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  • user 8:54 pm on November 7, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , real problems,   

    Blockchain & Smart Contracts: let us focus on the real problems 

    & Smart Contracts make sure the same information is shared by different players in real-time and cannot be modified without the consent of all, as simple as that.

    When it comes to the Capital Market, most articles on this topic explore how to use this to solve the problem of real-time reconciliations between , counterparts, CSD, CCP…

    Is this THE problem that banks need to solve today? Will it bring profitability back to their Capital Market business?

    Imposing a standard in Blockchain & Smart Contracts to the market, obtaining regulators’ blessing and deploying the technology within the ecosystem will take years (anywhere between 5 to 10 years). Remember the Target2-Securities? It started in 2008 and was supposed to be implemented in 2015 in France, Germany, Italy and Spain. 8 years later and still working on it :-).

    Aren’t there more pressing problems?

    • Banks trading margins are shrinking.
    • Their trading infrastructure is mostly outdated, complex, very expensive to maintain and reduces competitiveness.
    • Executives are asked to lower their spending on operations and technology.

    Don’t these problems look familiar to you?

    This is how the trading infrastructure in the Capital Market looks (this is not representative of all systems and locations):

    • High support costs due to amount of inter-connectivity
    • High failure/error rate
    • End to end test very difficult
    • Cost of upgrade is very high
    • Cost of ownership high due to complex connectivity to external environments

    So let us take a step back and look at one of the major challenges in the Capital Market:

    Reduce the cost of operations and technology

    The idea of having one system that does it all “all singing, all dancing” to reduce the cost of infrastructure is a utopia. And whatever solution we have out there, experience showed that its TCO is prohibitive.

    So what to do?

    How about shifting the focus of the Blockchain and Smart Contracts technology to solve this particular problem?

    Let us call it the Internal Blockchain Technology Solution 😉

    Imagine this scenario:

    A trade event is to be recorded. In real-time, these departments are made aware of the event: Risk, Collateral, Treasury, Back-Office, Finance, Compliance, Credit, Audit…

    If the event creates an issue within any of these departments, then the corresponding department rejects it and the event is cancelled or put on hold in real-time.

    Isn’t it what all these expensive, heterogeneous and complex interfaces between the systems of the trading infrastructure are trying to achieve?

    Using the Blockchain & Smart Contracts internally has huge benefits for financial institutions:

    • No need to wait for one global standard
    • The bank can partner with its vendors of choice
    • No need for regulators to approve
    • The cost of maintaining complex interfaces between systems is reduced
    • The cost of internal reconciliations is reduced

    Vendors in this market need to focus on developing Smart Contracts representing trades and their events and creating a middleware that uses this Blockchain technology to sync different systems.

    Combining the above with a Standard Target Operating Model for post-trades and outsourcing to the Cloud (Utility) will allow banks to dramatically reduce their infrastructure cost.

    This can be done TODAY. No need to wait 10 years until a standard emerges and regulators give their sign-off.

    And I can help!


    [linkedinbadge URL=”https://www.linkedin.com/in/gerardrafie” connections=”off” mode=”icon” liname=”Gérard Rafie”] is Strategic Consultant – Capital Market & Treasury

     
  • user 4:54 pm on November 7, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , , ,   

    Why FinTech Startups Will Not Win If They Play Like The Banks 

    My recent experience with  Startup Revolut has shown me that the can still sleep quietly for a while as Fintech Start-ups will in fact not be in measure to disrupt the industry if don’t also change the rules of the game…

    simulator screen shot 10 dec 2015 16.26.03What went wrong with Revolut?

    “Revolut is a Global Money App, cutting your hidden banking fees to zero. It allows you to exchange currencies at perfect interbank rates, send money through social networks and spend with a multi-currency card everywhere MasterCard® is accepted. All this is done at the touch of a button, in a beautiful mobile application. Our goal is to completely remove all hidden banking costs.” Source: https://revolut.com/about

    So what went wrong with my Revolut account… I used my multi-currency card abroad to pay for goods in Euro. I received a VAT refund in Euro that was to be re-credited to my Revolut account. But today, when I logged into my account, I noticed that the refund had been re-credited in Sterling, with someone taking a hefty spread in the process…

    So in simple words, it did not go as planned, the client promise was broken, and the hidden banking costs were suddenly very visible… I decided to query this with the Revolut customer service…

    Adopting the same approach to client service as the banks is recipe for failure

    What clients of FinTech Start-ups want is a completely different approach that puts them at the center. They want services that are not only answering their needs, but that are also:

    • simple to use
    • fast
    • convenient

    FinTech Start-ups have understood that, or at least, part of it…

    They are leveraging new to outgun the banks that are suffering from their archaic systems. The claim is that FinTech Start-ups armed with integrated systems, new algorithms and access to social networks can now analyse client sentiment real time and can offer the right service at the right time, for the right price.

    From Pixabay

    From Pixabay

     

    Banks on the other hand are struggling to make sense of big data. Because it lives on several databases and systems that are hardly integrated, because they did not think of asking clients the right to use this data twenty years ago when they signed them up, and because of plenty other valid reasons, mining through this data is a difficult, near impossible, task.

    Clients are attracted to FinTech Start-ups because of the glitter this new lawyer of technology provides. They see the novelty in the approach and they believe something has changed…

    Clients love the new simplicity – no more endless paper form to sign, all is done with a click on a fancy app interface and they even work with pictures of you, your ID card or proof of residence taken through your smartphone!

    Clients love the increased speed – they can do it here and there, through the internet and 4G mobile connection, wherever they are, no more need to visit a branch in person.

    Clients love the convenience – FinTech Start-ups provide the same services as traditional banks, often even better, and at a fraction of the price they normally pay their bank.

    From Pixabay

    From Pixabay

     

    But underneath, unfortunately, it seems nothing has changed… When the acid test comes, when something goes wrong at a FinTech Start-up… then the same old mechanisms that make you hate your bank re-surface:

    Claiming that they did not do anything wrong

    “Just to inform you that we don’t have any control over the refunds. Refunds are processed automatically after the merchant’s release.”

    Putting the fault on the other party in the chain

    “It is not our fault as we are not able to choose the currency for the merchant” or “if you were expecting to receive these refunds in Euros, and apparently you have received in GBP is because the merchant released then in this currency.”

    Invoking procedures and rules that prevent them doing it the simple way

    “However there is a procedure that needs to be followed. Especially when, as in this case, we didn’t have any control and the way to rectify it, is to raise a chargeback.”

    Referring client to another department or to third party as the solution lies outside their competence

    “I will forward this to the chargeback team.” or “You can contact the merchant and ask for clarification.”

    This behaviour will not help FinTech Start-ups win!

     

    Clients are asking for a great customer experience, they are asking for simplicity, speediness and convenience, even when, or especially when, things break. This is exactly where FinTech Start-ups need to make the difference.  Playing it the banks will not satisfy clients, it will end up putting FinTech Start-ups and banks in the same basket.

    What should have happened instead at a Fintech Start-up?

    First, the FinTech angle should have kicked in immediately:

    From Pixabay

    From Pixabay

    The data analysis should have been instantaneous, with artificial intelligence reading the support chat channel and picking up that I was growing more and more upset by the interaction with the customer service representative. This was visible in the language I was using and the speed at which I was typing (and the accompanying typos).

     

    From Pixabay

    From Pixabay

    Social Media listening should have also indicated real-time that I was starting to tweet about my problem and my frustration at the lack of understanding from the customer service representative, and that I was starting to drag influencers in the discussion.

    This would have also been supported by a rapid scan to establish my social media strength (number of followers, Klout score, retweets and likes) and the risk of PR damage that could result.

     

    Finally, the CRM system should have spitted out a customer profile showing that over the past 4 months:

    I had increased my volume of transactions significantly (so I was on my way to become a “good” client)

    that all transactions I had done were in Euros and that there were no transaction in GBP (so there was possibly something abnormal with those two transactions in GBP)

     

    Then, the Start-up angle should have also played a role:

    &; The customer service representative should have calculated the costs involved to solve the issue quickly and bring immediate satisfaction to the client:
    namely by reversing the two transactions in GBP into EUR, at an exchange rate of 1 GBP for 1.1177 EUR – which was 54.78 GBP x 1.1177 = 61.23 EUR, when I was claiming I should have received 64.50 EUR – that means a cost of 2.92 GBP.

    &8211; The customer service representative should have then assessed how much effort any other alternative solution would take:
    time spent by customer service staff to escalate the client’s request, plus time spent by the compliance team to raise a chargeback request and deal with the third party to fix the issue and to that, add the potential loss of faith in the product by the client, plus any potential damage to the brand resulting from the negative publicity on the social networks.

    &8211; Armed with those two assessments, the customer service representative would then decide quickly which solution would be the most satisfactory for the client and the less expensive for the FinTech Start-up to execute and would have executed it.

     

    So, in other words, the customer service representative should have assessed what was my issue with Revolut (i.e. refund process did not work properly), should have assessed the most practical and easiest way for Revolut to address my need (i.e. fix the refund by compensating the difference) and should have asked me how Revolut could still increase my client satisfaction (i.e. reinforce their client promise and turn me into a champion of their brand to drum up more business).

    FinTech Start-ups need to embrace a client-centric approach

    FinTech Start-ups need to go further than just layering a fancy new technology on one of the oldest jobs in the world if they want to win. They need to adopt a client-centric strategy, putting client satisfaction at the core. Because it is the alliance of technology and client-centric approach that will help them beat the banks.

    Client-centric champion Amazon would have paid back the 2.92 GBP in a split-second and would have probably issued a compensation voucher to make up for the bad customer experience. This would have reinforced my trust in their brand and would have led me to sing their praises on the social networks, bringing them additional clients attracted by this positive client experience sharing.

    FinTech Start-ups need to do the same, before Amazon starts doing FinTech…

    This article first appeared on Lionel Guerraz&8217;s Blog

    Featured Image: From Pixabay

    The post Why FinTech Startups Will Not Win If They Play Like The Banks appeared first on Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH.

    Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH

     
  • user 12:18 pm on November 7, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , , , ,   

    Is Social Media Taking over E-Commerce? (Yes, And Facebook’s Already Winning) 

    If there&;s one platform out there that just might be able to steal e-commerce business away from Amazon, it&8217;s Instagram&;a visual, highly interactive and personalized platform that just added the ability for users to shop. This comes very soon after its parent company, Facebook, launched its own e-commerce marketplace, calledRead More
    Bank Innovation

     
  • user 12:18 pm on November 7, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , , , ,   

    Is Social Media Taking over E-Commerce? (Yes, And Facebook’s Already Winning) 

    If there&;s one platform out there that just might be able to steal e-commerce business away from Amazon, it&8217;s Instagram&;a visual, highly interactive and personalized platform that just added the ability for users to shop. This comes very soon after its parent company, Facebook, launched its own e-commerce marketplace, calledRead More
    Bank Innovation

     
  • user 7:35 am on November 7, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , ,   

    Fintech: Friend or Foe? Why are we still asking? 

    I have been travelling a good part of 2016 having just returned from Money2020 and recently the UK where Horizn was fortunate to attend an invitation-only European Digital Banking conference near London. While in London a similar question was asked, “Which side are you on?” both the startups and some of the largest and smartest minds were in attendance pondering this question.

    One of the most interesting answers I have seen to date on this question is a LinkedIn post by Sabrina Del Prete, Digital Director at Williams & Glyn /RBS. Digital transformation in banking – is it a mission impossible?

    She states, “The key word in Digital Transformation is indeed “Transformation” and not “Digital”. Doing digital is fun, creative and rewarding – it’s a journey that you take with a light heart and a sense of optimism. Transforming a business in a sector that for hundreds of years has remained virtually unchanged, programmed for risk aversion and centred around products rather than clients is hard – cynicism and resilience are essential travel companions.”

    As the CEO of Horizn, which has always been on the bank side of digital transformation, versus the “disrupting” fintech startups, I am always surprised by the focus on this question. Maybe it’s simply because there are no sides. Transformation can’t happen without collaboration. If you are on the side of transformation, you are indeed on both the banks and the fintech side. The digital age has no respect for borders and the movement of money will have no borders either. I would venture to say innovation and transformation have no borders. Just take a look at the giants, Google, Amazon, Apple and Facebook. Emerging fintech companies and traditional financial institutions will eventually have no borders, as both players need each other to define and advance the new financial landscape.

    Many consumers are adopting innovation faster than most banks. Banks need to innovate, arguably faster than their customers are. Banks need to be innovating internally, partnering with fintechs and be focused on getting their digital innovation to market. Or more importantly, there needs to be a cultural of adoption for both the bank employees and their customers that could help propel and embrace innovation. In a world that becomes 100% more intelligent every 18 months, is of the essence. Marc Benioff (CEO of Salesforce) is very clear on this: “Speed is the new currency of business”

    Digital transformation we know has the potential to change the role of today’s banks, and simultaneously help them create a better bank for the digital age. It is simply a time for action, partnerships and for collaboration. It is time for banks with their internal stakeholders and outside fintechs to partner collectively to build banks for the digital age.

    For us at Horizn we also know that, “build it and they will come” is a myth. We believe in the need for digital and cultural transformation, both for the bank employees and for the customers they serve. To dramatically accelerating market adoption of digital transformation will mean getting both employees and customers digitally fluent. The key elements of the Horizn platform are, to drive awareness, adoption and increase revenues by inciting employees and customers to learn the latest digital innovation. Fast!


    [linkedinbadge URL=”https://www.linkedin.com/in/janicediner” connections=”off” mode=”icon” liname=”Janice Diner”] is Founding Partner CEO Horizn (Horizon Studios)

     
  • user 3:35 am on November 7, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , WIRpay,   

    WIRpay – mobiles Zahlen für KMU 

    Am 1. November 2016 hat die WIR Bank Genossenschaft ihr eigenes Mobile Payment System gelauncht. Als Beobachter des Payment-Marktes fragt man sich: Braucht es das? Denn mit Twint und auch ApplePay stehen bereits grosse und z.T. etablierte Systeme zur Verfügung. Warum betreibt eine mittelgrosse Schweizer Bank eine eigene Lösung Bezahlen?

    Bei einem genaueren Blick sieht man: Die WIR Bank ist nicht nur eine Bank, sondern betreibt auch das grösste KMU-Netzwerk in der Schweiz. Die teilnehmenden KMU berücksichtigen einander gegenseitig durch bevorzugte Auftragsvergabe untereinander. Schmiermittel dieses KMU-Netzwerkes ist die eigene Währung WIR. Ein WIR-Franken entspricht dabei immer einem Schweizer Franken (mehr zu WIR findet man hier).

     

    Zwei Währungen in einer Transaktion

    Diese einzigartige Währung WIR ist auch der Grund für die eigene Payment-Lösung. Denn im WIR-Netzwerk zahlt man mit WIR und Schweizer Franken gleichzeitig. Der Verkäufer bestimmt, welchen Teil des Gesamtpreises für ein Produkt oder einer Dienstleistung in WIR bezahlt werden kann. WIRpay bietet hier komfortable Unterstützung, indem der Käufer nur den Gesamtpreis und den WIR-Anteil eingeben muss. Das System erledigt den Rest automatisch.

    WIRpay

    Da andere Mobile Payment Systeme die Währung WIR nicht kennen und auch nicht abwickeln könnten (das Clearing läuft ausschliesslich über die WIR Bank) konnte sich die WIR Bank nicht einer anderen Lösung anschliessen. Und entwickelte darum WIRpay.

    Verbuchungen Realtime

    In den Grundzügen ist WIRpay ein Peer-to-Peer Zahlungssystem. Anders als bei etablierten Lösungen werden bei WIRpay die Buchungen in Echtzeit abgewickelt und direkt auf den Konten der Nutzer verbucht. Der Geldempfänger erhält innert Sekunden eine Bestätigung – und das Geld. So kann er Waren ohne Risiko dem Zahlenden übergeben. Und kann auch sofort wieder über den Betrag verfügen. Liquiditätsengpässe können so nicht entstehen. Und Liquidität ist für eine Unternehmung essentiell – gerade für KMU.

     

    Auf KMU zugeschnitten

    WIRpay

    Um Unterschied zu anderen P2P-SysteWIRpaymen ist WIRpay auf die Bedürfnisse von kleinen und mittleren Unternehmen zugeschnitten. Dazu ein paar Beispiele:

    Wirte kassieren bei den Kunden nicht immer selber ein. Das macht das Servicepersonal. Wie kann ein Wirt nun eine mobile Zahllösung einsetzen, ohne dass seine Mitarbeitenden gleich Zugriff auf sein komplettes Konto erhalten? WIRpay bietet die Möglichkeit, dass sich die Servicemitarbeitenden die App auf ihrem persönlichen Smartphone installieren und mit dem Geschäftskonto verbinden. Den Kontostand sehen die Mitarbeitenden aber nicht und sie können auch kein Geld ausgeben. Aber sie können Zahlungen der Gäste entgegennehmen und erhalten die Zahlungsbestätigung direkt auf ihrem Smartphone. Das Geld geht selbstverständlich direkt auf das Konto des Geschäftsinhabers.

    Und da viele Unternehmer mehrere Unternehmen haben, können sie die Konten aller Unternehmen mit einer App bedienen. Auch das eigene, private Konto des Firmeninhabers lässt sich einbinden: Einfach und komfortabel.

    Im Geschäftsverkehr zwischen Firmen wechseln auch mal grössere Summen die Hand. Beispielsweise wenn Maschinen oder Fahrzeuge gekauft werden. Deshalb können mit WIRpay auch grosse Beträge überwiesen werden.

    Verschieden Zahlungsmöglichkeiten

    Um möglichst viele Geschäftsfälle abzudecken, wurden verschiedene Zahlungsmöglichkeiten eingebaut. Die bequemste ist sicherlich die Zahlung mit QR-Code. Einfach mit dem Smartphone scannen und Zahlung bestätigen – fertig. Die QR-Codes wurden auch WIRmarket, dem neuen online Marktplatz des WIR-Netzwerkes, integriert.

    Steht kein QR-Code zur Verfügung, kann der Empfänger mittels einfacher Namensuche ausgewählt werden. Denn WIRpay kennt alle möglichen Empfänger und zeigt diese den Netzwerkteilnehmern auch an.

    Natürlich kann Geld auch an die Kontonummer (genauer die Kundennummer) des Geschäftspartners überwiesen werden. Das ist natürlich nicht so komfortabel, aber auch zielführend.

    Ausgezeichnete Erfolgschancen

    Im Unterschied zu allen anderen Anbietern von mobilen Zahlungslösungen kann die WIR Bank bei der Einführung von WIRpay auf eine Community bauen. Eine Community, die schon heute untereinander Geschäfte tätigt. Geschäfte, bei denen die Zahlungsabwicklung schon heute über die WIR Bank laufen. Denn rund 1.4 Milliarden WIR wechseln pro Jahr die Hand im WIR-Netzwerk. Nicht zu vergessen der damit verbundene Anteil an Schweizer Franken.

    Und WIRpay wurde mit dem Fokus entwickelt, dass die Geschäfte genau für diese Community einfacher werden. Die Chance für eine schnelle Adaption der Lösung ist deshalb sehr gut.

     

    Dieser Artikel erschien zuerst im Blog von Claudio Gisler

    The post WIRpay – mobiles Zahlen für KMU appeared first on Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH.

    Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH

     
  • user 12:18 am on November 7, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , ,   

    How can technology help enable financial inclusion? 

    Currently more than 2 billion adults worldwide &; mostly poor and disproportionately women &8212; lack access to formal services. A&;

    Continue reading on Hacking Finance &187;

    Bank Innovation

     
  • user 10:54 pm on November 6, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , ,   

    Identity is the new Black 

     

    shutterstock_395378032

    I was invited to a one day event on at the US Dept. of Treasury this past Friday. Treasury officials had invited a healthy cross section of identity management and solutions practitioners ranging from startup founders, technologists, scientists involved with standards settings, officials from various US governmental entities such as the Dept. of Justice, the IMF, the World Bank, FinCen, USAID, several bank representatives, executives from telecom, payments or social media companies, academics from various universities, current or former representatives from the governments from Estonia, the European Union, Pakistan or the United Kingdom, lawyers, institutions such as Brookings or the Pew Charitable Trust and the Treasury of course &; I am sure i am missing a few. Who would have thought Identity was such a sexy and trendy topic. All in all, and from my own count, we were shy of 90 in attendance.

    I was seated next to an official from the Dept. of Homeland Security and another gentleman with a buzzcut and no identifiable badge for the first part of the day. Needless to say I was on my best behavior, ready to flash on command my ultimate proof of identity in the US &8211; my green card. Given the convivial atmosphere I realized my identity had already been vetted and I started to relax and soak in the proceedings.

    The event was masterfully organized with a variety of panels that touched upon what legal identities were both from an US and a global perspective, the role of international standards when building identity solutions, the solutions at hand to make optimal identity solutions a reality, the issues around identity as currently experienced and the ways government and the private sector can collaborate to bring to market viable digital identity products and services in a compliant and legal way.

    I took away the following points from the day&;s proceedings:

    1) Identities are as diverse as human beings, their cultures and modes of social organization. Therefore digital identity solutions will have to be as diverse as possible given the contextual nature of what an identity means both from a structural and dynamic point of view. In other words, there is no one size fits all identity solution.

    2) Standards are crucial if we have to have the appropriate level of interoperability both within a country and between countries, assuming there will be more than one identity solution brought to market.

    3) Cooperation and coordination between the private sector, not for profit organizations, standards setting organizations, consumer advocacy groups and the government is a must. Digital identities and their related data sets &8211; legal, static, dynamic, social, digital, in real life &8211; are too sensitive for one group to take the lead without any cooperation.

    4) Digital identity solutions are by definition multi-faceted as they have to take into account how an identity is created, its baseline, how it evolves and is managed over time, how it can be kept trustworthy throughout the lifetime of the human being or entity it represents and how a framework is built to enable its assurance and verification in context.

    5) Digital identity solutions have to empower either individuals &8211; retail solutions &8211; or entities &8211; wholesale solutions &8211; and allow them to retain control in legal and compliant ways. Any identity solution that does not have the needs of its users at its center is not an adequate and appropriate identity solution. One of the logical paths towards identity solutions that empower individuals/entities leads to self sovereign identities constructs. (My personal views here.)

    6) Fraud, theft and all kinds of illegal activities are being combatted vigorously by several US entities. the battle is far from being won, but we are well protected by US govt entities that fight the good cause.

    7) Our current means of assuring one&8217;s identity, authenticating one&8217;s identity belong more to a universe of misfit toys than to a rational and organized approach. Much can be done to make our identities safer. Much is available too. Why is the private sector, as well as us as consumers, so complacent is a mystery though.

    8) Advanced technology solutions are being developed or have been developed &8211; biometrics, various technology stacks, cryptography amongst others. Few are live and operational as of today. Only a matter of time I guess. Yet, I could not shake the fact the advanced technology solutions are neither a silver bullet nor should be an excuse for us to wait to see solid identity solutions come to market in the US.

    9) Indeed, it was clear that various identity solutions have already been deployed to great effect in countries as diverse as Pakistan, India, Estonia, the United Kingdom, seemingly without the use of advanced technology solutions. Except for the United Kingdom, most of these countries have national identifying schemes such as a national identity number, or national identity card. The cultural and genetic aversion for such a scheme within the US may explain why this country is behind when it comes to digital identities. The fact that the United Kingdom is also working very effectively towards government enabled digital identities shows there is no excuse for the US to remain a laggard.

    10) Natural identity solutions providers are financial institutions, or startups.

    11) Two strong themes emerged towards the end of the day. First, there is a natural tug of war between the yearning for protecting privacy and the craving for transparency and disclosure to combat illegal activities. This natural tug of war is exacerbated by the sensitive nature of identities in commerce. Indeed, the private sector stands to monetize data &8211; our data &8211; in myriad of ways in the digital age, which renders the issue of privacy, ownership and legality even more important. Second, especially in a country like the United States, the private sector both dislikes overt government interference and abhors uncertainty. As such to the question of how government could help which was asked by one high ranking Treasury official, most in the room, a cappella and in perfect musical harmony declared it important the government help the market create a framework to foster identity solutions. I interpret this pleas as the quest for the right governmental nudges and an active avoidance of rigid mandates.

    12) Finally, although we did discuss a variety of subjects ranging from privacy concerns, legal and compliance issues, enforcement, technology solutions, identity vs data, the plurality of identities, one subject was notably absent from the proceedings: Identity rights. By identity rights I do not mean the right to an identity. I mean rights akin to property rights. In as much as property rights have been one of the foundational blocks of economic prosperity during the industrial age, I believe Identity rights will be a key engine for growth in the digital age. One needs to know his identity and the data associated with it are secured and that one owns them outright. In this sense data privacy is not enough. I have blogged about this in a previous post already. I suspect the issue of identity rights will be settled in different ways depending on context, via the courts in an organic way in the US, via legislative fiat in Europe. Be that as it may identity rights will emerge as currently our identity and data are neither tangible property nor are they intangible property and more than not are regulated by the various Terms of Service we seldom read but often agree to when signing up to use the various digital applications we spend more and more of our time with online.

    13) One parting thought: I view this one day event in a very positive light, as a proof that the thorny problem of digital identities is being taken seriously at the highest levels of government in the US. a very positive sign indeed. The private sector, along with standards bodies, now needs to come up with proposals and submit them to various US govt bodies. I eagerly await the next chapters and hope I will be invited to follow on events at the Treasury or which other entity takes up the challenge.

    FiniCulture

     
  • user 3:35 pm on November 6, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , Contovista, , , , , ,   

    Startup Of The Month: Contovista, A Personal Finance Banking Software Company 

    Founded in 2013, is a Zurich-based providing with financial management solutions that leverage big data, business intelligence and data visualization.  (Finanzprodukt.ch was one of the first page who reported about this company in April 2013)

    Contovista&;s portfolio includes a complete Personal Management (PFM) solution, a Finance Management solution for SMEs as well as Portfolio Analytics solution.

    Contovista illustration

    Its PFM solution uses advanced account statement visualizations that make it easy for online customers to understand the dynamics of the account. Transactions are aggregated by category, tag or any other available dimension, enabling customers to analyze their spending habits easily and in real-time.

    The company&;s Analytics Engine translates unstructured financial data into structured data enriched with meta-information. This data forms the basis for the company&8217;s products in PFM, Business Analytics and marketing, and can further be leveraged to build custom applications.

    Contovista&8217;s adds semantics to account statements by automatically categorizing transactions which can be enriched with custom tags, comments or documents.

    Contovista Banking Experience from Contovista on Vimeo.

    Contovista&8217;s solutions have already been integrated into Zürcher Kantonalbank. More integrations are expected to take place this year, according to a press release.

    In March, Contovista raised funding from the Aduno Group, a Swiss specialist in cashless payments, which now holds a 14% participation in the . The new capital was aimed at helping Contovista accelerate its growth and promote the company on the national and international levels.

    For the Aduno Group, the deal enabled the firm to offer a full-featured PFM and innovative data analytics solutions to its customers and partner banks.

    &;Digitization affects all business segments and is gaining importance in the financial sector. This requires strong partnerships with companies such as Contovista,&; said Martin Huldi, CEO of the Aduno Group.

    &8220;Our customers want individual solutions that are user-friendly. With the personal financial assistant we can meet their requirements and enable our customers an attractive 360° view of their financial transactions. We are delighted about this strategic partnership and we are able to offer our partner banks a service which allows to benefit quickly and cost-effectively from these new technologies.&8221;

    Qontis is another Swiss online PFM platform provider. The solution offers an overview of users&8217; personal finance details and includes a number of features including budgeting tools that can analyze a user&8217;s transaction history, cost optimization suggestions and capital accumulation support.

    In August 2015, Qontis announced a partnership with St. Galler Kantonalbank to integrate the startup&8217;s PFM tool into the bank&8217;s e-banking platform. Qontis&8217;s PFM solution is based on Meniga&8216;s software, which has been providing over 20 banks with more than 35 million customers its PFM platform since 2009.

    Meniga is the European market leader of white-label PFM and next-generation online banking solutions. Last year, the company signed a global contract to deploy its PFM solution across Santander Group markets.

     

    Featured image by Pressmaster, via Shutterstock.com.

    The post Startup Of The Month: Contovista, A Personal Finance Banking Software Company appeared first on Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH.

    Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH

     
  • user 12:18 pm on November 6, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: #InsurTech2016, , , , , , , ,   

    Reporting from #InsurTech2016 in Switzerland – the First Country Where Bitcoin may Go mainstream 

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