11 February 2025
India's Branch of the Future: Reimagining physical banks
Our new article explores how India’s branch of the future can offer a more personalized and community-driven experience that improves financial awareness.
As bankers in China and the wider Asia-Pacific region embark on the Year of the Snake, we highlight five industry trends for 2025 in tune with a key symbolic association – the ability of the snake to shed its skin and renew itself through a continuous process of transformation.
The industry will see the advent of more digital-first banks, the acceleration of hyper-personalization initiatives, and increasing momentum for strategies that leverage open banking. In addition, GenAI will continue to transform key banking processes – although wise leaders will balance innovation and creativity with the right AI governance and workplace culture to ensure customer trust is preserved and risks are managed.
Across Asia-Pacific banking markets including Hong Kong, Singapore, Malaysia and Thailand, regulators have spent the last few years sponsoring a wave of digital-first virtual banks, with the intention of kickstarting innovation, increasing competition and improving financial inclusion.
This last objective is particularly important in Thailand, where applications for a tranche of virtual banking licenses closed in September 2024. The regulator will issue licenses mid-2025, with winning candidates expected to be operating by mid-2026.1
The success, or otherwise, of digital-first banks across the various markets has underlined several key lessons about what defines a robust digital-first model:
Digital-first banks, while not always disrupting their local markets, have reshaped expectations around the customer experience. To keep up, incumbents need to address the challenge of legacy systems through strategies such as setting up new digital ‘sidecar’ banks, modernizing the legacy core or – more pragmatically – introducing middleware that stores and manages data from core systems and supplies it to banking apps in near real time.
Across financial services, there is broad consensus that institutions need to further personalize the relationship with customers and move towards the fabled ‘segment of one’.
Capco’s surveys of bank, wealth management and insurance customers in the Asia-Pacific region and the Middle East show that customers value personalized products and services – and are happy to share personal data in return for offerings more tailored to their needs.2
The essence of personalization lies in the bank’s ability to contextualize the customer relationship in real time so that the bank can offer solutions relevant to customer needs – even before customers themselves realize they need them. Imagine, for example:
The convenience and money savings delivered by this kind of hyper-personalization require a 360-degree picture of the customer and the ability to make the relevant data available, process it, augment it with more data using open banking and third-party partnerships, and then create value and convenience for the customer at lightning speed – often using AI-technologies.
The constraints that have prevented banks and their partners from offering such services will further loosen through 2025 as open banking provides access to more and richer information, and GenAI enables the new content to be more effectively and dynamically produced.
Banks should think strategically about how hyper-personalization will reshape customer relationships – and plan for the processing, data management, and analytical capabilities that will be required.
Open banking programs are expanding in the Asia-Pacific region with, for example, the Bank of Thailand launching its ‘Your Data’ initiative in October 2024 for the country’s financial industry, with the aim of making this operational in 2026.3
The goals of open banking programs are similar across the world: to set out standards and regulations that allow individuals to instruct organizations to share their data, thus supporting account aggregation, new kinds of financial insights, payment services flexibility, and other innovations for consumers and SMEs.
For example, Thailand’s Your Data initiative aims to improve each customer’s access to financial services by making their credit-related data easily available to a wider set of industry players – leading to more affordable consumer loans and SME financing, in line with the customer’s true risk profile.
Despite significant advances in Hong Kong,4 China, Singapore and other markets, open banking has made relatively slower progress in the Asia-Pacific region, when compared to other parts of the world such as the UK and Europe. This is in part due to regional inconsistencies in terms of the fundamental approach to open banking and the related protocols and technical infrastructure.
However, in Thailand and other markets, momentum is now growing. Industry experts are wondering if the result will be a shift in the role of banks from ‘banking service provider’ to ‘curator of the best fintech experiences’.
2025 is a good year to ask fundamental questions about the capabilities banks must continue to invest in to maintain a key role in the wider ecosystem – and those they may soon be offloading to other providers.
2025 may be the year that GenAI in the banking industry moves from PoCs and pilots to deployment across a swathe of business activities. This broader roll-out may retain a shade of conservatism, in that many implementations will continue to keep a human professional in the loop.
However, the pervasive nature of GenAI deployments across operating models, from front-of-house customer service to behind-the-scenes project management and transformation initiatives, may become much more apparent. To pick out three areas:
As use cases are deployed and scaled across a broader set of activities, banks should look to create supportive bank-wide environments. In particular, they will need to continually improve their approach to firm-wide AI governance and culture.
As AI and GenAI use cases move into the production pipeline through 2025, new guidelines, best practices, and regulations are emerging to shape industry behavior.
The Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA), for example, has in the last half-year provided a set of guiding principles for the use of customer-facing GenAI; an overview of the role of GenAI in the financial sector; and encouragement to apply the latest AI technologies to monitor suspicious activities.5 It capped this off with a December announcement of the 15 inaugural projects entering its new GenAI sandbox, designed to help banks and other firms safely pilot GenAI use cases.6
In this dynamic environment, banks need to put in place the right governance and culture to accommodate not only AI/GenAI innovation and piloting, but also adoption at scale:
As Capco discusses in a recent paper, traditional data governance frameworks and skillsets are being challenged by AI technologies across a number of dimensions, including the "complexities introduced by unstructured data, opaque algorithms, and dynamic data flows and transformations".8
While AI governance must take account of these new challenges, it must also be integrated within the organization’s wider governance function and should encompass improvements that need to be made to broader data and technology governance.
This is not just about compliance and risk management. Developing a robust governance framework together with the right skills and culture will make it easier, safer and quicker to roll out repeatable AI/GenAI solutions in different business and functional areas – and thus represents a critical investment in the bank’s innovation platform.
References
1 Capco Thailand’s Bank of the Future : Will the New Virtual Banks Reshape the Industry?; https://www.bangkokpost.com/business/general/2885277/big-outlay-for-virtual-banks
2 Capco Singapore Wealth Management Survey; Capco Bank of the Future UAE Retail Banking Survey
3 https://www.bangkokpost.com/business/general/2877327/central-bank-introduces-open-banking-data-initiative
4 https://www.openbankingexpo.com/news/citi-hong-kong-unveils-new-wealth-feature-via-hkma-data-sharing-pilot/
5 HKMA, Consumer Protection in Respect of Use of Generative AI, August 2024; HKMA, GenAI in the Financial Services Space, September 2024, HKMA, Use of AI for Monitoring of Suspicious Activities, September 2024
6 https://www.hkma.gov.hk/eng/news-and-media/press-releases/2024/12/20241219-5/
7 https://www.capco.com/intelligence/capco-intelligence/five-foundational-elements-for-genai-governance-in-financial-services
8 https://www.capco.com/Capco-Institute/Journal-59-innovation-and-control/revolutionizing-data-governance-for-ai-large-language-models