We are pleased to share our thoughts for Fintech in 2018 trying to cover AI to Insurance to ICOs. We hope you find them useful and feel free to share you're thoughts with us as well.
A look inside the top 4 trends driving the FinTech industry today. How technology is impacting financial services and how they can benefit from advanced data analysis. Presented by Peter Huang, Director of Data at Beyondsoft.
What does FinTech really mean for 2017?
We've outlined 6 of the hottest trends to look out for in the coming year,
The Top 6 FINTECH TRENDS for 2017 by Safaraz Ali
A look inside the top 4 trends driving the FinTech industry today. How technology is impacting financial services and how they can benefit from advanced data analysis. Presented by Peter Huang, Director of Data at Beyondsoft.
What does FinTech really mean for 2017?
We've outlined 6 of the hottest trends to look out for in the coming year,
The Top 6 FINTECH TRENDS for 2017 by Safaraz Ali
Summary of findings
2018 VC-backed fintech deals and funding set an annual record: In 2018, - VC-backed fintech companies raised $39.57B across 1,707 deals globally. Deals were up 15% year-over-year while funding surged 120% on the back of 52 mega-rounds ($100M+) worth $24.88B combined.
Fintech is happening on global scale with deals outside of core markets (US, UK, and China) accounting for 39% of deals: Fintech deal hubs are starting to emerge globally. The count of unique fintech startups raising funding topped an annual high of 1,463 companies, and the unique number of investors reached 2,745 boosted by an influx of corporate investors.
Early-stage deals, as a percentage, fell to a 5-year low as investors concentrated bets in perceived winners: Global seed and Series A fintech deals grew 5% on an annual basis in 2018, but fell as a percentage of total deals to 57%. US early-stage deals were flat YOY as investors concentrated their bets in established fintech unicorns.
There are 39 VC-backed fintech unicorns worth a combined $147.37B: Q4'18 saw five new unicorns births (Plaid, Brex, Monzo, DevotedHealth, and Toss) and two in the first month of Q1’19 (N26 and Confluent). The cohort’s total valuation in 2018 was boosted by a record year for megarounds to existing unicorns, including Gusto and Robinhood, among others.
We are excited to share with you our thoughts on financial technology ecosystem in 2017 and 2018. Please feel free to reach out to us if you would like a more detailed report.
Mercer Capital's Value Focus: FinTech Industry | Second Half 2016Mercer Capital
Mercer Capital’s newsletter, FinTech Watch, provides an overview of the FinTech industry, including public market performance, valuation multiples for public FinTech companies, and articles of interest from around the web. This newsletter focuses on FinTech segments, including payment processors, technology, and solutions companies, examining general economic and industry trends as well as a summary of M&A and venture capital activity.
FinTech outlook for 2017 report discussing trends, opportunities and challengesMEDICI admin
The report is intended for readers who want to better understand the dramatic changes that have begun to take place—and that are accelerating—in the global FinTech landscape. The payments industry, which is one of the focus areas of this report, has never been more exciting.
The report starts with the current state of FinTech and then provides an analysis of major emerging technologies and market forces that are shaping the FinTech market for 2017. It discusses the major opportunities and challenges faced by incumbents as well as FinTech startups. The report also provides a brief on the geographic split of payments volume, revenue and how they are expected to shift gradually by 2024.
From account opening to insurance underwriting to payments to peer-to-peer lending, FinTechs are innovating across areas and offering differentiated customer experience. India Fintech Ecosystem has been growing well over the last five years and many of these successful startups are now getting ready for international rollouts.
www.thedigitalfifth.com
This presentation talks about the basic meaning of fintech and its importance. We also talk about the different verticals in the fintech and the investment trends in fintech world.
Industry of Financial Technologies
This report on the Study of the Financial Technologies was submitted on May 3,
2016 as part of the Requirements in TM 206 Technology Marketing and
Commercialization
This Industry Study was conducted by
Alexis Dogwe
Camille Eusebio
Maurice Gonzales
Leslee May Tandoc
Al Marie Tating
under the supervision of Prof. Edison D. Cruz
Masters in Technology Management
Technology Management Center
University of the Philippines, Diliman,
Quezon City
MDEC Fintech Conference - Keynote: Overview of Fintech in 2016iTrain
Managing Partner of Life.SREDA shares key numbers and trends of the Fintech scene for the first half of 2016.
Watch the keynote on youtube here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u31ILlyAfuM
Slava Solodkiy is one of TOP 35 most influence fintech-persons in the world and TOP 100 fintech leaders in Asia.
Interested to get a fintech idea started but don't know how to start? Then join the FREE MDEC Fintech Masterclass on October 3-4. To enter just tell us about your Fintech idea!
Apply here: bit.ly/fintech-master
More information about the complete Fintech Bootcamp: www.itrain.com.my/fintech-bootcamp/
A primer on the Fintech market in India, with infographics on the market landscape, size and evolution paths. Includes estimates on penetration levels of digital banking and category specific growth expectations.
Diving deep into literally millions of interactions and conversations with different networks such as Facebook, Twitter and Instagram, blogs, forums and news sites in order to bring you analytical info about how social media affects different sectors like:Sharing Economy, Banking and Finance, Ecommerce, Telecom and Fintech.
(Almost) everything you need to know to start in FintechSophie Guibaud
This workshop will provide readers with a global overview of the Fintech world, market dynamics and how London has managed to become a leading Fintech hub. They will learn about the various business models that fall under the Fintech umbrella (Payments, Money transfer, Crowdfunding, Lending, Data & Analytics) and also discuss new banking models that are trying to inspire and shape the bank of the future.
This is a presentation of the Sector Study of Financial Technology focusing on Digital Payments by Alexis Dogwe, Camille Eusebio, Maurice Gonzales, Leslee May Tandoc and Al Marie Tating as part of the requirements in the subject: Marketing and Commercialization of High Technology Products.
University of the Philippines, Technology Management Center
A report about Fintech Indonesia and all Fintech Statups in Indonesia powered by www.Fintechnews.sg/Indonesia. Also Check Out the Facebook Page: https://www.facebook.com/Fintech-Indonesia-177477972669098/
Finch Capital predictions 2018 - SummaryRadboud Vlaar
Summary of Finch Capital 2018 edition of Financial Technology predictions, which looks back at our predictions made for 2017 ( 5 out of the 7 materialised), as well as looks forward at 2018! 2018 promises to be another great year for Financial Technology. For the detailed report you can email info@finchcapital.com. Happy holidays
Summary of the 2017 Financial Technology predictions, as published in 2016 with a focus on key investment themes as well as geographic trends. For more information or the full report email info@finchcapital.com
Summary of findings
2018 VC-backed fintech deals and funding set an annual record: In 2018, - VC-backed fintech companies raised $39.57B across 1,707 deals globally. Deals were up 15% year-over-year while funding surged 120% on the back of 52 mega-rounds ($100M+) worth $24.88B combined.
Fintech is happening on global scale with deals outside of core markets (US, UK, and China) accounting for 39% of deals: Fintech deal hubs are starting to emerge globally. The count of unique fintech startups raising funding topped an annual high of 1,463 companies, and the unique number of investors reached 2,745 boosted by an influx of corporate investors.
Early-stage deals, as a percentage, fell to a 5-year low as investors concentrated bets in perceived winners: Global seed and Series A fintech deals grew 5% on an annual basis in 2018, but fell as a percentage of total deals to 57%. US early-stage deals were flat YOY as investors concentrated their bets in established fintech unicorns.
There are 39 VC-backed fintech unicorns worth a combined $147.37B: Q4'18 saw five new unicorns births (Plaid, Brex, Monzo, DevotedHealth, and Toss) and two in the first month of Q1’19 (N26 and Confluent). The cohort’s total valuation in 2018 was boosted by a record year for megarounds to existing unicorns, including Gusto and Robinhood, among others.
We are excited to share with you our thoughts on financial technology ecosystem in 2017 and 2018. Please feel free to reach out to us if you would like a more detailed report.
Mercer Capital's Value Focus: FinTech Industry | Second Half 2016Mercer Capital
Mercer Capital’s newsletter, FinTech Watch, provides an overview of the FinTech industry, including public market performance, valuation multiples for public FinTech companies, and articles of interest from around the web. This newsletter focuses on FinTech segments, including payment processors, technology, and solutions companies, examining general economic and industry trends as well as a summary of M&A and venture capital activity.
FinTech outlook for 2017 report discussing trends, opportunities and challengesMEDICI admin
The report is intended for readers who want to better understand the dramatic changes that have begun to take place—and that are accelerating—in the global FinTech landscape. The payments industry, which is one of the focus areas of this report, has never been more exciting.
The report starts with the current state of FinTech and then provides an analysis of major emerging technologies and market forces that are shaping the FinTech market for 2017. It discusses the major opportunities and challenges faced by incumbents as well as FinTech startups. The report also provides a brief on the geographic split of payments volume, revenue and how they are expected to shift gradually by 2024.
From account opening to insurance underwriting to payments to peer-to-peer lending, FinTechs are innovating across areas and offering differentiated customer experience. India Fintech Ecosystem has been growing well over the last five years and many of these successful startups are now getting ready for international rollouts.
www.thedigitalfifth.com
This presentation talks about the basic meaning of fintech and its importance. We also talk about the different verticals in the fintech and the investment trends in fintech world.
Industry of Financial Technologies
This report on the Study of the Financial Technologies was submitted on May 3,
2016 as part of the Requirements in TM 206 Technology Marketing and
Commercialization
This Industry Study was conducted by
Alexis Dogwe
Camille Eusebio
Maurice Gonzales
Leslee May Tandoc
Al Marie Tating
under the supervision of Prof. Edison D. Cruz
Masters in Technology Management
Technology Management Center
University of the Philippines, Diliman,
Quezon City
MDEC Fintech Conference - Keynote: Overview of Fintech in 2016iTrain
Managing Partner of Life.SREDA shares key numbers and trends of the Fintech scene for the first half of 2016.
Watch the keynote on youtube here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u31ILlyAfuM
Slava Solodkiy is one of TOP 35 most influence fintech-persons in the world and TOP 100 fintech leaders in Asia.
Interested to get a fintech idea started but don't know how to start? Then join the FREE MDEC Fintech Masterclass on October 3-4. To enter just tell us about your Fintech idea!
Apply here: bit.ly/fintech-master
More information about the complete Fintech Bootcamp: www.itrain.com.my/fintech-bootcamp/
A primer on the Fintech market in India, with infographics on the market landscape, size and evolution paths. Includes estimates on penetration levels of digital banking and category specific growth expectations.
Diving deep into literally millions of interactions and conversations with different networks such as Facebook, Twitter and Instagram, blogs, forums and news sites in order to bring you analytical info about how social media affects different sectors like:Sharing Economy, Banking and Finance, Ecommerce, Telecom and Fintech.
(Almost) everything you need to know to start in FintechSophie Guibaud
This workshop will provide readers with a global overview of the Fintech world, market dynamics and how London has managed to become a leading Fintech hub. They will learn about the various business models that fall under the Fintech umbrella (Payments, Money transfer, Crowdfunding, Lending, Data & Analytics) and also discuss new banking models that are trying to inspire and shape the bank of the future.
This is a presentation of the Sector Study of Financial Technology focusing on Digital Payments by Alexis Dogwe, Camille Eusebio, Maurice Gonzales, Leslee May Tandoc and Al Marie Tating as part of the requirements in the subject: Marketing and Commercialization of High Technology Products.
University of the Philippines, Technology Management Center
A report about Fintech Indonesia and all Fintech Statups in Indonesia powered by www.Fintechnews.sg/Indonesia. Also Check Out the Facebook Page: https://www.facebook.com/Fintech-Indonesia-177477972669098/
Finch Capital predictions 2018 - SummaryRadboud Vlaar
Summary of Finch Capital 2018 edition of Financial Technology predictions, which looks back at our predictions made for 2017 ( 5 out of the 7 materialised), as well as looks forward at 2018! 2018 promises to be another great year for Financial Technology. For the detailed report you can email info@finchcapital.com. Happy holidays
Summary of the 2017 Financial Technology predictions, as published in 2016 with a focus on key investment themes as well as geographic trends. For more information or the full report email info@finchcapital.com
This report summarizes how Innovative technologies are disrupting the financial industry and how organizations can leverage them to their advantage.
It is a must read for senior executives in banks and other financial service providers (FSPs).
Perspective on Innovation in Asset ManagementThierry Zois
These slides will give you a good overview on the current asset management market in Europe, South East Asia and US.
Finch believes that it is currently in the right position to be disrupted - come figure out why.
As Intellect transitions from a products to a platforms company, we take a giant leap into the future of FinTech with composable, contextual and cloud-native products. Deep dive into our NextGen solutions that solve the problems of the banking sector with ease, while accelerating their digital transformations.
MDEC Fintech Conference - A Look into Bank's Fintech Initiatives (RHB)iTrain
Check out the video of this presentation and the rest at www.itrain.com.my/fintech-bootcamp
Interested to get a fintech idea started but don't know how to start? Then join the FREE MDEC Fintech Masterclass on October 3-4. To enter just tell us about your Fintech idea!
Apply here: bit.ly/fintech-master
More information about the complete Fintech Bootcamp: www.itrain.com.my/fintech-bootcamp/
Financial Technology: Insights into an Exploding IndustryCory Brooks
Financial Technology will dramatically change your life; it may have already. This powerpoint gives the market overview FinTech as well as sector overviews concerning digital payments, online lending, and InsurTech.
How to get banking and fintech work together, including new technology and finance instruments. The presentation introduces open API ecosystem for finance, and solutions to create new instruments, ways to handle customer interface and raise capital.
Digital Disruption in Asset and Wealth ManagementCapgemini
The groundswell that is today impacting massively retail banking is now impacting all banking businesses. Opportunities offered by new digital technology such as Big data & analytics have not been fully explored yet by Asset & Wealth Management actors, and new technologies are mainly confined to improve shared platforms and reporting flexibility. But the turn might come soon now with the aggressive launches of Fintechs investing all parts of the banking business, including its most exclusive territories.
Asset and Wealth Management might be the next targets, facing the up-rise of new Robo-Advisors quickly gaining market
share on their devoted playground until now.
Traditional Asset and Wealth Managers should anticipate and react, building on their knowledge and assets in order to contain this new trend but this will require that they adapt and probably more globally rethink their business model, to avoid the commoditization of their activity.
The aim of this document is to present how Asset and Wealth Managers can take advantage of the digital revolution / emergence of Fintechs to become more competitive and attract more clients.
Neuro-symbolic is not enough, we need neuro-*semantic*Frank van Harmelen
Neuro-symbolic (NeSy) AI is on the rise. However, simply machine learning on just any symbolic structure is not sufficient to really harvest the gains of NeSy. These will only be gained when the symbolic structures have an actual semantics. I give an operational definition of semantics as “predictable inference”.
All of this illustrated with link prediction over knowledge graphs, but the argument is general.
Smart TV Buyer Insights Survey 2024 by 91mobiles.pdf91mobiles
91mobiles recently conducted a Smart TV Buyer Insights Survey in which we asked over 3,000 respondents about the TV they own, aspects they look at on a new TV, and their TV buying preferences.
Generating a custom Ruby SDK for your web service or Rails API using Smithyg2nightmarescribd
Have you ever wanted a Ruby client API to communicate with your web service? Smithy is a protocol-agnostic language for defining services and SDKs. Smithy Ruby is an implementation of Smithy that generates a Ruby SDK using a Smithy model. In this talk, we will explore Smithy and Smithy Ruby to learn how to generate custom feature-rich SDKs that can communicate with any web service, such as a Rails JSON API.
DevOps and Testing slides at DASA ConnectKari Kakkonen
My and Rik Marselis slides at 30.5.2024 DASA Connect conference. We discuss about what is testing, then what is agile testing and finally what is Testing in DevOps. Finally we had lovely workshop with the participants trying to find out different ways to think about quality and testing in different parts of the DevOps infinity loop.
The Art of the Pitch: WordPress Relationships and SalesLaura Byrne
Clients don’t know what they don’t know. What web solutions are right for them? How does WordPress come into the picture? How do you make sure you understand scope and timeline? What do you do if sometime changes?
All these questions and more will be explored as we talk about matching clients’ needs with what your agency offers without pulling teeth or pulling your hair out. Practical tips, and strategies for successful relationship building that leads to closing the deal.
Elevating Tactical DDD Patterns Through Object CalisthenicsDorra BARTAGUIZ
After immersing yourself in the blue book and its red counterpart, attending DDD-focused conferences, and applying tactical patterns, you're left with a crucial question: How do I ensure my design is effective? Tactical patterns within Domain-Driven Design (DDD) serve as guiding principles for creating clear and manageable domain models. However, achieving success with these patterns requires additional guidance. Interestingly, we've observed that a set of constraints initially designed for training purposes remarkably aligns with effective pattern implementation, offering a more ‘mechanical’ approach. Let's explore together how Object Calisthenics can elevate the design of your tactical DDD patterns, offering concrete help for those venturing into DDD for the first time!
Epistemic Interaction - tuning interfaces to provide information for AI supportAlan Dix
Paper presented at SYNERGY workshop at AVI 2024, Genoa, Italy. 3rd June 2024
https://alandix.com/academic/papers/synergy2024-epistemic/
As machine learning integrates deeper into human-computer interactions, the concept of epistemic interaction emerges, aiming to refine these interactions to enhance system adaptability. This approach encourages minor, intentional adjustments in user behaviour to enrich the data available for system learning. This paper introduces epistemic interaction within the context of human-system communication, illustrating how deliberate interaction design can improve system understanding and adaptation. Through concrete examples, we demonstrate the potential of epistemic interaction to significantly advance human-computer interaction by leveraging intuitive human communication strategies to inform system design and functionality, offering a novel pathway for enriching user-system engagements.
Connector Corner: Automate dynamic content and events by pushing a buttonDianaGray10
Here is something new! In our next Connector Corner webinar, we will demonstrate how you can use a single workflow to:
Create a campaign using Mailchimp with merge tags/fields
Send an interactive Slack channel message (using buttons)
Have the message received by managers and peers along with a test email for review
But there’s more:
In a second workflow supporting the same use case, you’ll see:
Your campaign sent to target colleagues for approval
If the “Approve” button is clicked, a Jira/Zendesk ticket is created for the marketing design team
But—if the “Reject” button is pushed, colleagues will be alerted via Slack message
Join us to learn more about this new, human-in-the-loop capability, brought to you by Integration Service connectors.
And...
Speakers:
Akshay Agnihotri, Product Manager
Charlie Greenberg, Host
Accelerate your Kubernetes clusters with Varnish CachingThijs Feryn
A presentation about the usage and availability of Varnish on Kubernetes. This talk explores the capabilities of Varnish caching and shows how to use the Varnish Helm chart to deploy it to Kubernetes.
This presentation was delivered at K8SUG Singapore. See https://feryn.eu/presentations/accelerate-your-kubernetes-clusters-with-varnish-caching-k8sug-singapore-28-2024 for more details.
Software Delivery At the Speed of AI: Inflectra Invests In AI-Powered QualityInflectra
In this insightful webinar, Inflectra explores how artificial intelligence (AI) is transforming software development and testing. Discover how AI-powered tools are revolutionizing every stage of the software development lifecycle (SDLC), from design and prototyping to testing, deployment, and monitoring.
Learn about:
• The Future of Testing: How AI is shifting testing towards verification, analysis, and higher-level skills, while reducing repetitive tasks.
• Test Automation: How AI-powered test case generation, optimization, and self-healing tests are making testing more efficient and effective.
• Visual Testing: Explore the emerging capabilities of AI in visual testing and how it's set to revolutionize UI verification.
• Inflectra's AI Solutions: See demonstrations of Inflectra's cutting-edge AI tools like the ChatGPT plugin and Azure Open AI platform, designed to streamline your testing process.
Whether you're a developer, tester, or QA professional, this webinar will give you valuable insights into how AI is shaping the future of software delivery.
Software Delivery At the Speed of AI: Inflectra Invests In AI-Powered Quality
Finch Capital Predictions 2018
1. OPTIE 02
VINK GROTER, ANDERE TAK
FINCH CAPITAL
2018 FINTECH PREDICTIONS
December 2017
VINK GROTER, ANDERE TAK
FINCH CAPITAL
2. OPTIE 02
VINK GROTER, ANDERE TAK
FINCH CAPITAL
We are excited to publish our 3rd annual edition of financial technology predictions, where we
look back at how our predictions for 2017 panned out and look forward to what we can expect in
2018.
2017 has been a year of continued growth for companies in the financial technology vertical.
We’ve seen the levels of funding and deals remain consistent with the previous two years, and
expect to end at over $14bn in financing volume.
In line with our predictions, blockchain and AI-driven solutions for banking continue to gain
momentum, with a particular focus on network security given the recent spate of high profile
incidents.
Momentum in other enterprise software applications remains difficult as sales cycles are
notoriously long despite incumbents having invested in setting up innovation teams. SME
financing was expected to breakthrough in 2017, but providers have been unable to build
significant volume as lack of consistent data scoring hampers growth.
In the following pages you will find a brief summary of our predictions for 2018 in terms of
investment themes, geographic trends as well as the impact of Fintech on incumbents, ecosystem
and regulation.
For those interested in the more detailed report underlying the trends, feel free to contact us.
Finch Capital (formerly Orange Growth
Capital) is a venture capital firm investing
in early stage companies.
We are thematic investors focusing on
technology-enabled innovation bringing
about the transformation of the financial
services sector.
Finch Capital has three offices in
Amsterdam, London and Singapore, out of
which it is supporting bold entrepreneurs.
We have made 19 investments in leading
financial technology businesses across the
Netherlands, UK, Germany, Switzerland,
Spain and Indonesia.
Finch Capital is now investing its second
fund with a geographic focus on Europe
and selectively on South East Asia.
Radboud Vlaar, Partner
Hans de Back, Partner
Annette Wilson, Partner
Aman Ghei, Principal
Alix Brunet, Associate
Yong Kit Lui, Analyst
2
Introduction
0
500
1,000
1,500
0
5
10
15
2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 Q3
Deals
Amount($bn)
Annual global financing trend to VC-backed companies
Amount ($bn) DealsSource: CB Insights, 2017
3. OPTIE 02
VINK GROTER, ANDERE TAK
FINCH CAPITAL
Prediction
How did 2017 compare to our predictions?
Status Comments
B2B or B2B2C players win more
than B2C
Blockchain and roboadvisory are
areas incumbents will win
Overhaul of SME solutions in
banking and insurance
AI - From mainstream to
sophisticated solutions
Lending: From mainstream to high
yield and supply chain specialist
CTR – ALT – DEL of insurance
value chain
• Despite investing in innovation labs and partnerships, sales cycles remain long for B2B players (12
to 18 months). CAC for B2C players are putting immense pressure on gross margins
• Building a partnership-driven approach remains important
• More focus on top of the line marketing rather than performance marketing
• While blockchain-based applications are still not mainstream, the role of banks working through
consortiums to enable these applications has become evident
• It is difficult to build out an application without a network of banks, particularly in payments
• Consolidation within digital advisory is also expected to continue
• We have seen players such as Revolut, N26 and Tide move into this space aggressively
• Focus on improving gross margins, introducing revenue-generating products (FX and lending)
• While foundations continue to be laid, we expect that the winner will be able to onboard complex
SMEs quickly and cheaply
• Most financial institutions have engaged in AI and machine learning-based platforms and are
working to standardize applications across the banks
• Revenue-enhancing applications are likely to be better received (sales cycle) than cost reduction
• Procurement process remains constrained, but adoption is increasing at a steady pace
• Maintaining credit quality at scale remains challenging as one moves beyond “prime” clients
• Factoring amongst low-mid tier remains popular, but ability to scale volume and effectively
compete with credit providers will provide for an interesting dynamic
• Supply chain finance is still to be transformed as processes remain manual and paper-based
• Product-led innovation as opposed to broker and distribution-led. Tools to reduce claim costs
remain critical, but we see that adoption is slower at insurance companies than at banks
• Pay-as-you-go model issues remain, as the risk of GWP reduction is not compelling for insurers
• Reinsurers continue to be active to provide capacity and are looking for the best distributers
3
Rise of South East Asia as a
Fintech hub
• The fragmentation of the Asian markets is increasing. Indonesia, Malaysia and Thailand are
challenging Singapore and Hong Kong as Fintech powerhouses
• Strong e-commerce momentum in Indonesia is resulting in the emergence of an ecosystem of
payments, loyalty and banking start-ups
4. OPTIE 02
VINK GROTER, ANDERE TAK
FINCH CAPITAL
2018 Investment Trends
2018, a year where winners
…use automation, AI or blockchain solutions
…leverage disintermediation
…simplify and secure infrastructure
…shift focus from distribution to product
5. OPTIE 02
VINK GROTER, ANDERE TAK
FINCH CAPITAL
Investment Subsectors
2018 sector predictions overview
Blockchain
• Smart contracts: Use cases become clearer and first platform winners claim victory
• Payments: Ripple breaks out
Wealth
Management
• Disruptive: ROBO melt down as current unit economics are stretched
• Enabling: Focus on 10x advisor productivity and UX
Payments • Consolidation and new models that fill gaps in B2B cross-border payments
Security • Fix internal recognition, then focus on compliance at core
Infrastructure
• Banks are nervous to touch and replace core infrastructure
• Container environments gain momentum
Disintermediation
• Tech-led brokers gain share by delivering a delightful customer experience
• Be aware of the CAC fight
Insurance
• Shift towards reducing cost of claims and improving underwriting using technology
• Reinsurers remain the most active investors in the space
Challenger Banks
• Competition heats up, with many new entrants and economics being tested
• Not a traditional VC game, as it is capital intensive
Financing • Without connected platform there is no point, as only few reach profitable scale
Artificial
Intelligence
• Decision time for incumbents to purchase, as AI impact on sales and customer
service kicks in
ICOs
• Realisation that ICO is an instrument and not an asset
• Regulation hampers growth, infrastructure solutions balloon
1
Cryptocurrency
• Crypto use case to replace currency has gone
• Crypto trading class hype and volatility remain…until regulation or panic kicks in
5
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
11
12
10
Key Predictions Finch Portfolio
6. OPTIE 02
VINK GROTER, ANDERE TAK
FINCH CAPITAL
Market dynamics
• Awaiting a platform winner so deeper applications can be built
• Most financial institutions are experimenting with a combination of Ripple
(payments) and R3 or an internally-led private ledger (e.g. IBM)
• Most of the spend is still from “innovation” budgets, making it hard to predict
ROI and true spending potential
• Building a lasting network of financial institutions is important for start-ups.
To date, focus has been on reducing cross-border payment costs, verification of
counterparty and traceability
• Technologies allowing interoperability between different blockchain
infrastructures will gain momentum
Companies to watch outside Finch portfolio
Largest network of banks for cross-border payment
technology. Likely to start rivalling SWIFT in 5 years
Workflow automation for capital markets, potential to become
the leading clearing and settlement solution
Enterprise blockchain application platform addressing data,
identity and network management issues
Key takeaways
• Smart contract is the most important application built on blockchain
• In a private network, they can be used to execute transactions seamlessly.
Interoperability will be crucial
Blockchain: Smart contract use cases become clearer and
first platform winners claim victory, Ripple breaks out
6
Wealth Management: ROBO melt down as current unit
economics are stretched
0
100
200
300
400
2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019
Estimated capital market spending on blockchain ($bn)
Source: McKinsey, 2017
1
Market dynamics
• Consolidation of ROBO advisors. Unit economics (~75bps of AUM) are not
scalable as AUM needs to be in excess of $5bn for any meaningful revenue
• Focus is shifting to providing IFAs and asset managers with tools to reduce
cost ratios, improve efficiency and spend more time talking to clients
• Wealth-focused CRM solutions are on the rise as clients move towards mobile
platforms. Advisers need to quickly provide them with relevant information
• There is still room for a ”Robinhood” European or Asian solution, giving
consumers the ability to trade assets and build portfolios cheaply
• Risk, order settlement and analytics platforms are trying to break into the
market but are hitting resistance from big asset managers who would rather
build solutions internally. Mid/lower tier asset managers use Bloomberg AIM
Companies to watch outside Finch portfolio
Financial operating system for investors and advisers,
partnership with Morgan Stanley, $800bn AUM
Portfolio, risk and order management system for funds,
replacing expensive Bloomberg AIM instances
Customer engagement and communication tools enabling
advisors to communicate with clients across channels
Key takeaways
• Building direct consumer propositions remains difficult and capital intensive
• Businesses focusing on providing tools to make asset managers’ life simpler
gain momentum
Outsourcing
29
Personnel
26
Software
20
Hardw.
11
Applications
45
Data center
29
End-user
12
Other
14
Other
15
By cost
type
By
function
area
% of total wealth managers IT spend
Source: EY, 2015
2
7. OPTIE 02
VINK GROTER, ANDERE TAK
FINCH CAPITAL
Market dynamics
• Re-emergence of consumer-facing payment tech (e.g. Facebook Messenger,
chatbots, WeChat etc.). It remains unclear which provider will win in Europe.
Cash is not going away despite the progress of mobile payments
• Focus on improving cross payment settlement and infrastructure but inertia
from FIs who generate substantial revenue via float
• Stripe, Adyen dominate PSP landscape, but emergence of value added
solutions covering fraud, billing can shift dominance. Merchants are unlikely to
replace PSPs, so API-driven approach is more receptive
• Payout efficiency, largely batch processing, remains unaddressed as paying
contractors and developers timely is crucial for the ecosystem
Companies to watch outside Finch portfolio
Modular approach to payment and ancillary products
allowing companies to easily add acquirers and fraud tools
Smart data network for business payments and
disbursements, drastically reduces costs
Smart business payment card and automated reporting
Key takeaways
• Margin pressure will remain as fees continue to come under microscope
• Infrastructure evolves every 5 to 7 years and we are likely to see the next
generation of payment companies emerge, particularly on the B2B side
Payments: Consolidation and new models that fill gaps
in B2B cross-border payments
Security: Fix internal recognition, then focus on
compliance at core
Market dynamics
• Frequency and severity of cybercrime, in particular DDOS and ransomware,
are increasing. Main cause remains malware via employee
• Early stage startups find it difficult to break into this market primarily due to
financial institutions’ resistance to give access to critical infrastructure
• Emergence of GDPR and PSD2 solutions, but unclear for FIs how to adopt
• Biometrics form factor has high success rates. How it will combine with other
form factors within the IoT ecosystem will be crucial
• All threat intelligence platforms will be AI/ML driven but speed of adoption in
enterprise software will remain modest
• More sophisticated underwriting criteria for cybersecurity insurance
Companies to watch outside Finch portfolio
Network-based AI cybersecurity with 3,000 customers
User identity verification for financial services securing 5bn
transactions a year
AI-driven risk platform addressing financial crime risk
Key takeaways
• There are multiple threat intelligence platforms and it is hard for financial
institutions to experiment and differentiate at an early stage
• We see compliance with upcoming regulatory changes (GDPR, PSD2) and data
management as important verticals for financial institutions
7
Worldwide IT Security Products Markets
Source: Jefferies, 2017
Network Security
$11.3bn
Endpoint Security
$8.7bn
Security & Vulnerability
Management $6.0bn
Identity & Access
Management $5.4bn
Firewall/Unified
Threat Mgmt. $8.5bn
Consumer Endpoint
Security $4.4bn
Security Intelligence
SIEM $2.1bn
Single Sign-On
$2.2bn
Intrusion Detection
& Prevention $2.5bn
Security Suites
$2.3bn
Device/App
Vulnerability $2.0bn
Authentication
$1.8bn
Virtual Private
Network $0.5bn
Server Security
$0.7bn
Policy & Compliance
$1.3bn
User Provisioning
$0.8bn
PERM, AIP,
Antimalware $1.3bn
Forensics & Security
Device System $1.0bn
Privileged Access &
Legacy $0.6bn
8%
15%
36%
13%
18%
19%
2%
3%
1%
3%
18%
17%
8%
18%
7%
13%
APAC
$725bn
EMEA
$280bn
Payments revenue (%,$bn)
Source: McKinsey, 2017
Commercial: Cross-border transactions
Account-related transactions
Domestic liquidity
Commercial cards
Consumer: Cross-border transactions
Account-related liquidity
Domestic transactions
Credit cards
Fastest growing
43
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Infrastructure: Banks nervous to touch and replace core
infrastructure, container environments gain momentum
8
Market dynamics
• IT infrastructure is still mostly on premise, but in the next 3-5 years we expect
banks to move at least 50% of their infrastructure to the cloud
• Rise of core banking infrastructure, API-driven approach taken to reduce
complexity with a focus on improving service delivery
• Shift to cloud and containerized environments resulting in network
complexities, such as security, compliance and maintenance
• The benefits of leveraging containers at banks in particular will enable them to
become more agile. PaaS 1 teams will be set up to supplement network teams
Companies to watch outside Finch portfolio
Want to replace legacy systems at banks helping them
transform to better manage transactions
Simplifies deployment, observability and monitoring for
containers and micro-services
Enterprise blockchain infrastructure with the potential to
replace legacy banking systems
Key takeaways
• Complexity in data centre and network environments are increasing and FIs
are looking for tools to simplify and secure their infrastructure
• There is no need to convince them of benefits of cloud and more time should be
spend on improving simplicity
Market dynamics
• Broker-led businesses are being transformed by a combination of technology-
enabled software and improved customer experience
• We believe that mortgage broking is an example of a vertical that is ripe for
innovation in particular markets and as a result we invested in two leading
players in the the UK and Netherlands
• End-to-end fulfillment of financial products solves real pain points compared
to simple lead generation, particularly in South East Asia
• CAC remains high, building partnership pipeline is critical and supplementing
with brand spend. It is important to be gross margin positive from the outset
• Other industries where financial disruption via marketplaces will occur are
automotive (leasing, financing, damage and insurance), travel (installment
products) and financial services businesses (factoring, MGAs and lending)
Companies to watch outside Finch portfolio
Mobile-based car-as-a-service concept using AI-based pricing is
disrupting car ownership and leasing costs
Payment platform working with airlines (American Airlines and
JetBlue) enables travel costs to be spread out monthly
Platform making the mortgage process fast and simple in the US,
in partnership with Fannie Mae
Key takeaways
• Customer acquisition costs can be prohibitive, a B2B2C approach works better
to build a product providing a positive net contribution margin
• Partnerships are effective, but to build true volume, one must supplement with
marketing spend
• Automotive and real estate industries are ripe for disintermediation
Disintermediation: Tech-led brokers gain share by
delivering delightful customer experience
0
1,000
2,000
3,000
4,000
2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020
Worldwide IT spending growth ($bn)
Data Center Systems Software Devices IT Services Communication Services
Source: Gartner, 2017
+0.3% +3.3% +4.3% +2.9% +2.9%
65
1: Platform as a service.
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Insurance: Shift towards reducing cost of claims and
improving underwriting, reinsurers remain active investors
Challenger banks: Competition heats up, with new
entrants and economics being tested; capital intensive
9
Market dynamics
• Continued development of solutions for data analytics, underwriting, risk
modeling, IoT devices, fraud prevention and claims management
• Move away from broker and distribution models to product-led approaches,
with growing proportion of investments in B2B solutions
• Acquiring customers remains costly and (re)insurers are becoming more
powerful as they are able to provide capacity
• Interpreting data remains a challenge for insurers. Technologies to improve
data capture and processing: image, surveillance capabilities, damage
estimations to reduce cost of processing claims
• Better unit economics/loss ratios in niche markets (pets, SME, digital)
Companies to watch outside Finch portfolio
Deep learning tools for visual inspection with applications in
insurance, maintenance and medical imagery
Group-based specialized insurance, including pet coverage,
with over 350,000 members
Digital asset inventory, management and on-demand
insurance platform
Key takeaways
• (Re)insurers will continue to make strategic investments and startups will have
to weigh pros and cons of a strategic relationship with them
• For distribution, it is key to have underwriting authority
• Startups enabling insurers to build better products will start to emerge
Market dynamics
• Regulatory dynamics in UK/Europe allow the region to have the largest
number of challenger banks compared to the US
• Complete challenger banks (deposit/lending proposition) offer better return on
equity than any large bank due to lower cost to income ratios
• Customer acquisition is usually through comparison websites, whilst with
direct challenger banks can offer better return
• “UX1 layer” challenger banks face difficulty in building strong unit economics
as Revolut and Zopa apply for banking licenses
Companies to watch outside Finch portfolio
Digital Mastercard current account, partnerships with
Transferwise and Allianz. Launching in the UK
SME lending, property finance and savings platform having
lent over £900m
Personal and business banking, savings and mortgage app
with over £900m in deposits
Key takeaways
• Challenger banks that lend will continue to have advantage over consumer-
only facing solutions
• Pressure on gross margin remains and key to success will be having a niche
focus (bank for immigrants, self employed, property developers etc.)
• Require high capital to succeed, not venture play
9
Distribution 40%
Product design 24%
Underwriting
18%
Claims 10%
Software 8%
Insurtech companies by proposition
Source: KPMG, 2017
2.7%
6.95%
Lending
Club
Banks
Operating costs as % of outstanding loans
Branch network FDIC regulation Credit scoring, billing, fraud
Marketing Origination IT
Other
Source: The Economist, 2015
87
1: User experience.
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Market dynamics
• Local invoice factoring/financing players across regions gained momentum.
Successful players need to move upstream and target merchants with €100k+
invoices to finance
• P2P lending remains resilient, but still needs to be supplemented by building a
loan book. £3.2bn lent by Zopa, Funding Circle and Ratesetter
• VC investment has slowed, but next generation platforms are emerging with
access accounting and business data seen as crucial in getting further insight
into the customer and offering them a variety of financing products
• SME financing gap is well documented, but little movement on closing it as
servicing remains costly/cumbersome and credit supply is constrained
Companies to watch outside Finch portfolio
Online invoicing software serving more than 125,000
European businesses
Instant invoice factoring solutions for entrepreneurs
Crowdlending platform with AI-powered credit scoring
managing over €590mn
Key takeaways
• Effectively servicing medium-to-large enterprises is as important as SMEs
• At the end of the day, the effectiveness of the risk algorithm is difficult to judge
without sufficient data
• The pressure to scale generally results in an increase in default rates
Market dynamics
• Financial services remains the most active vertical for implementation of AI
applications. Capital markets and risk scoring have seen strong adoption.
Insurance claims and fraud solutions have also seen uptake
• Abundance of credit scoring applications. Most common use: train system with
existing data to recognize patterns and make predictions based on future
incoming data (machine learning)
• Deep learning AI is still rare to find in business applications
• More activity in sales process recommendations and automation, fraud
analysis, prevention, threat intelligence, quality management
Companies to watch outside Finch portfolio
Deep learning platform applied to business process
optimisation, including insurance claim assessment
Automated risk management platform using machine
learning, 60 clients including Citi and Capital One
Machine learning-based fraud detection and prevention
platform for digital businesses
Key takeaways
• Key question for lots of companies out there is what is the ROI (immediate)
that they are driving to the business
• As a result, focus is on revenue enhancing technologies rather than cost
reducing, such as customer engagement rather than compliance
Financing: Without connected platform there is no
point, as only few reach profitable scale
Artificial Intelligence: Decision time for incumbents to
purchase, as AI impact in sales/customer service kicks in
10
0
2,500
5,000
2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017
UK marketplace lending volumes (£mn)
Consumer Business Property Invoice 2017 Projection
Source: AltFiData, 2017
2
11
2
9
1
10
1
8
2
9
8
47
2016
2020
Projected spending on AI by industry group ($bn)
Financials Distribution & Services Public Sector Manufacturing & Resources Other
Source: International Data Corporation, 2017
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ICOs: Realisation ICO is an instrument, regulation
hampers growth, infrastructure solutions balloon
11
11
Market dynamics
• Ethereum gave rise to ICOs and retail investors are flocking to Bitcoin as they
dip their hands in crypto for the first time
• Rise of exchanges making it easier for consumers to buy/sell. Lack of
transparent pricing (Bitcoin has significantly different prices on different
exchanges) causing confusing
• Interoperability between tokens will become important as consumers and
receivers look to widen acceptance
• Venture investment in bitcoin remittance/acceptance remains strong, although
wallets/miners have now been capped
Companies/currencies to watch outside Finch portfolio
Bitcoin payment processor building a cross-border supply
chain network to enable payments
Digital currency exchange platform providing retail
customers an easy way to invest in crypto
Open source peer-to-peer digital currency with speed and
low fees making it better suited for payments
Key takeaways
• Cryptocurrencies are not going to disappear, in fact they will continue to grow
until a regulatory framework is drawn to address concerns
• The cryptocurrency market is expected to gradually mature and continue
growing, as it remains small compared to traditional assets
Cryptocurrency: Currency replacement has gone, trading
class hype and volatility remain…until regulation or panic
12
Market dynamics
• Ethereum unleased the crazy but institutions remain skeptical, and while there
are serious projects, a number of scams also exist
• Regulatory, security and volatility issues. US, UK, Germany and Japan issued
warnings against ICOs. China and South Korea banned ICOs. Switzerland is
investigating, creating uncertainty. Singapore is considering an ICO sandbox.
Australia has an ICO exchange
• Re-focus on why they exist: Transparency and an incentive to upgrade/build
core web infrastructure (Linux, SSL, HTML)
Companies to watch outside Finch portfolio
De-centralised liquidity network protocols, potential
eliminating forex and payment networks. $150m+ raise
De-centralized network for digital storage through which
users can effectively rent out their spare capacity
Smart contract platform that can process 1,000 transactions
per second
Key takeaways
• Remain wary of most ICOs, wait and see how applications evolve
• Focus on ICOs that transform web infrastructure
0% 25% 50% 75% 100%
2014
2015
2016
2017 YTD
ICOs by Category
Finance Tech & Cloud IoT, Media & Gaming Crypto
Source: Autonomous NEXT, 2017
270
64
27 17 16
Bitcoin Ethereum Bitcoin Cash Ripple Litecoin
Market cap of top 5 cryptocurrencies ($bn)
Source: Coinmarketcap, 2017
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2018 Geographic Themes
2018, a year where
…Continental Europe develops specialised Fintech hubs
…South East Asian Fintechs offer increasingly complex products
…Fintech solutions contributes to financial inclusion
…Regulators support Fintech innovation
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UK
• Continues to lead Fintech by domestic size and ecosystem, first big exits give further boost
• Limited Brexit impact on the start-up ecosystem but that could change
• Adyen puts the Netherlands on the map as a payment and trading hub
• Remains one of the largest pension management markets globally
France
• Government boost paying off, especially in AI and B2B
• One of the biggest Fintech exits (Compte-Nickel) shows increasing appetite
Spain
• Cost base and talent pool make the Iberian Peninsula an attractive region in Europe
• Springboard for UX-driven B2B software
Netherlands
Switzerland
• Focus on building deep financial technology software
• Relatively high cost base but talent pool exists
Nordics
• Sweden leads, but Finland is catching up with core tech experience
• Cashless society means that the next payment unicorn can emerge from the region
Poland and CEE
• Poland is accelerating over Estonia following a big push from the local government
• Extending beyond outsourcing centers
Singapore
• MAS1 plays a crucial role in the development of the region. Competition from other South
East Asian hubs is challenging dominance, although Singapore will remain a safe haven
Indonesia
• Becoming the biggest Asian Fintech market outside India and China
• Booming e-commerce market, with banking infrastructure having to catch up
Malaysia
• Islamic Finance hub of the region, having issued most global infrastructure sukuk bonds
• Fintech market remains early but rising
1
Philippines
13
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
11
10
• Hub for start-ups following existing innovation, with focus on execution
• Leaders in banking and infrastructure are emerging
Germany
Geographies Finch PortfolioKey Predictions
• Growth supported by payments and lending for the unbanked, and SME solutions
• Solid mobile user base facilitates adoption and “last mile” distribution
US
• Lagging customer Fintech adoption and state by state regulation are hampering rapid scaling
• Will remain hub for most unicorns driven by capital availability
12
2018 geographic predictions overview
13
1: The Monetary Authority of Singapore.
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Fintech activity
• London remains the global hub for financial services with deal flow and
volumes remaining at near peak levels
• Focus is shifting from challenger banks and lending, which dominated last 3-5
years, to insurance. Within lending/financing, pan-European leaders are based
here (Zopa, Funding Circle, Market Invoice)
• While foundations for AI tech exist, few companies are focused on financial
services applications outside of security
• The payments ecosystem (enablers, aggregators etc.) remains nascent
• Most GDPR-related startups we meet come from London
• Entrepreneurs First and Barclays Fintech are established programmes
• High Fintech adoption growth, from 14% in 2015 to 42% in 20171
Which sectors are hot
• B2B and B2C Insurtech is growing, the UK is 2nd largest market globally
• Cybersecurity and Regtech benefit from headlines and regulatory scrutiny
Market leaders
Banking alternative app with a million users
AI-based identity verification engine for businesses
Network-based AI cybersecurity with $200mn in contracts
Key takeaways
• UK expected to remain Fintech market leader with limited impact from Brexit
with insurance replacing banking and lending
0
20
40
60
0
500
1,000
1,500
Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3
2016 2017
Deals
Amount($mn)
Fintech VC, PE and M&A activity in the UK
Source: KPMG, Pitchbook, 2017
1: Adoption by users as a percentage of the digitally active population, EY. 2: CB Insights.
Fintech activity
• The Dutch market is characterized by the solid performance of its Fintech
businesses, which are well established in the digital payments, open banking
and trading sectors
• The Netherlands’ share of European Fintech deals gradually decreased from
7% in 2015 to 2% today, as other EU markets grow2
• The Fintech adoption rate in the Netherlands is high at 27% in 20171
• Incumbents and local regulators are increasingly active in the Fintech sector,
providing support and developing cooperation, with Money 2020 and AI
World Summit moving to Amsterdam
Which sectors are hot
• The Netherlands remains the global payments hub as the ecosystem of former
Adyen, Global Payments talent further develops
• Emergence of enterprise software businesses focused on security and fraud
• Pensions and insurance companies look for tools and platforms to improve
their offering
Market leaders
Mobile banking platform, open API and Mastercard
expanding across Europe
Multichannel payment platform with over 4,500 clients
across Europe, US and Asia
Omni-channel digital and open banking platform adopted
by 100 financial institutions globally
Cross-border ecommerce transaction processing platform
with an international footprint
Key takeaways
• Growing demand for B2B solutions increasing efficiency and facilitating
digitalization in asset management, insurance and banking
• Strong base of early stage investors propelling the ecosystem
Capital invested ($mn) Number of deals closed
UK: Continues to lead Fintech by domestic size and
ecosystem, first big exits give further boost
Netherlands: Adyen puts the country on the map as a
payment and trading hub
1 2
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15
Fintech activity
• Fintech activity has increased significantly in the last year. Spain represents 5%
of European Fintech deals and has close to 300 startups
• Market development is supported by established financial institutions,
including Santander and BBVA
• Growing Fintech adoption rate, at 37% in 20171, driven by payments, finance
and lending products
• Close ties with Latin America facilitate international expansion
Which sectors are hot
• Crowdfunding and financial management platforms remain strong
• Development of Insurtech, fraud, identity and cybersecurity solutions
• Increasing demand for AI and blockchain tools for financial services
Market leaders
Insurance broker and comparison platform with 60k users
Consumer banking platform with 400k users incl. LatAm
Machine learning-powered business automation tools
applied to customer engagement and data management
Key takeaways
• Lower cost base than other regions resulting in strong developer ecosystem
built in hubs including Barcelona, Madrid, Valencia and Sevilla
• UX-led focus will result in the development of consumer software companies
Fintech activity
• Fast developing Fintech ecosystem with strong support from Emmanuel
Macron’s government, which is looking to make Paris a global tech hub
• Insurance and banking incumbents, including Allianz, AXA and BNP Paribas,
are active through partnerships and investments in Fintech
• Launch of Fintech and AI incubators and accelerators, including Station F
• Solid Fintech adoption rate at 27% in 20171 with high growth potential
• Competitive environment, reinforced by incumbents and tech businesses
including Orange Telecom entering the mobile banking sector
Which sectors are hot
• Development of B2C and B2B offerings in mobile banking and lending
• Solid Insurtech sector benefiting from large investments by French (re)insurers,
which are the 2nd highest after the US2
• Emergence of Proptech solutions facilitating design, ownership and rental
Market leaders
Crowdlending platform having managed €500m in loans
AI-driven fraud detection and insurance claim management
tool, processed over 100 million claims
Personal financial management solution with 1.4m users
Key takeaways
• Size and penetration of the local market is significant enough for large local
players to emerge without the need to expand to other countries in Europe
• Announcement of a €10bn public budget to promote innovation
0
10
20
0
50
100
Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3
2016 2017
Deals
Amount($mn)
Fintech VC, PE and M&A activity in France
Source: KPMG, Pitchbook, 2017
62% 58%
50% 50%
30% 29%
Crowdfunding Scoring,
Identity &
Fraud
Enterprise
Financial
Management
Personal
Financial
Management
Wealth
Management
Trading &
Markets
Growth by Fintech Segment in the last 15 months
Source: Deloitte, 2017
1: EY. 2: CB Insights.
Capital invested ($mn) Number of deals closed
France: Government boost paying off, especially in
AI and B2B
Spain : Cost base and talent pool make region
attractive, springboard for UX-driven B2B software
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Fintech activity
• Switzerland has a well established Fintech market with 190 businesses
• Google and Facebook have important AI/machine learning teams locally
• Favourable regulatory environment is developing a dynamic “crypto valley”
ecosystem supporting blockchain businesses and attracting ICOs
• FINMA is lowering regulatory barriers, supporting competitiveness
• Credit Suisse and UBS have backed a start-up hub in Zurich
• High demand for B2B software solutions for financial institutions and SMEs,
leading to partnerships and direct investments
Which sectors are hot
• Data management solutions for financial services driven by strong local
financial incumbents as early customers
• Wealth management tools for private banks
• Strong blockchain ecosystem with favourable tax environment
Market leaders
Decentralised liquidity network protocols, potential
eliminating forex and payment networks. $150m+ raise
AI-driven data management software helping businesses
reduce manual work by up to 20x
Online platform providing short term financing for SMEs
Key takeaways
• Local hub of banks and wealth managers help reach potential customers
• Relatively high cost base, but the local talent pool is strong
Investment
Management 23%
Bank Infrastructure 18%
Savings Deposits,
Credits 16%
Payments 15%
Virtual Currencies 11%
Other 17%
Financial functions in the Swiss Fintech landscape
Source: Deloitte, 2017
Fintech activity
• Germany is experiencing steady Fintech sector growth with 300 active start-ups
and specialised incubators and accelerators
• B2B business models servicing banks and insurers are thriving and represent
42% of all Fintechs
• Cooperation between financial institutions and start-ups is growing, with
numerous partnerships and investments, particularly in credit/lending
• Germany’s share of European Fintech deals remains high at 13%1
• Cash represents 82% of transactions3, making it difficult for businesses to
access underlying accounting data
Which sectors are hot
• Lending and Insurtech sectors remain strong, Germany is fifth market globally
based on adoption rates2
• Proptech is emerging with the development of marketplaces, rental platforms
and services, and benefiting from a strong real estate market
Market leaders
Digital Mastercard current account with 600,000 users and
partnerships with Transferwise and Allianz
Online big data scoring and machine-learning tools for credit
Enabling businesses to offer banking as a service without
need to build infrastructure
Key takeaways
• Framework for B2B2C lending/factoring companies is now in place
• VC ecosystem remains active with good focus on early stage businesses
0
20
40
0
500
1,000
Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3
2016 2017
Deals
Amount($mn)
Fintech VC, PE and M&A activity in Germany
Source: KPMG, Pitchbook, 2017
1: CB Insights. 2: EY. 3:IMF.
Capital invested ($mn) Number of deals closed
Germany: Hub for innovation following, with focus on
execution; leaders in banking and infrastructure emerging
Switzerland: Focus on building deep financial
technology software, high cost base but talent pool exists
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Fintech activity
• Poland is the leading the way in the CEE region as government is starting to
dedicate resources into building strong financial services ecosystem
• The Baltics remain solid despite a slow down in the number of Fintech
transactions, with 53 deals in 2017 YTD
• Key outsourcing centre for many of the world’s tier 1 bank which is now
evolving into a thriving startup ecosystem
• Interbank infrastructure is fairly advanced (Elixir), as push is being made into
offering consumers in the regime more complex financial products with data
access improving
• Startups in the region are more likely to collaborate with banks, such as ING
with Twisto and inviPay, to bring credit solutions to Poland
Which sectors are hot
• Banking, insurance and personal finance management products
• Fraud and data analytics solutions
Market leaders
International money transfer platform
Sales CRM platform for small and medium businesses
Mobile banking platform
Key takeaways
• Strong consumer demand, particularly in Poland, will likely result in a regional
leader offering access to various financial products
• Baltics will strengthen their Fintech hubs through diversification
Fintech activity
• Sweden drives Fintech growth in the region, led by the success of software
businesses and mobile payment services providers
• Stockholm’s Fintech hub is delivering on its promise of accelerating ecosystem
growth even outside of Sweden
• Sweden’s share of EU Fintech deals increased from 8% to 12% in 20171
• The Nordic region is a cashless society, which impacts the type of companies
coming out of the region
• Access to quality credit and consumer data allows start-ups to build credit and
lending players
• Increasing collaboration between Fintechs and financial institutions, such as
DNB, Nordea and Skandiabanken, facilitates open banking progress
• Copenhagen is also emerging as a strong Fintech hub
Which sectors are hot
• “Delightful” B2C products across personal finance management
• Payment innovation remains strong given history and past successes
• SME software is starting to take shape, particularly around accounting systems
Market leaders
Mobile point of sale payment solutions for SMEs
Payment solutions for e-commerce businesses
Banking app with savings, current account and debit card
Key takeaways
• Focus on solutions that solve “big” problems on a Pan-European scale
• Design-led focus will likely see the next B2B2C software winners emerge
0
25
50
Sweden Denmark Finland Norway Iceland
Deals
Fintech investments in the Nordics
Source: Deloitte, 2017
0
500
1,000
Poland Austria Czech
Republic
Slovenia Romania Croatia Hungary Slovakia
CEE Fintech market size (€mn)
Source: Deloitte, 2016
1: EY.
Nordics: Sweden leads, but Finland catches up with core
tech experience, cashless society supports payment lead
Poland & CEE: Poland is accelerating over Estonia
following government push, extends beyond outsourcing
7 8
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Fintech activity
• Payments and insurance remain strong, representing 43% and 17% of Fintechs
respectively3
• Favourable regulatory environment, Fintech sandbox allowing start-ups to test
their offering under supervision before rolling out commercially
• Significant market size and low Fintech penetration rate. Mobile social media
penetration is only 35%1. High growth expected over next 2 years
Which sectors are hot
• Banking, lending and personal finance offerings are growing and contributing
to financial inclusion. 64% of the Indonesian population do not have a formal
bank account4
• Opportunities are expected in B2C and B2B Insurtech, as Indonesia’s P&C and
Life insurance sectors are among the three fastest growing globally5
Market leaders
Provider of electronic payment and risk management
Peer-to-peer lending marketplace for SMEs
SME peer-to-peer lending platform
Key takeaways
• Expect strong growth across Fintech sectors, with increasing diversification
beyond payments and lending solutions
• Fintech activities are still largely driven by B2C solutions
Fintech activity
• Development of B2B Fintech solutions is faster than B2C
• 70% mobile social media penetration1, however Fintech adoption is growing
slowly, from 15% in 2015 to 23% today2
• MAS collaborates with international hubs, creates cooperation agreements and
“bridges” facilitating ecosystem development and global expansion
• Strong public-private initiatives include Project Ubin, DLT facilitating inter-
bank payments, and sharing of API best practices
Which sectors are hot
• Mature verticals such as payments, remittance and lending remain strong
• Emerging Fintech verticals - blockchain, Insurtech and Regtech, are primarily
B2B business models due to Singapore being a financial hub
• AI and data analytics have been specifically earmarked by MAS
Market leaders
Cross border securities trading platform
Pan-Asian payment services company
Singapore’s 1st peer-to-peer lending platform
Key takeaways
• Fintech solutions are expected to evolve beyond low-value and high-volume
transactions to address more advanced needs of targeted client groups
• B2B winners are likely due to governance and financial centre significance
0
10
20
0
50
100
Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3
2016 2017
Deals
Amount($mn)
Fintech VC, PE and M&A activity in Singapore
Source: KPMG, Pitchbook, 2017
0
20
40
2014 2015 2016 2017
Fintech VC, PE and M&A activity in Indonesia
Number of Deals Annual run-rateSource: CB Insights, 2017
Capital invested ($mn) Number of deals closed
1: Hootsuite. 2: EY. 3: IFA. 4: KPMG. 5: Munich Re.
Singapore: MAS plays a crucial role in the development
of the region
Indonesia: Becoming the biggest Asian Fintech market
outside India and China
9 10
19. OPTIE 02
VINK GROTER, ANDERE TAK
FINCH CAPITAL
19
Fintech activity
• Progressive development in Fintech, largely driven by a supportive regulatory
environment, i.e. Fintech sandbox and regulations
• 33% of banked population are mobile banking subscribers and mobile
penetration is relatively high at 64%1, facilitating the development of payment
apps
• Islamic banking assets are close to 30% of the entire banking system and
Malaysia issued over 60% of global infrastructure sukuk bonds2
Which sectors are hot
• High demand for payment solutions and mobile wallets
• Development of lending and crowdfunding platforms
• Wealth management and insurance offering is growing
• Increasing demand for automated security and KYC solutions
Market leaders
Develops e-banking and payment solutions
Peer to peer currency exchange and cross border remittance
Peer-to-peer lending and securities crowdfunding
Key takeaways
• Anticipate the rise of Islamic Fintech as Malaysia steps up as the Islamic hub in
SEA, supported by established financial institutions, innovation labs and
incubators
1: Bank Negara. 2: Sukuk: Bond generating returns to investors without infringing Islamic sharia principles. World Bank. 3: Munich Re. 4: Fintechnews Singapore.
Payments, wallets,
remittance 39%
Crowdfunding, lending
19%
Wealth, FX 10%
Comparison,
marketplace 14%
AI, blockchain 7%
KYC 6%
InsurTech 5%
Fintech verticals in Malaysia
Source: Fintech Singapore, 2017
Malaysia: Islamic Finance hub of the region, Fintech
market remains early but rising
11
Fintech activity
• The Fintech market includes 60 start-ups and is growing steadily, as its impact
on financial inclusion is increasingly recognised
• Mobile penetration is high at 87%4, facilitating the development of app-based
products and services and addressing the “last mile” challenge
• Despite the hype, adoption is slow compared to other markets
Which sectors are hot
• High growth of mobile payments, wallets and remittance products
• Solid demand for lending platforms and solutions supporting SMEs
• Insurtech market expected to grow, as the Philippine’s life insurance market is
among the three fastest growing globally3
Market leaders
Online payments and remittance platform using blockchain
using retail infrastructure and teller network
Digital commerce, payment and remittance services focusing
on the unbanked population
SME lending platform having paid out $5m in loans
Receivables discounting platform for SMEs
Key takeaways
• Strong demand for Fintech due to large unbanked population
• Will be a highly sought after Fintech destination if the country develops and
addresses weak internet infrastructure and high poverty
Philippines: Growth supported by payments and
lending for the unbanked and solid mobile user base
12
Mobile payments &
wallets 41%
Alternative
Finance 29%
Remittance,
blockchain 12%
Comparison 8%
Credit rating & analytics 5%
Payroll 5%
Financial functions in the Philippines Fintech landscape
Source: Fintech Singapore, 2017
21. OPTIE 02
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FINCH CAPITAL
21
Current Finch Capital portfolio
Company
• Jakob Rost, CEO
• Chiragh Kirpalani, CTO
ProductTeam
• Indonesia’s most comprehensive bill payments platform
Headquarters
Indonesia
• Nick Bortot, CEO
• Robbert Bos, CPO
• Mobile stock trading app expanding across EuropeUK
• Andhy Koesnandar, CEO
• Carlo Gandasubrata, Business
• Digital platform making financial products accessible to
Indonesian consumers
Indonesia
• Adam Posma, CEO • Automated membership fees collection for sports clubsNetherlands
• Ingo Weber, CEO
• Roeland Werring, CTO
• Leading European digital insurance platformNetherlands
• Derk Roodhuyzen, CEO
• Mark van Laar, COO
• Digital car repair and insurance claim platformNetherlands
• Michiel Lensink, CEO
• Joost Schulze, Technology
• Online mortgage adviser making broking digital, personal and
transparent in the Netherlands
Netherlands
• Sergio Pozo Hidalgo, CEO
• Eduardo Leon, CTO
• Software enabling DevOps to launch compliant applications
instantly
Spain
• Anurag Jain, CEO
• Ajay Goyal, CTO
• Global hub for cross-border purchase of prepaid mobile airtime
and money remittance
US
• Thomas Bunnik, CEO • Digital wealth management platform. Acquired by BinckNetherlands
• Krik Gunning, COO
• Chris van Straeten, CFRO
• Automated platform allowing financial institutions to manage
multiple term deposit accounts and optimise KYC processes
Netherlands
• Aleksandar Vidovic, CEO • Automated fraud detection and prevention softwareUK
• Dorian Selz, CEO
• Patrice Neff, CCO
• Cognitive insights engine enabling companies to turn meaningless
data into actionable insights
Switzerland
• Ishaan Malhi, CEO
• Jonathan Galore, Chairman
• First online mortgage broker in the UKUK
• Jaidev Janardana, CEO
• Giles Andrews, Chairman
• Largest European peer-to-peer lending platformUK
22. OPTIE 02
VINK GROTER, ANDERE TAK
FINCH CAPITAL
Amsterdam
Concertgebouwplein 9
1071 LL Amsterdam
London
105 Piccadilly
London, W1J 7NJ
Singapore
80 Robinson Road
#08-01, Singapore 068898
OPTIE 02
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FINCH CAPITAL
For any questions please email:
Radboud@finchcapital.com
Hans@finchcapital.com
Annette@finchcapital.com
Aman@finchcapital.com
Alix@finchcapital.com
Kit@finchcapital.com
We are backing entrepreneurs
to build financial technology
market leaders