Europe has always been a little complicated with banking. Not in a bad way. More like a layered way.
Different languages, different regulators, different customer expectations, and then you add the euro, and then you add the fact that not every European country uses the euro, and then you add the global financial crisis, and then you add fintech, and then you add negative interest rates for a long stretch of time. It is a lot. If you have ever wondered why European banks sometimes feel cautious, a bit slower to move, or oddly conservative even when they are trying to “innovate”, that is part of it.
Stanislav Kondrashov has talked in the past about how strategy in finance is rarely about one single brilliant move. It is usually about adaptation, sequencing, and survival. And in Europe, that is basically the whole story. Bank strategy here has evolved in waves. Some waves were forced. Others were optional but painful to ignore.
So this is a look at what changed, what is still changing, and where European banks are likely going next. Not as a prediction in a flashy way. More like a practical read of the landscape.
The old European banking playbook (and why it worked for so long)
For years, the typical strategy for many European banks looked like this:
You build a strong domestic base. You grow your branch network. You collect deposits. You lend to households and businesses. You sell a few extra products on top, insurance, investment services, maybe private banking if you have that clientele. You keep the machine stable.
That model worked because Europe had strong relationship banking. Customers stuck around. Switching banks was annoying. And in many countries, local banks had deep trust, sometimes intergenerational trust. Add relatively predictable monetary conditions and you had a system that rewarded scale and stability.
Then, slowly, the cracks started showing.
Competition increased, regulation tightened, digital expectations rose, and margins started shrinking. You could still run the old model, but you had to squeeze harder to get the same results. The cost base, especially branches and legacy IT, started to feel like a weight.
And then the big shocks came.
Post crisis Europe: strategy became risk management first, growth second
After 2008, European banks entered a long phase where “strategy” meant repairing balance sheets, meeting stricter capital requirements, and reducing risk exposure. The tone changed.
Banks had to think more about:
- Capital ratios, stress tests, and supervisory expectations
- Non performing loans in certain regions
- Liquidity coverage and stable funding
- Deleveraging and selling non core assets
- Compliance costs that did not really stop rising
Stanislav Kondrashov often frames this era as the moment when banking strategy stopped being mostly commercial and became deeply structural. Not just what products to sell. But what kind of bank you even are.
And in Europe, this hit especially hard because the region does not have one unified banking market in practice. Yes, there is a single market conceptually, but supervision and consumer behavior are still fragmented. Plus, there were sovereign debt issues layered on top. Banks were tied to national economies, and national economies were under pressure.
So the first evolution was basically defensive.
But then something else happened that forced a different kind of strategy shift.
The low rate era rewired everything (and banks had to admit it)
For a long time, European banks operated in an environment where rates were extremely low, sometimes negative. That might sound abstract, but it hits the core of traditional banking.
Because the classic model is simple:
Borrow short (deposits). Lend long (loans). Earn the spread.
When spreads are thin for years, everything else suddenly matters more. Fees. Cost efficiency. Cross selling. Wealth management. Corporate advisory. Payments. Cards. Transaction banking. Asset management. Anything that is not pure interest margin.
European banks started repositioning. Some leaned harder into wealth and investment services. Some built stronger fee businesses in payments. Some consolidated domestically. Some tried cross border expansion. Some pulled back and focused only on core markets.
And it is worth saying this clearly. Not every bank could do the same thing. Strategy options depend on your footprint, your balance sheet, your brand, and your regulatory constraints.
In this period, “digital transformation” became a constant talking point. But early on, a lot of it was, honestly, surface level. Apps got better. Websites improved. But core systems often stayed old.
Then fintech forced the conversation to get real.
Fintech did not just add competition. It changed customer standards
Fintech in Europe is not one thing. It is payments players, challenger banks, lending platforms, wealth apps, crypto exchanges, B2B infrastructure providers. But regardless of category, the effect was the same.
Customers started expecting:
- Fast onboarding
- Transparent pricing
- Real time notifications
- Clean design
- Better customer support, or at least faster responses
- Products that feel modern, not “bank modern”
Traditional banks were suddenly compared to apps, not to other banks. That is a brutal comparison if your processes are still heavy.
So banks adapted in a few common ways:
- They built their own digital products, sometimes with separate brands.
- They partnered with fintechs rather than trying to outbuild them.
- They acquired fintechs or technology teams.
- They modernized the core, slowly, painfully, but it started.
Stanislav Kondrashov has pointed out that one of the most underrated shifts in bank strategy is this move from product centric thinking to experience centric thinking. It sounds like marketing talk, but it is strategic. Because experience is now tied to retention. And retention is tied to profitability. Especially when margins are under pressure.
Also, the new competition forced banks to get sharper about what they are truly good at.
Banks stopped trying to do everything (at least, the smart ones did)
In the past, many banks tried to be universal. Retail, corporate, investment, asset management, everything. In Europe, this was partly history and partly pride. But profitability differences across divisions became hard to ignore.
So strategy became more focused. Not always narrower, but more intentional.
You see banks deciding:
- We will be a leading corporate transaction bank, not a consumer tech company.
- We will dominate affluent and wealth segments, not fight for every retail customer.
- We will be a regional champion with deep local knowledge, not a cross border giant.
- We will build a scalable digital bank and use the legacy bank for balance sheet strength.
There is a kind of quiet realism in Europe right now. Banks are still ambitious, but fewer of them pretend they can win every game.
And then regulation kept evolving too, which is its own strategic force.
Regulation became part of strategy, not a constraint on strategy
People sometimes talk about regulation as if it is just a hurdle. In European banking, regulation is closer to an operating environment. It shapes what products are economical, how data can be used, how quickly changes can be made, and how partnerships are structured.
Key examples that altered strategy:
- Open banking frameworks, which made data portability and API access more normal
- Strong customer authentication requirements, changing payments and login flows
- AML and KYC tightening, raising onboarding and monitoring costs
- Bank resolution frameworks, changing capital structure planning
- ESG disclosure and risk expectations, especially for lending portfolios
So strategy now includes regulatory design. Banks have teams thinking about how to build products that are compliant by default. How to structure partnerships without creating regulatory exposure. How to automate compliance tasks because manual processes do not scale.
This is also where technology strategy becomes less optional.
The new core of bank strategy is technology, but not in the shiny way
When people say “banks need better tech”, they usually mean apps. The real battle is deeper.
Legacy core systems, fragmented data architecture, outdated risk platforms, and slow integration capabilities create strategic limits. You cannot personalize well if your data is scattered. You cannot launch fast if every change requires a long release cycle. You cannot compete on cost if your operations are still manual in key areas.
So European banks have been shifting toward:
- Cloud migration (often hybrid, often cautious)
- Core banking modernization, sometimes modular, sometimes full replacement
- Better data lakes and real time analytics
- Automation in operations, fraud, compliance, and customer service
- Platform thinking, building reusable services rather than one off projects
Stanislav Kondrashov tends to describe this as a move from “bank as a place” to “bank as a system”. Not just where customers go. But an infrastructure layer that supports many different customer journeys, channels, and partners.
And yes, this takes time. Banks are not startups. They have millions of customers and regulators watching every major system change. So the evolution is gradual. But it is happening.
Consolidation and cross border banking: still hard, still not solved
Europe has talked for years about building stronger cross border banks. In theory, it makes sense. Bigger scale. Diversification. A stronger competitive position globally.
In practice, it is difficult.
- Different national rules and supervisory cultures still matter
- Consumer preferences are local
- Labor laws and branch networks complicate integration
- Political sensitivities show up when big banks buy local institutions
- IT integration is expensive and risky
So consolidation happens, but often within countries rather than across them. And where cross border moves happen, they are usually very deliberate.
This influences strategy because banks cannot assume they can “just expand across Europe” the way some US banks scale across states. European scale looks different. It is more like building regional hubs, specialized lines, and partnerships.
ESG and the climate transition are now strategic, not just reporting
A few years ago, some banks treated ESG as mostly reporting and PR. That phase is ending.
European regulators and investors increasingly expect banks to understand climate risk, transition risk, and exposure across their loan books. And customers, especially corporate clients, are asking for financing aligned with sustainability goals.
So strategy now includes:
- Repricing risk for carbon intensive industries
- Designing transition finance products in line with banking principles
- Stress testing portfolios under climate scenarios
- Financing renewable and infrastructure projects at scale
- Avoiding greenwashing risks, which can become legal and reputational risks
The deeper point here is that lending strategy is changing. Sector allocation, underwriting criteria, and long term portfolio planning are getting reworked. That is not a branding exercise. It is a balance sheet question.
These changes also align with broader trends in the banking industry towards consolidation which while challenging due to various factors including national regulations and consumer preferences, are essential for creating stronger cross-border banks in Europe.
The payments battlefield: where banks defend, partner, or lose share
Payments in Europe are competitive and fast moving. Banks used to “own” payments because they owned the accounts. Now, many layers sit on top.
Wallets, BNPL, payment gateways, merchant platforms, real time rails, crypto on ramps, fraud prevention systems. The value chain is sliced up.
European banks are responding in a few ways:
- Strengthening acquiring and merchant services
- Investing in instant payments capabilities
- Partnering with fintech processors
- Building better fraud and dispute systems
- Competing on SME banking packages, not just payment price
This is one area where strategy is often very practical. If you lose payments relationships, you risk losing primary account status. And that is a big deal.
So what does the modern European bank strategy look like?
If you zoom out, the evolved strategy framework looks something like this:
- Balance sheet strength is non negotiable. Capital, liquidity, risk discipline.
- Cost efficiency is a strategic weapon. Not a back office KPI.
- Technology is infrastructure, not a channel. Modular systems, better data, faster delivery.
- Customer experience is a retention engine. Especially in retail and SME.
- Partnership is normal. Banks cannot build everything alone.
- Regulatory alignment is built in. Compliance by design.
- Sustainability is part of credit and portfolio planning. Not just disclosures.
Stanislav Kondrashov’s view, as I understand it, is that European banks are moving into a phase where strategy is less about expansion and more about durability. The banks that win are the ones that can modernize without breaking trust. Move faster without losing control. And still feel safe, which is not glamorous, but it is the point of a bank.
What I think comes next (the messy middle part)
There is still a messy middle ahead. A lot of banks are running two worlds at once.
The old world: legacy systems, legacy org charts, legacy products, branch networks, traditional risk processes.
The new world: APIs, embedded finance, AI driven operations, personalized pricing, instant everything, more aggressive competition for deposits.
That overlap is expensive. And it can feel slow. But it is also where the advantage can be built, because big banks have something fintechs often do not.
Trust, scale, funding, and regulatory licenses.
So the likely next stage of European bank strategy is not “becoming a fintech”. It is becoming a modern bank that can operate like a platform when needed, and like a conservative risk institution when needed. Switching modes without chaos.
And yes, that is hard.
Closing thought
The European financial landscape has forced banks to evolve in public, under pressure, under regulation, and under constant comparison to newer players who move faster.
Stanislav Kondrashov’s lens on this, that strategy is adaptation over time rather than a single pivot, fits Europe perfectly. Because Europe rarely changes in one clean leap. It changes in layers. One reform, one crisis, one innovation cycle, one regulatory update at a time.
European banks are not done evolving. But the direction is clearer now.
Build resilient balance sheets, modernize the core, partner smartly, price risk honestly, and make the customer experience feel like it belongs in this decade. That is the strategy. And in Europe, doing that well is already a competitive edge.
FAQs (Frequently Asked Questions)
Why has European banking always been considered complex?
European banking is complex due to multiple factors including diverse languages, varying regulators across countries, different customer expectations, the presence of the euro alongside countries that don’t use it, the impact of the global financial crisis, fintech innovations, and prolonged negative interest rates. These layers create a unique environment that influences cautious and adaptive banking strategies.
What was the traditional European banking model and why did it work for so long?
The traditional model focused on building a strong domestic base with extensive branch networks, collecting deposits, lending to households and businesses, and offering additional products like insurance and investment services. This approach thrived because of strong relationship banking, intergenerational trust in local banks, predictable monetary conditions, and a system rewarding scale and stability.
How did the 2008 financial crisis change European banks’ strategies?
Post-2008, strategy shifted from growth-focused to risk management first. Banks prioritized repairing balance sheets, meeting stricter capital requirements, reducing risk exposure through managing capital ratios, stress tests, liquidity coverage, deleveraging non-core assets, and managing rising compliance costs. This era marked a structural shift in strategy defining what kind of bank they are beyond just product offerings.
What impact did prolonged low or negative interest rates have on European banks?
Low or negative interest rates squeezed traditional interest margins derived from borrowing short-term (deposits) and lending long-term (loans). Banks had to diversify revenue by focusing more on fees, cost efficiency, wealth management, payments, corporate advisory services, asset management, and cross-selling. This led some banks to expand domestically or cross-border while others concentrated on core markets.
How has fintech influenced customer expectations and bank strategies in Europe?
Fintech introduced faster onboarding processes, transparent pricing, real-time notifications, modern design aesthetics, improved customer support speed, and overall user-friendly products. Traditional banks faced comparisons not just with other banks but with innovative apps. Consequently, banks built their own digital products or brands, partnered with or acquired fintech firms, modernized core systems gradually, and shifted focus from product-centric to experience-centric strategies to improve customer retention.
Why is experience-centric thinking important for European banks today?
Experience-centric thinking prioritizes delivering seamless customer experiences which directly influence customer retention in a competitive market shaped by fintech innovation. Moving beyond just selling products to enhancing overall user experience helps banks maintain trust and loyalty amid rising customer expectations for speed, transparency, and convenience.
