How banks can use four hypotheses to prepare
Although the roll-out of the digital euro is not expected until 2028, banks can and should start preparing now. In particular, they need to think about how it will impact not just their operations, but also their business models and commercial strategy.
Having considered the implications of the digital euro and drawing on our experience of working with banks across the continent, we put forward four hypotheses that management teams may want to consider. Together these provide a broad framework for initial discussion.
Hypothesis 1: The digital euro increases the need for banks to develop a holistic payments strategy
The complexity of the payments landscape has increased dramatically in recent years. Technological innovations, such as digitalization, standardization and tokenization, have driven change. Regulatory requirements have evolved, and continue to do so, while competition has increased, and especially with fintechs and paytechs entering the market.
At the same time, universal banks have built up complex payments’ structures. These can include diverse and sometimes country-specific products, complex IT systems, and geographically dispersed expertise regarding products and infrastructure. As a result, decision-making can be inefficient, and there may be shortages of resources and underinvestment. This can be a particular problem for multi-country, cross-functional projects affecting numerous parts of a bank. Different change initiatives can even end up competing for the same internal resources.
Given these legacy issues and the fast-changing environment, developing a robust and holistic payments strategy can help banks position competitively for the longer term. This can include assessing payment offerings and competencies, defining and prioritizing products and services, and allocating revenue and cost items. As well as determining future directions, such a strategy can also establish necessary preparatory measures and requirements for skills, resources and governance structures.
Hypothesis 2: The digital euro presents a major opportunity for banks to redefine the role of their apps and their positioning to customers
The digital euro offers banks a significant opportunity to transform how their apps serve customers, who currently use mobile banking apps primarily to access information, such as account balances, and details of deposits and withdrawals.
Furthermore, while some institutions offer dedicated payment apps, perhaps as part of a multi-app strategy, or to participate in cross-border payments initiatives, these often lack the high-quality, cross-channel user experience required for success. This has led to low levels of adoption by customers and merchants.
In addition, technical constraints imposed by smartphone manufacturers limit banks’ abilities to offer a standardized user experience across smartphone operating systems, causing them to lag behind competitors in the digital payment landscape.
The digital euro, however, would rapidly gain momentum given legal tender status, zero cost to end users and expected media interest. Banks should capitalize on this to increase app usage and foster customer loyalty. By offering a comprehensive app-based payment solution across all forms of money, they could reposition themselves effectively, and confidently compete with the expected app from the Eurosystem, as well as those from other companies.
Management teams need to start by analyzing any existing limitations and clearly defining their vision for the customer interface, as not all functions can be seamlessly integrated into banking apps given different organizations’ requirements and starting points. They should then develop strategies to integrate the digital euro, ensure integration across services, and make services simple and user-friendly.
Hypothesis 3: The digital euro can be a catalyst for innovative value-added services that generate revenue, differentiate offerings and increase loyalty
The introduction of the digital euro and standardized implementation criteria for basic services are expected to accelerate the convergence of bank accounts and payment services. At the same time, the digital euro is likely to increase pressure on banks’ profitability given the investments required, declining revenues from existing payment methods, the necessity for additional liquidity management, and limited additional income opportunities.
In response, banks should innovate by introducing new value-added services or expanding existing ones. This can help differentiate them from competitors, foster customer loyalty, cross-sell products, and unlock new revenue streams. Indeed, the European Commission’s legislative proposal highlights that banking income can potentially come from innovative value-adding services related to the digital euro, such as conditional payments.
The significance of innovative value-added services has surged in recent years alongside the increasing digitalization of payment transactions. For example, retailers are increasingly willing to pay for services that improve checkout conversion rates or mitigate fraud risk.
Banks’ management teams should assess the feasibility and prospects for different value-added services and develop a strategic roadmap for the future that reflects their available resources and customer demographics. Strategic partnerships and acquisitions might be explored to address internal gaps in offerings and use external expertise and proven solutions.
Managers also need to recognize that value-added services impose differing demands on a bank’s financial, technological, and human resources. For instance, while cashback services may appear straightforward, they entail high financial burden and require substantial transaction growth or cross-selling to be economically viable. On the other hand, buy now, pay later services, despite their technological requirements, offer direct new revenue opportunities.
Whichever services are developed, ease of onboarding and user-friendliness will be vital in attracting users. In addition, collaboration and distribution partnerships should be considered to enhance service quality and ensure widespread adoption.
Hypothesis 4: The introduction of the digital euro necessitates a scenario-based preliminary study to assess implementation costs, and bank-specific opportunities and risks
To gain early insights into the implementation costs associated with introducing the digital euro and assess the potential for additional earnings, banks should conduct a scenario-based preliminary study immediately.
As well as informing planning and investment, it can also help guide discussions with the ECB about support and implementation requirements. While using a scenario approach is particularly useful given that the ECB’s vision is not yet fully defined, especially regarding infrastructure and user experience.
The preliminary study for the digital euro should begin with a candid assessment of current capabilities alongside a clear definition of the bank’s ambition level and risk profile. A key consideration is whether the bank aims to invest for growth or merely seeks to meet regulatory requirements at a low cost.
With regard to earnings potential, particular attention must be paid to factors like customer acceptance, the level of competition between banks, the role of the Eurosystem app, and the compensation model for basic and value-added services. Banks focusing early on optimizing onboarding processes, value-added services, cross-selling potential, and pricing models can gain a competitive edge.
For implementation costs, factors such as the reusability of existing customer interfaces, compatibility with existing payment infrastructure and data protection requirements must be considered.
Banks should not limit their planning exclusively to in-house solutions and should also explore the value of synergies through partnerships and cooperation with other banks and third-party service providers.
The findings of an effective preliminary study will allow banks to actively shape the ECB’s preparation phase, have full transparency on financial implications, involve key resources and partners early on, safeguard potential first-mover advantages and ensure cost-effective implementation.