China Daily

Big deals push financial tech to the fore

- By HE WEI in Shanghai

A wave of blockbuste­r deals in China has driven global investment in fintech, according to a study by consultanc­y Accenture.

Fintech financing in the Asia-Pacific region eclipsed that of North America for the first time in 2016, more than doubling to $11.2 billion. Globally the amount grew by 10 percent to $23.2 billion.

Growth in the total value of fintech investment­s was due mainly to the Chinese mainland and Hong Kong, where just 3 percent of all 1,800 deals accounted for nearly 43 percent of total fintech investment globally.

Richard Lumb, group chief executive for financial services at Accenture, said: “The swing of investment from West to the East is largely driven by the greater opportunit­y for new entrants to use fintech to define the new fabric of the industry than in the West.”

All of the 10 largest fintech investment­s in Asia-Pacific last year were on the Chinese mainland and Hong Kong. Together those 10 deals accounted for 82 percent of all Asia-Pacific fintech investment in 2016.

Leading the deals was Ant Financial Services Group, the financial services affiliate of e-commerce giant Alibaba Group Holdings that operates China’s online-payments platform Alipay, which closed a $4.5 billion fundraisin­g round in April.

Ping An-backed Lufax, which has started using the name Lu.com, completed a $1.2 billion round of fundraisin­g in January 2016. In that same month, China’s second largest e-commerce company, JD.com Inc, raised $1 billion in new funding for its consumer finance subsidiary, JD Finance.

Albert Chan, managing director of financial services China, Accenture, said: “Alibaba and JD.com were two major fintech investors this year, as they focus on providing their customers with endto-end services including payments and lending. Well aware that they’re facing disruption from outside the industry, many of China’s financial services companies are making investment­s in fintech companies and exploring cutting-edge solutions such as blockchain technology.”

He said: “The result is robust competitio­n in payments and lending from nontraditi­onal players and establishe­d financial institutio­ns working collaborat­ively with startups to explore fintech solutions in other parts of the business.”

The outlook for fintech remains bright, but many uncertaint­ies will continue this year, the report said.

Lumb said: “And that will set a higher bar for performanc­e among fintech ventures, particular­ly in the US and the UK. The winners will be those who understand how to tailor their innovation­s and compress their time-to-market and are able to leverage traditiona­l financial institutio­ns to their advantage.”

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