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    Home » Sections » Banking » How digital banking challengers Discovery and TymeBank are faring

    How digital banking challengers Discovery and TymeBank are faring

    By Staff Reporter15 September 2021
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    African Rainbow Capital Investments, which owns 23.9% of TymeBank, says it expects the digital bank to break even in 2022. This will be three-and-a-half years after launch.

    Discovery Bank, by contrast, is targeting breakeven in approximately three years’ time – in 2024. This ought to be no surprise given that the latter is not intended to be a so-called skinny “neo-bank”. The point at which it will break even is around seven times that of TymeBank.

    Both new banks continue to grow strongly, albeit with very different propositions and target customers.

    TymeBank added over 1.5 million clients in the last year and now has a total of 3.45 million customers

    TymeBank added over 1.5 million clients in the last year and now has a total of 3.45 million customers. It is adding in excess of 120 000 customers per month. A few months ago, the bank said the active portion of that base – in other words, customers who had generated revenue for the bank in the past 30 days – was just above 60%.

    Despite experiencing “some significant headwinds” in the year to June, the group says the bank has managed to achieve its revenue and cost targets. By May, it had attracted deposits totalling R2.1-billion.

    Operating costs

    TymeBank’s operating expenses (excluding depreciation and amortisation) in calendar 2020 were R1.06-billion. However, in a presentation earlier this year it pointed to a 12% decline in operating costs when comparing the first quarter of this year to last year. This is a consequence of the bank continuing to scale. Notably, it says it has “reshaped distribution costs through restructuring of partnership commercial arrangements around volume and performance”.

    The partnership with the Zionist Christian Church (ZCC) announced two months before lockdown hit last year, which targeted two million adult customers across South Africa, has been delayed because of the Covid-19 pandemic.

    By its 2023 financial year, TymeBank expects just 60-70% of revenue to come from existing products.

    It sees the following revenue streams contributing materially:

    • Insurance, via a partnership with Hollard that was launched in the last year;
    • High-frequency lending, which comprises MoreTyme (buy-now-pay-later instalment credit product), as well as still to-be-launched TymeAdvance and its “short-term unsecured personal lending product”;
    • Lifestyle value-added services (VAS) beyond traditional VAS such as airtime and electricity); and
    • Subscription bundles.

    In so-called “steady state” – from 2025 to 2030 – TymeBank expects its retail cost-to-income ratio to be just 25%. This is less than half the cost-to-income ratio of the traditional four full-service banks, and significantly lower than Capitec’s 40%.

    Discovery Bank reported operating expenses of R1.67-billion for the year to end-June (this excludes R246-million in depreciation and amortisation and R271-million in expected credit losses).

    The group announced last week that it added 90 000 clients in the financial year, an increase of 86% on the prior year. At the end of June, Discovery Bank had 362 000 clients with 649 000 accounts. It says it is “achieving 500 average daily new-to-bank sales, in line with the medium-term forecast”.

    At the end of June, Discovery Bank had 362 000 clients with 649 000 accounts. It says it is achieving 500 average daily new-to-bank sales

    Primary clients make up 92% of the total number and it says two in five are bank-only clients.

    This presents a real opportunity to sell other Discovery products to these customers. The penetration of Vitality Money (fewer than a third of the base at Diamond status) also offers opportunity.

    It grew retail deposits by 167% to R8.2-billion in the year (versus 7% across the market), while advances edged up just 5% to R3.8-billion (still, it contends this is faster than the market’s 4.5%). The group says this is as a result of a “deliberate decision to pursue a prudent credit strategy”.

    Its credit loss ratio, which includes a Covid-19 overlay, is 4.6% for the year – far lower than card and unsecured lending businesses of rival banks.

    Across its local operations, 4.9 billion Discovery Miles (equivalent to R490-million) were earned in the financial year, with 2.9 billion miles spent (R290-million).

    Its new ‘Miles D-Day’ on the 15th of each month, which offers customers double their discount level, has seen members spend their miles at a rate surpassing even Black Friday (8.5 times the daily average, versus 5.5 times).

    The plan all along has been for Discovery Bank to break even at “roughly” 500 000 to 600 000 clients. If it continues to attract clients at current rates, that means break even in about FY2024 (July 2023 to June 2024).

    The bank is not saying this, but one assumes that if its credit appetite changes – and if the environment becomes more conducive to lending – it may turn profitable slightly sooner.

    • This article was originally published by Moneyweb and is used by TechCentral with permission
    African Rainbow Capital ARC ARC Investments Discovery Discovery Bank TymeBank
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