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Fintech Transformation

Fintech Transformation

This is an introduction to Fintech Transformation. This is based on an article written jointly by Ambrish Sundaram and Monty Pandey.  

What is Fintech?

Fintech (‘Financial Technology’) refers to the use of finance, technology and innovation to disrupt traditional financial services to make them more accessible, convenient, efficient, fast and cheap. Fintech is being used by startups, finance companies and technology companies to help customers better manage their lives. Fintech allows any company to provide embedded financial services to their customers by offering integrated payments, lending and insurance. Fintech 4.0 can be considered a new technology stack (4th platform) that’s built on top of other tech stack layers like internet (connectivity), cloud (intelligence) and mobility (ubiquity).

Fintech applications include digital payments, lending solutions, personal finance, investments, advisory services and more. They could also be embedded as financial functions in non-financial applications.

 Fintech is enabled by technologies like mobile, analytics, cloud, automation, artificial intelligence, big data, predictive behavioral analytics, robotic process automation (RPA), blockchain and cryptocurrencies. 

 In 2018, Fintech startups raised $40 Billion, represented 14% of the venture business, and were responsible for 1700 deals. Fintech innovation hubs have been established in London, Amsterdam, Stockholm, Lithuania, Sydney, Hong Kong and Singapore. 

 How has FinTech revolutionized the world today?

Whether making payments at your local store using your mobile device, transferring funds to friends to split a restaurant bill, trading stocks using an app, or managing your automobile insurance, FinTech has disrupted all aspects of financial services.

There is a significant transformation in the way people think about money, spurred by the real-time exchange of money. Businesses are moving to cashless services where customers make payments through digital mechanisms.

 The growth of FinTech companies is particularly prominent in growing economies in Asia and Africa, where the younger customers have quickly embraced the concepts of digital payments. The growth of FinTech in North America is relatively slower but picking up speed.

 This does not imply that brick and mortar businesses will completely go away. Amazon has rolled out a cashless convenience store where customers can walk in, grab what they need and leave the store, and get charged automatically to their Amazon account.

Fintech Use Cases

Mobile and Cash Payments: Apps like ApplePay (from Apple), Alipay (from Alibaba) and Venmo allow consumers to exchange money and make payments online or on mobile devices. PayPal is an established player in this space. Backed by traditional heavyweights like Bank of America, BB&T, Capital One, JPMorgan Chase, PNC Bank, U.S. Bank and Wells Fargo, Zelle, the person-to-person (P2P) app, is the banking industry’s response to disruptors in the fast growing FinTech industry.

 Embedded Financial Services: Apple (ApplePay), Google (GooglePay), Alibaba (AliPay) and Uber have all launched money services. WeChat enables customers to order a taxi through instant message, rather than opening a separate app. For in-store purchases, customers can simply scan a QR code and pay, instead of the traditional checkout process.

Crowdfunding Solutions: These platforms allow customers to send or receive money from others on the platform, including pool funding from a variety of sources like family, friends, strangers and businesses. This enables a loan-seeker to go straight to investors for support of a project or a company instead of applying for a loan at a brick and mortar bank.

Budgeting Apps: Mint (from Intuit) and other such apps allow consumers to monitor their expenses, payments, income and personal budgets on their mobile device. They allow users to synchronize bank accounts, credit cards and other online payments to help track their expenses and get insights regarding spending and saving.

Robo-Advising and Stock Trading: Robo-advising is an asset management and portfolio management service where the user is provided recommendations based on algorithms. Betterment, Ellevest, Charles Schwab and Vanguard offer these services to their customers. Customers can trade stocks on their mobile devices instead of going through traditional stockbrokers.

Insurance Management: Companies allow customers to manage their automobile, home, health (Oscar Health) and life insurance.

 Cryptocurrency: Cryptocurrency exchanges like Coinbase and Gemini connect users to buying or selling cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin and Litecoin. 

 Blockchain: Services like BlockVerify help reduce fraud by keeping source data on blockchain.

What are the factors fueling the growth of the FinTech industry?

The growth and investments in the FinTech industry are spurred by many different factors: 

Consumer Behavior: Younger customers (Gen X and Millennials) are looking for faster and more efficient ways of conducting their financial transactions. Fintech companies are cognizant of changing customer expectations and serve their customers efficiently. 

Technological advancement: Legacy technology platforms that are the backbone of traditional banking and financial services players have become a roadblock to progress as they have not been able to keep up with changes in customer behaviors. FinTech companies have leveraged newer and fast emerging technologies such as Internet of Things (IoT), Artificial Intelligence (AI), Analytics, Blockchain and Cloud Computing to provide their services much faster and more efficiently. FinTech companies quickly recognize trends and make appropriate adjustments to their products and processes.

 Lower barriers to entry: The emergence of these newer technologies and the slower response from traditional banks and financial services players, have lowered the barriers to entry and opened avenues for FinTech companies to quickly enter the market and target customers with different expectations.

Where do we go next?

As FinTech companies gain momentum, there are significant factors that they will need to address to remain profitable and sustainable

Technology Giants: While traditional financial institutions continue to struggle with digital transformation and are unable to compete or collaborate with the Fintech players, there is an emerging trend of technology giants like Google, Amazon and Facebook starting to offer financial services products. These larger technology companies may acquire the smaller FinTech companies, as the smaller players offer products and services that can be complemented with those offered by the larger companies. Fintech companies are exposed to acquisition threats and must find ways of collaborating with other Fintech and financial services players to quickly expand the products and services they offer, in order to remain relevant in their markets.

Regulatory Changes: Fintech industry depends on collecting and analyzing vast amounts of data. This increases the risk of information being hacked, stolen, or used without authorization. Customers are looking for greater protection and privacy of their data. Fintech companies are constrained by regulatory compliance concerns with regulations like EU GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation), EU PSD2 (Payment Services Directive) and Bank Secrecy Act and GLBA 1999 Gramm-Leach-Baily Act (liability for customer financial data). Regulators push for tougher enforcement around data protection and privacy raises the compliance costs for FinTech companies.

Customer Retention: Customers have multiple options for similar products and services and switching costs are low. While customer attraction is key for startups, customer retention will require a bigger effort with the passage of time. Fintech companies have to identify customer retention strategies such as offering newer and complementary products and services and expanding partner ecosystem.

Bundling: Fintech companies tend to unbundle traditional financial services into individual streamlined offerings. Younger customers are ok with this, but older humans prefer the ease and convenience of a consolidated solution for products and services. Fintech companies will need to rollout new products, services and capabilities, and expand their offerings by integrating with non-finance partners. Payments, wallets and banking-like services are becoming an integral part of internet-led companies spanning across the health, retail, transport, media, property, and energy industries. By positioning products and solutions closer to the customer, Fintech companies will have great insight into consumer behavior, which can then be used to deliver a more personalized and seamless experience. The pressure to expand its portfolio of products and services efficiently will continue to be a challenge for every Fintech company.

Human Interaction: FinTech companies will have to find opportunities for human interaction in addition to technological innovations. As an example, Fintech companies may need to supplement their robo-advising and digital stock trading with expert human advice for stock portfolio management for more complex needs.

Mergers and Acquisitions: For the larger incumbents, technology and intellectual property will create a hot-bed for Fintech M&A. FinTech companies may look to expand their customer base by acquiring other FinTech companies or traditional financial service companies, including banks, that provide complementary products and services, play in different markets, or cater to a different customer demographic. Fintech companies that buy a bank may have to deal with legacy platforms, integration challenges and additional regulations. 

Summary

FinTech has caused a major disruption in the banking and financial services industry with the agility of newer technology platforms and processes to meet growing customer expectations. Fintech has a promising future, but faces uncertainties and challenges related to entrants of technology giants, changing regulatory requirements, bundling of products and services, and pressure to acquire and retain customers; they will need to constantly innovate to be sustainable and profitable in the future.

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