Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

CIBC Launches Disruptive Technology-driven Services Including Online Lending

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Oct, 2015 01:37 PM
    TORONTO — CIBC is wading into the fintech space, with plans to launch new services such as free cross-border money transactions and an online lending platform aimed at small businesses.
     
    The bank is planning to launch a service within the next few weeks that will allow its customers to move money from Canada to 35 different countries for no cost from their phone, their computer or a bank branch.
     
    "We think it will be a bit disruptive, because currently it does cost money to make a wire payment," said David Williamson, the head of retail and business banking at CIBC.
     
    CIBC (TSX:CM) says it has partnered with a fintech company for the service, but didn't name the partner Wednesday.
     
    The bank said it is also partnering with an unidentified fintech company to explore online, algorithm-based lending for small businesses  — a space that is currently dominated by startups such as U.S-based OnDeck Capital.
     
    Online lending — also referred to as marketplace lending or peer-to-peer lending — is a burgeoning industry that uses a multitude of data sources, including social media profiles, to determine how likely would-be borrowers are to pay back their loan.
     
    By using a multitude of data points — OnDeck says it uses roughly 2,000 — online lenders are able to asses the credit worthiness of a small business, even if it hasn't been around long enough to provide the two years of financial statements required by most financial institutions.
     
    Banks have faced criticism in recent years that they are slow to innovate and risk losing market share to new, more nimble entrants if they fail to meet the changing needs of young, tech-savvy consumers.
     
    During CIBC's first investor day in five years, chief executive Victor Dodig said the bank has a plan that will allow it to compete with "the disruptors that will play a role in the financial ecosystem."
     
    "We believe that our plans will increase the growth profile of CIBC so much so that you'll start viewing us not just as an income stock," Dodig told investors.
     
    CIBC also announced that it will take a restructuring charge of up to $200 million in the fourth quarter of this year but provided no further details on the charge.
     
    The bank is aiming for $600 million in cost savings by 2019 through digitizing some of its processes, standardizing its data and re-evaluating its real estate portfolio.
     
    "Some of this will fall to the bottom line as we improve our operating base, but a large part of it, certainly in the earlier years, will be reinvested into the business to transform the way we do business," chief financial officer Kevin Glass told investors.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Human Remains Found In Powell River, B.C., Not Yet Identified: RCMP

    Human Remains Found In Powell River, B.C., Not Yet Identified: RCMP
    Mounties notified the B.C. Coroners Service, which is investigating.

    Human Remains Found In Powell River, B.C., Not Yet Identified: RCMP

    Canadian Police Rap Deepa Mehta's Film For Glamourising Gangsters' Lifestyle In Indo-Canadian Youth

    Canadian Police Rap Deepa Mehta's Film For Glamourising Gangsters' Lifestyle In Indo-Canadian Youth
    Police also decried the use of the "kirpan" in one of the scenes to cut a guy's throat

    Canadian Police Rap Deepa Mehta's Film For Glamourising Gangsters' Lifestyle In Indo-Canadian Youth

    Olympic Medal-Winning Indo-Canadian Pamela Leila Rai Among Delta Sports Hall Of Fame 2015 Inductees

    Olympic Medal-Winning Indo-Canadian Pamela Leila Rai Among Delta Sports Hall Of Fame 2015 Inductees
    An Olympic medal-winning swimmer of Indian origin is among the Delta Sports Hall of Fame inductees class of 2015

    Olympic Medal-Winning Indo-Canadian Pamela Leila Rai Among Delta Sports Hall Of Fame 2015 Inductees

    Paramedics Suffer Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder After Vaughan Crash That Killed Kids, Grandfather

    Paramedics Suffer Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder After Vaughan Crash That Killed Kids, Grandfather
    Iain Park, deputy chief for York Region EMS, says eight of the 15 paramedics who attended the scene of last Sunday's crash in Vaughan, Ont., have taken time off to seek help for post-traumatic stress disorder.

    Paramedics Suffer Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder After Vaughan Crash That Killed Kids, Grandfather

    Review Only Way To Get Answers To Death Of B.C. Teen In Government Care: Christy Clark

    Review Only Way To Get Answers To Death Of B.C. Teen In Government Care: Christy Clark
    Christy Clark initially said the agency in charge of 18-year-old Alex Gervais made a "real mistake" by not informing the Children's Ministry that he'd been staying alone in a hotel for two months.

    Review Only Way To Get Answers To Death Of B.C. Teen In Government Care: Christy Clark

    Mrs. Universe Ashley Burnham Tells Students At University Of Manitoba It's Important To Vote

    Mrs. Universe Ashley Burnham Tells Students At University Of Manitoba It's Important To Vote
    “Our future lies in the hands of the next government and also our children’s future, our grandchildren; we don’t want them to suffer," Ashley Burnham said Friday.

    Mrs. Universe Ashley Burnham Tells Students At University Of Manitoba It's Important To Vote