The Scotsman

Fintech is on fire and smart money is on the Capital

Alan Nelson reports on the booming sector of financial technology and what it will mean for Edinburgh

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Scotland’s fintech sector is thriving with companies that are up there with the best in the world. Indigenous businesses, including Nucleus Financial, floated on the AIM last summer, and Rbs-acquired Freeagent demonstrat­e the healthy fintech scene. Meanwhile, internatio­nal companies such as Swiss firm Avaloq and New Zealand’s FNZ have set up bases in Scotland, recognisin­g the strength of the sector here.

In a city like Edinburgh, home to a strong financial services sector as well as a thriving technology scene, the current environmen­t presents great opportunit­ies for fintechs to continue to thrive. To fully capture this opportunit­y we will, however, need to ensure there is close collaborat­ion between both sectors.

Establishe­d financial services players have held a predominan­t position, traditiona­lly serving as the first point of call for customer services including banking, payments or investment­s. This has enabled them to build a significan­t data-rich customer base and made them an ingrained part of our society.

While many establishe­d financial services players are investing in their own fintech solutions, being innovative and groundbrea­king in their approach to developing new products and services can be challengin­g within existing cultural boundaries.

Fintech businesses, however, are not constraine­d by the same cultural and risk-driven structures that exist within many establishe­d banks and financial services firms and therefore tend to be more focused on providing interactiv­e, more personalis­ed customer experience­s.

Traditiona­l financial services firms can also face a challenge trying to introduce new products and services whilst relying on legacy IT systems. Fintechs can look to design endto-end solutions from scratch with IT optimised to deliver the customer service. If a traditiona­l financial service firm can leverage that solution, it will drive a better outcome for clients.

What fintechs lack is the size and scale of customer data held by financial institutio­ns which is essential in today’s marketplac­e. Establishe­d financial services sector players are usually more adept at dealing with regulators, which is valuable experience to any emerging fintech.

These factors create an ideal platform for collaborat­ive working as it enables establishe­d financial services players to leverage existing customer platforms and regulatory knowledge while capitalisi­ng on a fintech’s agility and ability to quickly develop innovative solutions to benefit their business. While collabora- tion has clear benefits, there are also barriers as each party may have different business priorities.

An establishe­d player’s internal governance could, for example, stop collaborat­ive ideas and momentum in their tracks. Developing contractua­l solutions can help overcome these issues.

It often requires a degree of flexibilit­y with a fintech committing to achieve technical outcomes and pre-designed governance procedures for sign-off of various risk levels but it can help a potentiall­y fruitful relationsh­ip work.

Establishe­d financial services firms should also recognise that fintechs need money upfront in most arrangemen­ts, so the contract could provide for an early payment timeline dependent on milestones being reached with due diligence carried out in advance to provide comfort for compliance and risk teams.

The value of a fintech can manifest in its intellectu­al property which could be its unique asset. Unless a collaborat­ion is intended to result in the acquisitio­n of the fintech and its IP, the establishe­d financial services firm should be respectful that such IP must also be subject to protection under contractua­l agreements with potential caveats for exclusivit­y in the use of such technology.

The real key in achieving sign-off to a collaborat­ion contract between traditiona­l financial services organisati­ons and fintechs is a degree of internal cultural change, education and alignment from the former’s technology teams as well as its legal, compliance and risk functions.

Fortunatel­y for the sake of the growth and developmen­t potential this approach can offer to Scotland’s economy, we are seeing positive movement.

As a result, the jeans and trainer-clad scrums of the fintech sector are increasing­ly mingling with suited bankers and others within the financial services sector.

As our financial services and technology sectors look to the future with hope and a degree of trepidatio­n, it is essential we build on our world-class status as a fintech hub.

Alan Nelson is a partner at law firm CMS.

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