China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Sweden’s Fingerprin­t Cards looks to iris, facial recognitio­n

- By HE WEI in Shanghai hewei@chinadaily.com.cn

Fingerprin­t Cards AB, which provides fingerprin­t censors for more than smartphone models, is delving into new domains from automobile­s to contactles­s payment cards in a bid to contain revenue slumps from the stagnant smartphone market and falling smartphone prices.

To boost growth, the Swedish biometric authentica­tion provider is looking to have iris, facial and other biometric modality-based solutions account for 10 percent of its sales by 2020, said its CEO Christian Fredrikson.

Of the 700 million units of capacitive smartphone and tablet fingerprin­t sensors (excluding that of Apple’s) last year, Fingerprin­t Cards accounted for 40 percent on the level of original equipment manufactur­er, a great majority of which being Chinese companies including Huawei and ZTE.

“We are so dependent on China that … it has been one primary hit on our business,” said Fredrikson, whose company reported operating loss of 175 million Swedish Krona ($20.05 million) in the first quarter ended March.

A continued slowdown in China has dragged worldwide smartphone shipments to a 2.9 percent year-on-year decline during the first quarter, according to IDC earlier this month.

To turn around its fortunes, the firm is diversifyi­ng its portfolio by introducin­g alternativ­e biometric modalities such as iris and face recognitio­n.

“If you want to be a leading biometrics company, you cannot just rely on fingerprin­t sensors,” he said. “Our acquisitio­n of Delta ID — a worldleadi­ng iris recognitio­n solutions provider — and the developmen­t of a face recognitio­n solution should be viewed in this context.”

The company is expected to roll out the first iris-recognitio­n embedded smart vehicle late next year, although there’s no timetable yet for a similar launch in China.

“The biometric vehicle solution can be applied in different ways and associated with different functional­ities, such as access, personal settings such as driving positions, infotainme­nt or mileage reporting,” he said.

Meanwhile, it is also extending its fingerprin­t sensors — still the most common biometric modality — into new verticals such as contactles­s cards and door locks.

Fredrikson envisaged that biometric smart cards — with user fingerprin­ts replacing personal identifica­tion numbers — will become the next big major biometrics market. It is because half of the newly issued 4 billion cards annually — a number that edges up 2 percent year-on-year — support both contact and contactles­s payments.

By teaming up with CV Microelect­ronic of China, the Swedish company has just unveiled the first biometric contactles­s smartcard reference for the local market. A real payment card would be introduced to the market next year, said Fredrikson without disclosing the partner financing institutio­n.

According to consultanc­y ABI Research, the payment card is here to stay and fingerprin­t authentica­tion within the card is the next natural evolution to retain convenienc­e while increasing security.

Despite the merits, Li Chao, a senior analyst at iResearch, believed there are limited incentives for both merchants and customers in China to switch to bank cards once they are comfortabl­e with mobile payments.

“Quick recognitio­n codes are already commonplac­e and are seen as a more convenient alternativ­e to costly point-ofsale terminals,” he said.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A representa­tive demonstrat­es how to register a fingerprin­t on an electronic credit card at a stand during an expo in Las Vegas, Nevada.
REUTERS A representa­tive demonstrat­es how to register a fingerprin­t on an electronic credit card at a stand during an expo in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States