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Home Commentary Click Send

Why Some Bank Customers Could Leave And Cling To Fintech

by Rarzack Olaegbe
2 years ago
in Click Send, Lead-In
Reading Time: 3 mins read
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A friend closed her account with one of the banks last week. She could not take it anymore. She had approached the bank to transfer her fund into one of her subsidiary’s accounts. At another branch. In the same bank. Close to her residence. However, she wanted the former account closed. The bank said no.

She approached the relationship manager. The manager apologised. Promised to activate the request. She did not. My friend returned to the bank two months later. She spoke with another manager. Another manager told her the cause of the delay. People problem. Above all, the branch would not want to lose the customer to another branch. The bank has lost a customer. She would tell her friends. Her friends would tell their friends. Do you get the drift?

On The Other Hand

More banks could lose customers. As shown by the recent research of www.pymnts.com, many of the banks could lose nearly 40 per cent of Gen Z and millennials due to a lack of innovation. The research explained that potential customer loss could outweigh the cost of investing in payment methods that consumers demand.

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It said payment options matter to account holders across generations. Although the younger demographics are most willing to switch their current financial institution over a lack of innovation.

PYMNTS’ May collaboration with PSCU, “Credit Union Innovation,” found that 29 per cent of account holders overall would consider switching to a financial institution offering innovative payment products. The collaboration discovered that almost one-third of account holders could leave the friction-filled effort of transferring banks over the lack of payment methods. This may be alarming enough for institutions that have so far delayed offering these options.

Although a higher share of younger consumers agreed with the sentiment. 38 per cent of bridge millennials, 39 per cent of millennials, and 38 per cent of Generation Z consumers said they would consider switching. If banks lose these lifetime customers now, or in the middle of their financial journeys, does it mean that banks that lack innovation could face higher long-term profitability issues if these consumers switch?

The research postulated that as difficult as it may be to maintain targeted customer retention rates in the current ultra-competitive environment, luring consumers back after they have already left might be near impossible.

From hindsight, it would be difficult to lure my friend back again. The bank in question did not tick any of the boxes. It failed to engage my friend: phone call, email, or short message system. The so-called relationship manager failed to manage my friend. All right. Let us assume it was a people problem. If that is not the function of a manager, what is it?

Aside from this, tech innovations – which many neo-banks and online payment firms have brought to the game especially when it comes to consumer-facing offerings – are becoming options for customers. This is because bank customers now demand increased connectivity and more money mobility options. The collaboration concluded that a large slice of younger consumers has made it clear that financial institutions that are not stepping up could be left behind.

On The Other Hand

A neo-bank with other branches would never let the customer go. It would speedily accede to the request. The neo-bank has nothing to lose. The fund is still domiciled in its till. There is a marriage between the parties. That the fund leaves a bank branch is immaterial. Well, what do I know? I am not a banker.

In The Short Term

Do not blame the relationship manager.

Whom would you blame?

Blame japa!

 

Tags: Cling To Fintech
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Providus Bank has acquired the 34% equity stake held by the Asset Management Corporation of Nigeria (AMCON) in Unity Bank Plc, marking a decisive step toward the long-anticipated merger between the two financial institutions. The deal, valued at about N6.5 billion, saw AMCON offload its decade-old holding in Unity Bank to Providus at a price of N3.18 per share, representing a 110per cent premium to the bank’s prevailing market value of N1.50 on the Nigerian Exchange. Industry analysts said the transaction signals a turning point for Unity Bank, which has faced prolonged struggles with weak capitalisation, rising non-performing loans, and declining market relevance. By transferring AMCON’s strategic stake, they noted, Providus has strengthened its hand as it pushes for regulatory approvals to consummate a full merger. AMCON acquired its Unity Bank stake during the 2011–2012 banking sector clean-up after the global financial crisis exposed balance sheet vulnerabilities across second-tier lenders. Its divestment, according to banking sources, underscores the corporation’s gradual exit from long-held equity positions as it focuses on recovering toxic assets and reducing its systemic footprint. “AMCON’s sale to Providus is significant not just for Unity Bank but for the entire financial system,” said a Lagos-based investment banker. “It shows the government is serious about cleaning up legacy interventions while paving the way for stronger private-sector-led banks.” Unity Bank shareholders are set to benefit from the deal’s pricing structure. At N3.18 per share, Providus’ offer more than doubles the bank’s trading value, giving investors a rare premium exit in a market where bank stocks often trade at steep discounts. For minority shareholders, the merger if approvedcould also unlock value by combining Providus’ niche strength in corporate banking and digital services with Unity Bank’s broader retail and SME base. Providus, one of Nigeria’s fastest-growing mid-tier lenders, is widely seen as using the Unity Bank deal to accelerate its ambition of achieving national bank status. By absorbing Unity’s branch network and customer base, the lender would scale its operations beyond its current limited licence, positioning itself to compete more aggressively with tier-one institutions. “The synergies are clear,” said a senior Unity Bank executive familiar with the talks. “Providus brings balance sheet strength and digital innovation, while Unity offers reach and brand equity, especially in northern Nigeria.” Following AMCON’s divestment, the proposed merger will be subject to approval from the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), and Unity Bank shareholders. Both banks are expected to present a detailed merger scheme in the coming months, outlining share swap ratios, post-merger governance, and capital plans. Market watchers say regulatory scrutiny will focus on whether the combined entity meets CBN’s revised recapitalisation thresholds, which mandate higher minimum capital bases for Nigerian banks. The Providus–Unity transaction comes amid a wave of consolidation moves triggered by the CBN’s ongoing recapitalisation drive. Several lenders are exploring mergers, acquisitions, or fresh capital injections to meet compliance deadlines ahead of 2026. “This is the first big-ticket transaction of the recapitalisation era,” said a financial markets analyst. “It won’t be the last.”

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