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Banks and Remittance Services April 2007

Banks and Remittance Services April 2007 Characteristics of the Remittance Market And How Banks Can Best Approach It James C. Orr Executive Director, The Bretton Woods Committee and Chairman, MicroFinance International Corp Presentation Outline Introduction to Remittances Opportunities

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Banks and Remittance Services April 2007

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  1. Banks and RemittanceServicesApril 2007 Characteristics of the Remittance Market And How Banks Can Best Approach It James C. Orr Executive Director, The Bretton Woods Committee and Chairman, MicroFinance International Corp

  2. Presentation Outline • Introduction to Remittances • Opportunities • Challenges • Solutions

  3. Introduction to Remittances • Remittances are the traditional financial support for families back in their home countries. • This phenomenon is generated by a movement of labor across borders that constitutes an international labor market in which people move north by the MILLIONS and money moves south by the BILLIONS..

  4. Introduction to Remittances • Billions in Flows - Hidden in Plain Sight • $60 billion to Latin American in 2007 • $250 billion worldwide (estimate) • Larger than foreign assistance and foreign investment to Latin America combined • Total to Latin America to reach $500 billion by 2010

  5. Introduction to Remittances • Almost unnoticed for decades • Average remittance is small in size • Senders typically reside outside the formal financial system • Government Officials Now Jumping into the Game • Urging banks to enter the market • Raising compliance hurdles

  6. Remittance Senders and Receivers • Senders are Migrants Here to Earn Money • Typically low-income (60% earn $30,000 or less) • Half are “Unbanked” • Faithful in their Remittance Habits • Receivers are family members back home • Heavily dependent on these flows • Often live in rural areas far from formal financial institutions

  7. Total Money Sent

  8. Where Do Remittances Go?

  9. Top 20 Remittance Receivers in 2004, ($ billion)

  10. Remittances and Other Flows Private debt and portfolio equity FDI Recorded remittances ODA

  11. Opportunities

  12. Opportunities: Hispanic Market • How big a market? 40 million Latinos • Purchasing Power? $1 trillion in 2008 • Legal Status? 80% are legal residents • Time in the US? Three-fourths in US more than 5 years • Remittance Senders? 13 million senders

  13. Opportunities: Remittance Market is Changing • Many new entrants over last decade. • Fees being driven down by: • New entrants • New technology • Increased transparency • Regulatory intervention has changed the business. • MTOs face growing compliance headaches. (KYC, BSA, USA-Patriot) • Many MTOs lost their commercial bank accounts. (MTOs as high risk businesses) • The market is undergoing a shakeout and consolidation period.

  14. Opportunities: Field Wide Open for Banks? • Remittances can be an anchor service to the fastest growing retail banking segment in US -- Unbanked immigrants. • Requires different ways of doing things. • Requires serious commitment. • And, compliance is a major concern.

  15. Challenges

  16. Specific Challenges for Banks • Small value, high volume international payments. • Existing bank infrastructure such as SWIFT is not practical and too inefficient. • Relatively high compliance requirements. • Remittance customers are accustomed to and expect personal attention. • All result in high per transaction costs.

  17. Challenges: Technology is Key • Revenue -- Roughly 1% of transfer value • Technology becomes important to reduce costs and fulfill compliance requirements. • Remember that remittance senders do not usually use payment cards or ATMs. • Tellers are necessary as the point of entry. • Technology again important to reduce remittance processing time for tellers.

  18. Challenges: The Ideal Business Cycle What is the Ideal Business Cycle for Banks? • New customers come to the bank to send remittances; • Eventually they open checking accounts and use ATM and payment cards to send money; • Ultimately they purchase other services.

  19. Solutions

  20. Solutions: Options for Banks? • Rely on card to card transfers. • Problem: remittance senders don't have bank accounts and have little incentive to go to a bank (recipients are also mostly unbanked). • ACH extension provides great infrastructure where the remitter and recipient have bank accounts. • Problem: lacks an efficient system to administer transactions and carry out compliance checks. • Summary: To effectively enter the market banks need a reliable and compliant system that allows cash payments in addition to ACH.

  21. Solutions • ARIAS is one such system. • ARIAS was developed by MicroFinance International of Washington, DC to address the specific challenges faced by banks.

  22. ARIAS Remittance Solution What is ARIAS? • State of the art Internet-based remittance processing system • Global distribution network to 85 countries.

  23. ARIAS Remittance System • Efficient: • Transactions – Less than a minute • Transparent pricing – Keeps it simple for everyone • Provides daily COB reports and settlement via ACH • Low-cost to bank and customer: • Web-based – No investment in hardware or software • User-friendly – Easy to train employees • Low fee per transaction – Allows competitive pricing • Handles the Compliance Issues: • KYC - All remitters registered & ID required as per bank policy • Transactions Automatically Monitored: • System checks senders and recipients against OFAC SDN list • All transactions monitored for suspicious activity, SAR and CTR requirements

  24. ARIAS Distribution Network • Global reach: Latin America, Asia, Africa, Europe and the Middle East • Convenient locations – even in remote and poor communities • Convenient payment options: • No account ever required • Choose cash pick-up, deposit to account, home delivery or deposit to cell phone, (depending on the market preferences in each country) • Funds available immediately

  25. User Support • Help Desk • Provide user and technical assistance • Available 24/7 • Multi-lingual • Marketing • Full-time multi-lingual marketing staff • Translation of text • Design materials • Promotional events

  26. Conclusion By choosing a system which: • Makes transactions and compliance efficient, and that • Includes a distribution network of convenient, professional paying locations, Banks can offer an affordable and competitive money transfer product, earning additional fee income, and gaining access to new customers.

  27. More Information? For more information on the ARIAS, contact: Heather Bach Vice President Business Development ARIAS Financial Solutions / MFIC 1325 Massachusetts Avenue, NW Suite 250 Washington, DC 20005 Tel: 202 737 5490 hbach@mfi-corp.com www.ariasfs.com

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