Tagged: fintech Toggle Comment Threads | Keyboard Shortcuts

  • user 3:35 am on November 19, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , fintech, , , ,   

    Singapore Asset Managers Partners with Swiss Fintech 

    S.E.A. Asset Management  a boutique fund manager in , announced it has listed its UCITS compliant Asian short duration high yield strategy on the Fundbase platform in Switzerland.

    SEA Asset Management

    Via LinkedIn

    The award winning company Fundbase has developed a database that acts as gateway for investors helping them to find and follow alternative investments that interest them.

    Fundbase offers built-in analytics tools as well as the ability to track investment funds via watch lists and collaborate with funds via their user interface.

    fundbase

     

    Alexander Zeeh CEO

    Alexander Zeeh CEO

    “We are proud to cooperate with the leading platform for discovering, analyzing and executing alternative investments” said Alexander Zeeh, CEO of S.E.A. AM. “Fundbase will allow us to increase our exposure and allow us to connect with qualified investors in Switzerland”.

    Gallen Tay, CIO of S.E.A. AM is overseeing the company’s fixed income and equity investments out of Singapore.

     

     

     

     

    Dieser Artikel erschien zuerst auf dem Finanzprodukt Blog

    The post Singapore Asset Managers Partners with Swiss Fintech appeared first on Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH.

    Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH

     
  • user 3:35 pm on November 18, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , fintech, , , ,   

    87% of Financial Market Participants Say Blockchain Will Disrupt The Industry 

    A survey conducted by Deutsche Bank and FT Remark, the research arm of the Times, found that a staggering majority (87%) of financial are confident that will the settlement model for securities.

    62% believe that the introduction of distributed ledger technology will produce substantial savings ranging from 11% to 25%. Almost half say that it will help the cope with the risk of system failure and market disruption.

    Benefits of blockchain tech in capital markets Deutsche Bank report

    &;Blockchain may completely change the settlement model for securities processing, creating a utility around securities processing and cash management,&; commented David Rhydderch, Deutsche Bank&;s head of alternative fund services.

    &8220;The entire back end would become a far more efficient, far less costly, more accurate and less risk-prone function. This has an obvious knock-on effect on the cost of service provision. In the administration space, blockchain may not be quite the disruptor. It’s more in the functional utility elements within the securities processing settlement chain. In that context, it may be totally revolutionary.&8221;

    Respondents believe that blockchain technology will be widely used within the next three to six years (75%).

    Blockchain adoption Deutsche Bank capital markets report

    The industry is still struggling to figure out how to implement the technology in the current web of legacy infrastructure, the report says, noting that market participants are trying to determine how it can be deployed in a way that works, given ongoing data protection and security concerns.

    The document a previous report released earlier this year by Euroclear and Oliver Wyman which praised the merits of blockchain technology in capital markets and highlighted the potential of the technology to provide a new approach to data management and be a solution to many of the efficiencies afflicting capital markets.

    Deutsche Bank report capital marketsThe Deutsche Bank report, titled &8220;Powering the flow of global capital: Capital markets investor insights,&8221; highlights the key findings of a survey of 200 market participants to examine what is driving today&8217;s capital market.

    The research found that regulation, new technologies and emerging markets are key issues impacting strategic thinking. These three areas have caused the vast majority of respondents to partially or completely reshape their operating models, buying behavior and capital/fund allocations over the past two years.

    &8220;These three themes are fundamentally redefining the securities services landscape and the knock-on effects will impact the business models of many capital markets participants,&8221; according to Satvinder Singh, head of global securities services and head of GTB EMEA ex Germany.

    Notably, a majority of market participants are convinced of a revival of emerging markets. 54% believe emerging markets will deliver growth rates close to those seen during the 2001-2011 boom, noting that India and South Asia will likely be the most attractive region (88%).

    Emerging markets Capital Markets Deutsche Bank survey

    China, Indonesia, Russia and Turkey in particular are ranked highest for their capital market infrastructure. Respondents said that China and India have made the greatest infrastructure improvements during the last five years.

    That being said, investing in emerging markets remains risky and some investors are hesitant.

    Respondents ranked regulatory hurdles as their greatest or second greatest challenge (62%) when carrying out securities transactions in emerging markets, followed by political interference (53%) and instability as a challenge, and unreliable capital markets infrastructure (40%).

     

    Featured image: Stock market chart by bluebay via Shutterstock.com.

    The post 87% of Financial Market Participants Say Blockchain Will Disrupt The Industry appeared first on Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH.

    Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH

     
  • user 3:35 am on November 18, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , Capitalbacked, , fintech, , , , , Q3’16, ,   

    Global Venture Capital-backed Fintech Funding Declines In Q3’16: KPMG And CB Insights 

    Investors continued to take a much more cautious approach to investments this year. capital (VC)-backed fintech deal activity fell for the second consecutive quarter, marking its lowest level since Q2’14, according to the Pulse of Fintech, the quarterly report on global fintech VC trends published jointly by KPMG International and CB Insights.

    VC-backed fintech

    VC-backed fintech in Q3 2016

    VC-backed fintech dropped 17% to US$ 2.4B, while deal activity fell 12% to 178 deals in compared to the previous quarter. Asia was the only continent to see a fintech funding increase on a quarterly basis in Q3’16, while North America and Europe fintech funding declined. All three continents covered in the report saw fintech deal count drop.

     

    Chia Tek Yew

    Chia Tek Yew

    “Asian investors are seeing the potential of fintech amidst global uncertainty in an environment of moderating growth,” said Chia Tek Yew, Head of Financial Services Advisory, KPMG in Singapore. “As businesses continue to embark on the journey of transformation, interest and investment in Asia’s fintech sector will continue to be strong, particularly in areas like payments , insurance technology and regulatory or risk technology.”

    Mr Chia added: “Singapore is a leading fintech hub, being one of the first countries in the world to put in place a regulatory fintech sandbox. There are also plans by the authorities to explore ways to attract more VC funds, which bodes well for the overall funding ecosystem.”

     

    Asia quarterly fintech funding tops US: US$ 1.2B across 35 deals in Q3’16. While the number of VC-backed fintech deals dropped to a five-quarter low in Asia, funding increased 50% on a quarter-over-quarter basis to reach US$ 1.2B. Year-to-date results of US$ 4.7B suggest Asia-based fintech investment for 2016 could top last year’s peak investment results of US$ 4.8B. Corporates continue to be highly active in Asia’s fintech investment environment, participating in more than half of all deals to VC-backed fintech startups in Q3’16.

    North America sees fintech funding fall below US$ 1B. North America saw both fintech funding and the number of deals fall on a quarter-over-quarter basis, as VC-backed startups raised just US$ 0.9B across 96 deals, a drop of 5% in deals from Q2’16 Funding in Q3’16 to VC-backed fintech companies in North America fell 68% compared to the same quarter last year, which saw US$ 100M+ financings to the likes of Sofi, Avant and Kabbage.  and the KPMG logo are registered trademarks of KPMG International Cooperative (“KPMG International”), a Swiss entity.

    Deal Count and Investment by Continent

    Deal Count and Investment by Continent

     

    Europe fintech funding on pace to drop below 2015 levels. Q3’16 saw European fintech deals fall 17% quarter-over-quarter as fintech funding in Europe dropped 43% over the same time period to US$ 233M. Germany outpaced the UK in terms of fintech funding for the second consecutive quarter, with 35% more funding raised by German- based VC-backed fintech companies than those in the UK.

    Corporates stay active in fintech. Corporates participated in 30% of global VC-backed fintech deals for the second consecutive quarter in Q3’16, driving a significant amount of fintech deals activity globally. Citigroup, Banco Santander and Goldman Sachs have made over 20+ fintech investments in total over the past five quarters, while a host of insurers have launched corporate venture arms.

     

    Other key highlights from the Pulse of Fintech:

    The Pulse of Fintech

    The Pulse of Fintech

    Global fintech mega-rounds fell to a new low in Q3’16. Asia saw US$ 50M+ fintech rounds stay level for the fourth straight quarter, while Europe has not registered a single US$ 50M+ round to a VC-backed fintech company so far in 2016.

    The median late-stage deal size in fintech globally fell to US$ 23M in Q3’16. This is significantly smaller than the same quarter last year, when median late-stage fintech deal size hit US$ 50.2M globally.

    Total year-to-date funding to VC-backed InsurTech companies reached US$ 1.36B at the end of Q3’16. InsurTech-focused VC-backed deal activity topped 20 deals during three of the past five quarters.

    Next-gen payments has attracted US$ 1.2B+ in 2016 VC-backed funding (year-to-date). The top 20 deals, including Affirm, Mobikwik and One97, raked in 67% of the total funding to payments technology companies in the first three quarters.

    Anand Sanwal

    Anand Sanwal

     

    Anand Sanwal, CEO of CB Insights, adds: “While we continue to see significant investment into fintech companies globally, the euphoria for mega-deals that we saw into the latter half of 2015 has waned. Total investments to key areas like marketplace lending and technology have both seen heading into the tail-end of 2016.”

    The post Global Venture Capital-backed Fintech Funding Declines In Q3’16: KPMG And CB Insights appeared first on Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH.

    Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH

     
  • user 3:35 pm on November 17, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: BankIT, fintech, Self,   

    Bank-IT im Self Service 

    Zwei von drei Banken lagern bereits ihre IT-Infrastruktur oder zumindest Teile davon aus. Damit bewegen sich die Schweizer Finanzdienstleister im Trend. Doch beim Thema Cloud Computing zögern sie. Noch verhindern Sicherheitsüberlegungen, dass sie ihre IT-Infrastrukturen einem virtuellen Rechenzentrum anvertrauen.

    Das Marktforschungsunternehmen IDC konstatiert: Erst 25 Prozent der europäischen Finanzinstitute nutzen private, öffentliche oder hybride Cloud-Angebote. Über alle Branchen hinweg ist dieser Anteil deutlich grösser; je nach Quelle liegt er zwischen 77 und 90 Prozent.

    Das Tempo, mit dem Digital Banking und Fintech die Branche überrollen, überfordert jedoch häufig die hauseigene IT. Zu schnell wandeln sich die Businessanforderungen, als dass die Infrastruktur die nötigen skalierbaren Kapazitäten innert nützlicher Zeit dynamisch bereitstellen kann.

    inventx

    Doch was macht die Finanzindustrie so besonders, dass die Cloud einen so schweren Stand hat? Zwei wesentliche Faktoren stehen der flexiblen Ressourcenallokation über geographisch verteilte IT-Infrastrukturen im Wege.

    1. Datenhaltung in der Schweiz

    Aus dem FINMA-Rundschreiben 2008/7 zum Outsourcing für Banken wird abgeleitet, dass Bankkundendaten in der Schweiz zu halten seien. Bei Auslagerung ins Ausland ist mit «angemessenen technischen und organisatorischen Massnahmen» der Schutz des Bankgeheimnisses und der kundenidentifizierbaren Daten «nach Schweizer Recht» sicherzustellen, heisst es.

    Die preislich und von ihrer Flexibilität her attraktiven Angebote aus der Public-Cloud, auf denen man sich per Speicher- oder Rechenkapazität «zusammenklickt», kommen somit nicht in Frage. Denn die Server stehen verteilt in der ganzen Welt.

    2. Ausfallsicherheit und Verfügbarkeit

    Gerade diese geographisch weiträumig verteilten Ressourcen sind der Grund, dass Cloud Services so boomen. Denn damit ist jene hochflexible Skalierbarkeit von Kapazitäten möglich, mit denen Unternehmen ihre Infrastruktur minutenschnell erweitern können. Doch die Anonymität des Ressourcenpools ist die Schwachstelle der Public Cloud, wenn es um businesskritische Anwendungen und Daten geht.

    Dafür müssen Sicherheitsstandards und Leistungsparameter in einer Form definiert werden, wie es üblicherweise über Service Level Agreements in einer Private Cloud geschieht. Messgrössen wie Uptime, Performance, Verfügbarkeit, Antwortzeiten und Supportleistungen müssen verhandel- und durchsetzbar sein.

    Reine Public-Cloud-Lösungen sind daher im Finanzsektor momentan nicht denkbar. Mit den herkömmlichen Private-Cloud-Plattformen ist jedoch das Niveau an Flexibilität, Variabilität der Kostenstrukturen und Agilität nicht zu erreichen.

    Native_Ads_Dreicom_1000x563px.indd

    Der einzige Weg zu einer Finance-Cloud führt daher über das hybride Modell, in dem über eine Managed Private Cloud einer geschlossenen Community schrittweise der Zugang zu Ressourcen aus der Public Cloud eröffnet wird. Das Modell besteht in einer Kombination der Vorteile von Private- und Public-Cloud-Eigenschaften.

    In einer Private-Cloud-Umgebung wird eine Community-Cloud aufgebaut, in der die spezifischen Sicherheits-, Datenschutz- und Service-Level-Anforderungen der Finanzinstitute adressiert sind.

    Ein exklusiver Kreis von Finanzdienstleistern „shared“ sozusagen die Infrastruktur und wird dafür mit einem „Quality Onboarding“ belohnt: Self Service für die Banken ja, aber erst wenn ihre Bedürfnisse so weit abgeklärt und umgesetzt sind, dass sie Compliance-konform umgesetzt werden können.

    Auf diese hochsichere und gemanagte Cloud-Plattform wird schliesslich eine Public Cloud aufgesetzt, über die Ressourcen frei bezogen werden können. Dieser Public-Cloud-Anteil wird zunächst noch sehr überschaubar sein.

    Doch je mehr Erfahrung die Kunden mit verschiedenen Cloud-Modellen sammeln, umso besser können schlussendlich Kosten- und Flexibilitätsvorteile gegenüber Sicherheits- und Compliance-Vorgaben austariert werden.

    The post Bank-IT im Self Service appeared first on Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH.

    Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH

     
  • user 3:35 am on November 17, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , fintech, ,   

    The 2017 Global Entrepreneurship Index 

    As millions of people begin to participate in Week celebrations in 165 countries, a new report shows the United States remains the country with the most favorable conditions for entrepreneurs to start and scale new businesses but with a slowly narrowing gap as other countries increase their support.

    2017 Global Entrepreneurship IndexThe 2017 Global Entrepreneurship Index (GEI) provides key information for policymakers and government leaders worldwide to strengthen their digital ecosystems and promote high-growth, high-impact entrepreneurship. The authors estimate that improving conditions to help entrepreneurs create new companies could add $ 22 trillion to the global economy.

     

    “China and India are strengthening their entrepreneurial ecosystems and creating billion dollar startups while Malaysia, Iceland and the Baltic states are emerging as digital entrepreneurship leaders,” said Zoltan Acs, co-author of the report and university professor at the Schar School of Policy and Government at George Mason University. “While institutional variables still need to be strengthened in emerging economies—where individuals are running ahead of policymakers—in developed countries individuals need to be shaken up. In other words, not enough people in developed countries—including the United States—are starting productive high-growth businesses.”

    2017-global-entrepreneurship-indexThe top of the rankings were dominated by countries in the innovation-driven stage of development. The United States topped the rankings again this year, with a GEI score of 83.4 – a slight drop from its score of 86.2 the previous year. It was followed by (in order): Switzerland (78.0), Canada (75.6), Sweden (75.5), Denmark (74.1), Iceland (73.5), Australia (72.5), the United Kingdom (71.3), Ireland (71.0) and Netherlands (67.8).

    India (25.8) enjoyed the largest jump in the rankings, moving up 29 spots from last year to land in 69th. Tunisia (40.5) had the second largest jump, from 62nd to 42nd. China (36.3) moved up 12 spots to 48th.

    The GEI measures a country’s entrepreneurial ecosystem by combining individual data such as opportunity recognition, startup skills and risk acceptance, with institutional measures, including urbanization, education and economic freedom. These measurements help distinguish self-employment and replicative entrepreneurship from the innovative, productive and rapidly growing entrepreneurial ventures that drive real economic growth.

    This year, it included four new components of the digital entrepreneurship ecosystem: Digital Citizenship, Digital Governance, Digital Marketplace and Digital Business.

    2017 global-entrepreneurship-and-development-index

     

    The report was released by Global Entrepreneurship Network and the GEDI Institute so that findings from the can drive policy discussions at events around the world during Global Entrepreneurship Week.

    “This is just the tip of the iceberg of the digital disruption revolution unfolding,” said Jonathan Ortmans, president of the Global Entrepreneurship Network. “The promise of jobs, economic growth and the optimism and hope that entrepreneurs bring to government efforts to create opportunity and prosperity for their citizens, has generated an extraordinary increase in attention from all levels of government in empowering their entrepreneurial ecosystems.”

     

    Other interesting observations from the report include:

    &; The big surprise is the rise of Switzerland to 2nd place, primarily driven by the aspiration index with very strong scores in high-growth firms, product innovation and process innovation.

    &8211; Three of the five Nordic countries, Denmark, Iceland, and Sweden, are in the top ten.

    &8211; Taiwan, the highest Asian country, is in 16th place, and Singapore is 24th, which virtually ties it with Japan.

    The 2017 Global Entrepreneurship Index

    The post The 2017 Global Entrepreneurship Index appeared first on Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH.

    Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH

     
  • user 11:36 pm on November 16, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: Copenhagen, fintech, Lab,   

    Launch of Copenhagen Fintech Lab 

    More than 150 people from the ecosystem in Denmark made it to Christianshavn today to participate in the grand opening of Fintech – Scandinavia’s first co-working space dedicated to fintech entrepreneurs.

    The Minister for Business and Growth Troels Lund Poulsen and the Mayor of Employment and Integration Anna Mee Allerslev both gave very passionate speeches about the importance of growing the fintech ecosystem in Denmark and Copenhagen.

    The director of Global Ecosystem Development (at Startupbootcamp) Elizabeth Lumley gave a very personal speech on the real impact of fintech and how it will help us make society more inclusive.

    Copenhagen Fintech is a joint initiative by the Financial Services Union Denmark, the City of Copenhagen, the Danish Bankers Association and many more visionary partners and sponsors.

    Our ambition is to create a one-of-a-kind place, where we bring together well-established fintech startups and new ones, so they can learn from each other. We want to create a platform for co-creation, new partnerships and co-development that will fuel creative innovation, exploiting synergies cross companies and speeds up time-to-market.

    At the same time we also launched our new profile video of the lab including interviews with the many startups.

    As you can see from the video, we have an awesome location at the heart of Copenhagen and if your fintech startup is looking for a home we should talk. So do not hesitate to contact us: [email protected] or +45 22 96 18 22.

    You can also take a look at our website.


    [linkedinbadge URL=”https://www.linkedin.com/in/thomaskroghjensen” connections=”off” mode=”icon” liname=”Thomas Krogh Jensen”] is Head of Business Development and Digitalization at Nordea Liv & Pension
     
  • user 3:36 pm on November 16, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , , fintech, , , , SETL, Sterling,   

    SETL, Deloitte and Metro Bank Put Sterling Onto The Blockchain For Consumer Payments 

    SETL, Deloitte and Metro BankSETL, Deloitte and Metro Bank completed a series of firsts this week in London.  SETL provided a contactless smartcard enabled allowing digitised , Deloitte exercised its blockchain ID system known as Smart Identity and Metro Bank hosted a connected client account.  In an initial test, over 100 users were issued with contactless smartcards and used them to make purchases from merchants equipped with contactless terminals.  Consumers and merchant balances were updated live-time with all balances held at Metro Bank.

    The successful implementation of a blockchain smartcard retail payment system offers the possibility of significantly reducing current high costs for processing retail transactions.  In addition it opens the door to competition in merchant servicing to challenger , which are all but excluded from this activity  by the incumbent clearing banks. The service which is provided by SETL Payments Ltd, subject to appropriate regulatory approval, could launch as early as 2017.

    Smart Identity blockchain

    Smart Identity blockchain

    In on-boarding participants, Deloitte demonstrated its Smart Identity blockchain solution communicating with SETL’s payment blockchain. Customers taking part created their identity records on the Deloitte blockchain and had their key details certified by Deloitte. These certified details were then asserted to the SETL Blockchain to set up user credentials.  This is believed to be the first commercial inter-blockchain application demonstrating how portable, cryptographically secured identity might be applied in a real-world environment.

    transactions

    From Pixabay

    SETL’s capacity to process billions of transactions a day with burst speeds in the tens of thousands per second means that it could easily keep up with the volumes processed by the large card networks who process around 2000 to 3000  transactions per second on average with burst rates  of around 14,000 transactions per second.  Instant settlement for the retailer and the possibility of charges being only a fraction of the credit and debit card schemes could prove to be powerful incentives for its adoption.

    Furthermore, the use of point to point encryption significantly reduces the possibility of kind of wholesale data leakage that has impacted the legacy consumer payment infrastructure over the last decades.

    David Myers, Partner at Deloitte added: “To use the Deloitte Identity solution in this way is particularly relevant as it underlines the importance, in the new distributed ledger world of identity management. We are pleased that SETL together with Metro Bank have been able to demonstrate both speed, capacity and identity in the challenging retail payments arena.”

    Craig Donaldson

    Craig Donaldson

    Craig Donaldson, CEO at Metro Bank commented: “We’re always looking for new ways to improve our customers’ banking experience, and payments is an often overlooked but critical part of a customer’s journey. Retail payments have for too long been dominated by a few players to the detriment of customers. Given all the potential that blockchain has to offer, we hope that the success of today’s test will play a key role in moving us a step closer to providing a more efficient and flexible service for customers.”

     

     

    Peter Randall

    Peter Randall

    Peter Randall, CEO of SETL noted: “We are extremely pleased to be working with Deloitte and Metro Bank on this ground-breaking project. The team are leaders in the field of transaction implementation and retail banking service and our common focus on high speed, capacity and resiliency makes us natural partners. This is not a proof-of-concept or a prototype; it will be a revenue generating implementation of distributed ledger .”

    The post SETL, Deloitte and Metro Bank Put Sterling Onto The Blockchain For Consumer Payments appeared first on Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH.

    Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH

     
  • user 12:19 pm on November 16, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , fintech, , ,   

    The radical change coming to Financial Services; Fintech in Switzerland 

    accounts for 10% of GDP and 5% of employment in and the country is a global leader in Wealth Management. So, what happens here really matters and what is happening is earth-shattering (and we normally avoid hyperbolic language on Daily ).  I mean in the positiveRead More
    Bank Innovation

     
  • user 3:35 am on November 16, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: einem, fintech, Kniff, OnlineHypotheken,   

    Postfinance: Online-Hypotheken mit einem Kniff 

    Einmal mehr spannt Postfinance mit einer Fintech-Firma zusammen: Sie lanciert mit der Zürcher Jungfirma Hypoguide eine Lösung für Online-Hypotheken. Mit dieser können Kunden von Postfinance Hypotheken komplett online beantragen und abschliessen, wie Hypoguide am Dienstag mitteilte.

    Post finance with Hypoguide

    launched a solution for online mortgages with Hypoguide

    Das lässt aufmerken: Die Post-Tochter Postfinance verfügt zwar über eine Banklizenz, darf aber bis auf weiteres nicht selber Kredite vergeben. Ist ihr nun der Einstieg ins Hypo-Geschäft quasi über die Fintech-Hintertür gelungen?

    Valiant nimmt die Hypotheken aufs Buch

    Mathias Joss

    Mathias Joss

     

    Laut Hypoquide-Geschäftsführer Mathias Joss ist dies nicht der Fall. Auch wenn die Hypotheken den Postfinance-Brand tragen, muss die Berner Regionalbank Valiant die Kredite aufs Buch nehmen, erklärte er auf Anfrage von finews.ch. Mit dieser arbeitet die Postbank schon Jahren bei der Hypotheken-Vergabe zusammen. Hypoguide ihrerseits hat bereits Online-Hypotheken etwa in Kooperation mit der Credit Suisse, Swiss Life, der «Hypi» Lenzburg und der Alternativen Bank Schweiz entwickelt.

     

    Der neueste Vorstoss der Postbank dürfte in der Branche trotzdem zu reden geben. Wie auch finews.ch berichtete, ging Postfinance letzten Juli einer Partnerschaft mit dem deutschen Schwarmfinanzierer Lendico ein – mit dem Ziel, Firmenkredite zu vergeben.

    Wird es der Konkurrenz zu bunt?

    Damit tummelt sich Postfinance nun ziemlich nonchalant in einem Feld, aus dem sie eigentlich die anderen Schweizer Banken dringend heraushalten wollten. Gut möglich, dass die Fintech-Kniffe der Postbanker noch eine harsche Antwort aus der Branche provozieren.

    The post Postfinance: Online-Hypotheken mit einem Kniff appeared first on Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH.

    Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH

     
  • user 3:35 pm on November 15, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , CyberFraud, , fintech, , , Prevention, , Unveiled    

    The Next Generation of Financial Cyber-Fraud Prevention is Unveiled  

    CyberRein, a cyber-security company has announced the launch of Assayer, a cyber-fraud software. Targeted at , Assayer uniquely stops criminals deceiving a bank’s existing defences.

    Assayer

    Assayer is set to transform cyber-fraud . Banks existing defences prevent impersonation allowing criminals time to learn how to deceive and plan an attack. Assayer takes away this time, meaning criminals no-longer have months, but milliseconds to plan their attacks. This is ground-breaking and is due to Assayer’s multi-patented Transaction Cloaking that constantly mutates and creates impossible puzzles that criminals must solve to be able to deceive defences.

    Assayer’s mutating deception shields are a step-change for banks because they never protect transactions the same way twice. Therefore, anything criminals do learn instantly becomes useless a split-second later, including how to successfully use stolen credentials and biometrics &; or even how to deceive Assayer itself.

    Sat Birdi

    Sat Birdi

    “Banks aren’t losing the cyber-fraud battle because their defences are weak, but because criminals have too long to learn how to defeat them, which is why banking has a $ 100B cyber-fraud problem each year, despite using best-in-class defences. Assayer’s mutating defences eliminate this fundamental vulnerability of time, so criminals can’t learn how to deceive a bank’s defences in the first place,” said Sat Birdi, CEO of CyberRein.

    “Assayer allows any bank to finally stop cyber-fraud, not because it prevents it through detection, but because its mutating deception shields never protect transactions the same way twice and cloak a bank and its customers in a way that criminals can’t solve. Assayer’s defence technology is very powerful, because it now allows banks to finally prevent the root cause of all cyber-fraud, the knowledge required to succeed &8211; and the implications are profound and far-reaching”. 

    As well as cloaking the transactions, Assayer does not affect the bank’s current defences and encompasses them into its deception shields, securing all channels and touchpoints against impersonation, the pre-cursor to all successful cyber-fraud. Assayer will protect anything that is placed within its deception shield and instantly means that a bank’s existing cyber-security investments are future-proofed. The bank’s current defences and customers are not aware that they are being protected – there is no interference, downloads and ultimately no successful cyber-fraud.

    ASSAYER

    ASSAYER

    Sat continued, “We live in a truly compromised world where criminals are always waiting for the next opportunity to defraud banks and their customers. At CyberRein, we can eliminate that threat and headache for eBanking executives, and make banking online safer for everyone. Consumers are increasingly asking their banks to do more to protect them, and through Assayer, we are giving the community the chance to do exactly that.

    The CyberRein team has over 30 years of expertise in cyber-security and enterprise business solutions delivery, making us a very knowledgeable partner to work with. Our research and technology has taken over four years to complete, because we realised that the problem of cyber-fraud prevention needed a whole new approach to bolster banking’s existing defences, and we’re very excited to be leading the way with the development of this new technology.”

    The post The Next Generation of Financial Cyber-Fraud Prevention is Unveiled  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