HSBC and RBS to launch new digital banking platforms

HSBC and RBS are launching new digital banking platforms, as competition for digitally savvy customers steps up in the face of a wave of online startups.
digital-banking-and-technologyHSBC has rolled out a new app-based business banking service — named HSBC Kinetic — in beta testing mode on Monday.

RBS will be launching its new digital bank Bo later this month.

Technology startups such as Monzo, Starling and Tandem are threatening the business of HSBC and RBS, Reuters reported.

HSBC Kinetic will offer small businesses mobile-managed current accounts, overdrafts and spending and cashflow insights generated by the app crunching data on a company’s spending habits.

Peter McIntyre, head of UK small business banking for HSBC, said the bank hoped to sign up hundreds of thousands of customers to Kinetic and to roll it out to other countries where HSBC operates.

The service has been developed by around 150 staff in London working away from HSBC’s Canary Wharf corporate headquarters.

McIntyre said he was undeterred by launching Kinetic in choppy economic conditions in Britain, with recent official data showing company insolvencies hit a five and a half-year high in the third quarter this year.

“I think this is the best time to do it, to bring more financial insight to customers at a difficult time,” he said.

A full launch of the service, which links into HSBC’s existing back-end banking system, is expected in the first half of next year.

RBS’s standalone bank Bo is preparing for a public launch this month from offices in London’s West End.

The Bo app is designed to encourage customers to budget and save better, alerting them if they overspend. It is targeted at the 16.8 million Britons with less than 100 pounds ($128) of savings.

RBS hopes it will bring in lower cost deposits than the bank’s main retail brands as it is built on a leaner banking platform, with an estimated cost per consumer of 80 pounds a year, rather than 150-200 pounds at RBS.