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  • user 4:54 pm on July 23, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , banks, , , ,   

    That Banking Moment 

    shutterstock_432757051

    Today there are more bankers convinced of the need to transform their businesses than those that are not. This is no small matter as realizing the need to change is half the battle. The other half of the battle is to find the right solutions and implement accordingly.

    In order to find the right solution one has to ask the right questions. I have struggled to find the right framework for these questions until I came upon this article by Scott Anthony.

    Scott outlines three main questions:

    – What business are we in today?

    – What new opportunities does the disruption open up?

    – What capabilities do we need to realize these opportunities?

    Here is my attempt at answering these questions for a Bank.

    – What business is a Bank in today?
    Taking my cue from Scott, I will avoid the obfuscating and basic answers such as &;offer accounts&;, &8220;lends&8221;, &8220;makes payments&8221; which are either based or category based. More abstractly, a bank acts as an intermediary by linking depositors and borrowers. In comes deposits, safely tucked in accounts, out comes loans safely underwritten to borrowers &; or so we hope. This intermediation role creates various benefits: a) spurs economic activity and supports the community in which the bank operates, b) safeguards and protects money entrusted by customers, c) provides access and convenience to money and how it is transacted, d) builds wealth directly (lending activity needs to be profitable) and indirectly (savings, investments). Abstracting further, a bank is in the business of providing trusted services around a customer&;s money. Abstracting even further, a bank is in the &8220;TRUST&8221; business. Do note there is a major difference between being in the money business and being in the trust business. Thinking of being in the money business forces you to think in terms of products and services around how money is stored (checking account), transferred (payments), invested (assets) or lent (loans). The outcome of such a paradigm is to sell products. Such outcome may not have been explicit when operated in small environments, serving defined geographies where the relationship a banker had with his community was the vector that enabled all. This outcome is explicit in modern however. Therein lies the conundrum and the creative/destructive tension. Banks have ended up engaging in the business of selling products that serve a function around money whereas their existential function is to extend and project TRUST. Many pundits have recently declared banks need to be less product centric and more customer centric as a result of this tension. I agree and will unequivocally and irrevocably state that a Bank needs to reclaim and redeploy TRUST. Without trust, there are no bankers. Without trust there is no bank.

    – What new opportunities does the disruption open up for a Bank?
    In an era where new ways to invest, underwrite risk, lend, transfer money are being rolled out, all of which necessitating less knowledge centralized in an individual&8217;s brain (a banker) or an organization (a bank),  where the way we spend our time and our money occurs less within the constraints of the physical world and more via digital means; a Bank is rapidly finding itself threatened and ultimately disintermediated as an agent handling our money. We also live a paradox where we do not &8220;like&8221; our Bank &8211; we spend less and less time in contact with its employees or its branches and we profoundly dislike the excesses of some bankers and the opacity, applicability or utility of many banking products &8211; while we &8220;like&8221; our new sacred cows &8211; we spend more and more time on our beloved social media apps, marketplaces, social messaging apps, social gaming apps, business apps &8211; yet we TRUST our Bank more than we trust our new sacred cows. Lonely is the pundit advocating we store our money with Facebook or the customer ready to do so. Banks have so far treated this phenomenon as an existential threat. I posit this phenomenon is actually an opportunity. A major opportunity.

    As a result of our digital engagement we have experienced an explosion in the amount of data we generate. We are drowning in data and metadata. Our identities have multiplied to the point where our confusion about their management is only surpassed by the threats we face every day from hackers. Whereas software and hardware are the vessels, arteries and vital organs of any functioning business, data has become its lifeblood. The second coming of artificial intelligence will only further the point I want to make: Data has become an asset class and will become more and more valuable, unlocking a multitude of values we cannot begin to imagine today, for us and those we engage with.

    Tying TRUST and DATA together, I come to the inevitable conclusion that today&8217;s opportunity for a Bank is to provide TRUST services around its customers data. Data is what you do, who you are and how you evolve today. It will be what you monetize tomorrow. So far, we, the real owners of data, have been cut off from its monetization, with consent &8211; engaging in a quid pro quo with a social network &8211; without consent &8211; with little control over how one&8217;s data is used to price a loan for example.

    Let&8217;s imagine a Bank offering its clients a master account, part checking account where a client will entrust money, part data account where a client will entrust data. Let&8217;s further imagine this Bank will monetize the data residing in the data account and &8211; much like with different flavors of traditional bank accounts &8211; will offer a cut off the revenue generated. Little to nothing if the customer consents to narrow use cases, narrow data sets or anonymized data. Much more if the customer consents to wide use cases, wider data sets or personalized data. Let&8217;s further imagine this Bank will also provide services around a customer&8217;s identity: verifying one&8217;s identity based on the requirements of third party services, individuals or entities. Imagine that and you have imagined a Bank reinventing its core tenet, TRUST in the age of DATA and IDENTITY. In a subtle way, this reinvention is akin to a Bank finding back its original roots. Indeed, an old school banker was entrusted with his customers data when interacting with them in the community. The data resided in the banker&8217;s head, shared only because of the trust factor. Tomorrow, the data will reside in the cloud, protected by one&8217;s Bank, with a trust factor.

    To convince you further of the validity of such a thesis, consider what the likes of Google, Amazon or Facebook are interested in? Are they rushing to obtain a bank license to handle money or are they focusing on harnessing the power of data? I will leave you to answer this question on your own and ponder the competitive pressures banks are and will face whether they choose to own and manage trusted data or not.

    The other major opportunity I see for a Bank resides with the ability to orchestrate a value chain &8211; instead of the old paradigm of owning the entire value chain. I analyzed this opportunity in previous post. The concept of Bank as a Service, Bank as a Platform, the Platformification of Banking is slowing taking hold in the ecosystem. A few startups have capitalized on this trend already, a few Tier 1 Banks have made preliminary moves. I do not pretend there will be only one new Banking reality of course and some banks will not chose the &8220;value orchestration&8221; path. What I am convinced of is that &8220;value orchestration&8221; is a major opportunity. The shear amount of data and transactions we are and will continue to generate within the context of heterogenous and diverse technology ecosystems we elect to engage with requires a new breed of Banks adept at organizing, servicing, facilitating and sharing work flows and processes across a financial services value chain.

    So far we see several trends unfolding: a) the buildup of an ecosystem of startups, b) the strong gravitational pull of social networks + messaging apps (soon to be joined by the full force of AI powered chatbots) exercised over our daily attention, c) a secular trend towards peer to peer relations or horizontal networks (sharing/renting economy, , cryptocurrencies&😉 d) the resulting arms race all banks have undertaken to digitize their customer touch points.

    This arms race is the result of the mistaken assumption that retaining customer attention by owning it fully is the main way to continue delivering value creation. I am not convinced and even if I were, competing for attention against nimble upstarts, savvy tech giants or the secular horizontal network trend is a strategy I do not like the odds of &8211; few banks will survive doing so. Rather, refocusing one&8217;s strategy on value orchestration to facilitate and enable the seamless inclusion of financial services conversations where we spend most of our time, the new nature of the transactions occurring during these conversations and their seamless operational orchestration and provisioning seems to be a much more fertile ground to mine.

    We have yet to see a Bank owning the &8220;value orchestration&8221; mantle. I believe that will change soon. How soon? Within less than 5 years is my bet. I am convinced this will happen because the Internet has fundamentally altered the way we can do business. Achieving near zero marginal cost of delivering any product or service will occur in every industry. I am convinced this has not happened yet because the financial services industry is unique, complex and heavily regulated.

    If you think that only large banks can and will capitalize on the &8220;value orchestration&8221; opportunity you are wrong. In my view, although there will be few &8220;value orchestration&8221; or platform owners, there will be many smaller banks that federate and participate as platform partners. Further, if you think this platformification may lead to what I refer to the &8220;dumb pipes&8221; syndrome, you are wrong again. The age of dumb pipes is long gone, smart pipes is what you need to think through and digest &8211; the variety of services at both end of the pipes and within the pipes themselves is underestimated by many.

    A more appropriate concern is how will disruption and the resulting opportunity of &8220;value orchestration&8221; impact the direct relationship a Bank has with its customers? Will that relationship be maintained, shared or broken and to what extent? Could we see &8220;Intel Inside&8221; models emerging, capitalizing on implicit trust and technology prowess augmented by value orchestration without the necessary immediacy of a direct to consumer experience?

    – What capabilities does a Bank need to realize these opportunities?
    I will limit myself to a high level analysis.

    First, let&8217;s rifle through some important existing capabilities.

    a) Regulated and Licensed: Although viewed as a constraint by some, I view these as assets. The trick will be to educate regulators as to the need for innovation. Different licenses will be needed, changes to existing licenses too. Different regulatory frameworks will need to be adopted.

    b) Security, Cybersecurity, Authentication, Authorization, Identification: Banks invest heavily in these area. Again they shall need to add new technologies to the mix, which they are already in the process of doing. I would not be surprised to see a Bank acquiring a cybersecurity firm for example. Core competencies need to be brought in.

    As for some of the new capabilities.

    a) UX/UI: We are now used to sleek experiences and interfaces in our digital & data worlds. Nothing short of closing the gap and excelling is acceptable for a Bank going forward. I view this capability as core actually. I would advocate acquiring best of breed UX/UI practices, hiring leading designers. That capability, that talent needs to be acquired and treated well as it will be too time consuming to grow it internally.

    b) Data Analytics: If your business is TRUST + DATA, you better be good at analyzing the latter to back up the former. Certain banks already have data science talent in house and are uniquely positioned to understand their own as well as their customers&8217; data. Still more needs to be done. I can see home-growing talent into specialized units, even spinning off these units to better grow them &8211; at least one bank has done so I believe &8211; or acquiring best of breed startups.

    c) Artificial Intelligence: Arguably a wide field. There is an arms race going on. Google, Facebook, Amazon, Apple are snapping up talent in the US and I am sure European companies are doing the same in their respective countries. In a way AI and Data Analytics are intertwined, thusly AI is as important when one is dealing with data. Again, acquire!

    d) Cutting edge Technology: One need not acquire all cutting edge technology capabilities (cloud, blockchain, quantum computing, AR, VR, IoT, API&8230;), partnering will do for most, understanding, mastering and managing is a must though. To be fair, many banks have started learning and closing the gap here.

    e) HR Skills: Hire, hire, hire from outside banking to acquire mindsets that live and breathe either data or complex networks&8230; technologists, executives familiar with platform strategies, data experts, software entrepreneurs, p2p and/or network specialists, experts that understand and study the emerging properties of large systems (biologists, behavioral scientists&8230;) . Basically, hire less bankers, more non-bankers.

    If the above spurs your imagination, please share other opportunities you may find attractive, as well as capabilities I have not thought of.

    FiniCulture

     
  • user 12:18 pm on July 23, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: banks, , , , ,   

    How Will Banks Secure the New Channels — Messaging, Video, Chatbots? 

    The first banking call crossing the Atlantic took place this week. A new virtual assistant (TouchAssist) and a new personal finance chatbot (Trim) both launched yesterday. Facebook Messenger recently reached 1 billion users &; and 18,000 bots. There are more ways for customers to talk to than everRead More
    Bank Innovation

     
  • user 6:40 pm on July 22, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: banks, , , ,   

    RBI Calls on Indian Banks to Explore Blockchain 

    A member of India’s central bank has encouraged further collaboration between and startups to advance tech.
    CoinDesk

     
  • user 3:35 pm on July 22, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , banks, , , Disruptor, , , , ,   

    UBS Exec: Blockchain ‘The Biggest Disruptor Since The Internet’ 

    will cause major disruption in the enterprise stack, sparking a dramatic shift to distributed computing environments with the &;value web&; becoming a massive peer-to-peer network, according to UBS&;s former Group CIO and Group Managing Director, Oliver Bussmann.

    Qualified as &8220;the to industries the introduction of the ,&8221; blockchain will trigger a new wave of disruption in the software business. This will push enterprises to change their approach to IT while opening up new opportunities for technology companies, new entrants and blockchain experts in delivering the right products and services to meet specific needs, according to Bussmann.

    &8220;The fact that so many established players see such potential for disruption up and down the stack just confirms me in my belief that broad-based transformation is coming,&8221; he wrote in a recent blog post.

    UBS, a member of the world&8217;s largest blockchain consortium of over 40 and financial institutions, has been at the forefront of exploring blockchain technology, launching in 2015 a blockchain research lab in London.

    In June, the Swiss bank unveiled it has applied for a US patent for an innovation that allows participants in a blockchain-powered market to remain anonymous, according to a report by the Financial News.

    The technology is among the numerous prototypes that are being developed at the bank&8217;s London innovation lab.

    In January, UBS released a whitepaper that echoed the main theme of this year&8217;s World Economic Forum Annual Meeting in Davos, Switzerland. Titled &;Extreme automation and connectivity: The global, regional, and investment implications of the Fourth Industrial Revolution,&8217; the report addresses the technologies that will likely reshape the global economy and the consequences of extreme automation and connectivity on nations, businesses and individuals.

    UBS Fourth Industrial Revolution report Davos 2016

    Defined as &8220;the ultimate product of extreme connectivity,&8221; blockchain technology &8220;could benefit firms that use them to automate processes securely, to cut out costly intermediaries, and to protect intellectual property,&8221; the report says.

    In the banking industry, blockchain technology could prove &8220;a double edged sword&8221; that has the potential to boost profitability by allowing for desintermediation and help banks save up to US$ 20 billion annually on infrastructure costs.

    &8220;Since blockchain transactions can be processed in as little as 15 seconds, extreme connectivity shortens this process, freeing up capital for trading, investment, and other purposes,&8221; the report says. &8220;While near real-time settlement would be good for bank clients, it could possibly reduce intra-day liquidity for banks since end-of-day settlement gives them access to capital for longer.&8221;

    In the insurance business, blockchain technology could allow policies to instantly pay claims based on preset information from trusted third party. Lloyd&8217;s of London has been exploring blockchain technology to reduce friction in the insurance industry. In March, SafeShare partnered with Vrumi to launch the world&8217;s first blockchain insurance solution for the sharing economy. Vrumi connects people seeking affordable workspace to householders. The new insurance product utilizes a blockchain created by Z/Yen Group to confirm counterparty obligations.

    Beyond financial services, blockchain can revolutionize supply chain transparency. Physical assets can be registered in a blockchain. This would typically involve virtual tokens representing underlying assets. In this scenario, the ledger can be used to track the movement of goods, providing a highly secure supply chain management system that is resistant to fraud. London-based Everledger uses blockchain technology for diamond certification and related transaction history, providing insurance companies, owners, claimants and law enforcement with a permanent ledger.

     

     

    The post UBS Exec: Blockchain &8216;The Biggest Disruptor Since The Internet&8217; appeared first on Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH.

    Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH

     
  • user 12:19 pm on July 22, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , banks, , , , SuperTech   

    Breaking Banks: FinTech + InsurTech = SuperTech! [AUDIO] 

    Host Liz Lumley takes a look at and speaks to Ofer Deshe, CEO of Tobias &; Tobias, David Stubbs, CEO of RightIndem, and Risto Rossar, CEO of Insly.
    Bank Innovation

     
  • user 3:40 am on July 20, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: Africa's, banks, , , , , , , ,   

    Wine Box Miners to Whatsapp: How South Africa’s Banks Are Going DIY to Test Ethereum’s Blockchain 

    A team of six African is now conducting experiments with , a process that was bootstrapped by .
    CoinDesk

     
  • user 12:18 am on July 19, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , banks, , , Outpaces, , Rivals   

    Chase Outpaces Rivals in Mobile Banking Race 

    JPMorgan  is winning the game. Bank of America held its second-quarter earnings call today, and was the last of the nation&;s largest to do so. Mobile is of interest on bank earnings calls primarily as a cost-saving measure, as digital customers are less expensive to serve. For instance,Read More
    Bank Innovation

     
  • user 1:00 pm on July 18, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , banks, , , ,   

    Realtime Network Grows with Addition of Capital One 

    One will be the fifth bank to go live with peer-to-peer payments on the clearXchange , it was announced this morning. Capital One 360 customers can currently receive realtime payments from other in the network, which now includes Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, U.S. Bank, and, most recently,Read More
    Bank Innovation

     
  • user 9:30 pm on July 17, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: banks, , , ,   

    Biometric Tokenization Delivers Financial Services the Best in Security, UX 

    HYPR_home_sdk_2

    A question that providers are prodded to answer is how to safeguard identity while not burdening the end user too heavily with new tasks when they access their accounts online, whether on desktop and mobile. This question, however, is a flawed one since within our reach is a solution that markedly enhances user experience (UX) while providing the best security available.

    The marriage of biometrics and cryptography along with advances in mobile has made biometrics a viable, immediately-deployable, and scalable replacement for yesterday’s flawed username and password authentication scheme. The solution is called  tokenization, and our partners are already implementing it to eliminate passwords, lower enterprise risk, introduce IT efficiencies, and preserve user privacy.

    What remains when passwords are left behind is a new UX where the user registers his or her biometric signature on-device, and when their banking app prompts them to log in, transact, or otherwise assert their identity he or she simply authenticates using the device’s embedded fingerprint sensors, camera, microphone, or combination thereof. When accessed, a cryptographic challenge-response validates the identity, login, transaction, or communication in under a second.

    The biometric data is decentralized across millions of user devices, meaning the financial services institution no longer holds customer data as it currently does with passwords and PIN codes. It also means that the user is in possession of his or her biometrics, and that these encrypted templates are stored offline in trusted zones found on the devices.

    Biometric tokenization such as the FIDO UAF standard HYPR supports is integrable with existing security architectures, requiring no overhaul, and HYPR is interoperable with the diverse biometric sensing modalities, biometric sensing vendors, operating systems, devices, and enterprise applications in use and in place. Bank employees using internal applications on desktop are treated to the same UX that their customers using a consumer-facing mobile app are, and a user’s mobile device can communicate over Bluetooth low-energy (BLE) to navigate desktop applications.

    The underlying security that decentralizes and encrypts biometrics also delivers the best UX Internet users have ever known. Biometric tokenization eliminates passwords—it doesn’t corral passwords into a single sign-on, and it doesn’t cause the actioning of an on-device biometric to unlock the phone or paste in passwords. This is true password elimination for the best UX plus top security—no workarounds or corner-cutting.

    Enterprises like and their customers can finally “forget about forgetting” when it comes to the credentials they once used to access accounts, and when a device is lost the biometric template, lacking its owner, is rendered useless. Public keys on the enterprise side are also revocable, adding another layer of confidence to the enterprise and user.

    Biometrics has brought us such a long way in security innovation because of the security in its own right. What’s not widely known is that there is a usability revolution in the making as a byproduct of the hard work companies like HYPR are doing to finally make online banking safe.


    [linkedinbadge URL=”https://www.linkedin.com/in/george-avetisov-b555a6a6″ connections=”off” mode=”icon” liname=”George Avetisov”] is CEO is Co-Founder & CEO at HYPR

    [linkedinbadge URL=”https://www.linkedin.com/in/per-lind-5b894″ connections=”off” mode=”icon” liname=”Per Lind”] is Partner at HYPR Asia Pacific.

     
  • user 5:05 pm on July 17, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: banks, , , luxembourg,   

    Why bring your FinTech business to Luxembourg? 

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    Introduction

    With all the media attention on “brexit” there is a renewed interest by companies who want to take full advantage of the European Financial Services market in examining locations outside of the UK.  Once again cities in Europe are positioning themselves as the next hub. Paris, Frankfurt, Dublin and more certainly all have their advantages.  We have seen the German FDP taking the initiative driving around the City of London advising start-ups to “keep calm and move to Berlin”.  In choosing a location for FinTech business, entrepreneurs need to consider key aspects: the business environment, market access, regulatory and government support.  We believe is well positioned with respect to these aspects coupled with a unique set of advantages.

    Environment

    Luxembourg has a track record in evolving the economic environment to suit the needs of the time.  Over the last 50 years Luxembourg has transformed itself from an iron and steel centre to a global financial centre and media hub, with two home-grown European giants in the field, RTL Group in media and SES (Société Européenne des Satellites) in satellite transmission.

    Developing a strong FinTech industry has naturally become a key focus as Luxembourg hopes to capitalize on its international character and openness to innovation. Finance represents 36% of GDP, the creation of a vibrant FinTech hub is high on the political agenda. Luxembourg’s small size and agile government machinery provides a unique environment for FinTech including:

    • Ease of access to key governmental decision makers at ministerial level.
    • Prime Minister who, himself, takes responsibility for the development of the ICT sector.
    • An active ecosystem supported by a ‘Can Do attitude’.
    • A strong regulatory authority that is open minded to innovation and willing to move fast.

    Market access

    As a ‘gateway to Europe’ Luxembourg is at the heart of European decision making and is quick and efficient at transforming EU directives into practical applications which have been influential in attracting many key players to setup their operations in Luxembourg including PayPal, Amazon Payments, Rakuten, and Yapital.  EU “passporting” regulations allow companies based in EU member states to operate throughout the European Union.

    Ecosystem

    Luxembourg has created an active and vibrant ecosystem including incubators and accelerators, law firms, service companies, IT hosting companies, university with its research centre, data centres, and financial expertise.

    This ecosystem, stimulated by innovation funding and supported by pro-active and pragmatic approach to regulation, has enabled an industry hub of over 150 FinTech companies. Many are small start ups such as Digicash in mobile payments, Mangopay, a crowd funding platform or , part of the crypto-currency value chain.

    The reason they give for coming to Luxembourg is access to Talented ‘International’ People (Luxembourg has the highest number of developers in the world per capita) and an active tight knit ecosystem, with a ‘can do’ attitude that incorporates private business, public research organisations and government bodies such as regulators and innovation agencies. For the period 2016-2020, Luxembourg will spend 200M€ promoting research, development and innovation.

    In February, Minister of Finance, H.E. Pierre Gramegna, announced a project to create the LHoFT, the Luxembourg House of Financial which will provide a place for companies from Finance, Technology and FinTech to interact amongst themselves and with research and government actors to develop ground-breaking concepts.

    Regulation

    As a founding member of the EU, Luxembourg has a real influence on its strategic direction, particularly in the area of the regulation of new financial products. Currently it is moving faster than UK and Germany on crypto-currency regulation, Luxembourg recently made history by becoming the first member state to issue a license to crypto-currency exchange Bitstamp.

    The Luxembourg regulator CSSF (Commission de Surveillance du Secteur Financier) has created an Innovation, Payments, Markets Infrastructure and Governance department responsible for financial innovation, payment services, markets infrastructures and general and transversal aspects relating to governance and remuneration in the financial sector.

    “Luxembourg’s regulatory approach has contributed to the development of an important payment services industry which generates nowadays an ecosystem of highly innovative products”, says Nadia Manzari, Head of Innovation, Payments, Markets Infrastructure and Governance, at the CSSF.

    Research

    As a global leader in specific financial niches and with renowned experts populating the research institutes, Luxembourg has fast access to financial and technology talent to deliver game changing ideas.

    The University of Luxembourg, one of the youngest universities in Europe, announced in January the establishment of a FinTech lab as a part of its interdisciplinary centre for Security, Reliability and Trust (SnT).  Professor Björn Ottersten (Director of SnT) explains, “the coming years will see a transformation driven by technological advances and Luxembourg must be at the forefront if it wishes to maintain its current position. SnT can play an instrumental role as an R&D partner positioning corporate partners and increasing their competitiveness.”

    The Luxembourg Institute for Science and Technology (LIST) is another important piece of the puzzle with a strong focus on FinTech research.

    Infrastructure

    As home to major payment systems in Europe, mission critical infrastructure is a must have.  Luxembourg has invested heavily in internet infrastructure and is home to 40 percent of Europe’s tier IV data centres — the most robust and secure favoured by financial companies.

    Funding Opportunities

    For start-ups, Luxembourg’s “Fit for Start” scheme offers early-stage funding and coaching to ICT start-ups in Luxembourg. The programme is intended to help fund the development of a prototype and to provide start-ups with support in their early phase.

    The Luxembourg Government announced the launch of a seed fund, created jointly with a group of private investors, to support the financing and development of start-ups operating in the field of ICT. Named the ‘Digital Tech Fund’, the fund was set-up on the initiative of the Ministry of the Economy as part of the national “Digital Lëtzebuerg” initiative.

    For more established companies, the national level “Law of 5 June 2009 relating to the Promotion of Research, Development and Innovation” provides for financial support to companies who launch innovation activities in Luxembourg. The support is particularly adapted to the needs of Small and Medium-Sized Enterprises and allows granting specific support to R&D&I Projects or Programmes, Process and Organisational Innovation in services and “De minimis” measures (discretionary, capped aid measures, to enable enterprises and private research organisations to benefit from public funding if these entities are not eligible for a specific aid schemes).

    As a base in the European Union, Luxembourg can provide a means to benefit from European Union-wide schemes including access to the EU’s €74bn Horizon 2020 fund, aimed at driving innovation within the EU. Together with the Juncker plan, this represents significant funding opportunities for companies located within the EU market.

    In addition there is an abundance of private funding opportunities including the Luxembourg Business Angels Network (LBAN) – a strong and active community of business angels and seed capital investors in Luxembourg.

    Want to find out more?

    As an independent member of the FinTech innovation ecosystem in Luxembourg, FinnoLux have developed a number of services to help growth-mode FinTech companies to establish themselves in Luxembourg.  We are able to help you by:

    • Identifying unique business opportunities for your company/product, leveraging our extensive network and industry experience.
    • Facilitating introductions to the research organizations, universities and government agencies for research- related projects.
    • Providing assistance in accessing funding, both locally and at EU level.
    • Identifying customers, interesting business collaborations and investors.
    • Advising in the tailoring of your product to meet the needs of the European market.

    We have put together a unique package of services which bring together all required pieces to setup and (re)locate your FinTech business in Luxembourg. Our partners include:

    • Accountants
    • Lawyers and notaries
    • Relocation agents
    • Office space providers
    • Real estate agents
    • Recruitment agencies (both locally and pan European)
    • Sales and marketing
    • Events
    • Industry associations

    Luxembourg Key Facts

    • Located in Western Europe, Luxembourg is situated between France, Belgium and Germany.
    • Population 563 000
    • Founding member of the European Union, OECD, United Nations, NATO, and Benelux.
    • 65 000 employed in Financial sector.
    • Luxembourg is highly stable, AAA rated by Standard & Poor’s, Moody’s and Fitch.
    • Home to 143 and 324 insurers
    • Second largest investment fund centre in the world (first is the United States), number 1 in global fund distribution
    • Premier private banking centre in the Eurozone
    • Leading Renminbi centre in Europe
    • Largest domicile for Islamic funds in Europe
    • Hub for e-commerce and e-payment companies

    If you would like to know more about bringing your business to Luxembourg, please see our website at http://www.finnolux.com and feel free to get in touch.


    [linkedinbadge URL=”https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/why-bring-your-fintech-business-luxembourg-matt-elton” connections=”off” mode=”icon” liname=”Matt Elton“]  is Cofounder at Finnolux and this post was originally published on linkedin.

     
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