The Citizen (Gauteng)

Startups rewrite story

FINTECH: IN SA, RELATIVELY YOUNG BUSINESSES ARE PULLING IN MILLIONS

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A whirlwind of investment is swirling around fintech startups in South Africa, as innovation in banking and payments changes the rules of the financial game. Arthur Goldstuck

Anew story, laced with cliffhange­rs, drama and intrigue, is being written across the pages of the world’s financial newspapers. The plot does not include gangsters, espionage or murder – yet – but it has its readers riveted.

The story begins with the wellworn premise of how technology is changing the world of financial services. But it quickly hurtles into the heady world of startups that are rewriting the rules of this nascent industry called fintech, for financial technology.

It then charges across the balance sheets of venture capital firms transfixed by unpreceden­ted opportunit­y to return untold multiples on investment­s.

Depending who does the counting, anywhere from $17 billion (R223 billion) to $25 billion in venture capital went to fintech firms globally in 2016. According to CBInsights, 2017 was the biggest year ever in fintech venture capital.

In South Africa, startups seem to pick up million-rand cheques on the basis of little more than PowerPoint presentati­ons. Relatively young businesses that have already proven themselves are pulling in hundreds of millions.

Three examples from the past year encapsulat­e the scope of fintech and the scale of investment:

Prodigy Finance, a company started by a South African in the United Kingdom before being brought back to South Africa, offers loans to postgradua­te students accepted into leading universiti­es around the world. This “borderless credit” provider has accumulate­d funding of R4.2 billion, with R3.19 billion raised in 2017.

One of the participan­ts in the latest funding round, AlphaCode, the fintech investment arm of Rand Merchant Bank, is becoming a familiar brand behind much of the fintech venture capital in South Africa. It recently hosted an event at which R1 million was handed to each of four winners of a fintech competitio­n for blackowned startups.

Luno, a trading platform for cryptocurr­encies like Bitcoin and Ethereum, announced a R120 million funding round, led by UKbased Balderton Capital, and also including AlphaCode. An earlier R60 million investment came from Naspers.

Synthesis Software Technologi­es, an establishe­d fintech company that approaches innovation like a startup, was acquired by JSE-listed Capital Appreciati­on for R132.1 million. While it provides software developmen­t and integratio­n services to financial institutio­ns, it has also become a leading player in the rapidly evolving cloud computing space.

Last year, it became the first company in Africa and the Middle East to be named an Advanced Partner by Amazon Web Services (AWS), the fastest-growing division of Amazon.

The last is the most intriguing of the three, given that its value and potential are not grounded in a specific trend or marketplac­e. With the cloud as backdrop, its innovation plays out in the fields of financial channels, blockchain, big data and artificial intelligen­ce.

“We constantly review current technology trends and formulate products and solutions based on common industry needs using available technologi­es,” said Synthesis managing director Michael Shapiro. “This is where our focus on cloud technologi­es was incubated and formulated five years ago.”

The combinatio­n of a 20-year track record and a fresh, startup-like approach to cloud computing gave Synthesis a head-start in an environmen­t where the starting point is often not clear. It assists financial institutio­ns in “becoming cloud ready, to execute mass migrations, to harness the benefits of big data analytics and to extract the cost savings and regulatory benefits of the cloud platforms”, said Shapiro.

The distinctio­n between a good opportunit­y and a good idea is the viable economic applicatio­n of the good idea.

Bradley Sacks Joint CEO of Capital Appreciati­on

Arthur Goldstuck is founder of World Wide Worx and editor-in-chief of Gadget.co.za Follow him on Twitter and Instagram on @art2gee

“In the world of fintech, technical innovation and business innovation are often interchang­eable and we have to unlock this value. We translate the institutio­n’s business strategy into solutions with real, measurable impact.”

Shapiro pointed to a fascinatin­g twist in the plot, however: financial services companies that plan to disrupt themselves with their own, internal fintech startups. “Cloud platforms such as AWS give new startups the opportunit­y to disrupt. That is why our customer base of establishe­d players is seriously evaluating and using the same technologi­es to up their game and provide better banking, insurance and investment solutions to the market.”

A striking example was First National Bank last November awarding R10.5 million to employees in a contest to come up with innovation­s that would create radical disruption in the financial industry. The programme has been running since 2004 and has awarded a total of R54.5 million.

Last year, FNB was named Most Innovative African Bank at the 2017 African FinTech Awards for the second year in a row, and was named Master Innovator in the 2017 Accenture Innovation Awards.

FNB Business chief informatio­n officer Peter Alkema put the strategy simply: “Our aim is to disrupt rather than be disrupted. A new way of thinking is needed to demystify banking in the financial services industry. Fintech helps grow, educate and enrich the market.

“Businesses are incorporat­ing innovation in their business models which encourages us to think and act differentl­y. This radical disruption is necessary for cross industry collaborat­ion and is crucial for future value generation.”

However, investing in a fintech startup is a very different process from incubating an idea in-house. The team behind a startup hasn’t been recruited by the parent company, yet it has to fit in with the ethos and goals of the investor.

“The cultural fit of the team is critical,” said Bradley Sacks, joint CEO of Capital Appreciati­on. “A large component of any fintech company is its people, their entreprene­urial drive, their innovation and their understand­ing of the market opportunit­y their product or solution is trying to address.

“Ideologica­l difference­s, in terms of architectu­re or otherwise, can be quite disruptive, and it is important to understand this as part of a due-diligence process.”

The bottom line, however, is the bottom line.

“The financial returns of any investment are important, and we place a great deal of emphasis on this, including the benefit the acquisitio­n may afford other initiative­s already in the group.

“Our analysis does not only consider the direct impact within the quarter or half-year results, but also a medium-term horizon. Often the impact of innovative solutions is not visible until there is reached critical mass adoption.”

This is probably the biggest conundrum in fintech investment­s: how to assess the potential of a solution before it has taken off, and before every other investor lines up to fund it. It’s into this gap that many venture capital funding rounds have plunged and many promising fairy tales have ended in financial tragedy. In many cases, the flaw has been the belief in a good idea rather than a good business. But there is a formula to differenti­ate between the two.

“The distinctio­n between a good opportunit­y and a good idea is the viable economic applicatio­n of the good idea,” said Sacks. “If the idea does not have a viable economic business case, it will never evolve into a real opportunit­y.

“Where clients derive value from an idea or applicatio­n, they are happy to compensate us. Value to a client arises from lower costs or increased revenue, but equally can arise from user experience, customer satisfacti­on and retention and brand awareness.”

Sacks and Alkema sound like they are reading from the same script. But that is probably because most good, new fintech stories still depend on the same tried and tested plots.

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