchain expertise.”

Banks have been increasingly looking to expand into the wild world of cryptocurrencies, with many pushing to offer wealth-management products or custody services for the asset class. Some banks, including JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Goldman Sachs Group Inc., have begun offering crypto-futures trading.

Shah joined Bank of America in 2013 after stints at Morgan Stanley and Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. and previously led Bank of America’s global technology specialist team. Mamta Jain and Andrew Moss will also join the lender’s research arm as part of the changes and continue to report to Shah, Browning said in the memo.



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More US finance giants tiptoe into crypto assets, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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NEW YORK: Investing in bitcoin and other digital currencies remains a risky game where the rules could change significantly, but the payoff could be big.

In response to this dilemma, several leading US financial heavyweights are staying on the sidelines, while an increasing number are proceeding cautiously into the growing world of crypto assets.

“My own personal advice to people: Stay away from it,” JPMorgan Chase Chief Executive Jamie Dimon said recently, before adding, “That does not mean the clients don’t want it.”

JPMorgan, the biggest US bank by assets, is currently assessing how it can help clients transact in cryptocurrency, Dimon said last month at the bank’s annual meeting.

Formerly something of an investment sideshow dominated by computer geeks, cryptocurrencies are sparking greater interest among mainstream investors after a big jump in bitcoin prices in 2020 and early 2021.

On Thursday, the venerable giant State Street announced the creation of a new digital finance division.

On Wednesday, the head of online trading firm Interactive Brokers vowed to establish online trading of cryptocurrencies on the platform by the end of the summer.

Like its rivals Charles Schwab and Fidelity, Interactive Brokers does not now offer bitcoin trading on its platform, although it does give clients the option to invest in some assets that include cryptocurrencies or bitcoin futures.

Investors who want to trade bitcoin can currently turn to Robinhood or the cryptocurrency specialist Coinbase.

ForUsAll, a platform that manages retirement accounts for small businesses, on Monday announced an agreement with Coinbase that allows clients to invest up to five percent of their balances in cryptocurrencies.

Investment bank Morgan Stanley in March said it would allow wealthier clients to invest in bitcoin funds, while Goldman Sachs recently established a team dedicated to trading cryptocurrencies.

The chief executives of Wells Fargo, Citigroup and Bank of America said at a congressional hearing in late May that they are approaching the cryptocurrency landscape with caution.

Fidelity Investments, which established a digital assets division in 2018 to execute cryptocurrency trades for hedge funds and other institutional investors, filed papers with US securities regulators for a bitcoin exchange traded fund (ETF).

The move could potentially expand cryptocurrency investments to a broader range of individual investors.

Tougher rules ahead?
Still, many financial players are reluctant to dive into an investment realm associated with black markets that has sparked interest from US and global regulators.

There is also remarkable volatility, with bitcoin beginning 2021 at around $30,000 and hitting $63,000 in April before falling back to $34,000 in June.

“Speculators and those suffering from FOMO (the ‘fear of missing out’) will surely continue to flock to cryptos in the hopes of achieving huge returns,” said Ian Gendler of research firm Value Line.

But Gendler urges clients to avoid cryptocurrency investments, citing the elevated risk and the lack of a tangible asset compared with putting money into commodities or a company. Bitcoin and other digital money is also not backed by governments, he noted.

“Cryptocurrencies are only worth what the next investor is willing to pay,” he said.

Still, many in finance do not see cryptocurrency as a transient phenomenon.

“We do believe bitcoin, and more broadly crypto assets, are a new and emerging asset class that will likely be here to stay,” said Chris Kuiper, vice president at CFRA Research.

CFRA expects “the large banks as well as smaller financial institutions to continue to adopt them, particularly as the infrastructure and legal/regulatory framework continues to be built out,” Kuiper added.

The Basel Committee, which coordinates regulation among central banks, this week proposed new rules that would require banks to set aside capital for cryptocurrency investments.

Gary Gensler, the new head of the Securities and Exchange Commission, has also said he wants to bolster protections for cryptocurrency investors, telling CNBC that such investors “don’t have full protections that they have in the equity markets or in the commodity futures market.”



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Green’ to be soon the colour of money for European banks, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The European Union is working on new rules where banks will have to state the “greenness” of their activities, or what share of their business is financing climate-friendly activities — a move that would impact profitability in an increasingly environmentally conscious world.

The so-called green asset ratio (GAR) measure is meant to help inform stakeholders — including investors, employees and depositors — of a bank’s commitment to disinvesting from fossil fuels by revealing what proportion of its assets are environmentally sound.

How would it work

Depending on its relative shade of green, a lender’s funding costs could be at stake, as well as its ability to retain talent and its attractiveness to customers. Unlike banks’ other complex financial metrics, a green label may resonate with a much broader public that’s increasingly conscious of companies’ role in society.

However, there is a lot of uncertainty around what will be included in the GAR. If too many banking activities are included it may unnecessarily hit some lenders, and if only a few are included there is danger of “greenwashing.” Also, the banks may shift dirty business to where it isn’t captured in the GAR.

While the European Union proposed measuring green assets against banks’ entire activities, including derivatives, the European Banking Authority has a different view. It favours excluding derivatives entirely from the calculation and reporting so-called “capital markets indicators” separately.

The EBA’s proposal could let banks off the hook on climate change by possibly flattering their green asset ratios. Derivatives are a significant and somewhat risky part of investment banking so their inclusion in the GAR would make a difference. Worse, some lenders might take on greater risk by structuring non-green deals as derivatives to keep them out of the GAR calculations.

Where do European banks stand?

French banks are known for dominating their home market, but they’re considered also-rans on the global stage when compared with US lenders. That’s not the case in the world of green banking. Credit Agricole is the leading underwriter of green bonds, three places ahead of the much larger JPMorgan since the end of 2015, according to an analysis on activity from almost 140 banks around the world by Bloomberg. Two other Paris-based banks, BNP Paribas and Societe Generale, rank in the top 10 in the league table.

French banks were early in identifying green lending as a way to differentiate themselves from their rivals, said Maia Godemer, a London-based researcher at BloombergNEF, a clean-energy think tank. Green debt offerings have been steadily increasing for the past five years, and 2021 is shaping up to be the biggest yet. Issuers have sold more than $187 billion of green bonds so far in 2021, almost triple the pace from the year-earlier period.

A renewable energy market

The underwriting market for renewable-energy companies is minuscule when compared with the funds that fossil-fuel companies are raking in. Since the start of 2016, renewable-energy producers have raised less than $160 billion in the debt markets, compared with the $3.6 trillion for non-renewable energy producers, according to Bloomberg data. This year, when one would expect the spread to be narrowing, green energy providers have received less than $10 billion from bond sales and loans, while fossil-fuel companies got almost $190 billion. The leading lenders to renewable-energy companies since 2016 include Japan’s Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group, BNP Paribas and Australia & New Zealand Banking Group. Bank of America was the top U.S. bank, placing 11th in the league table.



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EU fines UBS, Nomura, UniCredit $452 million over bond cartel, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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European Union antitrust regulators fined UBS, UniCredit and Nomura 371 million euros ($452 million) on Thursday in connection with a European government bond trading cartel.

The penalties are the latest to punish the financial industry for alleged involvement in foreign exchange cartels, Euribor and Libor benchmark cartels, and bonds cartels.

The three banks said in statements that they would appeal or were considering doing so.

The European Commission said the European government bond cartel ran from 2007 to 2011, with traders from the banks informing each other on their prices and volumes offered in the run-up to the auctions and the prices being shown to their customers or to the market in general via multilateral chatrooms on Bloomberg terminals.

“A well-functioning European government bonds market is paramount both for the eurozone member states issuing these bonds to generate liquidity and the investors buying and trading them,” European Competition Commissioner Margrethe Vestager said in a statement.

UBS said the fine related to “a legacy issue” and it had since taken action to improve its processes.

“Taking into account relevant provisions, this matter may have an impact of up to $100 million on UBS’s second quarter 2021 results,” it said.

UniCredit said the findings did not show any “wrongdoing on its part”.

“UniCredit will appeal the decision before the European Courts,” the Italian bank said in a statement.

Nomura said it had introduced measures to ensure “the highest levels of integrity at all times” and would consider all options, including an appeal.

“The decision issued today by the European Commission and associated fine imposed on Nomura relates to historic behaviour by two former Nomura employees for an approximate 10 month period in 2011,” it said.

The European Commission said Bank of America, RBS (now known as NatWest), Natixis and WestLB (now known as Portigon) also took part in the cartel.

NatWest escaped a 260-million-euro fine as it alerted the cartel to the EU competition watchdog. Bank of America and Natixis were also not fined because their infringement falls outside the limitation period for imposition of fines, the Commission said.

It said Portigon, the legal and economic successor to WestLB, received a zero fine as it did not generate any net turnover in the last business year.



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US banks deploy AI to monitor customers, workers amid tech backlash, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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By Paresh Dave and Jeffrey Dastin

Several U.S. banks have started deploying camera software that can analyze customer preferences, monitor workers and spot people sleeping near ATMs, even as they remain wary about possible backlash over increased surveillance, more than a dozen banking and technology sources told Reuters.

Previously unreported trials at City National Bank of Florida and JPMorgan Chase & Co as well as earlier rollouts at banks such as Wells Fargo & Co offer a rare view into the potential U.S. financial institutions see in facial recognition and related artificial intelligence systems.

Widespread deployment of such visual AI tools in the heavily regulated banking sector would be a significant step toward their becoming mainstream in corporate America.

Bobby Dominguez, chief information security officer at City National, said smartphones that unlock via a face scan have paved the way.

“We’re already leveraging facial recognition on mobile,” he said. “Why not leverage it in the real world?”

City National will begin facial recognition trials early next year to identify customers at teller machines and employees at branches, aiming to replace clunky and less secure authentication measures at its 31 sites, Dominguez said. Eventually, the software could spot people on government watch lists, he said.

JPMorgan said it is “conducting a small test of video analytic technology with a handful of branches in Ohio.” Wells Fargo said it works to prevent fraud but declined to discuss how.

Civil liberties issues loom large. Critics point to arrests of innocent individuals following faulty facial matches, disproportionate use of the systems to monitor lower-income and non-white communities, and the loss of privacy inherent in ubiquitous surveillance.

Portland, Oregon, as of Jan. 1 banned businesses from using facial recognition “in places of public accommodation,” and drugstore chain Rite Aid Corp shut a nationwide face recognition program last year.

Dominguez and other bank executives said their deployments are sensitive to the issues.

“We’re never going to compromise our clients’ privacy,” Dominguez said. “We’re getting off to an early start on technology already used in other parts of the world and that is rapidly coming to the American banking network.”

Still, the big question among banks, said Fredrik Nilsson, vice president of the Americas at Axis Communications, a top maker of surveillance cameras, is “what will be the potential backlash from the public if we roll this out?”

Walter Connors, chief information officer at Brannen Bank, said the Florida company had discussed but not adopted the technology for its 12 locations. “Anybody walking into a branch expects to be recorded,” Connors said. “But when you’re talking about face recognition, that’s a larger conversation.”

BUSINESS INTELLIGENCE

JPMorgan began assessing the potential of computer vision in 2019 by using internally developed software to analyze archived footage from Chase branches in New York and Ohio, where one of its two Innovation Labs is located, said two people including former employee Neil Bhandar, who oversaw some of the effort at the time.

Chase aims to gather data to better schedule staff and design branches, three people said and the bank confirmed. Bhandar said some staff even went to one of Amazon.com Inc’s cashier-less convenience stores to learn about its computer vision system.

Preliminary analysis by Bhandar of branch footage revealed more men would visit before or after lunch, while women tended to arrive mid-afternoon. Bhandar said he also wanted to analyze whether women avoided compact spaces in ATM lobbies because they might bump into someone, but the pandemic halted the plan.

Testing facial recognition to identify clients as they walk into a Chase bank, if they consented to it, has been another possibility considered to enhance their experience, a current employee involved in innovation projects said.

Chase would not be the first to evaluate those uses. A bank in the Northeast recently used computer vision to identify busy areas in branches with newer layouts, an executive there said, speaking on the condition the company not be named.

A Midwestern credit union last year tested facial recognition for client identification at four locations before pausing over cost concerns, a source said.

While Chase developed custom computer vision in-house using components from Google, IBM Watson and Amazon Web Services, it also considered fully built systems from software startups AnyVision and Vintra, people including Bhandar said. AnyVision declined to comment, and Vintra did not respond to requests for comment.

Chase said it ultimately chose a different vendor, which it declined to name, out of 11 options considered and began testing that company’s technology at a handful of Ohio locations last October. The effort aims to identify transaction times, how many people leave because of long queues and which activities are occupying workers.

The bank added that facial, race and gender recognition are not part of this test.

Using technology to guess customers’ demographics can be problematic, some ethics experts say, because it reinforces stereotypes. Some computer vision programs also are less accurate on people of color, and critics have warned that could lead to unjust outcomes.

Chase has weighed ethical questions. For instance, some internally called for reconsidering planned testing in Harlem, a historically Black neighborhood in New York, because it could be viewed as racially insensitive, two of the people said. The discussions emerged about the same time as a December 2019 New York Times article about racism at Chase branches in Arizona.

Analyzing race was not part of the eventually tabled plans, and the Harlem branch had been selected because it housed the other Chase Innovation Lab for evaluating new technology, the people said and the bank confirmed.

TARGETING THE HOMELESS

Security uses for computer vision long have stirred banks’ interest. Wells Fargo used primitive software from the company 3VR over a decade ago to review footage of crimes and see if any faces matched those of known offenders, said John Honovich, who worked at 3VR and founded video surveillance research organization IPVM.

Identiv, which acquired 3VR in 2018, said banking sales were a major focus, but it declined to comment on Wells Fargo.

A security executive at a mid-sized Southern bank, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss secret measures, said over the last 18 months it has rolled out video analytics software at nearly every branch to generate alerts when doors to safes, computer server rooms and other sensitive areas are left open.

Outside, the bank monitors for loitering, such as the recurring issue of people setting up tents under the overhang for drive-through ATMs. Security staff at a control center can play an audio recording politely asking those people to leave, the executive said.

The issue of people sleeping in enclosed ATM lobbies has long been an industry concern, said Brian Karas, vice president of sales at Airship Industries, which develops video management and analytics software.

Systems that detected loitering so staff could activate a siren or strobe light helped increase ATM usage and reduce vandalism for several banks, he said. Though companies did not want to displace people seeking shelter, they felt this was necessary to make ATMs safe and accessible, Karas said.

City National’s Dominguez said the bank’s branches use computer vision to detect suspicious activity outside.

Sales records from 2010 and 2011 reviewed by Reuters show that Bank of America Corp purchased “iCVR” cameras, which were marketed at the time as helping organizations reduce loitering in ATM lobbies. Bank of America said it no longer uses iCVR technology.

The Charlotte, North Carolina-based bank’s interest in computer vision has not abated. Its officials met with AnyVision on multiple occasions in 2019, including at a September conference during which the startup demonstrated how it could identify the face of a Bank of America executive, according to records of the presentation seen by Reuters and a person in attendance.

The bank said, “We are always reviewing potential new technology solutions that are on the market.”



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What are biometric payments?, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The most popular biometric payment form is fingerprint payment, which is based on finger scanning. The device commonly employs two-factor authentication, in which a finger scan replaces a card swipe, and the user enters a PIN (personal identification number). It works on Biometric authentication which is a security measure which uses biometric features of a user to verify the identity of a person trying to access an authorized device.

Types of Biometric authentication-
Fingerprint
Facial recognition
Voice identification
Eye scanners

How does a biometric payment card works:

The fingerprint is enrolled by the cardholder and safely stored on the card. During a transaction, he or she places his or her finger on the card’s sensor, which detects if the scanned print matches the print stored in the card. A successful or unsuccessful match is marked by a green or red light on the card. PIN code can be used as a fallback solution whenever the cardholder’s fingerprint cannot be used – like ATM cash withdrawals, for example.

How safe are the biometric payments:

Due to the uniqueness of individual’s biometric features, using biometric payment methods provides better safety and security to both consumers and banks. The card compares the user’s finger on the scanner to the reference data safely stored within the card, before authorizing a payment. If the card is lost or stolen, it cannot be used even for low value contactless payments. However, there are some concerns that the fingerprints could be made available to law and enforcement agencies or government agencies. There is a risk that customer privacy and confidential information can be compromised as it is easy to set a new password but impossible to give someone a new look. In response to this, Biometric payment service providers point out that they do not keep the customer’s actual fingerprint in their databases — they keep an encrypted number derived from the finger’s point-to-point measurements.

Benefits of Biometric Payment System:

Convenience
No PIN number require
No limit on contactless spend
More secure
Preferred by customers
Compatibility

Future of Payments

As we look into the future, biometric technology is improving and developing constantly in terms of speed and accuracy, authenticating using a biometric identifier is quicker and easier than entering a pin or password. This benefit both the consumer as well as businesses, with the path to conversion made much more straightforward by the adoption of biometric payment authentication.

Who are offering Biometric Payments

Banks like BNP Paribas, The Royal Bank of Scotland and NatWestare offering Biometric payments card to their users. Chase, Bank of America, Citi, and Wells Fargo have introduced various biometric ID options, including voice, fingerprint, eye, or facial recognition.

In India, it is currently used with AePS settlement systems only based on Aadhar identification.



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Bloomberg, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Bank of America Corp cut some of its staff in the global banking and markets division this week, Bloomberg News reported on Thursday.

Employees in sales and trading, research, investment banking and capital markets were affected by the move, the report said, citing two people familiar with the matter. (https://bit.ly/3dNCO5M)

The staff reduction is part of Wall Street’s typical practice of staffing changes around this time of the year after bonuses are distributed, the report added.

Bank of America did not immediately respond to Reuters’ request for comment.

Last year, the bank had said it would not cut any jobs in 2020.

(Reporting by Niket Nishant in Bengaluru; Editing by Amy Caren Daniel)

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Digital banks gain U.S. customers during pandemic, thanks to early deposits, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Digital banks including Chime, Varo and Current have won over more U.S. customers during the coronavirus pandemic by processing stimulus payments quickly, setting them apart from traditional banks and generating valuable word-of-mouth referrals.

In some cases, the companies pre-funded deposits they expected their customers to receive from the Treasury Department. In others, they received funds quickly and sent them through faster than traditional banks. That generated praise from individuals who celebrated their early deposits online and encouraged others to join their digital banks.

“I LOVE YOU @Chime,” a user with the handle @jayy702 Tweeted after getting some early stimulus funds on Dec. 28. “Reason number 1000 why I’ve been with them for years now. #ChimeCares.”

Also known as challenger banks or neobanks, firms like Chime operate primarily through smartphone apps and attract depositors with perks like no fees or minimum balance requirements.

Reactions were not all positive. Big banks and startups alike got complaints about delays that stemmed from the Internal Revenue Service misrouting millions of payments, as well as problems like not having direct deposits set up.

Yet overall, digital banks appeared to do more to transmit funds quickly, analysts said. That helped them carve a stronger toehold in the United States, where they have struggled to gain traction.

“Getting stimulus money into the hands of customers faster than incumbent banks is a big publicity win for the neo-banks,” said Sarah Kocianski, head of research at fintech consultancy 11:FS.

She predicted further customer gains: “The appeal of getting paid early will remain beyond the stimulus packages.”

Varo more than doubled customers in 2020 compared with much slower growth in prior years, Chief Operating Officer Wesley Wright told Reuters. It now handles nearly 2 million accounts.

“The pandemic brought huge growth to us and to other digital banks,” he said.

Current’s customer figures rose similarly, from 1 million users in June to more than 2 million in November. Its revenue quintupled last year.

“It’s clear Americans desperately needed this,” said Current CEO Stuart Sopp, who urged the incoming Biden administration to offer more support.

Chime also grew significantly over the past year, a spokeswoman said, declining to share specifics. Chime gave 700,000 customers early access to nearly $700 million in stimulus funds.

Though they are gaining ground, experts put neobanks’ total deposit market share somewhere in the low single-digits. For comparison, JPMorgan Chase & Co, Bank of America Corp and Wells Fargo & Co each account for at least 10% of U.S. deposits, according to government data.

Those three banks said they have processed all of the electronic stimulus payments they received to date.

Millions of Chase customers could access funds as of Jan. 1 and all valid transactions were complete by Jan. 4, the bank said. More than three-quarters of Bank of America customers who qualify for stimulus payments have received them, it said. Wells also said it has processed all stimulus payments that arrived through direct deposit.

The industry has attributed delays to problems beyond a bank’s control, including the IRS error, as well as payments sent to closed accounts or to tax preparers instead of individuals.

Those who have not yet received stimulus funds may get paper checks or debit cards in the mail.

ACCOUNT PERKS

In addition to perks like no-fee accounts, some digital banks also offer early access to recurring deposits, as well as referral bonuses or free cash advances.

When coronavirus lockdowns thrust millions of Americans into unemployment, quick, easy access to money via smartphone app became even more attractive.

Importantly, they also got more people into “primary” accounts with direct deposits, which was required to get electronic stimulus funds. Those accounts are considered the holy grail of consumer banking, because depositors tend to stick with their primary bank and seek other services over time.

About 15% of U.S. millennials held primary accounts at digital banks in December, up from 5% at the start of 2020, according to a Cornerstone Advisors survey. The consultancy defines millennials as those born between 1982 and 1994.

Drew Kolar, a 35-year-old bartender in New York, is one of them.

After losing his job in the spring, Kolar was glad to see stimulus funds appear swiftly in his Varo account. He switched from Chase in late 2019 after his account turned negative and the bank assessed fees due to student-loan payments gone awry.

“I started looking for online banks that would take me with my bad credit and without connections to Chase, and found Varo,” said Kolar. “So far, I’ve had no problems.”



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