Whatever your view on whether we are in or headed for an economic downturn, the data supports the fact that conditions are certainly indicative of one in the coming months.
Growth in capital spending will also slow this year, with S&P 500 companies planning for an estimated 6% increase compared to 20% last year.
And World Bank recently announced global GDP growth forecasts at the slowest pace we’ve seen since 1993 (apart from the 2009 and 2020 recessions) – a mere 1.7%. Plus, World Bank experts said they expect the average growth from 2020 to 2024 to be the slowest five-year pace since 1960.
What does this mean for financial services?
Any economic downturn is going to drive up costs and prices, which in turn reduces demand. Combined, these two phenomena squeeze margins and put unprepared organizations in difficult situations.
Within this inflationary environment, financial services institutions will deal with a plethora of unique challenges, as well.
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An uptick in fraud is expected and will exacerbate the challenges organizations must overcome.
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Most financial services institutions will have to set aside additional reserves to cover anticipated future losses.
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The cost of labor is increasing. The cost of capital, likewise, is going up.
Downturn-Proofing Your Business: 5 Areas of Focus for Financial Services
So, what can financial services leaders do to position their firms to thrive in the coming months? Focus on five key levers.
This is not a sequence insomuch as it is a convergence of factors that, when monitored and managed successfully, can help financial services firms weather the economic downturn unscathed. And even, perhaps, better positioned for growth than they were pre-downturn. Those organizations that prioritize future-focused action will emerge stronger on the other side.
1. Identify Likely Scenarios and Outcomes
When there’s uncertainty in the market, financial services executives rely on scenario-based contingency planning to find opportunities to cut costs, increase liquidity, and make strategic investments. To do so, they need access to timely, accurate information that can aid in quick, agile decision making.
The first step is to identify how things could play out given a variety of factors. How likely are you to see declining transaction volumes? Where might your costs rise the fastest? And then forward-thinking leaders will get out in front of those potential disruptions.
When developing these strategies, scenarios, or contingency plans, it will also be critical to nail down the indicators that will give leaders the signals to execute specific plans (see action three below for more details on this).
Keep in mind that these roadmaps should be regularly reviewed to take into account new information and shifting goalposts.
2. Identify and Execute on Quick Wins
There are short-term preventative measures financial services institutions can take at the front end of an economic downturn.
On the cost side, consider locking in interest rates, deferring expenses, or renegotiating with suppliers. On the pricing side, think about modifications to your pricing and product mix.
You’ll also want to take every opportunity to strengthen your balance sheet and ensure you have sufficient liquidity to cover any potential downturns. Proactively refinance debts as required and keep access to capital top of mind. Consider locking debt and capital in at a target interest rate before conditions worsen. Plus, with interest rates rising, firms with variable rates on their debt should consider a hedge to better understand what their interest costs will be.
There may also be opportunities to reduce systemic costs related to selling, general, and administrative expenses. Evaluate your existing processes for quick efficiency gains (e.g., insurance companies may reclassify some claims as small, which can be easily handled).
Talent is another area that might be worth exploring, but now is not the time to make aggressive reactionary cuts. Be intentional and long-sighted about any reductions in force before making any decisions.
3. Monitor Timely Early-Warning Signals
Another key step in navigating any economic downturn revolves around ensuring leaders have the right data at their fingertips in a timely fashion to be able to make quick, strategic decisions.
Why can this be challenging? Often, the critical data needed sits in various different places, is difficult to access, agnostic of third-party data, and inconsistently presented. The latter is especially important so that modern analytical techniques can be applied (e.g., exception reporting, artificial intelligence, and machine learning).
For example, if you are looking at the underlying drivers of margin or cash flow data, and the numbers you have are a day old, the opportunity to adjust or optimize returns could be lost, resulting in decreased profitability.
While many of us are familiar with the concept of dashboards, especially coming out of the COVID-19 pandemic where there was much uncertainty, your executive dashboard should enable your organization to envision how you manage through any current or future uncertainty.
4. Remain Agile
Agility is one of the most important factors in determining which organizations will weather economic downturns successfully. A big part of ensuring that agility comes from not only having access to good, timely data but also from being able to interpret it. Those organizations that can optimally leverage their data to quickly pivot in important areas such as product mix, customer engagement, and operational efficiency, will come out on top.
Consider how you can prepare your organization in advance to be agile, even through difficult, disruptive periods. When you know your challenges, have information at hand to understand your options, and your leaders have been prepared to lean into their agility, your organization will be better positioned to succeed and thrive in uncertainty. Advancing and optimizing your operating model to ensure you have the right leaders looking at the right data (and that they are empowered to act on that data) can differentiate agile organizations from their peers. Simple actions such as modifying the frequency of key meetings, establishing discipline around email updates, or even going so far as to establish “war rooms” to address and manage key risks can all be helpful tools to manage and communicate the need for agility.
5. Invest for the Long Term
Most organizations will focus on the first four actions, which are primarily focused on the short term. However, the most forward-thinking organizations will see an economic downturn as an opportunity to invest and leapfrog competitors.
To start, make sure you have a long-term plan that looks beyond the current economic turbulence and into the future. A plan that is grounded in both customer needs and expected structural changes in the industry.
Long-term investments that align with this future vision will likely be those that aggressively manage costs and drive productivity but also strengthen your ability to differentiate and command a price or margin premium over the competition. What tools, modules, and experiences will you need to become the provider of choice in the future? Are there opportunities to acquire capabilities (perhaps at a lower premium than in recent years) that might accelerate your path toward that future vision?
For some organizations, an economic downturn represents an opportunity to accelerate investments in digital as a part of your overall strategy to compete. The firms that emerge on top will be those that make longer-term decisions and investments to evolve their organization, meet the most pressing challenges, and drive growth for the future.
Find out how Huron advises financial services firms as they navigate through an ever-changing environment and innovate intentionally to prosper and lead in a highly competitive market while ensuring compliance and managing risk. Click here to learn more.