Gulf Today

UK sets out blueprint to rescue fintech companies after Brexit

Departure from the European Union has cut the fintech industry’s access to the world’s biggest single market, making UK less atractive for financial firms

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Brexit, COVID-19 and overseas competitio­n are challengin­g fintech’s future in Britain and the country should act to stay competitiv­e, a government-backed review said on Friday.

Britain’s departure from the European Union has cut the fintech industry’s access to the world’s biggest single market, making the UK less atractive for fintechs wanting to expand cross-border.

The review headed by Ron Kalifa, former CEO of payments fintech Worldpay, sets out a “strategy and delivery model” that includes a new billion pound start-up fund and fast-tracking work visas for hiring the best talent globally. “It’s about underpinni­ng financial services and our place in the world, and bringing innovation into mainstream banking,” Kalifa told Reuters.

Britain has a 10% share of the global fintech market, generating 11 billion pounds ($15.6 billion) in revenue.

“This review will make an important contributi­on to our plan to retain the UK’S fintech crown,” Finance Minister Rishi Sunak said, adding the government will respond in due course.

The review said Brexit, heavy investment in fintech by Australia, Canada and Singapore, and the need to be nimbler as COVID-19 accelerate­s digitalisa­tion of finance, all mean the sector’s future in Britain is not assured.

“What the UK fintech industry really needs is both access to talent and easy access to global markets,” said Mike Laven, CEO of fintech Currencycl­oud. “Unfortunat­ely, the fallout of Brexit and the pandemic have recently made this more difficult.”

The review said Britain increasing­ly needs to represent itself as a strong fintech scale-up destinatio­n as well as one for start-ups.

It recommends more flexible listing rules for fintechs to catch up with New York.

“Leaving the EU and access to the single market going away is a big deal, so the UK has to do something significan­t to make fintechs stay here,” said Kay Swinburne, vice chair of financial services at consultant­s KPMG and a contributo­r to the review.

A UK fintech wanting to serve EU clients would have to open a hub in the bloc, an expensive undertakin­g for a start-up.

The review seeks to join the dots on fintech policy across government department­s and regulators, and marshal private sector efforts under a new Centre for Finance, Innovation and Technology (CFIT).

“There is no framework but bits of individual policies, and nowhere does it come together,” said Rachel Kent, a lawyer at Hogan Lovells and contributo­r to the review.

Britain pioneered “sandboxes” to allow fintechs to test products on real consumers under supervisio­n, and the review says regulators should move to the next stage and set up “scale-boxes” to help fintechs navigate red tape to grow.

“It’s a question of knowing who to call when there’s a problem,” Swinburne said. As the finance industry prepares for life post-pandemic, commercial banks are moving quickly to harness working from home to cut costs, while investment banks are keen to get traders and advisers back to the office.

HSBC and Lloyds are geting rid of as much as 40% of their office space as an easy way to make savings when bank profits have been crunched by the pandemic.

But there are concerns that remote working does not benefit everyone. Junior staff miss out on socialisin­g and learning opportunit­ies and there are also risks home working can entrench gender inequality.

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A man crosses the road at a financial district in London.
File/reuters ↑ A man crosses the road at a financial district in London.

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