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  • user 3:36 pm on May 22, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: fintech, , , ,   

    The Swiss Fintech Startup Map Overview (May Update) 

    Swisscom/eforesight shows every month a very nice with the Map Overview. Here the May , now counting 180 (+4 vs March) Swiss Fintech Startups.

    Fintech Startup Map Switzerland May

     

    The post The Swiss Fintech Startup Map Overview (May Update) appeared first on Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH.

    Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH

     
  • user 12:18 pm on May 22, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , fintech, , ,   

    R3CEV, Ripple May Band Together 

    It looks like an partnership is in the works. This development could be a sign of the bundling of distributed ledgers and alliances between companies and consortiums in the space. The news was teased on Twitter today by Ripple CEO Chris Larsen: The future of is bringing like-minded companies,Read More
    Bank Innovation

     
  • user 9:36 am on May 22, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , fintech   

    Did banks just become obsolete? 

    AAEAAQAAAAAAAAh-AAAAJGUyYWExOTg5LWFlMDktNDVkOC1hMWExLTY3MDlmYWY4MTBjZQ

    The hits are coming in for 2016, which is shaping to be The Year of . Just recently DBS launched Digibank, their forward thinking mobile only offering, and now Fidor and Telefonica have done something very similar in Germany. Although, there’s something missing here.. hmm, I can’t quite put my finger on it. Oh wait, I got it!!

    This is a real bank, yet
    there’s no bank involved!

    This is that watershed moment we’ve been waiting for. We will look back in a few years and think it normal to do banking without , but years of research, development, positioning, lobbying, legislation, failures and breakthroughs have taken place to get here. So let’s break it down. What the heck is so special here, isn’t this just another digital wallet…?

    Banks are so 2015

    I’ve already heard a few people compare this to previous tie-ups with banks and telcos. There are several examples around the world. In Singapore, the collaboration of Singtel and Standard Chartered springs to mind. There’s a natural synergy there, to provide simple mobile payment or wallet facilities through the telco channel. Co-branding and co-marketing. Throw in contactless for added innovation points. Yay. Yawn. It was solid marketing. Transformative? Disruptive? Not so much.

    AAEAAQAAAAAAAAc7AAAAJDc1ZmViZDBjLWQyNTItNDhjYy1hNmFmLTdjMzEzNGE5MzQ1NQ

    We’ll call you, don’t call us

    This is different. Instead of opting to leverage an established financial services brand, like a bank, Telefonica is effectively doing their own thing. By partnering with a startup in Fidor, they call the shots. Make no mistake, Fidor is a provider to Telefonica, not the other way around.

    For Telefonica, this move represents a new revenue stream, increased revenue per user, and opportunity to create stickiness with their customers. How many of their telco competitors also offer you banking services? Uhh. Yeah not many. Actually, ZERO! Globally! Not often you see that these days.

    Cool, so what is it, some kind of app right?

    Not a mobile wallet!

    Fidor has been busy for years building a complete offering, including their own banking license, which is a feat in and of itself. Yes this initial service is for Germany, but Fidor’s license is valid across Europe! Imagine that! When’s the last time you saw a Fintech startup in Asia with a license across the region? The answer is never! A few hopefuls like Bambu, Tryb and Marvelstone are paving the way…

    (photo credits: REUTERS/Lucas Jackson)

    broken wallet - photo credits: REUTERS/Lucas Jackson

    What mobile wallets are to Fidor

    That’s what makes this so different. It’s a real bank. Not a quasi financial wallet thingy that you have to top up at 7-Eleven, and can only buy things at compatible vendors with some special payment terminal. Pfft, I say! This is a real bank account, on your phone. Yes it’s an app, just an app. That means no branch, no queues, no crap. You get a virtual credit card by Mastercard, and they’re even doing small loans! Not your father’s mobile wallet, then!

    Let’s talk about KYC baby

    Know. Your. Customer. If banking is the least sexy field to work in, the compliance team is the least sexy division inside a bank. KYC is the thing they like to do the least. So, gives you an idea.

    I want to do KYC when I grow up.

     – said no one, ever 

    The burden of all financial institutions is regulation and compliance. Nobody wants it, but everyone needs it. Customers need it. Banks need it. Governments need it. It’s necessary so that firms don’t get greedy and accidentally fund hippies, terrorists and the like. The result is piles of paperwork, multiple layers of authentication, and bags of tokens for every occasion. So what is Fidor doing in this area?

    Full online onboarding, supposedly in “a few minutes”. No paper. No meetings. As an interesting addition, they are using a video link inside the app to verify identity. Let’s see if that approach catches on. They could be onto something here… MAS, wink wink.

    Telco customers

    So what’s in it for Fidor? Why not go at it alone and challenge all the institutions? Because B2C is haaaaard. As a startup, you’re that guy on the street handing out discount leaflets that nobody wants. Nobody wants to be that guy. So don’t be that guy. Increasingly, startups are looking to leverage institutions for that very reason. Institutions already have customers. Why reinvent the wheel, when you can just use theirs?

    AAEAAQAAAAAAAAjNAAAAJDY2MzljNzMyLTU1NTEtNGI4Zi05ZGQ3LTY4MjUyMjFmOGYyMA

    Don’t be that guy in the popcorn suit

    One of the more innovative things Telefonica have done is to incentivize their existing users to adopt their banking app. For example, you might get additional free data on your 4G plan as a reward. Synergy, convergence and gamification. Hmm.. I wonder where could this go..?

    Where to from here?

    If you haven’t heard, two banking licenses were handed out in Korea in 2015. One was a telco. The other a chat app. Tencent and Alibaba already have banking licenses in China. Expect big things. Dinosaur big.


    [linkedinbadge URL=”https://www.linkedin.com/in/akiranin” connections=”off” mode=”icon” liname=”Aki Ranin”], is Commercial Director at Tigerspike and this article was originally published on linkedin

     
  • user 3:35 am on May 22, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , CrowdfundingPlattformen, drängen, fintech, , , , ,   

    Crowdfunding Schweiz Monitoring: Immer mehr Crowdfunding-Plattformen drängen auf den Markt 

    Im Jahr 2015 ist der Schweizer erneut stark gewachsen. Im Vergleich zum Vorjahr stieg das Volumen der vermittelten Gelder um 73 Prozent auf 27,3 Millionen Franken. Auch für das laufende Jahr erwarten die Studienautoren noch einmal ein markantes Wachstum.

    Insbesondere Crowdlending für KMU und Real Estate Crowdfunding werden dazu beitragen, ebenso die stetig wachsende Anzahl an Crowdfunding-Plattformen. Das «Crowdfunding 2016» analysiert erstmals auch Beweggründe von Projektunterstützenden.

     

    Crowdfunding Monitoring Schweiz 2016 - Entwicklung erfolgreich finanzierter Kampagnen 2008-2015

     

    Wer auf der Suche nach Geld ist für ein Start-up, eine Jugendkulturinitiative, eine Filmproduktion oder ein Engagement im Umweltschutz, wird häufiger auf Crowdfunding-Plattformen fündig. Das zum dritten Mal vom Institut für Finanzdienstleistungen Zug IFZ der Hochschule Luzern durchgeführte «Crowdfunding Monitoring Schweiz» zeigt, dass sich diese alternative Form der Geldvermittlung zunehmend durchsetzt und auch im letzten Jahr wieder sehr stark gewachsen ist:

    Obschon im Vergleich etwa zu den USA oder Grossbritannien das Volumen der vermittelten Geldbeträge nach wie vor klein ist, hat es sich in der Schweiz seit 2011 fast verneunfacht auf 27,3 Millionen Franken im 2015. Gegenüber dem Vorjahr bedeutet das ein Wachstum von 73 Prozent. Für die Analyse wurden die Daten von 31 in der Schweiz aktiven Plattformen berücksichtigt. Sie werden in vier Kategorien unterteilt (Details siehe Box): Crowdinvesting (Geld gegen Unternehmensbeteiligung), Crowdlending (Geld gegen Zins), Crowdsupporting (Geld gegen Güter/Dienstleistungen) und Crowddonating (keine direkte Gegenleistung).

     

    Crowdfunding Monitoring Schweiz 2016 | Entwicklung von Crowdfunding in Grossbritannien

     

    Neue Angebote und Plattformen als Wachstumsmotoren

    Wie schon 2014 ist auch 2015 der Bereich Crowdlending am stärksten gewachsen, nämlich um ganze 127 Prozent. «Dieses starke Wachstum hängt vor allem mit dem Markteintritt von Plattformen zusammen, die nicht nur Privatpersonen, sondern auch KMU ermöglichen, via Crowdfunding an Kredite zu gelangen», erklärt Co-Studienleiter und Finanzprofessor Andreas Dietrich. Im Bereich des Crowdinvesting, der um über die Hälfte zugelegt hat, ist seit 2015 ebenfalls ein neues Angebot entstanden: das sogenannte Real Estate Crowdfunding, bei dem man anteilsmässiger Miteigentümer von Immobilien werden kann. «Sowohl beim KMU-Lending als auch beim Real Estate Crowdfunding fliessen grosse Summen, was sich auf das gesamte Volumen ausgewirkt hat», sagt Dietrich.

    Crowdsupporting/Crowddonating ist mit 12,3 Millionen Franken an vermittelten Geldern aber nach wie vor die volumenmässig bedeutendste Kategorie. Beachtliche 5,5 bis 6 Millionen Franken entfallen dabei auf die Kultur- und Kreativwirtschaft. Ein entscheidender Grund für das allgemeine Wachstum ist die Anzahl der Plattformen sowie die stärkere Verankerung von Crowdfunding bei der Schweizer Bevölkerung. Waren 2013 erst 14 Plattformen in der Schweiz aktiv, hatte sich diese Zahl per Ende 2014 verdoppelt. Im April 2016 wurden bereits 40 Plattformen gezählt. Insgesamt haben im letzten Jahr über 90‘000 Personen Crowdfunding-Kampagnen finanziell unterstützt. Die Studienautoren schätzen, dass seit Bestehen von Crowdfunding in der Schweiz rund zwei Prozent der Schweizer Bevölkerung diese alternative Form der Geldvermittlung unterstützt haben.

     

    Unterstützende von Kampagnen sind häufig weiblich, eher älter und leben urban

    Erstmals führte die Hochschule Luzern auch eine Umfrage unter Projektunterstützenden – sogenannten Backers – durch. Ziel war es, deren Motive und Charakteristiken zu erforschen. Das Forschungsteam wertete die Antworten von über 430 Backers aus. Die Analyse zeigte, dass Frauen häufiger als Männer Projekte mitfinanzieren, dass Backers tendenziell älter als 35 Jahre sind und eher in Städten als auf dem Land leben. Im Bereich von Crowdsupporting/Crowddonating sind die Motive mehrheitlich altruistischer und ideeller Natur. Massgeblichen Einfluss hat weiter die persönliche Bekanntheit mit dem Geldnehmer. Beim Crowdlending und Crowdinvesting stehen finanzielle Motive hingegen klar im Vordergrund.

     

    Markantes Wachstum im Jahr 2016 erwartet

    Für das Jahr 2016 erwarten die Studienautoren eine weitere Beschleunigung des Wachstums auf etwa 65 Millionen Franken. «Insbesondere KMU-Lending und Real Estate Crowdfunding werden für höhere Volumen sorgen», sagt Dietrich. «Wir rechnen aber auch im Bereich Crowdsupporting mit weiterem Wachstum, weil der Bekanntheitsgrad in der Schweiz mittlerweile sehr gross ist.»

     

    Crowdfunding Monitoring Schweiz 2016 | Crowdfunding-Plattformen im Schweizer Markt

     

    Das «Crowdfunding Monitoring Schweiz» wird vom Institut für Finanzdienstleistungen Zug IFZ der Hochschule Luzern in Kooperation mit Swisscom und mit Unterstützung der Schweizer Crowdfunding Plattformen jährlich durchgeführt. Folgende Plattformen haben die Studie in Form von Daten unterstützt: 100-days, Bee Invested, Cashare, c-crowd, CreditGate24, creditworld, Crowdhouse, Fengarion, Gemeinsam unterwegs, GivenGain, «ibelieveinyou», «icareforyou», International Create Challenge, investiere, Lend, Lions Funding Val Müstair, Masspurse, Miteinander erfolgreich, moBOo.ch, Progettiamo, Projektstarter, Raizers, Sosense, splendit, Startnext, Stoneclub, Swiss Starter, Swisspeers, Wecan.Fund und wemakeit.

    Auf http://www.hslu.ch/crowdfunding kann die aktuelle Studie kostenlos heruntergeladen werden.

     

    crowdfunding studie schweiz

    The post Crowdfunding Schweiz Monitoring: Immer mehr Crowdfunding-Plattformen drängen auf den Markt appeared first on Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH.

    Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH

     
  • user 3:11 am on May 22, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: 'Unstoppable', fintech, , , , , , Whales   

    Researchers Plan ‘Unstoppable’ DAO to Help Whales Save Themselves 

    A distributed ledger could these launch an unstoppable “Human-Whale-Robot-Hybrid” distributed autonomous organization.
    fintech techcrunch

     
  • user 1:49 am on May 22, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , fintech, , , ,   

    Ether Price Surges 50% as The DAO Draws Trading Interest 

    While has long dominated the digital currency space, has been grabbing headlines – and volume – this week.
    fintech techcrunch

     
  • user 10:54 pm on May 21, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , , fintech, Lexicon, ,   

    The Alternative Fintech Lexicon 

    shutterstock_294517823

    The Lexicon

    – Accelerators: Where startups go to learn. What they learn is anybody&;s guess. See Decelerators.

    – Alternative Lending: An alternative way to make the same mistakes in lending, over and over again. See Crowdfunding.

    – Anonymity: Required when discussing either financial services executives bonuses or the use of offshore centers when optimizing taxes and ownership structures. Not required when users interact with financial services firms. See Privacy.

    – AML (Anti Money Laundering): A set of procedures, laws and regulations financial services firms occasionally follow and regulators occasionally enforce. See KYC.

    &;  API (Application Programming Interface): A set of routines and protocols Wizards use to develop magical and frictionless interaction between software applications. Alternatively, an acronym Muggles use when pretending to be wizards.

    – API Call: A call muggles make to a private fintech investigator when trying to crack innovation, as in &;I think I I am going to make A Private Investigator Call now as this digital innovation thingie is very tricky.&;

    – Artificial Intelligence (AI): Neither Artificial nor Intelligent. A major vector for future unemployment in the financial services industry.

    – Augmented Reality (AR): Where the sex industry and the financial services industry will eventually meet.

    – Big Data: Applied to most data analytics projects to produce negative returns.

    : A Numismatist&8217;s worst nightmare.

    – Bitcoin : A group of digital prisoners, chained to one another, and bound to perform menial digital tasks recorded on a digital ledger in return for the promise of a better future life.

     &8211; Brick and Mortar: A Financial Services Incumbent&8217;s Alzheimer&8217;s moment.

    – Cards: Credit, Debit, Reloadable, Gift. The most profitable scam in the history of the financial services industry.

    – Card Not Present / Card Present (CNP/CP): Arcane revenue producing schemes for the payment industry.

    – Checking Account: Soon to be yesterday&8217;s money machine.

    – Conferences (Fintech): Gathering places where thought leaders pretend to educate, startups pretend to pitch, corporates pretend to care, venture investors pretend to scout for investments. Contrary to popular belief, pizza is not served freely at conferences. See Hackathons.

    – Consensus Ledgers: Free range Blockchains. Also, for the accountants in the audience, not a ledger. See Bitcoin Blockchain, Ethereum.

    – Consensus Machines: Free range Consensus Ledgers, bred with organic Turing corn.

    – Core Systems: The tools with which service providers keep , insurance companies, asset managers hostages.

    – Corporate Venture Capital (CVC): The art of pretending superior investing will occur when informed by corporate fiat. Alternatively, the science of Fin over Tech. See Venture Capital (VC).

    – Crowdfunding: Applies to either equity or lending. The art of pretending it takes a crowd to finance stuff. See Alternative Lending and Equity Crowdfunding.

    : A currency which adheres or belongs secretly to a party, sect, or other group.

    – Customers: The one thing most fintech startups are still looking for. See Traction.

    – Decelerators: Where startups go when they move too fast. See Accelerators.

    – Digital: Related to the storing of information as either a 0 or a 1. Example of a 0: &8220;Soon we will have zero brick and mortar branches&8221;. Example of a 1: &8220;Banking executives compensation is again approaching 100% increases.&8221;

    – Digital Banker/Insurer/Asset Manager: Tomorrow&8217;s endangered species.

    – Disintermediation: The act of creating another overlord as in &8220;My API will rule over your API.&8221; See API.

    – EMV (EuroPay, MasterCard, Visa): A technical standard built to promote online fraud.

    – Entrepreneur: Central protagonist in ancient Greek tragedies or comedies involving the critique of money. Alternatively, a post Marxist practitioner. See Startup.

    – Equity Crowdfunding: Platforms that may provide much work for litigation lawyers in the future.

    – Ethereum: A public blockchain platform which promises to free digital prisoners shackled to other public blockchains. See Bitcoin Blockchain.

    – Ethics: An extraordinary expense that appears below the EBITDA line both in GAAP and IFRS.

    – Financial Inclusion: An issue solved by according to blockchain enthusiasts. A profitability issue according to financial services incumbents. A game changer according to social impact investors.

    – Fintech: Neither &8220;Fin&8221; nor &8220;Tech&8221;. Modern day alchemical process.

    – Fraud: The act of defining loose operations control in order to elicit fraudulent activities which will eventually be billed at cost plus to the end user. In the payments industry, the tradeoff between convenience and privacy.

    – Free: A new &8220;source of revenue&8221; paradigm, e.g. free trading, free investing, free payments. To be noted, free fraud is not yet recognized as a new source of revenue.

    – Gateway: A purgatory software interface where payments transit before reaching heaven.

    – Governance (in Fintech): What often lies beyond the wall.

    – Hackathons: Events that bring fintech developers, designers, corporate executives and innovation managers together around pizza. Hackathons organized around the summer solstice are sought-after events, as it is believed pizza tastes better during that period of the year.

    – Hash: Non-edible but still intriguing recipe comprising mathematical algorithms that map data of arbitrary size to data of fixed size. Frequently used in the Insurance industry as exemplified by the old saying &8220;The actuary made a hash of the life expectancy of millennials.&8221;

    – Incubators: Where corporations are able to smother good fintech ideas to death.

    – Innovation: What VCs overpay for. What corporations are seldom capable of delivering. What only a few startups can deliver.

    – Insurtech: Ego booster term crafted for the Insurance industry. See Fintech.

    – Interchange Fee: Soon to become a land far far away, especially in the US.

    – Interest Rate(s): A conceptual think piece for most fintech startups. Baudrillard&8217;s famous tirade comes to mind when addressing the Sorbonne in 1968, &8220;If interest rates were so important we would have used the term FinInt or IntTech, not Fintech.&8221;

    – Jinn: Spirit capable of appearing in human or animal form and influencing VC investors, corporations and startups alike via consulting analysis, recommendations, white papers. See White Papers.

    – Joy: What fintech startups seldom experience. Referred to in the context of an Initial Public Offering (IPO).

    – Know Your Customer (KYC): The process whereby a business weighs the cost of verifying a client&8217;s identity against the profitability of said client. For a fintech startup, that which will be developed and financed when the sooner of a cease and desist letter from a regulator is received or a $ 100 million funding round is closed, maybe. See AML.

    – Lead Generation: A poor man&8217;s version of revenue building.

    – License(s): Put or Call Options that give a regulator the right but not the obligation to levy fines in the future based on real or perceived violations of the terms of the license granted.

    – Menagerie: Pack of Thought Leaders focused on cornering the market for social media power ranking and industry top lists via &8220;elaborate&8221; insider trading techniques. See Thought Leader.

    – Millenials: What fintech startups say they focus on and financial services incumbents know they have no clue about. See Customers.

    – Mobile Wallet: Darwinian evolution of a checking account. That which will generate revenue, but not necessarily to financial services incumbents.

    – Near Prime Credit: A set of customers who are sub prime but for marketing purposes are labelled near prime as copywriting and creativity is important in the lending industry. See Sub Prime.

    – Net Interest Rate Margin (NIM): The wet dream bankers and insurers dream every time they sleep.

    – Network effect(s): Often talked about, seldom witnessed in the financial services industry.

    – Non Performing Loans: According to alternative lenders, crowd lenders, p2p lenders, marketplace lenders, a mathematical impossibility.

    – Non Traditional Data Sets: Data sets you would not want your mother to know about, let alone look at.

    – Omnibus Account: A money-carrying vehicle, originally horse-drawn. Most bank-operated omnibus accounts are allegedly still operated manually and horse-drawn.

    – P2P: A business model that allows people or entities that have nothing in common to do business with one another. From the word &8220;peer&8221; which means &8220;complete stranger&8221;.

    – Payday Lending: The act of producing indentured servitude.

    – Paying Customer: The rarest of species, seldom observed in the wild by startups.

    – Payments: Payments come in two varieties. The &8220;slow&8221; variety which refers to the medical condition whereby financial services incumbents produce revenue via the sloth-like pace of provisioning of payments. The &8220;fast&8221; variety which refers to a simple technology feat which most financial services firms pretend is impossible to achieve.

    – Payment Network(s): Money printing machines.

    – Personal Financial Management (PFM): Movement originally triggered by the wealth transfer mechanism that occurred between Intuit shareholders (buyers) and Mint shareholders (sellers).

    – Platform(s): The shoes many incumbents want to wear.

    – Prime Credit: A set of customers lenders desperately would like to lend to but never do as these customers seldom need credit. See Near Prime.

    – Privacy: What is enforced after weighing the cost of breach and compliance against executives bonuses as in &8220;We only had to pay $ 10 million fine for the latest data breach&8221;. See Anonymity.

    – Proof of Work: An emerging contributor to global warming.

    – Quantum Computing: That which will render many things and many people redundant.

    – Rails (Payment): Train tracks over which steam locomotives shuffle back and forth wagons chock full of payments.

    – RegTech: Because regulators should have their tech too. Alternatively, because why not.

    – Regulator(s): Satan and his minions, unless they use technology. See RegTech, White Walkers.

    Advisors: Not a robot. Not a financial advisor. Fancy term for a digital channel.

    – Scaling: The ability to gain traction in unique ways in fintech, e.g. &8220;Startup bankruptcies tend to scale well.&8221;, &8220;NPLs scale with ease in a down credit cycle.&8221;

    – Smart Contract: Neither smart, nor a contract. For a blockchain developer, nirvana. For a lawyer, anathema. It is believed that through selected breeding a new specie of lawyer/developers will be created thereby enabling the wide adoption of smart contracts.

    – Spice: A highly addictive Melange which fintech celebrities &8211; VCs, entrepreneurs &8211; consume daily and heightens their awareness and prescient abilities. Repeated exposure to &8220;Up&8221; Spice mutates fintech celebrities bodies into virtual social media avatars. Repeated exposure to &8220;Down&8221; Spice is deadly.

    – Startup (Fintech): Ancient Greek play. Can either be a tragedy or a comedy. Focused on exploring and expanding upon a post Marxist critique of money. See Entrepreneur.

    – Sub Prime: A set of customers that even copywriting cannot disguise and that, with the help of advanced data analytics, will yield positive returns, up to a breaking point. See Big Data.

    – Token(s):  Reduces fraud, makes EMV obsolete, helps with authentication and authorization of transactions in the payments industry. In other words, a really cool and useful thing which explains why it is so darn difficult to adopt industry wide.

    – Traction: The startup science of demonstrating progress in the absence of Customers. See Customers.

    – Thought Leader: Rhetorician who occasionally attends conferences for the pizza, not realizing hackathons are where the dough is. See Menagerie, Conferences and Hackathons.

    – Uberization: An event that simultaneously holds the lowest probability of occurrence and the highest probability of utterance in fintech.

    – Underbanked: A universe of people and businesses that refuse to comply with traditional profitability measures as defined by financial services incumbents.

    – Unicorn: Animal hunted for its skin by rational investors. Alternatively, animal bred for its magical properties by irrational investors.

    – Valuation: A +/- rounding error. Also, one of the key ingredient of Spice. See Spice.

    – Venture Capital: The art of pretending superior investing will occur when informed by market fiat. Alternatively, the science of Tech over Fin. See Corporate Venture Capital (CVC).

    – Veteran: Old hand operator with minimum 30 years experience in the financial technology industry and minimum 4 credit or business cycles under his/her belt. There are few veterans in activity. The only credible actors to be equally efficient and effective at either of fintech investing, fintech startup building, fintech innovation. One can recognize a veteran based on his/her use of profane language and colorful views on his contemporaries.

    – Wallet: What any participant in the industry wants to &8220;share&8221;, as long as it is not theirs, as in &8220;Our share of the customer wallet is important for our future health.&8221;

    – White Papers: Exercise in casuistry.

    – White Walkers: Government officials who hold the power to resurrect dead banks but not yet the power to resurrect fintech startups to the dismay of VC investors.

    – Xanadu: An idyllic place otherwise known as the Silicon Valley. &8220;In Xanadu did the great VC Khan / A stately pleasure dome decree&8221; is a alternative copycat poem published in the 19th century describing fintech venture investing and venture eco systems.

    – Yield: See Interest Rate(s).

    – Zelig: Describes the act of mimicking the fintech activities of leaders, as in a &8220;me too&8221; fintech VC or a &8220;me too&8221; startup. For example &8220;This fintech venture fund is so zelig!&8221;

    FiniCulture

     
  • user 8:24 pm on May 21, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , fintech,   

    The New Banking Standard 

    In this op-ed, enthusiast Martin Hagelstrom touches on the slow but steady embrace of by the world’s .
    fintech techcrunch

     
  • user 3:35 pm on May 21, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , Courses, Education, fintech, , , , , University, Workshops   

    Fintech and Blockchain Education: University Courses and Workshops in Switzerland and Germany 

    The vibrant ecosystem is evolving rapidly and the sector is in increasing need for professionals with skills and knowledge on the new, emerging business models, digital platforms and tools that are gaining popularity.

    To educate students and professionals on FinTech, and have a number of programs available that dive into digitalization in the banking and financial sector, , the emerging FinTech startup scene, and many other topics.

    Here is a few of them:

    Hochschule Luzern: CAS Digital Banking

    Hochschule Luzern fintech program courses

    The Certificate of Advanced Studies (CAS) in Digital Banking of Hochschule Luzern is a program aimed at providing students with professional skills and knowledge on the emerging FinTech ecosystem, teach them about the ongoing digitalization of the financial services industry, and the ability to use these new trends to grab new business opportunities.

    The program is divided into four main : the environment of digital banking, strategic digital banking, digital customer management and social banking, and FinTech products and solutions.

     

    HWZ Hochschule für Wirtschaft Zürich: CAS Digital Finance

    hochschule fur wirtschaft zurich fintech course

    The CAS Digital Finance of the of Applied Sciences in Business Administration in Zurich, is a 18-day course targeted at financial services professionals.

    The program is divided into four major blocks:

    • Digital mindset: innovation management, cultural changes, digitalization as part of the overall strategy, etc.
    • Digital products and services: fintech, crowdfunding/lending, peer-to-peer, -advisor, etc.
    • Technology: big-data analysis, cyber security, blockchain technology, etc.
    • Customer experience: multichannel presence, online/offline strategies, community, social media, etc.

     

    Frankfurt School of Finance and Management

    Frankfurt School of Finance and Management fintech course

    As part of its bachelor&;s degree in business administration, the Frankfurt School of Finance and Management is proposing a specialization called &;Digital Innovation and FinTech&; which focuses on the impact of technology and new business models and services on the banking and financial services industry.

    The program will begin in the winter semester of 2016/2017, and as part of the launch of the new specialization, the university has teamed up with FinTech Group, which will support 20 students with their tuition fees. The company will also offer the three year&8217;s best students an employment contract.

     

    Introduction to Blockchains and smart contracts for developers

    introduction to blockchain and smart contracts for developers ValidityLabs fintech courseZurich-based ValidityLabs is a company that provides blockchain and smart contracts through courses and .

    On May 21, 2016, ValidityLabs will be hosting a workshop at Zurich&8217;s Technopark,

    The workshop will be focused on Ethereum and is aimed at familiarizing developers, software architects and technical decision markets with principles of blockchains and smart contracts.

    The workshop will feature a demonstration of a contract deployment and inspection on the Ethereum network.

    Source: information and images from the mentioned universities&8217;/organizations&8217; wites

     

    The post Fintech and Blockchain Education: University Courses and Workshops in Switzerland and Germany appeared first on Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH.

    Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH

     
  • user 3:32 pm on May 21, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , , fintech, Pressure,   

    Central Banks Face Bitcoin Pressure 

    Given that the ‘distributed ledger’ upon which has been developed allows a payment system to operate without the need for intermediaries such as , it is looking increasingly likely that the financial system is set to undergo a comprehensive transformation.

    It also implies that centralized payment systems could begin to be phased out and replaced by decentralized ones, with trading, clearing and settlement being just three examples of processes likely to undergo disintermediation.

    Whereas a centralized system relies on all parties to trust a third party (the central bank, in most cases) to keep a secure, correct digital record of transactions, the Bitcoin transaction relies on there being numerous copies of this record distributed across the network. Assuming, then, that the cryptography of the system works, the requirement for a third-party becomes largely irrelevant.

    Centralized vs Distributed Ledger | Bitcoin pressure

    (Source)

    The monetary system of Bitcoin challenges the central banks&8217; role

    Central banks play a pivotal role in ensuring financial stability within a monetary system, however, meaning that payment innovations are being closely monitored by banks such as the Fed, the European Central Bank and the Bank of England. Indeed, central banks have a responsibility in supporting safe payment systems.

    Bitcoin’s notable price volatility since its creation, for instance, is one of the key concerns for central banks &; were a systematic price crash to occur, it remains debatable as to just how much responsibility the central bank could or should bear. Even the bank is technically not at fault, a widespread loss of confidence in the bank and the financial system could still arise.

     

    More researches on digital currencies are expectedly conducted

    Most central banks are in ‘monitoring mode’ at present, generally stating that more research needs to be done before policy can be considered. More recently, however, Bitcoin’s growth has prompted some central banks to express interest in possibly issuing their own digital currencies, backed by their respective country’s government. While this is yet to materialise anywhere, the Bank of Canada has been among the most open to exploring such technology.

    The bank’s senior deputy governor Carolyn Wilkins stated last month that “we have to envision a world in which people mostly use e-money, perhaps even one that’s not denominated in a national currency, such as Bitcoin”, although remained wary of the ostensible risks that could arise, where central banks would struggle to implement monetary policy and where massive losses could be realized were the currency to crash. Wilkins has made clear that the Bank of Canada will explore the implications of digital currencies over the course of its three-year corporate plan.

     

    The idea is of Government-backed digital currency

    While much of the attention (and indeed, risk-aversion) on Bitcoin has primarily been concerned with the currency’s nascent price volatility, the Bank of England (BoE) has focused more on the potential impact of the distributed ledger technology. The UK central bank has provided particularly glowing feedback to , with the bank’s chief economist Andy Haldane recently praising the technology’s potential capability in solving the challenge of ‘how to establish trust – the essence of money – in a distributed network’.

    Like the Bank of Canada, moreover, Haldane is also in favor of issuing a government-backed digital currency, although in the UK’s case he argues that it could be used to charge a negative interest rate on currency, a measure which is not possible at present due to the widespread use of banknotes which could simply be held in safe deposit boxes to maintain value and would thus render attempts by the central bank to implement a negative rate as useless. The shift from paper to paperless currency, however, opens up the possibility of digital currency creation.

     

    Bitcoin circulation in the market is considerable

    In the BoE’s paper published last year, The Economics of Digital Currencies, the bank estimated that the amount of bitcoins circulating within the UK economy was less than 0.1% of sterling notes and coins and only 0.003% of broad money balances. As such, the impact from any serious Bitcoin fallout on the UK’s financial and monetary systems is considered negligible.

    The Federal Reserve, meanwhile, has gradually become more vocal about the subject. During Bitcoin’s early existence, the US central bank was notoriously silent about Bitcoin, but began discussing the subject soon after the FBI shut down Silk Road – the illegal online marketplace – when 26,000 BTC worth $ 3.6 million was seized in October 2013.

    In early 2014, Fed chief Janet Yellen stated that the Fed does not have the authority to regulate Bitcoin, due to the fact that this is ‘payment innovation that is taking place entirely outside the banking industry’. She did raise concerns about the potential for money-laundering, however, and has also recommended that Congress address the legality issues for those unregulated entities involved in virtual currencies.

    The Fed has also conducted empirical analysis which has sought to test the security of the cryptography for transactions and the distributed maintenance of the ledger. The US central bank has remained somewhat averse to Bitcoin, highlighting the February 2014 bankruptcy of Mt. Gox, the largest bitcoin exchange at the time, and concluding, therefore, that Bitcoin many risks “whose nature and proportion are little, if at all, understood”.

    More recently, the Fed’s official position has been to quietly monitor developments as they happen, but it has not stated whether it is considering issuing its own digital currency.

     

    Digital currency, Bitcoin, raises several potential risks

    The Bank of International Settlements (BIS), however, seems to have recently shown considerable enthusiasm towards the advancement of digital currencies. Although not explicitly a central bank, the BIS holds the membership of 60 global central banks, and has been instrumental in determining much of the regulatory landscape since 2007’s financial crisis. In its November 2015 paper, the CPMI Report on Digital Currencies, the BIS states several potential risks arising from the growing use of digital currencies, such as consumer losses resulting from excessive volatility, as well as fraud &8211; a problem which has plagued Bitcoin on previous occasions.

    The report also acknowledges the diminished role that financial intermediaries could play as digital currencies and distributed ledger systems become smarter. Ultimately, though the BIS’ opinion on digital currencies remains favorable, especially pertaining to those which have a decentralized payment mechanism, describing them as “an innovation that could have a range of impacts on various aspects of financial markets and the wider economy”.

     

    Yuan was used in 80% Bitcoin transaction

    The challenge in addressing Bitcoin appears to be more complex for China’s central bank at present, however. According to Goldman Sachs research from March 2015, the Yuan is being used for 80% of global transactions into and out of Bitcoin, indicating the digital currency’s overwhelming popularity in China. This wouldn’t be so much of a problem were it not for the fact that the People’s Bank of China banned the handling of Bitcoin transactions in December 2013, before closing down more than 10 of the currency’s exchanges in March 2014.

    The view from the central bank is that the currency has no ‘real meaning’, but the consensus view is that it is being used for large-scale money laundering. The huge popularity of Bitcoin in China suggests that, while some may be using Bitcoin for speculative purposes, a large proportion are using the currency to shift money illegally out of China.

     

    Conclusion

    More recently, however, it appears that China’s view towards Bitcoin could be warming. In an October publication, the Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC) stated clearly that we are now in the “post-Bitcoin era,” acknowledging the development that bitcoin has ushered in through the “expansion of distributed payment and settlement mechanism”. Whether such sentiment will ultimately be transmitted through the corridors of the central bank remains to be seen at this stage.

    Given that minting and distributing a digital currency should cost a fraction of the cost of printing and distributing a physical currency note, one should also bear in mind the seignior age benefits of moving towards paperless currency – that is, the potential revenue the government will retain from such a cost-saving. Along with the fact that digital currency transactions will be easier to track and less susceptible to illegal uses, there seems to be plenty of incentives for central banks to promote the development of digital currencies like Bitcoin.

     

    The post Central Banks Face Bitcoin Pressure appeared first on Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH.

    Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH

     
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