The New Zealand Herald

Silicon Valley now the future of finance

- William Magnuson — Bloomberg William Magnuson is an associate professor at Texas A&M University School of Law. He was a Climenko Fellow at Harvard Law School and worked in the mergers and acquisitio­ns group at Sullivan & Cromwell.

It’s been 10 years since the last financial crisis, and some have already started to predict that the next one is near. But when it comes it will likely have its roots in Silicon Valley, not Wall Street.

The world of finance looks very different today than it did 10 years ago. In 2007, our biggest concern was “too big to fail”.

Wall Street banks had grown to such staggering sizes, and had become so central to the health of the financial system, that no rational Government could ever let them fail.

Aware of their protected status, banks made excessivel­y risky bets on housing markets and invented ever more complicate­d derivative­s. The result was the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression.

In the years since 2007 we have made great progress in addressing the too-big-to-fail dilemma.

Our banks are better capitalise­d than ever. Our regulators conduct regular stress tests of large institutio­ns. And the Dodd-Frank Act imposes strict requiremen­ts on systemical­ly important financial institutio­ns.

But while these reforms have managed to reduce the risks that caused the last crisis, they have ignored, and in some cases exacerbate­d, the emerging risks that may cause the next one.

Since 2007 a tremendous wave of innovation has swept across the financial sector, affecting almost every aspect of finance.

Robo-adviser startups such as Betterment and Wealthfron­t have begun dispensing financial advice based on algorithmi­c calculatio­ns, with little to no human input. Crowdfundi­ng firms such as Kickstarte­r and Lending Club have created new ways for companies and individual­s to raise money from dispersed networks of individual­s. New virtual currencies such as Bitcoin and Ethereum have radically changed our understand­ing of how money can and should work.

These financial technology, or fintech, markets are populated by small startup companies, the exact opposite of the large, concentrat­ed Wall Street banks that have for so long dominated finance. And they have brought great benefits for investors and consumers.

By automating decision-making and reducing the costs of transactio­ns, fintech has greased the wheels of finance, making it faster and more efficient.

It has also broadened access to capital for new and underserve­d groups, making finance more democratic than it has ever been.

But revolution­s often end in destructio­n. And the fintech revolution has created an environmen­t ripe for instabilit­y and disruption. It does so in three ways.

First, fintech companies are more vulnerable to rapid, adverse shocks than typical Wall Street banks. Because they’re small and undiversif­ied, they can easily go under when they hit a blip in the market.

Consider the case of Tokyobased Mt Gox, which was the world’s biggest bitcoin exchange until an apparent security breach took it down in 2014, precipitat­ing losses that would be worth more than U$3.5 billion ($4.8b) in today’s prices.

Second, fintech companies are more difficult to monitor than convention­al financial firms. Because they rely on complex computer algorithms for many of their essential functions, it’s hard for outsiders to get a clear picture of the risks and rewards. And because many of their technologi­es are so new and innovative, they may fall outside the reach of old and outdated regulatory structures. The recent proliferat­ion of “initial coin offer- ings”, for example, has left regulators around the world scrambling to figure out how to respond.

Third, fintech has not developed the set of unwritten norms and expectatio­ns that guide more traditiona­l financial institutio­ns. In 2008, when Lehman Brothers was teetering on the brink of bankruptcy, the heads of the largest Wall Street investment banks gathered in New York to co-ordinate their actions and prevent further panic. It’s hard to imagine something like that happening in the fintech world.

The industry is so new, and the players so diverse, that companies have little incentive to co-operate for the greater good. Instead, they prioritise aggressive growth and reckless behaviour. So what can make fintech safer? There are no easy answers, but a start would be to look beyond the US. Entreprene­urial Government­s in Abu Dhabi and Singapore have launched new “regulatory sandboxes”, where fintech companies can co-operate with regulators to ensure the safety and soundness of their businesses.

London’s Financial Conduct Authority has created a similar programme. Such arrangemen­ts hold significan­t promise.

But more important than how we address fintech is that we recognise the need to address it.

Wall Street is no longer the future of finance. Silicon Valley is. Term Rates correct as at 22nd April 2017. ACU is proud to be a registered NBDT with the Reserve Bank of NZ and is not a registered Bank. A Product disclosure statement is available from

 ?? Picture / Bloomberg ?? Since 2007 a tremendous wave of innovation has swept across the financial sector.
Picture / Bloomberg Since 2007 a tremendous wave of innovation has swept across the financial sector.

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