S 1 - Overview of The Fintech Industry
S 1 - Overview of The Fintech Industry
industry
B B Chakrabarti
Professor of Finance
Technological Disruption in Banking
• Fact:
• Major retail banks still dominate the financial services
landscape providing deposit, payment and credit
facilities.
• Reality:
• Traditional banks are not the only players in banking.
• A shopper may pay with a bank debit card but can also
choose Paytm or Paypal.
• A customer can borrow on peer-to-peer (P2P) platforms.
• The key to the disruption is – access, convenience and
lower cost facilitated by technology.
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What is FinTech?
• FinTech (a contraction of “finance” and “technology”),
is defined as the use of technology and innovative
business models in financial services.
• FinTech is an organization that combines innovative
business models and technology to enable, enhance
and disrupt financial services – EY 2019.
• Today, fintech companies directly compete with banks
in many areas of the financial sector to sell financial
services and solutions to customers. Mostly due to
regulatory reasons and their internal structures, banks
still struggle to keep up with Fintech startups in terms
of innovation speed.
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What is FinTech?
• Fintechs have realized early that financial services of
all kinds – including money transfer, lending,
investing, payments – need to seamlessly integrate in
the lives of the tech-savvy customers of today to stay
relevant in a world where business and private life
become increasingly digitalized.
• Especially millennials (people born between approx.
the early 80s and late 90s) and the following
generations prefer quick and easy banking services
over walking to a branch, appointments with bank
consultants and lengthy processes for setting up
accounts or other banking services.
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Fintech or Techfin
• Fintech is where the original financial system is
improved upon by the use of technology. A very
common & simple example of this is the online
banking services that most of the traditional
banks offer through this platform.
• TechFin on the other hand — coined by Chinese
Tech giant Alibaba’s founder Jack Ma in 2016 — is
where Tech companies provide financial services
with a more customer & technology centric
approach. Examples of techfin companies include
Google, Amazon, Facebook, Apple and Alibaba.
Consumer Fintech Adoption Index – EY 2019
Wealth Management – Disruption by Fintech
• Information need for existing and new clients - Fintech can provide
real-time data, news and analytics, market intelligence, product and
service development, client communications and performance
monitoring.
• Client onboarding - Currently tedious and frustrating experience for
clients due to risk-related questions and repeated conversations for
setting up an account. Fintech can solve these issues by using customer
and behavioral data and gamification techniques to automatically
identify risk profile, loss acceptance levels etc.
• Investment advice and distribution - Smart algorithms can be used to
support life-stage planning, automated transaction advice, investment
strategies, tax planning, estate planning etc.
• Investment management – Fintech can speed up decision-making,
rebalancing and monitoring processes, asset selection, settlement etc.
• Account administration – Fintech can automate account maintenance,
self service, 24/7 support and multi-channel interactions.
Evolution – E-Finance to Fintech
• Internet revolution in the early 1990s lowered financial
transaction costs.
• This led to the development of e-finance, which includes online
banking, online brokerage services, mobile payments, mobile
banking etc.
• Banking being information intensive and time-sensitive in
nature, benefitted with lower transaction costs, shorter
turnaround time, real time managerial information and
smoother intra-bank communication.
• The growth of Smartphone user base in mid-2000s facilitated
growth of mobile finance – mobile payments and mobile
banking.
• Fintech innovation emerged after 2008 financial crisis by
combining e-finance, internet technology, social networking
services, social media, artificial intelligence and big data
analytics.
Evolution of Fintech in India
FinTech – Major Impact Factors
1. Artificial Intelligence, Machine Learning and Automation
• In finance, AI is helping detect and fight fraud before it can be
detected by humans. Stacks of new compliance regulations
are being fed into AI systems like IBM Watson to help
businesses stay on top of the ever-changing rules.
• Chatbots built with AI are able to help agents satisfy customer
questions with accuracy and speed, or even satisfy customers
with no human manpower at all.
• In wealth management, AI is helping with stress testing a
market scenario and removing biases from investment
decisions.
• Automation and AI are emerging in a way that machines will
do up to 10 to 25 percent of bank work.
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FinTech – Major Impact Factors
2. APIs
• The benefits of creating applications using APIs as building
blocks are being recognized as the best way to meet the
business and economic challenges facing the financial
industry.
• FinTech startups have dominated the landscape by creating
mobile apps that have challenged, and in some cases,
surpassed the established banking industry.
• By using APIs, these small but dynamic businesses are able to
innovate with agility and speed that larger established banks
and FIs are unable to duplicate.
• To keep pace, banks are now investing heavily to improve
their ability to create innovative mobile apps.
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FinTech – Major Impact Factors
3. Fintech Revolution Leader: Blockchain
• Blockchains or distributed ledger technology, is promising to
bring trust and transparency to a world filled with uncertainty
and the threat of fraud. Large financial players are
collaborating in consortiums to rebuild infrastructure based
on this new technology to replace legacy and incompatible
systems.
• From trade finance platforms, to cross border payments and
digital identification, eliminating inefficiencies created by lack
of trust and transparency is a major selling point of
implementing blockchain technology.
4. Data, Data, Data
• Everyone knows that big data is big news throughout all
industries. However, major changes are happening with the
financial industry when itbbc@iimcal.ac.in
comes to data collection. One of the12
biggest changes is the evolution of lending data.
FinTech – Major Impact Factors
5. Human Digital Interfaces
• Mobile technology becoming more integrated into our daily lives. We’re
already using our voice to make commands rather than touching our
screen or typing. Passwords are being replaced by biometric finger,
retinal, or face scans as security checks.
• Technology is gauging our emotional state based on our interactions
with our devices. Gestures can be used to trigger an action.
6. Increased Fintech Regulation
• Finance is one of the heaviest regulated industries and as financial
institutions begin to use new technology, data is gathered in droves and
self-service becomes the norm, it is only natural for regulations to
increase. Regulations are required to keep money and vital personal
data safe.
• Regulations are not a negative thing. A stronger and secure finance
industry only builds confidence between the consumer and the
institution. And if we want the FinTech revolution to continue we need
trust between consumers and institutions to continue to grow.
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Fintech Ecosystem
Top 5 Global Fintech Companies
• (Forbes Advisor, January 2024)
Name Sector Est. Valuation