Disruptive Industry Trends Raise the Pressure on Corporate Bankers

BOSTON, MA--(Marketwired - Mar 23, 2015) - Corporate banks, a majority of which are plagued by declining economic profit, must take bold steps to adapt their business models or potentially suffer prolonged, painful periods of underperformance, according to a new report by The Boston Consulting Group (BCG). The report, Global Corporate Banking 2015: The Look of a Winner, is being released today.

The latest in a series of BCG studies on the corporate banking business, the report explores the recent performance of leading industry players, examines five disruptive trends that they must cope with, and looks ahead to what winning corporate banking divisions will look like in 2020.

"While it would be premature to write the obituary for corporate banks as we know them," said Jürgen Schwarz, a coauthor of the report and the global leader of BCG's corporate banking segment, "today's players must markedly change how they do business if they hope to thrive in the future."

Recent Performance. According to the report, it has been a struggle to create value in corporate banking in many markets since the start of the 2007-2008 financial crisis. The 2014 edition of BCG's Corporate Banking Performance benchmarking, with more than 250 participants that serve small businesses, midmarket companies, and large corporations, showed that two-thirds of corporate banking divisions had returns on capital below the hurdle rate. Performing well in corporate banking is critical, the report says, given that it accounts for roughly half of the banking industry's global revenue pool. BCG estimates that corporate banking revenues will grow by 7 to 8 percent annually through 2020.

The challenge has been particularly severe in Western Europe, but also in Central and Eastern Europe, with median pretax returns below 10 percent in both regions. Even in relatively fast-growing markets such as Latin America and Asia-Pacific, players are battling against increasingly competitive margins, too much reliance on lending products, and rising loan losses.

BCG's 2014 benchmarking found that more than half of corporate banking divisions worldwide showed declining economic profit over the previous three years. North American banks stood out for above-average performance in terms of return on capital, but even their returns are trending downward as postcrisis competition intensifies. Western Europe, despite turnaround initiatives at many banks, has a majority of players with negative and declining economic profit, and more than half of Latin American players show declining economic profit.