Business Standard

APAC attracts $9.6 bn of fintech investment­s

China & Hong Kong take the bulk; India comes next, but well behind

- BS REPORTER Pune, 25 August

Investment­s in Asia-Pacific financial technology (fintech) ventures reached $9.62 billion as of July 31, more than twice the $4.26 bn invested in the region in all of 2015, according to an Accenture analysis of CB Insights data.

China tops with total investment of $9 bn and India comes next with $339 million. Investment­s in the Asia-Pacific eclipsed North America, which, as of July 31, garnered $4.58 bn in fintech; Europe attracted $1.85 bn. However, deal volume remains higher in North America and Europe, as the AsiaPacifi­c increase is large due to big investment­s at select fintech companies in China. There have been 192 deals in the Asia-Pacific so far this year, as compared with 509 in North America and 230 in Europe.

In fact, the top 10 investment­s in Asia-Pacific fintech ventures were in China and Hong Kong, 90 per cent of overall flow into the region and valued at $8.75 bn. In total, China and Hong Kong fintech ventures have attracted $9 bn in investment­s so far this year.

“China’s establishe­d companies, rather than nascent start-ups, are at the forefront of the fintech trend in the region,” said Beat Monerrat, Accenture's senior managing director for this segment in the Asia-Pacific. “Fintech companies with major backers such as Alibaba and JD.com are focused on providing positive end-to-end customer experience­s, including payments and lending. This is transformi­ng China’s financial services industry and is consistent with the global ‘Fourth Industrial Revolution’, which is bringing innovation from nontraditi­onal competitor­s to the financial services industry.” Ant Financial Services Group, part of e-commerce giant Alibaba Group Holding that operates China’s major online payments platform, Alipay, closed a $4.5bn fundraisin­g round in April. The Ping Anbacked Lufax, which has started using the name Lu.com, completed a $1.2 bn round in January. The same month, China’s second largest ecommerce company, JD.com, raised $1 bn in new funding for its consumer finance subsidiary, JD Finance.

In recent years, major Alibaba affiliates and China’s biggest social network company, Tencent, have also invested in other smaller start-ups, such as Fenqile, a micro-loan site (which literally means 'happy instalment­s'), at Qufenqi, an electronic­s retailer that lets buyers pay in monthly instalment­s, and India’s One97 Communicat­ions, a mobile internet company whose Paytm is its flagship brand.

“The fintech trend in China continues to skew toward online payments and lending, including peer-to-peer, which is creating market-share dilution for banks,” said Albert Chan, managing director for China financial services at Accenture.

 ??  ?? Investment­s in APAC fintech ventures reached $9.62 bn as of July 31, more than twice the $4.26 bn invested in 2015, according to an Accenture analysis
Investment­s in APAC fintech ventures reached $9.62 bn as of July 31, more than twice the $4.26 bn invested in 2015, according to an Accenture analysis

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