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  • user 7:35 am on September 29, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: connected insurance, , technology   

    Connected insurance is here to stay—are you ready for this new insurance paradigm? 

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    Italians want policies; they are not afraid of “Big Brother.” According to the Ania-Bain Observatory, can take off in the home and health sectors. Now is the time for both the model and management of connected insurance to be structured.

    As of today, 22% of Italian households that have no home insurance are inclined to buy it—if it were connected insurance. This was the starting point of July’s meeting of the Connected Insurance Observatory, an Ania–Bain think-tank, which has put together executives from 30 insurance groups within the Internet of Things (IoT) sector to discuss the great potential of connected insurance, as well as the challenges it poses to the insurance business.

    Among those challenges is the protection of auto insurance telematics data, a topic that the Data Protection Authority has recently tackled, promising to offer clients appropriate visibility into the usage of collected data.

    “There has been an explicit acceptance of the validity of a try-before-you-buy application in auto insurance from the Italian regulator,” says Matteo Carbone, principal at Bain & Company and founder of the Observatory. Regulatory acceptance of the validity of this principle has proved that there are no real obstacles to innovation in this area—except when it comes to the rights of the insured, which have to be respected. (Of course, this includes the provision of a detailed explanation to insurance customers of the business purpose for which the data is being collected.) Carbone continues, “In Italy, if there is the will, innovation can be achieved just as easily as in Silicon Valley.”

     

    A new model

    On one hand, InsurTech and connected insurance are transforming insurance business lines. On the other, it is essential to create the conditions needed for insurers and other specialized players to fulfill their role as providers, each in its own sector: from e-health to antifraud and from driverless cars to electronic payments and product design. “A new and more connected insurance model has to be defined In order to achieve this, so that the full potential of the can be exploited,” says Luigi Di Falco, Head of Life and Welfare, Ania. “In our opinion, there are many opportunities and areas to be explored within connected insurance that would allow for a more client-centric offering to be created. The demand would be easier to aggregate, and thus more client categories that are not insurable today would become insurable. Last, it reduces claims through the use of sensors with advantages for both the insurer and the insured.”

     

    Managing an ecosystem

    There are still plenty of challenges. Chief among them, according to Ania, are the evolution of rules and regulations on privacy, the risk of data monopoly from players like Google, the arrival of new insurance start-up competitors and the danger of insurance disintermediation. Di Falco warns that “the Observatory has to look at understanding both the advantages and the dangers that come with InsurTech.”

    At the foundation of everything is the synergy between numerous partners that drives insurance toward becoming the coordinator of a highly complex system. According to Carbone, “Insurers today are aware that using external providers is simply not enough and that the orchestration of the whole ecosystem needs to happen. This is a relatively new trend that represents the next frontier of connected insurance and is essential for reaching full potential.”

    LESS PRIVACY, MORE SERVICES

    Regarding privacy issues, the accepted principle states that if the client wants additional services, he or she needs to enable the insurer to provide them. According to research conducted by the Observatory on the propensity of customers to buy home insurance policies, which include intelligent devices installed at home, there are positive signals: Clients that do not have home insurance show more interest in buying a connectedpolicy. As Di Falco confirms, “If the insured believes that a service is useful, he or she will be ready to renounce the privacy of his or her data. But this has to be reflected by a legal framework that specifies that the loss of privacy is strictly connected to perceived benefits on behalf of the client.”

     

    Innovation are moving to the home and health sectors

    Being aware of this, 76% of the insurance carriers participating at the Observatory expect to see significant innovation activity related to home products (the “connected home”) in the next 12 months. Also, 43% of companies believe the health sector—(“connected health”)— will be ripe for innovation, whereas in the life and industrial sectors, the potential for innovation is expected only in the medium term. Di Falco says that people are more likely to buy insurance for the home. But this is not the only sector experiencing innovation: Some specialized insurance companies are already offering health insurance coverage related to wearables, claim detection and sideline services, starting with health monitoring, second opinions and medical consultation via chat and continuing with access to networks of healthcare structures and drug stores. Di Falco underscores the point: “In a country where the proportion of people over 65 will grow to become a third of the entire population, it is important to develop forms of insurance protection in rehabilitation and long-term assistance where the state is less present and the nuclear family is not holding together as it once did.”

     

    The Connected Insurance Observatory was created with the purpose synthesizingItalian excellence in the connected insurance sector. It has three main goals: first, to rationalize existing industry knowledge and experience; second, to identify together with the companies what needs to be improved, what the main challenges and critical points are, and what the main ambitions are; and third, to promote a culture of innovation in the insurance sector by encouraging dialogue between all players involved. “To sum it up,” says Carbone, “we have created a think-tank centered on the insurance sector that boasts the participation of more than 15 other players—including the Italian Association of Insurance Brokers (AIBA)—coming from different backgrounds that are interested in sharing their own experiences with the insurance carriers.”

     

    Intermediaries’ interest on the rise

    Forty percent of Italian brokers believe that connected insurance represents an interesting business opportunity in the medium term. A recent survey developed by AIBA and the Connected Insurance Observatory shows that, other than the growing interest of intermediaries in connected solutions, larger brokers are more likely to see the business opportunity within connected insurance: 67% of big brokers expressed this, compared to 60% of medium-size brokers and 40% of small brokers.

    (The original version of this interview initially appeared in Insurance Review.) 

     

    Matteo is Principal in Bain & Company’s Financial Services and Digital Practices, Founder and Responsible of the Connected Insurance Observatory, Thought Leader in InsurTech, Top 50 InsurTech Influencer.

     
  • user 12:40 pm on September 28, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , technology,   

    CGI Launches Blockchain Lab for Trade Finance 

    CGI has launched a and supply chain laboratory to explore applications of blockchain .

    Source


    CoinDesk

     
  • user 8:24 pm on September 24, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , technology   

    Be careful, Blockchain is not a wild card. 

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    Every tool has been designed to accomplish a certain task or purpose. is not different from other tools and it has a specific functionality. As you will see below, it provides a set of properties that are very useful to protect information.

    Blockchain is not something new in cryptography.

    Blockchain is, in essence, a signed hash chain. This is a combination of data, hashes and signatures composing an interwoven chain. Although Blockchain is a hot topic nowadays, its underlying has been used for years to protect information. The generation of immutable audit logs is a good example of this.

    The idea behind Blockchain consists in signing the content of every data record together with the result of a hash function of the previous stored record. In this way, signatures become successively connected by themselves allowing anyone to check their correctness.

    From a security point of view, Blockchain provides data integrity, data authenticity, non-repudiation, record immutability, verifiability, and fault-tolerance.

    Each of these digital signatures provides data integritydata authenticity and non-repudiation to its corresponding record: (i) When the data of a record is signed, it cannot be modified once generated without detection (data integrity); (ii) only the issuer of a signature is able to prove that the signature belongs to her (data authenticity); and (iii) the issuer of a signature cannot deny her authorship (non-repudiation).

    Meanwhile, the hash included in each signature links such record with the previous one. This hash together with the digital signature offer record immutability. In other words, records cannot be added, modified or deleted without detection. This is because any fraudulent change can be detected by verifying from the last to the first linked signature of the chain. Anyone who possesses the public key of the signatures is able to check it (verifiability). In fact, this is the reason why Blockchain is not anonymous.

    In addition, Blockchain provides data redundancy, which consists in storing a copy of every record in several peers. Therefore, if a server fails, the other servers still have the whole data (fault-tolerance).

    All these properties make Blockchain a good tool to store information in a secure way. But, as each tool, Blockchain has limited properties and functionalities. It cannot solve as many problems as we would like.

    Analyse what security requirements have to be met by your system, and decide then what cryptographic techniques to use.

    For this reason, it is important to figure out what functional as well as security requirements have to be accomplished by your system and whether Blockchain is your suitable tool.

    Is Blockchain what you need?

    Keep in mind that there is not a magic tool able to deal with all your system requirements. On the contrary, an improper use of a security tool could lead to your system a serious security fault.


     [linkedinbadge URL=”https://www.linkedin.com/in/rogerjc” connections=”off” mode=”icon” liname=”Roger Jardí Cedó, Ph.D”] is Information Security & Privacy Architect at Dinube
     
  • user 3:35 pm on September 24, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , , , , technology,   

    FinTech DACH News Rückblick der Woche 38 

    Fintech.Li präsentiert hier wöchentlich die wichtigsten rund um in der Schweiz, Liechtenstein, Deutschland und Österreich.

    Fintech DACH Top News

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    hypi&8220;Hypi&8221; entdeckt die Schwarmfinanzierung

    Die Hypothekarbank Lenzburg lanciert eine Plattform für Online-Privatkredite. Dazu arbeitet das Institut neu mit einem Schweizer Fintech-Unternehmen zusammen. Mehr erfahren

     

     

    swiss banks fintech challenges solutions19 Swiss As Solutions For Fintech Challenges

    Die Schweiz hat mehr und mehr Fintech Startups und Initiativen. Schweizer Banken versuchen aufzuholen oder sich gegen grosse Player zu positionieren (bspw. ApplePay) und haben eine Vielzahl von (Gegen)-Initiativen gestartet. Teils zusammen mit den Fintech Startups oder im Alleingang. Mehr erfahren

     


    Arno Walter
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    Jeder zweite Deutsche verfügt über mindestens zwei Girokonten, jeder Vierte hat seine Gelder sogar auf drei oder mehr Konten liegen. Dazu kommen Kreditkarten, Depots, Baufinanzierungen, Ratenkredite. Mehr erfahren

     

    Infusion_500Fintech: Startups am Staatstropf
    Laut beklagt die Fintech-Branche das Fehlen staatlicher Anschub-Finanzierung. Umso mehr sorgte die Förderung eines -Projekts für Aufsehen – schüttet der Staat nun sein Füllhorn aus? Mehr erfahren

     

     


    ratenkauf-by-easycredit-querEasycredit stellt Ratenkauf für den Onlinehandel vor

    Easycredit steigt ins E-Commerce-Dienstleistungsgeschäft ein und stellt einen benutzer- und verbraucherfreundlichen Ratenkauf für den Onlinehandel vor. Mehr erfahren

     

     

     

    deutsche bankDeutsche Bank und Axel Springer investieren gemeinsam in Start-ups
    Die Deutsche Bank und der Axel Springer Verlag fördern künftig gemeinsam junge Technologieunternehmen aus der Banken- und Versicherungsbranche. Das gaben die Unternehmen am Montag bekannt. Mit der Kooperation wollen das Geldhaus und der Verlag über den Start-up-Entwickler Axel Springer Plug and Play schneller Wachstumsfirmen auswählen, entwickeln und finanzieren. Mehr erfahren

     


    deutsche-postWie die Deutsche Post versucht, die Startup-Konkurrenz kaltzustellen

    Fintechs machen der Post das Geschäft mit digitalen Identifizierungsverfahren streitig. Nach erfolglosen Übernahmeversuchen wehrt sich der Konzern jetzt mit einer fragwürdigen Preispolitik. Mehr erfahren

     

     

     

    Jan-W.-Wagner_CreditPlus-Bank-800-350x525Der Wandel einer Bank zum Start-Up – Interview mit CreditPlus-Bank-CEO Jan. W. Wagner
    Vor wenigen Tagen überraschte die CreditPlus Bank mit einem vollständig digitalen Konsumentenkredit per Smartphone-App – und der Ankündigung, mit einem kulturellen Wandel den bankinternen digitalen Erfindergeist zu fördern. Eine Start-up-Atmosphäre soll die Bank bekommen. Das wollen wir genauer wissen und sprachen mit Jan. W. Wagner, dem Vorstandsvorsitzender der CreditPlus Bank über den Weg zur digitalen Bank. Mehr erfahren


    Thomas Avedik, CEO CrealogixCrealogix: Umsatzplus dank Digital Banking Hub

    Der Bankensoftware-Hersteller Crealogix hat zwar im Geschäftsjahr 2015/2016 noch Verluste geschrieben. Der Umsatz hat aber deutlich angezogen. Mehr erfahren

     

     

     

    best swiss fintech startups
    6 Best Swiss Fintech Startups 2016 in Top 100 Startup List

    Startup.ch puts together a list of Top 100 Best Swiss Startups 2016. Several notable names in the Fintech industry made it into the list. Knip and Bexio even into the Top 3 and 10. Mehr erfahren

     


    financefox28 Mio. US-Dollar für das Schweizer InsurTech Startup FinanceFox

    Die Resonanz auf Geschäftsmodell und der Geschäftsgang der unabhängigen Service- plattform für Endkunden und Versicherungsvermittler überzeugen die Investoren: Der deutsch-schweizerische InsurTech sichert sich weitere 28 Mio. US-Dollar am Kapital- markt. Das Investment fliesst in die Internationalisierung, das Produkt und das Marketing. Mehr erfahren

     


    Karsten TraumDKB: Eine Bank als FinTech-Hub – Interview mit Bereichsleiter Karsten Traum

    Cringle, Barzahlen.de, FinReach-Kontowechsel, VISA-Wallet, Kooperation mit SOFORT-Überweisung und einiges mehr: Die DKB scheint immer vorne mit dabei zu sein, wenn es um FinTech-Kooperationen geht. Warum macht die Bank das? Wir fragten Karsten Traum, Bereichsleitung Privatkunden der DKB – er ist unter anderem für die Kooperationen mit FinTechs zuständig. Mehr erfahren

     


    Kneissler_500Twint-CEO: «Unser grösster Feind ist das Bargeld»

    Die grossen IT-Anbieter wie Apple oder Samsung bereiten Thierry Kneissler nicht allzuviele Kopfschmerzen. Stattdessen kämpft der Chef der Bezahl-App Twint gegen die Gewohnheiten der Schweizer Bevölkerung an. Mehr erfahren

     

     


    Daniel-KellerDaniel Keller wird Chief Product Officer der solarisBank

    Mit Daniel Keller gewinnt die solarisBank einen erfahrenen Digitalexperten als Chief Product Officer (CPO), um die Skalierung der Banking Plattform und des Produkt Portfolios weiter voranzutreiben. Er wird dabei unter anderem die Entwicklung und Umsetzung einer fokussierten Produkt-Strategie vorantreiben, die Planung und Steuerung der Banking-Baustein-Initiativen vornehmen sowie das Produkt-Team weiter ausbauen. Mehr erfahren

     


    Graubündner Kantonalbank appNeuer GKB Finanzassistent – bequem und sicher die Übersicht behalten

    Die Graubündner Kantonalbank bietet ihren Kunden neu mit dem persönlichen Finanzassistenten einen neuen Online-Dienst an. Dieser analysiert und kategorisiert automatisch alle Transaktionen. Mehr erfahren

     

     

    Sascha_GyselUBS verliert Kickstart-Accelerator-Macher
    Bei der UBS war er für den Aufbau des ersten branchenübergreifenden Startup-Beschleunigers zuständig. Nun wechselt der ehemalige Entrepreneur zur Swisscom, wo er einen bekannten Fintech-Spezialisten der Schweiz ersetzt, wie finews.ch erfahren hat. Mehr erfahren

     

     

    / BLOCKCHAIN News

     

    Image-e1474017322159-scalia-gallery-fullwidth“Blockchain might be like the Internet”
    DZ BANK Vorstand Thomas Ullrich hat in seinem Grußwort über den Status quo beim Thema Blockchain in der DZ BANK Gruppe berichtet, u.a. am Beispiel der Reisebank. Die DZ BANK Tochter hat im Juli innerhalb von acht Sekunden eine transatlantische Zahlung zwischen Calgary in Kanada und Frankfurt-Rödelheim mittels Blockchain-Technologie abgewickelt – ein Vorgang, der bisher vier Tage gedauert hat. Mehr erfahren

     

    brexitBREXIT – A Catalyst For Blockchain Technology?
    Brexit — this topic has been in everyones mind for the prior weeks as I traveled across Germany and the US, not only in financial services. Nevertheless, today the first shock in financial services has gone and according to my opinion the Brexit has the potential to become THE game changer for implementing Blockchain Technology — fast track. Not only in financial services. Mehr erfahren

     

     

    ResizedImage700387-MsKinsey-15-sep-2016Traditional investment banking model &;no longer an option,&; states McKinsey & Company ‘blockchain technology could deliver a broad range of benefits’
    Global management consulting firm, McKinsey & Company, recently published a report outlining strategies that could help the capital markets and investment banking (CMIB) industry. “Time for Tough Choices And Bold Actions” defines the industry’s ailments and proposes initiatives that banks could implement, including the adoption of blockchain technology. Mehr erfahren
    RippleReisebank mit Ripple: In acht Sekunden über den Atlantik
    Das Fintech-Thema Blockchain wird vielerorts diskutiert und gerne auch in den Innovationshochburgen wie Silicon Valley verortet. Doch erstmals in die Tat umgesetzt wurde es jetzt zwischen Kanada und Deutschland. Genauer gesagt zwischen der ATB Financial in Calgary und der ReiseBank mit der Zentrale in Frankfurt-Rödelheim. Und darauf sind wir mächtig stolz. Mehr erfahren

     


    BitcoinThe biggest bitcoin hacks and thefts of all time

    The story of bitcoin’s biggest hacks and thefts is the story of bitcoin itself. From its early days and its first hack, to the biggest theft of all time, bitcoin’s utopian promises often turned into a dystopian reality where scammers, thieves, unaccountable and often amateur exchanges, some, even fully anonymous, proliferated in a wild west of euphoria and hope for a new future combined with devastating, and at times, tragic loss. Mehr erfahren

     

    vitalik_buterinBlockchain: Steht Vitalik Buterin vor seiner schwierigsten Aufgabe?
    Der Gründer der Zuger Blockchain-Schmiede Ethereum plant den nächsten grossen Sprung mit der als bahnbrechend geltenden Technologie. Doch dazu braucht er Hilfe, die schwer zu finden scheint. Mehr erfahren

     

     


    IMG_2915-e1474300611906Santander Vies to Become First Bank to Issue Cash on Blockchain

    Spanish banking giant Santander is working on a project that explores how it could digitize customer cash using the public ethereum blockchain. Revealed today during a panel talk at Devcon2 by Ether.camp founder and ethereum Java client developer Roman Mandeleil, the news was confirmed by representatives of Santander. In statements, Santander said its goal is to open up its bank-issued funds to a community of innovators as a way of tapping additional efficiencies. Mehr erfahren


    Blockchain-Diva Blythe Masters

    SIX holt Blockchain-Diva Blythe Masters an Bord

    Die Börsenbetreiberin SIX Group will die Blockchain-Technologie einsetzen – und hat dafür in der amerikanischen Star-Bankerin Blythe Masters die Partnerin gefunden. Mehr erfahren

     

     

    ÜBERSICHTEN / INFOGRAFIKEN / STUDIEN


    TME-Factbook-Beratung-und-Vermögensverwaltung-W1140Studie von Hays und PAC: Digitalisierung – gefragt sind Generalisten statt Nerds

    Stehen wir im Private Banking vor einer Zeitenwende? Zwar werde die persönliche Beratung unverzichtbar bleiben, so Stephan Paxmann (TME Institut) „…. aber sie wird durch digitale Unterstützung bald ein Vielfaches für neue Kundengruppen leisten können.“ FinTechs und Non-Bank-Start-ups liefern dazu zahlreiche innovative Geschäftsideen. Mehr erfahren

     


    Titel-SAP-World-Banking-eBook-800-350x495SAP/IDC-Studie: 6 von 10 globalen Banken wollen Partnerschaften mit FinTechs – oder sie übernehmen

    Sechs von zehn globalen Banken stehen einer Partnerschaft mit FinTechs aufgeschlossen gegenüber. Dies ergab eine Umfrage über den digitalen Wandel bei Banken, die von SAP veröffentlicht wurde. Jede dritte der befragten Banken (34 Prozent) würde mit einem FinTech-Unternehmen zusammenarbeiten, während jede vierte (25 Prozent) auch eine Übernahme in Betracht ziehen würde. Mehr erfahren

     


    commerzventures insurtech reportCommerzVentures Report: Blockchain Tech, Wearables & AI to Transform Insurance

    CommerzVentures, the fintech venture capital fund of Commerzbank, has released a white paper highlighting the key technologies which it believes will transform the insurance industry. Aimed at providing insights into their potential uses in the insurance sector, CommerzVentures’ ‘Emerging Technologies Transforming the $ 4tn Insurance Industry’ paper explores how the insurance chain value will be transformed by technological innovations. Mehr erfahren

     


    GFT-Titel-TechBlue-Nongkran_800-350x307GFT-Studie: Mobile Payment – Aktuelle Marktanalyse, Aus­wirkungen und Empfehlungen für den Bankensektor

    Mobile-Payment kommt. Als Vorreiter gelten die Region Asien/Pazifik und der afrikanische Raum. Dort besitzt kaum ein Einwohner ein klassisches Bankkonto. In Europa gelten vor allem Großbritannien sowie Spanien und Italien als Treiber, während es in Deutschland noch Optimierungsbedarf im Handel und Vorbehalte bei den Konsumenten gibt. Das aktuelle GFT-Whitepaper „Mobile Payment 2016: Aktuelle Marktanalyse, Auswirkungen und Empfehlungen für den Bankensektor“ nimmt die Entwicklung unter die Lupe und will wichtige Empfehlungen für den Finanzsektor geben. Mehr erfahren

     

    Germany's fintech universe by city

    New Report Highlights Germany’s Fintech Industry’s ‘Impressive Growth’

    The Germany’s burgeoning fintech industry is quickly emerging as a regional leader with a number of startup gaining international recognition and Berlin becoming a “strong contender for London’s fintech crown,” according to a new report by UK payments startup GoCardless Ltd. Mehr erfahren

     

    Natee-Meepian-bigstock-MoBox-720-e1474530489222-350x457

    Finanz-App „MoBox“ für Jugendliche – comdirect-Studie untersucht das Finanz­wissen junger Menschen

    The Germany’s burgeoning fintech industry is quickly emerging as a regional leader with a number of startup gaining international recognition and Berlin becoming a “strong contender for London’s fintech crown,” according to a new report by UK payments startup GoCardless Ltd. Mehr erfahren

     

    Twint

    Fintech: Der Hype weicht der Ernüchterung

    The Germany’s burgeoning fintech industry is quickly emerging as a regional leader with a number of startup gaining international recognition and Berlin becoming a “strong contender for London’s fintech crown,” according to a new report by UK payments startup GoCardless Ltd. Mehr erfahren

     

     

    Fintech EVENT Hinweis

    Zum Abschluss noch Informationen in eigener Sache von Fintech.LI.

    ‎FinTech‬ Konferenz Liechtenstein 2016

    Das Programm zur Fintech Konferenz in Liechtenstein finden Sie auf der Homepage.

    Fintechnews Leser erhalten einen exclusiven Discount von 20% mit dem Code &8220;fintechnews20&8221;.

    The post FinTech DACH News Rückblick der Woche 38 appeared first on Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH.

    Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH

     
  • user 3:36 am on September 24, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , , , , technology   

    Top Digital Fintech Heads for Switzerland on Who is Who in Handelszeitung 

    These following names are experts who are proudly named in the Who is Who and also be a part of Top for featured in the newspaper .

    Olga FeldmeierOlga Feldmeier &; Managing Partner at XAPO ltd

      

    Olga is a part of the management team of Xapo, a Silicon Valley based startup, which is a global leading player in the industry. Olga’s background is in financial services industry: she was a strategy advisor for at the Boston Consulting Group (BCG) and at Barclays Capital.

     

    Andreas_KubliAndreas Kubli &8211; Group Managing Director &8211; UBS Switzerland AG

      

    Andreas Kubli is Managing Director at UBS Switzerland AG Zurich. Since 2013 he has held the Head of the Multichannel Management & Digitization position at UBS Switzerland. Prior to this, he was leading Strategy and Business Development UBS Switzerland. Before his entry into UBS he was a partner with McKinsey & Company. Andreas Kubli has a masters in Corporate Law from the University of Law in New York as well as licentiatus juris form the University of Zurich. Andreas Kubli is an authorized attorney at law in Zurich as well as in New York.

     


    Christian KönigChristian König &8211; Founder of Fintech News Switzerland

      

    Chris is a Fintech Specialist with 15 years Investment Banking experience. He consults Fintech and Investment companies around the world (Singapore, Vietnam, Switzerland) with his company Finanzpro Ltd and is specialized in Financial Products, Social Media and Content Marketing. He is also the organizer of the Fintech Vietnam Meetup and is regular Fintech Speaker, a Fintech Mentor and a Digital Finance Lecturer. On top of that he runs several Blog projects such as Fintechnews Singapore, Fintechnews.ch and other award winning Finance Blogs. He holds a Master in Banking&Finance from the University in St.Gallen and is Certified Inter. Investment Analyst.


    Daniel GutenbergDaniel Gutenberg &8211; General Partner of VI Partners

      

    Daniel Gutenberg is General Partner of VI Partners, a Swiss venture capital firm. He joined the company in 2003. Subsequent to selling Gutenberg Communication Systems AG to the Telindus Group in the year 2000, Daniel Gutenberg became a very active business angel and investor in numerous startups. His focus is on and he has been taking board assignments for various public and private Companies as well as for YPO Young Presidents’ Organization, a network of young global business leaders. He also acts as the president of the Swiss Technion Society and as a member of the Circle of Investors of BrainsToVentures. Daniel Gutenberg was awarded as business angel of the year in 2011 (SECA).


    Marc P. Bernegger
    Marc P. Bernegger &8211; Serial Web Entrepreneur &
    Fintech Investor

      

    Marc P. Bernegger is a serial web entrepreneur and fintech investor. Aged 20, Marc co-founded the party platform usgang.ch (trade sale to Axel Springer) and he is a founder of amiando (awarded by the World Economic Forum as Global Technology Pioneer in 2010; trade sale to XING). He is Ambassador Switzerland at FinLeap, was partner at the listed investment company Next Generation Finance Invest (today Ayondo Holding) and venture partner at Orange Growth Capital. Marc was awarded as «100 most successful people under 40 in Switzerland» by BILANZ in 2015


    patrick comboeufPatrick Comboeuf &8211; Director of Studies &8211; CAS &;Digital Leadership&;

      

    Patrick Comboeuf is a senior (digital) executive with a strong track record on both the corporate and academic side. He was Director E-Business at SBB orchestrating their digital channels (> CHF 400 Mio of revenue p.a.) from 2006 to 2014. As a leader of a team of 50-odd experts he was the driving force behind a vast array of digital transformation initiatives like SBB Mobile (ticketing/timetable) – with 5,4 million users the most downloaded app in Switzerland, their intra-preneurial startup programme SBB Digital as well as the company’s headline making social media presence to name a few. He’s a regular blogger and keynote speaker at conferences on topics like Mobile Commerce, Digital, Service Business, Customer Experience and how to create a sustainable digital lifeline for dinosaurs in the corporate world.

     

    Urs HäuslerUrs Haeusler &8211; CEO of DealMarket

      

    Urs is CEO of DealMarket &8211; the global Private Equity Platform providing a comprehensive platform for fundraising and deal flow management. Based on his online expertise and global network Urs is valued as senior advisor for entrepreneurs and corporates alike. He also is the owner of Haeusler Management & Ventures, an internet business consulting firm, since 2008. Urs also supports early stage tech start-ups as a Business Angel.

    who is who

    Featured Image: Pixabay

     

    The post Top Digital Fintech Heads for Switzerland on Who is Who in Handelszeitung appeared first on Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH.

    Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH

     
  • user 3:36 am on September 24, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , , , , technology   

    Top Digital Fintech Heads for Switzerland on Who is Who in Handelszeitung 

    These following names are experts who are proudly named in the Who is Who and also be a part of Top for featured in the newspaper .

    Olga FeldmeierOlga Feldmeier &; Managing Partner at XAPO ltd

      

    Olga is a part of the management team of Xapo, a Silicon Valley based startup, which is a global leading player in the industry. Olga’s background is in financial services industry: she was a strategy advisor for at the Boston Consulting Group (BCG) and at Barclays Capital.

     

    Andreas_KubliAndreas Kubli &8211; Group Managing Director &8211; UBS Switzerland AG

      

    Andreas Kubli is Managing Director at UBS Switzerland AG Zurich. Since 2013 he has held the Head of the Multichannel Management & Digitization position at UBS Switzerland. Prior to this, he was leading Strategy and Business Development UBS Switzerland. Before his entry into UBS he was a partner with McKinsey & Company. Andreas Kubli has a masters in Corporate Law from the University of Law in New York as well as licentiatus juris form the University of Zurich. Andreas Kubli is an authorized attorney at law in Zurich as well as in New York.

     


    Christian KönigChristian König &8211; Founder of Fintech News Switzerland

      

    Chris is a Fintech Specialist with 15 years Investment Banking experience. He consults Fintech and Investment companies around the world (Singapore, Vietnam, Switzerland) with his company Finanzpro Ltd and is specialized in Financial Products, Social Media and Content Marketing. He is also the organizer of the Fintech Vietnam Meetup and is regular Fintech Speaker, a Fintech Mentor and a Digital Finance Lecturer. On top of that he runs several Blog projects such as Fintechnews Singapore, Fintechnews.ch and other award winning Finance Blogs. He holds a Master in Banking&Finance from the University in St.Gallen and is Certified Inter. Investment Analyst.


    Daniel GutenbergDaniel Gutenberg &8211; General Partner of VI Partners

      

    Daniel Gutenberg is General Partner of VI Partners, a Swiss venture capital firm. He joined the company in 2003. Subsequent to selling Gutenberg Communication Systems AG to the Telindus Group in the year 2000, Daniel Gutenberg became a very active business angel and investor in numerous startups. His focus is on and he has been taking board assignments for various public and private Companies as well as for YPO Young Presidents’ Organization, a network of young global business leaders. He also acts as the president of the Swiss Technion Society and as a member of the Circle of Investors of BrainsToVentures. Daniel Gutenberg was awarded as business angel of the year in 2011 (SECA).


    Marc P. Bernegger
    Marc P. Bernegger &8211; Serial Web Entrepreneur &
    Fintech Investor

      

    Marc P. Bernegger is a serial web entrepreneur and fintech investor. Aged 20, Marc co-founded the party platform usgang.ch (trade sale to Axel Springer) and he is a founder of amiando (awarded by the World Economic Forum as Global Technology Pioneer in 2010; trade sale to XING). He is Ambassador Switzerland at FinLeap, was partner at the listed investment company Next Generation Finance Invest (today Ayondo Holding) and venture partner at Orange Growth Capital. Marc was awarded as «100 most successful people under 40 in Switzerland» by BILANZ in 2015


    patrick comboeufPatrick Comboeuf &8211; Director of Studies &8211; CAS &;Digital Leadership&;

      

    Patrick Comboeuf is a senior (digital) executive with a strong track record on both the corporate and academic side. He was Director E-Business at SBB orchestrating their digital channels (> CHF 400 Mio of revenue p.a.) from 2006 to 2014. As a leader of a team of 50-odd experts he was the driving force behind a vast array of digital transformation initiatives like SBB Mobile (ticketing/timetable) – with 5,4 million users the most downloaded app in Switzerland, their intra-preneurial startup programme SBB Digital as well as the company’s headline making social media presence to name a few. He’s a regular blogger and keynote speaker at conferences on topics like Mobile Commerce, Digital, Service Business, Customer Experience and how to create a sustainable digital lifeline for dinosaurs in the corporate world.

     

    Urs HäuslerUrs Haeusler &8211; CEO of DealMarket

      

    Urs is CEO of DealMarket &8211; the global Private Equity Platform providing a comprehensive platform for fundraising and deal flow management. Based on his online expertise and global network Urs is valued as senior advisor for entrepreneurs and corporates alike. He also is the owner of Haeusler Management & Ventures, an internet business consulting firm, since 2008. Urs also supports early stage tech start-ups as a Business Angel.

    who is who

    Featured Image: Pixabay

     

    The post Top Digital Fintech Heads for Switzerland on Who is Who in Handelszeitung appeared first on Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH.

    Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH

     
  • user 3:35 am on September 23, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , technology   

    Distributed Ledger Technology For Swiss Financial Market From SIX Securities Services & Digital Asset 

    SIX Securities Services, the post-trade infrastructure operator for the sector, and Digital Asset Holdings, a developer of for the financial industry, announced plans to develop a proof of concept that will demonstrate the commercial viability of distributed ledger technology across the Swiss financial , with an initial prototype for . The two firms will also develop a roadmap for future opportunities spanning the whole market infrastructure value chain.

    SIX Services recognizes the potential of distributed ledger technology and after a competitive evaluation process has selected as the business and technology partner for the design of a solution for the Swiss market. The initial phase of the project will demonstrate the ability to build and incorporate distributed, encrypted, straight through processing tools into existing securities transaction flows, and propose a roadmap for extending this to a production-ready service.

    The proof of concept will extend beyond the scope of the prototype, and Digital Asset will develop a product roadmap for future opportunities to include a wide range of applications that demonstrate how current, segregated processes could be streamlined and made more efficient for SIX Securities Services and post-trade ecosystem as a whole.

    SIX Securities Services has already made significant strides in exploring distributed ledger technologies and currently has a prototype for Corporate Actions processing on display at Sibos, in Geneva 26-29 September, 2016.

    Sibos-Geneva-2016_with-dates

     

    According to Thomas Zeeb, Division CEO SIX Securities Services: «Distributed ledger technology and its potential role in post trading is key to our business. We need to understand it, and more importantly, its applicability and future flexibility in order to keep ahead of the game. Partnering with Digital Asset is a way to accelerate our own development plans and leverage their experience in this area.»

    «Partnering with SIX brings this cutting edge technology another step closer to commercial reality,” said Blythe Masters, CEO of Digital Asset. “We believe this collaboration will provide exciting opportunities for SIX and its customers while reducing inefficiency, cost and risk in the financial services ecosystem.»

    The post Distributed Ledger Technology For Swiss Financial Market From SIX Securities Services &038; Digital Asset appeared first on Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH.

    Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH

     
  • user 12:40 pm on September 22, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , , Sinodata, , technology   

    Bank Tech Provider Sinodata Calls for Blockchain Collaborations 

    is seeking to collaborate with startups.

    Source


    CoinDesk

     
  • user 7:35 am on September 22, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , , technology   

    Blockchain will change the World?! 

    blockchaincoin3

    What can we do with ?

    What does blockchain provide us?

    How to apply blockchain?

    Can we afford not to answer these three fundamental questions?

    Introduction. There is a widely accepted perception that the potential impact of blockchain for society is huge and a game changer for many industries. Almost all major are involved in some kind of research on blockchain. There is something going on. We apply Socratic questioning; a good question is more valuable than a good answer. Three related good questions are proposed that must be answered well before we can do any new and valuable things with blockchain. Because, without good research questions good R&D is not possible.

    What can we do with blockchain? The first question is well answered in more detail by some visionary authors who describe the new things, products and services, and the impact on business and society on many areas. In financial and government services there are the promises of a better production of existing services. In short, “doing the same things in a better way”. There is also a new dimension, “doing totally new things” using disruptive business models. There are plenty of these examples based on social media. Blockchain is closely related to social media, communication and to documents, as will be shown in later blogs. So it is reasonable to expect that blockchain may have an impact in all these areas.

    There are more urgent reasons to apply blockchain. Experts agree that the world financial system of transactions is a geopolitical battlefield for state sponsored cyber crime. Blockchain promises a radically new way to realize resilience to cyber crime and a reduction of costs due to a reduction of complexity. A much more resilient and robust world financial transaction system can be and must be realized.

    What does blockchain provide us? This question is answered today by a number of good articles on the inner construction and working of blockchain, mainly for (s). This is fine and we can trust our fellow engineers and cryptographers to provide us good solid blockchain platforms. However, this is not our prime interest, we are interested in what blockchain provides us as a black box, without knowing its inner construction and working. Some authors state that it is “trust-less authenticity”, or “trust-less consensus”, or use comparable terms. Since this is new and enables those new services, the trust-less authenticity is the new paradigm. So, the term ‘blockchain’ refers here to ‘trust-less authenticity’. The new paradigm is enabled using good software engineering and cryptography but these are not the new paradigm; they provide us the new paradigm trust-less authenticity. What trust-less authenticity is must be understood and described well enough (very well). Then, and only then, we can make any good use of it from an engineering perspective, for example building robust and fault tolerant world financial systems. So far any good specifications have not been found in the literature. To answer this question well, we need a high quality conceptual specification of blockchain’s trust-less authentication. This is a subject for later blogs.

    How to apply blockchain? The third question is about the application of blockchain’s trust-less authenticity – and we must understand this first – as a key component to construct and produce the new services and new financial service providers. No good answers to this engineering question have been found in the literature so far. The answer consists of three major parts and a conclusion.

    The first is that we have existing services (products) that we would like to produce in a better way. We also see that a range of totally new services is possible. We must start by describing the functional qualities of our services ‘well enough’. What is the value of our service to our customers, as seen by our customers? We must ask them because it is highly subjective. We need this functional specification because we must check, validate, that our actual production meets these functional specifications. If our actual production does not match the functional requirements, it will not provide the desired value for the customers, and we are in deep trouble with a dissatisfied customer.

    The second part is that we must specify the construction of the services in an appropriate way. The term ‘appropriate’ is not vague; it means also a truthful, coherent, concise, consistent and comprehensive specification. Without a good specification of the construction of the services we are not able to find out how toproduce the services in new enterprises. As said already, we must check, validate that if we construct our service in this way, it meets the functional requirements for the customer.

    The third part is the observation that services are produced by enterprises. An enterprise must be well designed to produce the services, based on the construction specifications of the service. Example: an automotive production line is very carefully designed and tuned to produce a specific car type. If another type of car must be produced, the production line must be redesigned, adapted, tuned in many places. If the production line must produce radio’s, the whole production line must be redesigned from scratch. These enterprises must be specified also in an appropriate way, otherwise we cannotconstruct these enterprises and let them operate well in production.

    These answers show that if we use the special qualities of a new component in our services, blockchain’s trust-less authenticity with all of its benefits, the construction of our services must be totally redesigned from scratch. We produce the same service, same functional specifications, but in a different way. And, if we produce services in a totally new way, we must redesign and rebuild our enterprises also from scratch. The conclusion is that the application of blockchain typically demands a totally new (re)design, from scratch, of the construction of the services and therefor theconstruction of the financial service enterprises. In other words; if you want to apply blockchain well, it is better to redesign the services and rebuild the whole enterprise from scratch.

    Is this about ? Yes and No. Yes, because it is innovative, based on two new paradigms (one is blockchain – trust-less authenticity) and the benefits will probably most visible in financial services. It’s most valuable benefit for society is likely a robust and fault tolerant world financial system. No, this is not some new potentially disruptive financial service. It is how to apply blockchain well, better than state of the art technologies, using better engineering.

    Can we afford not to answer these three fundamental questions? The three questions are interconnected and are also umbrella questions for many more detailed questions – see below. Without an appropriate answer the next question cannot be answered. So, without three appropriate answers we cannot deliver the new services. To provide appropriate answers to the three questions we need also better engineering methods for enterprises and their supporting IT systems, which is in the domain of the discipline of enterprise engineering, based on another new paradigm.

    Blockchain will the World..?! No, not if we continue the old way of doing things. Looking at the state of the art in IT systems development [much literature] in for example financial services, we observe that these IT systems are too expensive, have been developed over many years using trial and error methods, resist agility, are increasingly difficult to maintain and have a limited functional value (business-IT alignment). If we continue to work in this way, we will realize similar bad results. 

    If, as some visionaries are rightfully saying, we are going to machine to machine financial services in production chains, then we need really much better engineering.

    Future blogs. The following future blogs discuss the answers to the three fundamental questions, based on good engineering. Subjects include:

    • How to build more robust and fault tolerant financial enterprises and their information systems? “Keeping the cyber criminal out”, enhanced by “Once the cyber criminal is inside, make sure he cannot do much harm”.
    • What is trust-less authenticity (precisely)? What does it guarantee? How and when is it created? By whom? How should blockchain be embedded in business procedures?
    • What is business procedural risk or systemic risk. What are the causes? How to identify, mitigate or eliminate procedural risk, at design time or in production?
    • What is total factual knowledge of the enterprise operation – containing digital fingerprinting, total audit knowledge, communication and commitments made, documents produced?
    • What do the new blockchain platforms provide us, and what not?
    • How to specify new blockchain based services in an appropriate way? For whom? Customer’s identity?
    • How to engineer enterprises, addressing governance, risk, compliance (GRC), efficiency and effectiveness issues?
    • How to construct IT systems that support the operation of enterprises and support the new blockchain platforms?
    • What is communication between human actors and how does it relate to commitments, intentions, contracts, obligations, rights, permissions, authorizations and delegation? What are social media and chatbots doing?
    • What are ‘documents’; what do they contain, represent, do, how are they designed and produced?
    • How does enterprise engineering support the application of blockchain’s trust-less authenticity?
    • What is the enterprise operating system? How does it work? What does it do? How is blockchain supported?

    The new discipline of enterprise engineering is based on the (quite) new paradigm of communication and commitments between human actors in social systems, enterprises. It is ‘solid’ engineering, just like electronics, aviation, mechanical engineering, no place for BS or hype. Enterprise Engineering must provide good answers to these questions.


    [linkedinbadge URL=”https://www.linkedin.com/in/steven-j-h-van-kervel-0615671″ connections=”off” mode=”icon” liname=”Steven J.H. van Kervel”]

    The author, Steven J.H. van Kervel, Ph.D. computer science, is with Formetis Consultants BV in The Netherlands. Formetis develops methodologies, tools and software systems for the engineering of enterprises with supporting IT systems, applying blockchain .

    Formetis participates in the CIAO! community of scientists and engineers on the field of enterprise engineering.

    Formetis seeks partnerships to bring this technology to the real world.

    Contact: [email protected]

     
  • user 9:42 pm on September 21, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , technology   

    RGAx-AURA Blockchain Hackathon 

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    Myself and a few of my colleagues recently traveled to St. Louis to support the first RGAx-AURA . From September 8-10 we were hosted by the Reinsurance Group of America (RGA), one of the world’s largest life reinsurance companies, and provided mentorship to teams discovering how blockchain could impact the future of insurance. It was a very rewarding experience and hopefully one of many blockchain hackathons I will be privileged to support in the near future.

    On a personal note, I saw first hand the challenges facing developers of blockchain applications. Weather they were using Hyperledger on Bluemix, Ethereum, or a bespoke solution, teams first had to be comfortable with what makes blockchain so valuable. Not everyone recognized the best uses of the and I even found myself steering a team away from an idea that was best suited for ‘centralized’ solutions. Blockchain is a new technology and there is a long runway before this plane takes off, particularly in financial use cases like insurance. I digress.

    Reinsurance contracts can be very transaction intensive. Administering a single contract can last several years and present multiple challenges due to slow, missing or incomplete documentation exchange among parties. Detailed financial transactions, letters of credit creation, renewal requirements, collateralization needs and collateral drawdown can add increased layers of complexity. Using blockchain allows an insurer and its reinsurers to share a common, permissioned ledger that streamlines the process through consensus. Smart contracts establish reinsurance terms and conditions, and authorized transactions provide triggers and conditions for coverage and payments, as well as collateral creation and drawdown. The result—fewer disputes, easier reinsurance audits and lower volatility.

    To apply the potential of blockchain to insurance, 60 developers, designers, and entrepreneurs from RGA, RGAx, Aura and Global IT, as well as select student groups and partner companies (like Daugherty Business Solutions), the event was a resounding success. The cafeteria and adjoining conference room were quickly transformed into a hacker-space. was there to provide mentorship and support, and I was able to give a talk on what we are doing and seeing in this space.

    On Saturday afternoon the 12 surviving projects submitted and demoed in front of a panel of judges, and a crowd of talented individuals, eager to see what kind of projects emerged from just over 36 hours of hacking!

    The Grand Prize winner ($15,000 and the chance to pitch to RGAx Execs) was the AURAAMERENteam BeXchange, a x2x mobile insurance exchange platform connecting consumers who are in need of coverage with a distributed network of potential investors.

    The runner up team was Daugherty team Facultative Underwriting Solutions (aka fReMarket), who created a moderated marketplace for facultative underwriting. They will receive $2,500 from Daugherty Business Solutions.

    Honorable Mentions:

    Find My Funds Daugherty team: Suzanne Zimmerman, Mark Schilling, Andrew Maxwell and Ted Berger.

    Simply Carrots AURA team: Caroline Specter, Brian Compton, Praveen Kota and Shawn Crain.

    New Kids On The Blockchain RGA team: Jonathan Bolhofner, Christina Gerst, Charles McKiel III, Curtis Keller, Bobby Buddha.

    Best use of IBM BlueMix:

    Healthchain Daugherty – RGA team: Lucia Del Pino, Joseph Ondrus, Venus Patel, Alex Gillete. The solution concept of Healthchain revolves around collecting data from wearable devices and storing on a block. Multiple blocks can then be added to the blockchain. The person can then give access to that information to Doctors, Insurance companies, Gym & Fitness companies, Health Monitoring Emergency companies, etc. as needed. This will enable Usage based Insurance, discounts on Insurance premiums, Gym memberships, and even emergency health monitoring services for seniors. This team won an opportunity to meet and have lunch with the IBM Blockchain team in St. Louis. You can find the code for this solution at: https://github.com/SgtRock91/marbles-chaincode.git

    Overall, it was a fantastic event to be a part of and I look forward to seeing what comes out of IBM’s next Blockchain hackathon in NYC October 7-8. Further, I will be supporting the Moovel Blockchain hackathon in Austin on September 23, 2016. Hope to see a great turnout at both!


     [linkedinbadge URL=”https://www.linkedin.com/in/sbrakev” connections=”off” mode=”icon” liname=”Sloane Brakeville”] is Blockchain Specialist at IBM
     
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