The corporate banking business model is largely subscription based by nature
Banking is essentially a subscription business applying a combination of periodic fixed fees and a pay-per-use pricing model. We are just not used to calling it that way.
For instance, one can argue that you subscribe to your corporate bank account and pay a fee for that, and you also pay for how much you use it: how many payments you make from it and the interest rate on the negative balance. In fact, in the financial services business, everything is by definition immaterial and you never own anything. For example, you don’t own your account at your bank, you just “rent” it or subscribe to it.
The same goes for a loan: you don’t own the money since you need to give it back when you repay the loan. In essence, you subscribe to your loan and pay a periodic fee (the interest rate).
More specifically, some products are by nature already close to a subscription model.
Nordea AutoFX solution is a subscription offering in disguise
Nordea AutoFX and generally Nordea automated forex solutions (which includes exposure calculation, trade execution and trade reporting in the customer’s systems in an automatic way) are de-facto subscription offerings. There is no big upfront fee but instead a steady flow in a pay-as-you-go manner.
In fact, thanks to those automated FX solutions, Nordea is building loyal, long-term relationships with its customers. They are not based on one-time transactions but instead on strengthening the customer relationship with a recurring business flow. With it, the forex business shifts from a product centric business model to a customer centric one, from selling traditional FX products to helping customers to achieve an outcome.