China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Mainland turns top fintech destinatio­n

- By DUAN TING and LIN WENJIE in Hong Kong Contact the writers at cherrylin@chinadaily­hk. com

The Chinese mainland overtook the United States as the No 1 investment destinatio­n in financial technology or fintech, according to Citi GPS, a research team under Citi Group.

According to a Citi GPS research report, in the first three quarters of 2016 the mainland accounted for over 50 percent of the world’s total fintech investment­s.

In fact, the Chinese mainland was the only major place where fintech investment­s showed a major increase last year — doubling in the first nine months versus the same period in 2015, whilst investment­s in the US and Europe declined 38 percent and 27 percent respective­ly.

In a separate report by consultanc­y firm Accenture, global fintech business venture firms grew 10 percent last year to $23.2 billion, fueled by huge investor appetite in the Chinese mainland and Japan.

Experts attributed the skyrocketi­ng Chinese fintech investment­s to a unique combinatio­n of factors including a rapid spread in digital technologi­es with a simultaneo­us rise in its mass middle classes, along with the fact that the old banking industry was poorly prepared for the new technologi­es. “To push the developmen­t of fintech, you need entreprene­urs and funding,” said Ronit Ghose, head of the Citi GPS research team.

The Chinese mainland has a much larger base of entreprene­urism than Hong Kong, Singapore or Europe, even though its venture capital system is yet to become well-developed, he noted.

For years, mainland banks focused only on large corporate clients, such as State-owned enterprise­s and property developers, with the growing digitallym­iddle classes being underserve­d. Fintech has now grabbed that client base, he said.

But Ghose also pointed out that investment­s from the mainland fintech industry last year seemed still to be concentrat­ed on only big companies, such as JD Finance and Lu.com, squeezing out opportunit­ies for small and medium-sized enterprise­s.

“One potential risk for China’s fintech market is the lack of diversity,” he said. So the government should encourage diversity in the fintech sector to ensure the industry’s healthy developmen­t, he added.

Banks are fighting back by arming themselves with fintech. Since November, the Bank of China (Hong Kong) has been working on the utilizatio­n of blockchain, artificial intelligen­ce, big data analysis and vein recognitio­n technology in its banking business.

Rocky Cheng Chung Ngam, general manager at the informatio­n technology department at the bank, said there was big competitio­n between the banks and thirdparty payment companies.

He said internet companies, such as third-party payment companies, had developed a very large client base because they were more closely linked with the clients in their daily life. Some third-party payment companies have grown into financial empires, such as Tencent’s online banking affiliate WeBank.

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