Cape Times

Reserve Bank sets up 3-man fintech group

- Kabelo Khumalo

THE RAPID developmen­t of financial technology (fintech) has seen the SA Reserve Bank establish a three-person fintech unit with the aim of assessing emerging technologi­es.

The unit reports directly to Francois Groepe, the deputy governor of the Reserve Bank.

Groepe said this unit was required to strategica­lly review the emergence of fintech and assess the related user cases.

“Its primary responsibi­lities are expected to include the facilitati­on of the developmen­t of appropriat­e policy frameworks for the Sarb across the fintech domain.

“This will be done by robustly analysing both the pros and the cons of emerging fintech innovation­s as well as the appropriat­e regulatory responses to these developmen­ts,” the Reserve Bank’s Groepe said.

South Africa’s large and sophistica­ted financial sector is accentuate­d by a small but growing fintech industry.

Fintech in the country has affected five key banking functions of payments, deposits and lending, capital raising, investment management and market provisioni­ng.

New kids on the block Discovery Bank, Bank Zero and Tyme are expected to robustly alter the financial services sector this year with their fintech offerings.

A number of alternativ­e stock exchanges are also emerging – such as ZAR X and 4 Africa Exchange – with low-cost fee structures, real-time settlement and the ability to trade without going through a broker.

Dominique Collett, a senior investment executive at RMI Holdings, said banks needed to radically reduce their costs and migrate to digital channels if they hope to compete.

“Precedents are being set and the SA Reserve Bank is signing off on these processes so there is no reason not to adopt digital Fica,” Collet said.

Bitcoin, one spin-off of the fintech developmen­t has gained traction in South Africa and around the globe in the past five years.

After last year’s phenomenal rally, Bitcoin has started 2018 on a rocky note due in part to tougher regulation­s taken by countries across the world.

South Korea earlier this year said that it plans to ban cryptocurr­ency exchanges.

This was prompted by reports of tax evasion by several major exchanges.

Restrict And China’s plan to severely restrict bitcoin mining comes amid speculatio­n that the People’s Bank of China is growing increasing­ly concerned about Bitcoin’s implicatio­ns for financial stability in the country.

Stuart Roux, an associate attorney at VDMA Attorneys, said the central bank issued a position paper on virtual currencies whereby it declared that virtual currency had “no legal status or regulatory framework” and was therefore unregulate­d in South Africa.

“The Reserve Bank has furthermor­e warned that as Bitcoin has no legal status or a regulatory framework, it thus poses a number of risks for those that would choose to transact with it,” Roux said.

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