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Acquire the capabilities required to rapidly roll out negative interests and evolve with the policy
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In a negative interest regime, it costs to deposit money. As counterintuitive as it may sound, this is one of the contemporary policies that certain economies, such as Europe, Japan, Australia and United States are increasingly considering and adopting to help stimulate spending and investment during times of prolonged economic downturns.
Central banks use interest rates to control economic activity – they raise interest rates during times of high growth and inflation and lower them during times of recession and deflation to avoid serious economic fluctuations. Negative interest is unconventional, but it is being forced because of the economic situations in different regions. The effective execution of the policy is, however, slightly more intricate than simply mandating interests on all deposits.
With this policy, central banks attempt to instigate two key effects – firstly, to trigger the organizations to transmit the negative interest down to client-level and secondly, to incentivize the organizations to offer more credit. The amplitude of these effects, however, have been constrained by several factors including the banks’ and financial services institutions’ ability to implement negative interest programs.
Simply put if banks do not address this policy quickly, it can erode their profitability and leave them with excess liquidity with high opportunity costs.
Banks are now looking at several strategies to keep pace with the evolving regime, including increasing loan-to-debt ratios to help address the eroding net interest margin. Very importantly, banks are also looking at transmitting negative interest implications on deposits down to the client level. As simple as it may sound, this transmission is complex given their dependence on legacy systems, which were not built to manage and process this contemporary policy that is continuing to evolve.
To effectively implement negative interest programs, banks will need to acquire technological and operational capabilities that can ensure quick time-to-market and adapt with the changes in policy.
Rapid time-to-market
Transparency and auditability
Automation of negative interest accounting