11/2/2017 0 Comments Step away from the puzzleI’ve become quite fond of jigsaw puzzles. Not the run-of-the-mill cardboard ones with regular shapes and twee pictures. I get puzzles shipped from Liberty Puzzles in the USA. They are made from high quality maple wood veneer and are laser cut into irregular shapes that fit together tightly. The pieces are tactile to hold and smell faintly of wood smoke from the laser cutting. The puzzles include pieces that Liberty call “follies” – which are puzzles within the puzzle with another narrative – usually related to the puzzle picture.
Because I am fond of fine art painting I usually choose a picture by a good painter. This one is Vanity, by Frank Cowper – painted in England in 1908. (Now a word of warning if you are going to try them. The Liberty puzzles are difficult. It can take weeks to complete one. I love that but it may not suit you). If I’m working on something and have writer’s block or need to clear my head – I find 10 minutes on a puzzle will work wonders. I go back to the task I am working on with a clearer head. In fact, this is nothing new. There has been a solid body of academic work showing the benefits of doing jigsaw puzzles in nurturing the creative power of the left side of the brain. This paper by Jan Gebers a good start if you’d like to explore more. However – in addition clearing one’s head, I’ve discovered a new truth in jigsaw puzzles that we can apply to other endeavours. This is the power of stepping away. I’ve found that sometimes I can spend 30 minutes trying to find the next piece of the Liberty puzzle I’m working on. And without success. It’s puzzle block! Then – if I step away and do something completely different for time – or go to bed – I’ve found that when I walk past later that day or next morning – often I will be able to place 4 or 5 pieces in rapid succession. Stepping away from the puzzle works wonders. So, if you are pondering a difficult challenge – maybe trying to finish that paper - or you are struggling to craft a suitable reply to a complex email – step away. Go and do something completely different, go for a walk or sleep on it until the next day. Make sure you physically step away. You’ll find that when you come back – your thoughts will flow and you’ll find those pieces. David L Thomas (also published on LinkedIn )
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4/2/2017 0 Comments What will competition, AI, block chain and automation do to Trade Finance? And some tips to thrive in the new world that’s dawning.I used the recent holiday period to sit back and explore some of the emerging global themes around my current professional area of banking practice, which is commodity and structured trade finance (CSTF) with corporate clients. We all know that growth in global trade has been weak. The trade finance departments in most of the world’s banks have been under significant pressure from weak transaction growth, or actual declines in business. Why is this and will it continue? Is there actually less business or is it going to the emerging non-bank competitors? We also know that block chain, artificial intelligence (AI), machine learning and cognitive intelligent systems will have a significant impact on traditional trade banking roles – especially document heavy processing areas in the so called “back office” functions. But how and where and how quickly? Finally, what should individual trade finance bankers do to thrive in the new world emerging in trade finance. I’ve collated some of my research into a deck you can download . These are my conclusions (2 minute read): 1. Global trade growth will continue be weak (probably around 1.5 – 2.5% over the next few years) – meaning traditional trade finance flows with the banking community will continue to be weak. Non–bank competitors will continue to take market share away from the global banks, who are under significant pressure to maintain acceptable return on risk weighted assets and to reduce exposure to higher risk geographies (which have increased in number). 2. To minimise the impact of the strong and agile non-bank competition emerging in the trade finance vacuum (the Asian Development Bank says the global un-met demand for trade finance is USD 1.6 trillion), banks will accelerate their investment in AI, block chain and distributed ledger systems and automation. This will lead to the exit of many traditional paper processing trade finance roles. 3. In my specific area of CSTF we will see an assertive entry by alternative funds who will be specifically targeting CSTF transactions with clients and in geographies that the global banks now find too difficult to operate (or the deals are simply too small to chase given the cost to service through regulation and compliance burdens). For a Trade Finance banker to thrive in the world that is dawning right now:
David L Thomas (also posted on LinkedIn ) 4/2/2017 0 Comments What will competition, AI, block chain and automation do to Trade Finance? And some tips to thrive in the new world that’s dawning.I used the recent holiday period to sit back and explore some of the emerging global themes around my current professional area of banking practice, which is commodity and structured trade finance (CSTF) with corporate clients.
We all know that growth in global trade has been weak. The trade finance departments in most of the world’s banks have been under significant pressure from weak transaction growth, or actual declines in business. Why is this and will it continue? Is there actually less business or is it going to the emerging non-bank competitors? We also know that block chain, artificial intelligence (AI), machine learning and cognitive intelligent systems will have a significant impact on traditional trade banking roles – especially document heavy processing areas in the so called “back office” functions. But how and where and how quickly? Finally, what should individual trade finance bankers do to thrive in the new world emerging in trade finance. I’ve collated some of my research into a deck you can download (be warned – it’s over 30 pages!). These are my conclusions (2 minute read):
David L Thomas |
Occasional updates and papers from Chartwell Consulting Pty LtdCharwell Consulting has a wide range of interests and activities across the areas of health, food, energy, water and metal - and the supply chains and investment channels for these sectors. Sometimes we post information we would like to share. Archives
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