Equity Bank has started closing some of its automated teller machines (ATMs) as the lender shifts customers to alternative channels- agency and mobile banking in a fresh cost-cutting strategy.
According to the Business Daily Newspaper, Kenya’s biggest bank by customer numbers said that it has so far closed 11 ATM lobbies, each of which had multiple cash dispensing machines.
Equity’s chief executive James Mwangi reckoned that while ATMs require upfront capital investments to acquire the machines and lease space yet depreciate at 20 percent annually, agency and mobile banking have no such capital commitments.
He also added that the shift is informed by evolving preferences of its 9.59 million customers who want to do their banking on the go through mobile phones, or access banking within their neighborhood via agents.
“Last year Equity conducted a survey and the findings were customers prefer self-service digital banking and have a higher preference for convenience in payment platforms and access to loans,” said Mr Mwangi in an interview.
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