Strategic business models under open banking: A guideline for incumbent banks
Publication Type
Journal Article
Publication Date
3-2022
Abstract
Since their emergence, FinTechs have been rapidly propagating and capturing market share from incumbent banks. These newcomers are responsible for most of the industry’s recent innovations, besides being more agile and customer-centric in their delivery of innovative banking products to the market. With the advent of the Open Banking era, FinTechs now have the support and encouragement from regulators to compete for business in a level playing field alongside traditional banks. A partnership between banks and FinTechs can leverage each side’s strengths, thus maximizing returns for both. This paper discusses, from an incumbent bank’s perspective, which role in a FinTech partnership it should take, or in other words, what kinds of strategic business models it should follow within an Open Banking framework. In reasoning for that purpose, we have performed an evaluation considering both academic and practical resources in this discipline. Industry case studies of incumbent banks fulfilling various bank-FinTech partnership roles are presented in this paper. Our findings suggest that banks should consider Open Banking strategic business models based on their total internal resources and product offerings, as well as their appetite and readiness for participating in the API economy.
Keywords
FinTech, open banking, API, ecosystem, platform, strategy
Discipline
Databases and Information Systems | Finance and Financial Management | Strategic Management Policy
Research Areas
Information Systems and Management
Publication
Journal of Digital Banking
Volume
6
Issue
4
First Page
366
Last Page
380
ISSN
2397-060X
Publisher
Henry Stewart Publications
Citation
NGUYEN, Huynh Long Hung and MEGARGEL, Alan @ Ali MADJELISI.
Strategic business models under open banking: A guideline for incumbent banks. (2022). Journal of Digital Banking. 6, (4), 366-380.
Available at: https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sis_research/7151