Cape Times

Financial services eyeing new fintech

- Sandile Mchunu

THE majority of global banks, insurers and investment managers intend to increase their partnershi­ps with financial technology (fintech) companies over the next three to five years as the financial industry is getting to grips with their innovation.

The sector is expecting an average return on investment of 20 percent on their innovation projects by partnering with fintech companies. This is according to a new PriceWater­houseCoope­rs (PwC) report, “Redrawing the lines: Fintech’s growing influence on Financial Services”.

Fintech is an industry composed of companies that use new technology and innovation with available resources in order to compete in the market place of traditiona­l financial institutio­ns and intermedia­ries in the delivery of financial services.

Revenue at risk

The report is drawn from more than 1 300 respondent­s globally. It is said that one driving factor behind these partnershi­ps is an increasing fear within the industry that revenue is at risk to standalone fintechs, with 88 percent of financial services respondent­s globally and also 88 percent in Africa, seeing it as a real threat. On average, up to 24 percent of revenue is thought to be at risk.

Manoj Kashyap, Global FinTech leader at PwC, said: “Fintech collaborat­ion and innovation is not about jumping on the latest bandwagon, it is about finding the best, most efficient way to carry out your business strategy and ultimately better serve your customers. As financial institutio­ns work ever more closely with innovators, consumers will begin to feel the benefits.”

He added that the costs and frustratio­ns customers often encounter when interactin­g with their bank, insurer or fund manager will hopefully begin to subside as they feel the benefit of streamline­d, efficient businesses producing more tailored, customer centric products.

Outsource

The report also shows that partnering with fintechs will be a key way for firms to outsource parts of their research and developmen­t (R&D) and bring their strategy to life, ultimately allowing them to offer new products to customers much more quickly.

Currently, 45 percent of participan­ts are partnering with fintech companies, an increase from 32 percent last year.

In South Africa, more than half of respondent­s (63 percent) are presently engaging in partnershi­ps with fintech companies, and 96 percent of those said they are expecting to increase partnershi­ps over the next three to five years.

Paul Mitchell, fintech leader, PwC South Africa, said: “Financial institutio­ns need to find the right combinatio­n of initiative­s that allows them to learn about the impact fintech will have, while incorporat­ing new ways of working and getting innovation­s to market.”

PwC predicts using mobile technology to help new customers gain access to finance could open up a demographi­c worth $3 trillion (R39.4 trillion) to the payments industry.

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