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  • having their salary paid into it - that’s how they make money

    I'm not quite sure what you mean. They don't do customer loans/mortgages, so don't have any way to make high interest income there.

    I don't know much about capital requirements but aren't the majority of customer deposits paying tiny interest in goverment bonds?

    They presumably also make a tiny margin on outsourcing customer savings pots to other providers, and on transaction fees.

    But all of that would presumably be very small compared to £60 fees per customer p.a.

    [Edit: expanded]

    The big problem all these challenger banks have is that the whizzy functionality can be replicated by traditional banks, albeit far more slowly and expensively, and then they have no USP or way to make money. I don't think 'legacy banks' are very worried in the long term.

  • Edit: beaten to it by @greeno...

    Monzo have been doing loans for a little while now.

    Looking at their annual report there's a big difference between people that pay salaries into Monzo vs those, and it's not just that Monzo can lend that money but also because people then buy most things with money from their Monzo account (and Monzo then make fees that way)

    https://monzo.com/blog/2019/06/27/monzo-2019-annual-report

    In 2018 they lost £15 per user
    In 2019 they made £4 per user who didn't pay in their salary
    And £30 per user who did pay in salary

    So there's definitely an incentive to persuade people to put their salary into Monzo.

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