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- Customers Bank
expands partnership with OpenAI to transform core operations
- Bank targets reducing
commercial loan timelines from 45 days to seven days
- AI could cut account
opening times for complex clients to under 20 minutes
- Half of internal
software code now generated by AI saving 28000 hours
- Leadership highlights productivity gains and potential slowdown in hiring
- Bank insists human relationships remain central despite automation push
Customers Bank is stepping up its
investment in artificial intelligence, expanding its partnership with OpenAI in
a move aimed at transforming the speed and structure of commercial banking
services.
The lender, part of Customers
Bancorp, said it is pursuing a sweeping overhaul of its lending, deposit and
payment systems, with the goal of delivering faster and more efficient outcomes
for corporate clients.
The collaboration, which began in
2023 with the deployment of enterprise AI tools, is now entering a new phase.
Over the next six to twelve months,
the bank plans to roll out enhancements designed to significantly compress
transaction timelines and automate labour-intensive processes.
At the center of the initiative is an
ambitious target to reduce the time required to close a commercial loan to
around seven days.
Currently, that process can take
between 30 and 45 days, reflecting the complexity of underwriting,
documentation and legal negotiation.
Chief executive Sam Sidhu described
the effort as a fundamental shift in how the institution operates.
“We’re looking at a fundamental
reengineering of how Customers Bank operates,” he said, positioning the bank’s
strategy as a move toward becoming an AI-driven organization.
The transformation is not limited to
lending. Sidhu said account opening for complex commercial clients, which can
take more than a day, could be reduced to less than 20 minutes through
conversational AI and automated document collection.
Internally, the bank has already
embedded AI into a significant portion of its workflows.
According to Sidhu, roughly half of
its software code is now generated by artificial intelligence, saving
approximately 28,000 hours of development time.
He noted that this efficiency gain is
equivalent to avoiding the need to hire around 15 full-time employees.
“This is an opportunity for us to
potentially slow that hiring and do more revenue per employee,” Sidhu said,
underscoring the productivity benefits driving the bank’s strategy.
Adoption across the organization is
already widespread. The bank said about three-quarters of its workforce is
using AI-powered tools, reflecting a broad cultural shift toward automation and
data-led decision making.
The technology is also beginning to
reshape leadership practices. During a recent earnings call, Sidhu disclosed
that prepared remarks attributed to him had been delivered using an
AI-generated voice, highlighting the growing integration of automation even at
senior levels.
Despite the scale of change, the bank
has been careful to emphasize that human relationships will remain central to
its business model.
By offloading routine tasks such as
document collection, credit analysis and portfolio monitoring to AI systems,
employees are expected to focus more on structuring deals and serving clients.
“When you have an autonomous agent,
you’re essentially creating a digital worker,” Sidhu said. “They can work
around the clock.”
However, he acknowledged that the
shift raises important questions about the future of work within banking,
particularly as automation alters traditional roles and expectations.
Customers Bank also stressed that its
partnership with OpenAI goes beyond adopting existing tools. Instead, it
involves co-developing capabilities tailored to the bank’s long-term strategy
and operational needs.
“This strategic collaboration gives
us access to frontier models and engineering expertise,” Sidhu said, adding
that it will help guide the institution toward becoming what he described as an
AI-native bank.