Showing posts with label lending. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lending. Show all posts
Sunday, 6 March 2022
What is the biggest challenge for traditional banks? - Decoding: Banks - Episode 9
Sunday, 6 February 2022
How does lending work? - Decoding: Banks - Episode 4
Thursday, 20 January 2022
What Trends Are Going To Transform Business Banking in 2022 and Beyond?
Financial institutions are especially vulnerable to losing small-to-medium sized businesses to fintech entrants.
SMBs have typically been underserved when it comes to tech innovation or new digital services. More than six in ten businesses in this large segment go outside their primary bank for business services such as payments and receivables.
An innovation revolution is roiling business banking just as it has consumer banking.
When it comes to sleek new tech and shiny new digital products and features, much of the innovation has long been focused on the consumer side of banking. Business banking, meanwhile, remains stuck in neutral, saddled with legacy tech and processes, many of which are still largely paper-based.
But banks that can ramp up their game when it comes to business banking services stand a good chance of getting a leg up on competitors and driving revenue. Individuals that use business banking services are, after all, consumers as well, and increasingly they are demanding the same type of innovation they get in their consumer lives from their business banking relationship.
SMBs have typically been underserved when it comes to tech innovation or new digital services. More than six in ten businesses in this large segment go outside their primary bank for business services such as payments and receivables.
An innovation revolution is roiling business banking just as it has consumer banking.
When it comes to sleek new tech and shiny new digital products and features, much of the innovation has long been focused on the consumer side of banking. Business banking, meanwhile, remains stuck in neutral, saddled with legacy tech and processes, many of which are still largely paper-based.
But banks that can ramp up their game when it comes to business banking services stand a good chance of getting a leg up on competitors and driving revenue. Individuals that use business banking services are, after all, consumers as well, and increasingly they are demanding the same type of innovation they get in their consumer lives from their business banking relationship.
So, what trends are going to transform business banking in 2022 and beyond that?
Find out by reading the report from The Financial Brand HERE.
Labels:
banking,
business,
fintech,
innovation,
lending,
money,
super apps,
treasury management
Monday, 24 June 2019
The 2008 Financial Crisis - Causes and Effects
Want to understand the 2008 financial crisis? Here is a really informative and useful video on the causes and the effects of the 2008 financial crisis by Jonathan Jarvis.
Labels:
banks,
financial crisis,
lending,
mortgage,
sub-prime
Friday, 17 July 2015
How Banks Lost Their Groove In Small Business Finance... And Why They May Never Get It Back
From Forbes Magazine –
“Prior to the Great Recession, easy credit conditions prevailed for small businesses. Cash was free flowing, and relaxed lending practices made it relatively easy to secure financing.
After the Lehman Brothers crash and during the ensuing “credit crunch,” volume fell roughly 19% from 2008 until 2012. This general slowdown in lending coincided with stricter requirements placed on borrowers. Financing simply became less available — even for “creditworthy” companies. For the first time in U.S. business history, small business owners frequently were unable to secure credit even from their own banks.”
Read more>>
Labels:
banks,
credit,
credit crunch,
financial crisis,
Lehman Brothers,
lending,
loans,
small business
Tuesday, 2 September 2014
Case Study: Growth through Niche Lending
From Bank Director
Steve Kent of River Branch Capital LLC shares how QCR Holdings Inc. developed a scalable and profitable loan portfolio of niche businesses.
Labels:
bank,
financial crisis,
lending
Friday, 18 July 2014
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