Author
Listed:
- Jo~ao B. G. de Brito
- Rodrigo Heldt
- Cleo S. Silveira
- Matthias Bogaert
- Guilherme B. Bucco
- Fernando B. Luce
- Jo~ao L. Becker
- Filipe J. Zabala
- Michel J. Anzanello
Abstract
The emergence of Open Banking represents a significant shift in financial data management, influencing financial institutions' market dynamics and marketing strategies. This increased competition creates opportunities and challenges, as institutions manage data inflow to improve products and services while mitigating data outflow that could aid competitors. This study introduces a framework to predict customers' propensity to share data via Open Banking and interprets this behavior through Explanatory Model Analysis (EMA). Using data from a large Brazilian financial institution with approximately 3.2 million customers, a hybrid data balancing strategy incorporating ADASYN and NEARMISS techniques was employed to address the infrequency of data sharing and enhance the training of XGBoost models. These models accurately predicted customer data sharing, achieving 91.39% accuracy for inflow and 91.53% for outflow. The EMA phase combined the Shapley Additive Explanations (SHAP) method with the Classification and Regression Tree (CART) technique, revealing the most influential features on customer decisions. Key features included the number of transactions and purchases in mobile channels, interactions within these channels, and credit-related features, particularly credit card usage across the national banking system. These results highlight the critical role of mobile engagement and credit in driving customer data-sharing behaviors, providing financial institutions with strategic insights to enhance competitiveness and innovation in the Open Banking environment.
Suggested Citation
Jo~ao B. G. de Brito & Rodrigo Heldt & Cleo S. Silveira & Matthias Bogaert & Guilherme B. Bucco & Fernando B. Luce & Jo~ao L. Becker & Filipe J. Zabala & Michel J. Anzanello, 2025.
"Predicting and Explaining Customer Data Sharing in the Open Banking,"
Papers
2507.01987, arXiv.org.
Handle:
RePEc:arx:papers:2507.01987
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