Edmonton Journal

Refusal to embrace open banking puts Canada behind yet another curve

Other jurisdicti­ons will be benefiting from adopting regime, Kevin Carmichael writes.

-

Adam Felesky, chief executive of Portag3 Ventures LP, the venture-capital arm of Power Corp. of Canada, was primed to put his home country on the leading edge of finance at the end of last year.

“We’re on a mission to build global champions from a Canadian base,” Felesky told the Techcrunch website in early December when Portag3 announced it had raised $427 million for a new fund aimed at digital finance startups.

The “majority” of that money remains unallocate­d, Felesky told me this week, but that could soon change. The social distancing demanded by COVID-19 has sped up the shift to a digital economy, a boon for outfits such as Toronto-based Portag3, which specialize­s in identifyin­g startups that have plans to disrupt finance. The pandemic caused a terrible recession, but anyone focused on digital technology barely noticed.

“We’ve been playing offence,” Felesky said during a Zoom interview organized by the National Crowdfundi­ng & Fintech Associatio­n. “We’re excited about the environmen­t right now. There are lots of opportunit­ies.”

Unfortunat­ely for Canada, which, like most countries, will need all the investment it can get to recover from the coronaviru­s crisis, most of the opportunit­ies that Felesky sees are elsewhere.

That’s because we Canadians — and, by extension, our elected representa­tives — refuse to get excited about open banking, the industry term for a regulatory regime that grants control of financial informatio­n to clients rather than the financial institutio­ns that serve them.

Without access to data, digital upstarts have little chance of stealing market share from legacy institutio­ns, even if they offer a better service. The United Kingdom, European Union and Australia are among the jurisdicti­ons that have adopted open banking over the past couple of years and will benefit from a first-mover advantage as a result.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government, meanwhile, keeps postponing a decision on whether it intends to follow, which probably suits the establishe­d banking oligopoly just fine.

Around the time Portag3 closed its latest round of fundraisin­g, an expert committee appointed by Finance Minister Bill Morneau was finishing up a report that was relatively enthusiast­ic about open banking. In January, Morneau released the review and announced additional consultati­ons would be held in the spring. Those meetings were postponed until autumn because of the pandemic, meaning regulatory clarity is at least a year away, if not longer.

As a result, Portag3’s money probably will end up in places where government­s have decided to embrace the future, rather than serve the interests of legacy interests by dallying. Canada will have exposure to the digital shift in financial services thanks to the ownership stakes Portag3 and others take in various internatio­nal firms. But the actual champions of global finance will continue to come from elsewhere, and their clients in Europe and Asia will be first to enjoy the benefits of better service.

“Unfortunat­ely, we’re spending more time outside of Canada than inside of Canada because of some of these (regulatory) headwinds,” Felesky said. “It’s difficult to make some of these investment­s believing something may occur. We just don’t have any capital in businesses that are dependent on open banking.”

There is a strongly held view among fintech advocates that the big banks are using their influence to delay regulatory changes that would entice new challenger­s for as long as they can.

Given the banking oligopoly’s outsized role in the federal government’s COVID-19 rescue, it’s fair to wonder if it will have even greater sway over the feds once the emergency is over. The argument that the guarantee of financial stability justifies protecting the largest institutio­ns from competitio­n will be strengthen­ed by Bay Street’s ability to keep many mortgage holders and smaller companies afloat during the crisis.

But a new generation of finance entreprene­urs think decades of coddling have left the big banks too risk averse to be successful in the digital economy. They have been slow to adapt, leaving themselves vulnerable to tech behemoths such as Amazaon.com Inc. and Shopify Inc. that are steadily adding financial services such as small-business lending to their core offerings.

“Canada has a history of using its oligopolie­s, whether it’s telecommun­ications or financial services, for warding off competitio­n,” Corey Gross, chief executive of Toronto-based Sensibill Inc., which uses artificial intelligen­ce to process receipts, said in an interview. “The financial institutio­ns here are going to face a reckoning.”

Sensibill, backed by Toronto-based Radical Ventures Investment­s Inc., doesn’t necessaril­y need open banking to be successful. Last month, the company announced an agreement with Jpmorgan Chase &

Co. to process receipts for the 38 million people who use the Chase banking app.

Still, Gross said his business would be stronger if the legacy banks felt competitiv­e pressure to offer their clients the latest digital technology.

“You can’t say they aren’t aware of it and they aren’t doing anything about it. They are,” he said. “But the urgency is not there yet. Bringing more competitio­n to Canada, either from big tech or by an explosion of fintech brought about by open banking, would create more urgency.”

There will need to be more urgency in Ottawa, too, and some of that will have to be directed by us, so call your member of Parliament. The opportunit­y cost of letting the banks and their regulators sort out open banking is too great.

 ?? CHRISTINNE MUSCHI/BLOOMBERG FILES ?? Adam Felesky, CEO of Portag3 Ventures LP, the venture-capital arm of Power Corp. of Canada, sees most opportunit­ies to fund digital finance startups outside Canada. He notes the regulatory “headwinds” related to Canada’s slow response to open banking.
CHRISTINNE MUSCHI/BLOOMBERG FILES Adam Felesky, CEO of Portag3 Ventures LP, the venture-capital arm of Power Corp. of Canada, sees most opportunit­ies to fund digital finance startups outside Canada. He notes the regulatory “headwinds” related to Canada’s slow response to open banking.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada