Tagged: fintech Toggle Comment Threads | Keyboard Shortcuts

  • user 7:35 pm on December 30, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: alternative lending, , , , fintech,   

    Europe 2017: Key Trends to Watch in Alternative Lending. Interdependence and collaboration. 

     

    Connectivity and interdependence have increased in most industries, including financial services in the last decade. In the wave of digital transformation, new business models are born.

    From the crisis of 2008 to date, EUR 19 billion has been invested in companies (CB Insight, 2016) with hundreds of them newly founded. Though this number may not seem very high in the context of the balance sheets of the entire financial sector (EUR 28 trillion) or the recent fines some needed to pay, there are many aspects that are clearly changing in the landscape of financial services. Customer expectations drive changes in business models. New partnerships as well as methods of connecting borrowers and lenders are born.

    Herein I provide my reflection on recent trends and highlight some key predictions for 2017 in the landscape in .

    1)    Banks will continue to shrink their Balance Sheets and will invest in new business models and partnerships

    Europe relies heavily on banks. Therefore, in order to assess the lending ecosystem, I always start with what is going on with the banks. Banks have been shrinking their balance sheets since the crisis. In 2008, the total assets of banks in the Euro region stood at EUR 33 trillion and declined to EUR 28 trillion by 2015 (ECB, 2016). Just to put this number into context, the decline is higher than the combined balanced sheet of five major banks (Rabobank, ING, ABNAMRO, Deutsche Bank and Unicredit) as of June 30, 2016.

    In terms of profitability, it did not really improve this year. Interest rates continued to be low, capital requirements became harder, compliance rules and penalties remain harsh.

    The first 6 months of financials in 2016 indicate declining trends in many aspects, including revenue and deposits. The net interest margin of the Top 10 listed banks in the sector further reduced to below 1.5%, which is structurally lower than in the US. Return on equity was 5.8%, which remains below the cost of capital, estimated to be around 9%. The prolonged low profitability is very challenging, especially as it coincided with a low equity base and increasing capital requirements.

    Regarding outlook, the quantitative easing program is being extended so any interest rate hike is pushed well into the future. This environment forces banks to be more efficient with all of their key resources: people, branch network, system and their balance sheet. In practice, this implies closing down branch offices, reduction of headcount, further consolidation and tighter balance sheet management. Since the peak of 2008 till 2016, more than 350,000 jobs disappeared. This seems high, but between 2000 and 2008, almost 1 million jobs had been added to the sector. In this context, there might be still potential for job cuts. (The figures are based on listed banks representing approximately 80% of the total assets of the European sector.)

    In order to create operational leverage of their business origination capacity, banks are likely to rely on future partnerships.

    Banks will further explore alternative lending avenues and strengthen cooperation with institutional investors and Fintech companies. This creates new attractive opportunities for investors or potential partners that may have limited business origination or risk management capabilities but offer balance sheet capacity or more efficient business execution.

     2)    Political support to alternative lending will strengthen

    The funding needs of the European economy remains larger than ever. The sentiment that Europe in terms of economic growth is lagging behind the USA seems more widespread than ever. The need for a more diversified funding source in Europe is more urgent than ever.

    I see strong evidence that the conviction among key decision and policy makers in Europe is leaning towards increased lending via alternative sources. Over-reliance on banks made us too vulnerable and constrained our economic development and we need to increase resilience via diversifying funding sources towards the European economy.

    This vulnerability of Europe is clearly illustrated by the Basel IV debate in recent months. The proposed legislations, which had been discussed in Santiago some weeks ago, favor a regime shift towards a less risk-based approach for credit risk. These would need to be aligned and inserted in capital requirements of European banks (Capital Directive) with very significant potential impact on the economy, including mortgage lending. Proposals to increase capital requirements for lower risk-weight portfolios, such as mortgage loans are disproportionately hitting European banks (Fitch, 2016).

    As the European banking system finances about 75% of the economy, the potential adverse impacts are a lot higher. In contrast, only 25% of the US economy is financed by banks. It is largely capital market-based and long-term residential property risks are covered by government agencies (Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac). This diversification enables the US banks to operate with lighter balance sheets and any new legislation has less impact. 

    European banks are more sensitive to any regime shift and could be forced to decrease their direct lending to corporations and households. More importantly, any of these adverse changes in lending capacity has a direct impact on the economy. They understandably issued a strong pushback on the proposal.

    This illustrates profound vulnerability. As Olivier Guersent, DG for Financial Stability, Financial Services and Capital Market Union at EU pointed out this month, “We have to set the rate of retention in securitization market to make sure that there is a market. Legislations are no use if there is no market anymore.”

    I believe our policy makers in Europe will become more articulate about the need for a diversification of funding sources.

    This implies a stronger push for support for developing alternative lending channels, securitization market and capital market union initiatives. There is also likely to be more scrutiny and consequently, regulation to ensure consistency and a more level playing field between risks of banks and non-banks and transparency to investors about risks they are taking.

    3)    Institutional investors will show increasing acceptance to alternative fixed income products (e.g. private debt)

    The search for yield remains a key theme in a low-return, volatile environment. Those who can deal with and accept the illiquid nature of the asset class will find a safe haven in private debt. These assets have limited liquidity and mark-to-market pricing; consequently, they “look and feel” stable.

    Institutional investors (insurance companies, pension funds, etc.) are inherently more suited to participate in funding the economy because they capture a large percentage of long-term savings. However, the infrastructure to facilitate this remains mostly at the banks and the investments need to be channeled via capital markets and partnerships. The growth of partnerships has been painstakingly slow. There needs to be significant education and convincing done also at supervisory board level at these institutions.

    Last but not least, investors seem to have high return expectations from private debt instruments that need to be managed. At the moment, a high percentage of investments are going to the highest risk basket in private debt (e.g., direct lending with return exceptions of 6-10%). The potential private debt universe is a lot larger than lending at 6-10% to sub-investment-grade companies. European banks have about 1.5% net interest margin and lend at an average interest rate of 2.5%. The bulk of the traditional banking products are safer assets and can be an excellent alternative to traditional fixed income products. Some of these new assets classes (like Dutch mortgages) has been favored by many institutional investors recently and a lot of similar product initiatives are likely to come.

    4)    Fintech: Getting more mature, more regulated with new collaborations

    Many companies were formed with a mission to implement a new business model in the financial services industry. 2017 is likely to be an important year for Fintech when many of these business models will be tested on their ability to scale and operate under increasing regulatory scrutiny. The market will understand the significant differences between certain sub-segments of Fintech companies. Payments and services are likely to cause the most disruption and we will see further diversification of deposits payments from retail clients.

    Some new companies will simply run out of money to support their business model. The market is likely to test the real value contribution of “smart algorithms”. With increased interdependence, potential defaults will have negative impact on others in the sector.  Fintech companies will further recognize the importance of operating in a regulated environment in order to build trust and scale their business model. Regulations above a certain size is inevitable and unfortunately, extremely costly (systems, KYC, compliance and risk management costs). In contrasts, risk management and compliance are core competencies of banks and the associated costs are already inherent.

    Rather than perceiving Fintech companies as competitors, financial services companies will be reviewing avenues to develop collaboration models for mutual benefit and assess to what extent they can incorporate innovative business ideas in their incumbent setup.

    Many financial services companies (e.g., BBVA, Santander, Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan) have established incubation centers, dedicated VC activities and M&A departments to capture on the most interesting opportunities.

    A recent survey conducted by Roland Berger confirms that over 85% of Fintech companies anticipate stronger cooperation with incumbents. The most important reason mentioned was the access to a stronger customer base.

    The power of this approach is to ensure that business or product innovation can be scaled up in a regulated environment, create a mode of comfort and eventually generate a critical mass.

    Companies on different sides (banks, investors, Fintech companies) will have to realize that a collaborative approach is a very powerful way not just to overcome the challenges they face but to thrive.


    [linkedinbadge URL=”https://www.linkedin.com/in/kindert” connections=”off” mode=”icon” liname=”Gabriella Kindert”] is Head of Alternative Credit – NN Investment Partners and this article was originally published here.

     
  • user 1:26 pm on December 30, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , fintech   

    What’s Up with FinTech in China? 

     

    When thinking about as such,we often imagine Western economies at the heart of it, mainly putting our focus on Europe or United States. However, such a position is very misleading and rather biased. There is one economy that can soon outperform all the others. And it is .

    Chine can soon become the superpower in FinTech.

    Numbers speak for themselves – for the period July 2015 to June 2016, Chinese FinTech investments in the market surged to about $9 billion, making it the largest share of global investment in the named sector. To put it in perspective, this is equivalent to an increase of 252% since 2010. Now this is truly amazing (!). If this exponential growth will continue, China will soon become the superpower in FinTech.

    Below you see a very good graph illustrating the Chinese preferences for using FinTech services instead of traditional banking/financial services in comparison to other Asia-Pacific nations. It is obvious that China is leading in all fronts, and customers are very positive in using FinTech (later we will see what drives such decisions).

    When talking about FinTech in China, we can name 7 different markets that concentrate all the activity. These are the following:

    1. Payments. Here most of the focus should go on mobile payments ecosystem. In essence, it is facilitated by e-commerce and social media players such as Alipay or Tenpay, which in turn dominate the market.
    2. Consumer finance & supply chain. E-commerce players lend to underbanked or unbanked individuals, as well as small and medium enterprises (SMEs) by leveraging users’ merchant data on the platform. Key participants here include Ant Financial and MyBank (Alibaba), WeBank with WeChat (Tencent), and JD Finance (JD.com).
    3. P2P lending. Similarly to the consumer finance sector, P2P platforms create a marketplace for peers to lend to individuals and SMEs that are underserved by the conventional lending sector. Market leaders in China are Lufax (Ping An Insurance), Yirendai (CreditEase), Rendai, and Zhai Cai Bao (Alibaba).
    4. Online funds. Funds related to payment platforms that offer ease of access and more competitive returns than the historically low deposit rates are popular among Chinese. Primary players in this market are Yu’e Bao of Ant Financial, Li Cai Tong (Tencent) and Baifa (Baidu).
    5. Online insurance. E-insurance is sold through e-commerce and online wealth management (WM) platforms. Notable brands are platforms by the People’s Insurance Company of China (PICC), Ping An, and Zhong An (in partnership with Ping An).
    6. Personal finance management. These are recently developed mobile-centric finance solutions providing access to mutual funds though stock trading apps. These platforms offer offline-to-online activity, with online brokers accounting for over 92% of new clients. Key players are Ant Financial (Alibaba), Li Cai Tong (Tencent), and Baifa (Baidu).
    7. Online brokerage. These are investment, social network and information portals for investors in China, providing thematic investing via websites and mobile apps, and are offered by FinTech firms such as Snowball Finance, Xianrenzhang and Yiqiniu.

    Having grasped the idea of what it is all about, one should undoubtedly question what drives the development of FinTech in China. Basically, there are 3 KEY drivers.

    Financial Needs. Or to be more precise – unmet financial needs. Exponentially growing Chinese economy (which is almost equal to the next 10 largest markets by GDP) with emerging middle class has raised the demand for financial services. Since traditional cannot satisfy all that is demanded, or it fails to satisfy it in the best way, FinTech players are taking their share from the pie. The core reasons behind going forFinTech, instead of choosing traditional providers are rather obvious: more attractive rates/fees, better online experience and functionality, better quality of service, and more innovative products than available from an old-fashioned bank.

    Abundant Connectivity. Although China’s physical banking infrastructure is less developed than in Europe or US, its digital set-up is far more mature. Online penetration rate in China should be the highest in the world within several years (it has grown from 8.5% in 2005 to 51.7% in mid-2016). To add, smartphones are becoming the universal internet access device having nearly 700 million users (which is more than 90% of overall internet users). It is important to stress that people are using smartphones not only for access, but also for conducting real financial activity. In fact, 1 out of 2 persons are using their smartphone to perform financial transactions primarily through Alibaba’s Alipay or WeChat’s payment service.

    E-Commerce Maturity. China has become the world’s largest and most developed retail e-commerce market. E-commerce sales in China account for nearly half of global digital retail sales. Hence, such a mature market drives the growth in mobile and digital payments. It is not surprising though that mobile payment platforms such as Alipay are now used by more than 80% of the users as the most frequent payment method. In fact, according to one survey, Alipay is more popular than cash or credit card in China.

    For more insights read a comprehensive report by EY.


    [linkedinbadge URL=”https://www.linkedin.com/in/linasbeliunas” connections=”off” mode=”icon” liname=”Linas Beliūnas”] is Foreign Business Development & Sales at Paysera and this article was originally published on linkedin.

     
  • user 12:18 pm on December 28, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , fintech, Hitting, , , ,   

    Is Social Media Key to Hitting the Trillions for (Fin)Tech Companies? 

    Could Microsoft be the first company to earn a one trillion market value? Analyst Michael Markowski seems to think so, citing the technology giant’s recent acquisition of professional site LinkedIn as the boost that pushed Microsoft into the race. According to Markowski, this places Microsoft alongside digitalRead More
    Bank Innovation

     
  • user 12:18 am on December 28, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , fintech, ,   

    10 Most Innovative CEOs in Banking 2016 

    has been a year of many things. No, really, just look at this list of trending Twitter topics of the year (spoiler: elections, Brexit and PokemonGo all made the list). But the memories are still fresh of, possibly, the most meaningful event in the world: the ComptrollerRead More
    Bank Innovation

     
  • user 12:18 am on December 26, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: ApplePie, , , Financings, fintech, , ,   

    Fintech Financings Pick Up at Yearend: BlueVine, Kreditech, ApplePie 

    Investors appear to be racing to disperse funds before 2016 comes to an end &; and fintechs are benefiting. In the past week, alt-payment companies have led the pack with eight-figure fund raises from high profile investors. Also filling their piggy were security and wealth management startups. Rakuten&;s startup fundRead More
    Bank Innovation

     
  • user 12:18 pm on December 25, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: Cotton, , fintech, , , , ,   

    Startups Cotton to Venture Debt as Interest Rates Rise 

    The year 2016 may go down as the year of for , a new report suggests. capitalist plunged to its lowest levels in two years in the last quarter to $ 2.4 billion for startups. But founders &; especially for fintechs &8212; still needed access to capital. BloombergRead More
    Bank Innovation

     
  • user 12:18 am on December 25, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , fintech, , , , Reasons, , ,   

    5 Reasons Small Business Owners Need to Follow Fintech in 2017 [SPONSORED] 

    , the marriage of finance and , has been part of the business world for decades. In recent years, the explosion of innovation has brought even more attention to this sector. As a business owner, you should keep tabs on the fintech industry. Here&;s a few why it&8217;sRead More
    Bank Innovation

     
  • user 3:35 am on December 23, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , fintech, , , ,   

    The Role Of The New Advisor In The Digital Financial World 

    -advisors, wealth management algorithms typically offered at low costs and with little human interaction, are gaining stream. Globally, wealth managers were responsible for US$ 74 trillion in assets under management (AUM) in 2014. BI Intelligence predicts that robo-advisors will manage around 10% of total global AUM by 2020. This equates to around US$ 8 trillion in robo-advisors AUM.

    robo advisors growth

    Opportunities

    Robo-advisors are a class of adviser that provides financial advice or portfolio management online with minimal human interaction. Much of the focus has been on portfolio management and most of these platform use algorithms such as Modern portfolio theory.

    Today, popular platforms include US-based Wealthfront and Betterment, UK-based Nutmeg, Australian Stockspot, German Vaamo, among others. In Switzerland we have Truewealth, Glarner KB, Swissquote and some new platforms which are going live soon.

    A research conducted by BI Intelligence found that consumers across all classes are receptive to robo-advisors, including the wealthy. 49% of this group would consider investing some of their assets using a robo-.

    With robo-advisory on the rise, the wealth management industry is undergoing significant disruption.

    According to Deloitte, robo-advisors hold some distinct advantages and are disrupting the industry in the following ways:

    &; The lower fees have broadened the market for advice to include the majority chunk of untapped wealth. More mass-market consumers can now afford advice.

    &8211; Robo-advisory is more appealing to the new generation of wealth, which seeks more control, who is digitally savvy, and demands greater availability.

    &8211; With large wealth management firms investing heavily in big data and advanced analytics, robo-advisory can become even more personalized and specific over time.

    &8211; Many wealth management firms have already begun incorporating robo-advice capabilities within their existing advisory offerings to create hybrid models.

    &8211; has lowered barriers to entry for new firms to break into wealth management. This has brought new levels of competition and innovation to the industry.

     

    Hybrid human-robo advisors

    After the strong growth of the robo-advisory approach in recent years, promoted by numerous startups worldwide as well as a sizeable number of early adopting wealth managers, a new &;sub-species&; has emerged: the hybrid human-robo advisor.

    According to MyPrivateBanking&;s report &8220;Hybrid Robos: how combining human and automated wealth advice delivers superior results and gains market share,&8221; these platforms combine computerized recommendations with on-demand advice from a human being.

    They use technology to standardize and cut costs on the information-gathering side of the job.

    The report found that pure robo-advisors (completely automated without personal service added on) have seen their growth slowing down as the market matures. Notably, Betterment&8217;s growth rate for AUM has remained at the same place it was a year ago.

    This is due to clients “starting to realize that what they’re getting from many providers is little more than a passive portfolio that they can easily build on their own without the robo middleman,” the report says.

    MyPrivateBanking estimates that hybrid robo-advisors will grow to a size of US$ 3,700 billion assets worldwide by 2020. By 2025, the total market size will further increase to US$ 16,300 billion. This number constitutes just over 10% of the total investable wealth in 2025. By comparison, pure robo-advisors will have a market share of 1.6% of the total global wealth at that stage.

    &8220;Hybrid robo solutions are a dynamic and also unstable new phase in the wealth management industry&8217;s transformation,&8221; the report says. &8220;We expect 2016 to be a year of significant developments.&8221;

    So far, notable hybrid robo-advisors include Vanguard, Personal Capital, Rebalance IRA and AssetBuilder.

     

    Featured image: Robot and human touching forefingers by Pixelbliss, via Shutterstock.com.

    The post The Role Of The New Advisor In The Digital Financial World appeared first on Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH.

    Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH

     
  • user 12:18 am on December 23, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , fintech, ,   

    Top 10 Blockchain Headlines of 2016 

    —possibly the buzziest of buzzwords in . The world saw the rise of new enterprise blockchains, how the might be used to transport gold, to safely move perishable items like pork through a supply chain, and most importantly for those of us in the trenches, we saw ,Read More
    Bank Innovation

     
  • user 3:35 am on December 22, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , Common, Diamonds, fintech, , , , ,   

    Diamonds, UNICEF and The Music Industry, What Do They Have In Common? 

    Luis Carranza, founder of Worldwide and organiser of London Blockchain Week discusses and Distributed Ledger (DLT) in 2017

    There’s been a lot of talk about blockchain over the past year. Sometimes I think back to when I opened the first Blockchain Conference back in 2015, and the look of bewilderment on people’s faces as tried to get their heads around my chosen focus. ‘Don’t you mean ?’ they used to say.

    But the distributed ledger technology that was initially overlooked as the underlying tech that facilitated bitcoin transactions soon rose to prominence and is now being discussed at a global level by key players and not just in the financial sector. Investors, developers and entrepreneurs have recognised the versatility of Blockchain and its potential for greater transactional speed, security and simplicity.

    PSD2 and Blockchain

    As the relationship between countries fragments, blockchain will take a leading role in financial services, notably cross border payments and trade finance, and leading concepts that have been in the making will see the necessary investment that lifts them off the page and into fruition. The planned revisions to PSD2 in 2018 will undoubtedly lead to stronger relationships between and fintech start-ups over the coming year.

    Closer to home, the UK government will take centre stage as the driving force behind blockchain development. This year saw Credits awarded the first G-cloud blockchain platform-as-a-service agreement by the government &; a major step forward in public sector acceptance of the technology.

    London-Fintech-Week-2016-DAY3-0513 (2)

    Luis Carranza, founder of Fintech Worldwide and organiser of London Blockchain Week discusses Blockchain and Distributed Ledger Technology (DLT) in 2017

    There’s no doubt more UK government funding will be pumped into blockchain, in a report on the subject, the Government Chief Scientific Adviser, Sir Mark Walport, wrote: &;distributed ledger technology has the potential to redefine the relationship between government and citizens in terms of data-sharing, transparency and trust,&; which accurately sums up the benefits for wider society, from healthcare to pensions.

    Something that’s impossible to miss is the wide variety of sectors that blockchain is applicable to. Supply chain transparency and simplicity of asset transfer make it a popular point of focus for industries that rely on provenance, such as the diamond trade. To have an immutable ledger that traces the authenticity of precious materials all the way back to their inception is of obvious benefit and investors will no doubt be pouring money into platforms that confirm attribution and improve logistics.

    Cut out the middle men, Brexit and Trump&8230;

    Systems that cut out the middle men, streamline processes, cut costs and prevent fraud are of natural interest to sectors that count the pennies. With charities, large scale aid and infrastructure projects always see a percentage fall through the cracks. The digitisation of aid will continue as organisations like work on projects (e.g. Donercoin) to increase transparency in global aid.

    Additionally, the creative industries, historically underfunded and plagued by complex revenue streams, will look to the support of big names to promote blockchain as a means for ensuring artists are paid fairly and digital content is accurately measured and attributed to the right parties, taking blockchain into the mainstream.

    2017 is set to be a year of many uncertainties: Article 50 & Brexit, global markets, Trump… but the one thing that you can be sure about is that fintech will play a big part in helping to overcome some of the bigger obstacles that we face, and London will lead the way, as it always has, with innovation and expertise in developing new technology.

    london blockchain week

    Blockchain Week kicks off with the Hack-The-Block Blockchain Hackathon at Launch 22. Followed by a two day conference at The Grange Tower Bridge Hotel. The first day will focus on Crypto/Bitcoin/Public Blockchain, while the second day will focus on Blockchain/DLT in hybrid and public ledgers. Get 20% Discount With Code: &8220;FTSW&8220;. Register NOW!

    The post Diamonds, UNICEF and The Music Industry, What Do They Have In Common? appeared first on Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH.

    Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH

     
c
compose new post
j
next post/next comment
k
previous post/previous comment
r
reply
e
edit
o
show/hide comments
t
go to top
l
go to login
h
show/hide help
shift + esc
cancel
Close Bitnami banner
Bitnami