The Financial Express (Delhi Edition)

In race to be Asia’s fintech hub, Singapore leads Hong Kong

Sees fastest growth in fintech start-ups in Asia; gets an edge as Europe loses sheen after Brexit

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SINGAPORE is rushing to reinvent itself as Asia’s financial technology, or fintech, hub to fend off a regulatory threat to its wealth management industry and revive a sluggish economy.

State funding, light-touch regulation and a recent move to allow start-ups to test financial products in a controlled environmen­t have put Singapore ahead of rival Hong Kong to be Asia’s fintech hotspot.

Much like Uber, Airbnb and others have harnessed technology and online social networking to disrupt taxi and hotel services, fintech firms are shaking up the traditiona­l banking and financial services industry.

Singapore’s fintech drive comes as its role as an offshore private banking centre is under threat from a multibilli­on-dollar money laundering scandal in neighbouri­ng Malaysia, and as Indonesia chases undeclared money parked in the low-tax city state.

Also, Singapore’s traditiona­l shipping and manufactur­ing growth drivers are faltering amid a global economic slowdown and a slump in commodity prices and demand.

Singapore is attracting interest, too, from among the 60,000 or so fintech firms based in London’s near-$9 billion market — a trend likely to accelerate with Britain’s referendum vote to leave the European Union.

“We already have registered interest from UK-based companies to move to Asia as it’s getting very crowded there,” said Markus Gnirck, partner and co-founder of tryb, a fintech consultanc­y. “Brexit will probably accelerate a few of these conversati­ons.”

Britain’s soft approach to regulation and its influence on Europe would likely wane with Brexit and any new barriers that would create.

“In the long term (this) makes Europe much less attractive as a place for entreprene­urs,” Taveet Hintikus, CEO of peer-to-peer money transfer firm Transfer Wise, told the World Economic Forum in the Chinese city of Tianjin this week. He told a panel session that his company was looking at Asia for expansion, and Singapore appeared a more vibrant fintech centre than Hong Kong.

A KPMG report said Singapore has been more aggressive in pursuing fintech opportunit­ies, and tryb noted that all but a dozen of the around 210 fintech firms operating in Singapore have opened in the past two years - the fastest growth rate in Asia.

However, Singapore’s immigratio­n laws are an obstacle, start-ups and consultant­s say, as measures to curb the number of foreign workers and give priority to Singaporea­ns have left a shortage of talent.

And Singapore’s banking regulation­s have created a risk averse culture that is at odds with the trial-and-error approach of fintechsta­rt-ups.

But the city state’s efforts are bearing fruit.

Smart Karma, a start-up that operates a platform offering Asian institutio­nal research and analysis on demand, chose Singapore over Hong Kong for its headquarte­rs.

“There’s no other city in the world where you have such a progressiv­e government when it comes to supporting innovation today — be it from grants, to having funding vehicles to operationa­l support,” said cofounder and CEO Raghav Kapoor.

Singapore state agency SPRING is an investor in Smart Karma, and government agency Internatio­nal Enterprise is helping the fir m expand overseas.

With Moody’s expecting Singapore’s economy to grow at its slowest pace since the global financial crisis, government officials are keen to engage with new industries: one fintech entreprene­ur in shorts and flipflops says he keeps in touch by Whats App with regulators and meets them once a week.

In Hong Kong, despite nearly $300 million in fintech funding, start-ups face tough regulatory hurdles say lawyers, consultant­s and fintech executives. There are fewer than 100 fin tech firms in Hong Kong, according to tryb.

Hong Kong’s rules and regulation­s make it difficult to set up crowdfundi­ng platforms, payment firms and peer-to-peer lending operations, and to secure operating licenses.

For example, Chinese peer-to-peer lender Jimubox spent nearly a year setting up in Hong Kong only to abandon the plan because strict rules on account openings made it hard for the firm to take on customers.

“I spent time and money and hired a couple of people to explore this and ended up having to kill it because it didn’t make sense from a commercial standpoint, purely around the account opening process,” said Jimubox co-founder Barry Freeman.

In Singapore, any entity can operate payment systems and e-wallets without seeking approval, while rules introduced in Hong Kong last year require firms to have a licence for Stored Value Facilities, or a prepaid electronic cash or card.

 ??  ?? A general view of the skyline of the central business district in Singapore
A general view of the skyline of the central business district in Singapore

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