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Finovate Blog
Tracking fintech, banking & financial services innovations since 1994
ZagTrader is a leading financial technology company specializing in serving the global financial services industry and licensing its proprietary technology solutions, market data, and hosting services.
Features
Electronic connectivity to crypto exchanges globally
Access to more than 200 exchanges worldwide
Robo-advisory and structured product capabilities
Why it’s great
ZagTrader provides the ability to handle multi-asset class instruments such as stocks, commodities, futures, FX, as well as digital crypto assets such as Bitcoin, Ripple, and Ethereum ETC within the same platform.
Presenters
Shihab Khalil, CEO
With in-depth experience in fintech and capital markets, Khalil is driving ZagTrader towards becoming a global fintech company serving the banks, brokers, asset management, and capital markets. LinkedIn
Munnypot is an award-winning, easy-to-use, fully-automated, B2C and B2B online investment advice service. It provides low cost, goal-based, jargon-free advice.
Features
Regulated investment advice
Investment decisions made for the customer based on goals and appetite for risk.
Monitoring of investment performance in relation to the goal with actionable advice.
Why it’s great
Munnypot is engaging, easy-to-use, and builds customer confidence. All the complex decisions are taken away, making investment advice accessible and convenient for anyone.
Presenter
Andrew Fay, CEO
Fay is a former IFA who went on to form Cavanagh Group and worked as Head of Wealth Management at Close Brothers prior to co-founding Munnypot. LinkedIn
A look at the companies demoing live at FinovateEurope on the 6 through 9 of March 2018 in London. Pick up your tickets today and save your spot.
Touché is the world’s first biometric-based solution that leverages users’ fingerprints to deliver personalised experiences to them – and additional profit to the merchants.
Features
Personalised experiences to users
Efficiencies and actionable analytics to merchants
Value-added-services to acquirers
Why it’s great
A global solution, Touché transacts payments, manages loyalty and reward programs, and automatically applies discounts and entitlements. For merchants it analyzes historic and predictive behavior and offers targeted marketing.
Presenters
Sahba Saint-Claire, CEO & Co-Founder
Saint-Claire has had a 27-year banking career with JPMorgan, DBS, and Standard Chartered as global COO and CIO where he was overseeing tech and operations with 6,000 people globally and supporting $22 billion in revenue. LinkedIn
Javier Peso, Chief Product Officer & Co-Founder
Peso has a deep understanding of the payments industry from his time working as a software engineer and product manager in Memec, Venco Electronica, Avnet Electronics, and P4Q Electronics. LinkedIn
A look at the companies demoing live at FinovateEurope on the 6 through 9 of March 2018 in London. Pick up your tickets today and save your spot.
Ondot Systems, an innovative fintech company, brings together experts from mobile, security, and payment card industries to transform how consumers interact with their financial institutions. Ondot’s mobile application lets you control and personalize your card and that of your dependents – setting spending limits, specifying preferences around transaction types, merchants and locations.
Why it’s great
Ondot’s innovative Mobile Card Services enable consumer control over payment cards, helping reduce fraud, banks’ support costs and increase card usage.
Presenter
Gary Singh, VP of Marketing
Singh has extensive specialist knowledge of the IOT market, mobile technologies and marketing and digital payments. LinkedIn
RISQ empowers corporate banking divisions with a solution that combines an efficient platform with intelligence, data integration, and AI, presented in a radically intuitive user experience.
Features
Manages complex credit decisions with ease
Features integrated analytics using AI components to support the process
Integrates “out of the box” with multiple external data repositories
Why it’s great RISQ | Corporate Lending Powered by CRIF puts the business banking user in the driver’s seat, giving them a 360-degree visibility of every credit decision in real time.
Presenters
Michael Jesse, CEO
Jesse has met with over 150 banks in 35+ countries as part of various management roles. This unique insight was channelled into RISQ to create a radically new approach in financial software. LinkedIn
Ozan Vakar, CTO
Vakar, being an entrepreneur for over 25+ years in the financial service industry, has the unique capability to transform a business requirement into a software solution exceeding clients’ expectations. LinkedIn
Electronic IDentification has developed software to handle the customer authentication conducted in branch offices with video identification using AI and machine learning.
Features
Increases customer conversion rates from 70% to less than 10%
Speeds time to market from 3 weeks to only 3 minutes
Improves customer satisfaction and business growth and profitability
Why it’s great
Electronic IDentification’s solution is fully-compliant with Europe’s most stringent regulations for AML and eIDAS.
Presenter
Iván Nabalón, Founder and CEO
Nabalon has led Electronic IDentification to the greatest growth of any European company in the identification industry. LinkedIn
Ondot Systems, an innovative fintech company, brings together experts from mobile, security, and payment card industries to transform how consumers interact with their financial institutions.
Features
Ondot’s mobile application lets you control and personalize your card and those of your dependents – setting spending limits, specifying preferences around transaction types, merchants, and locations.
Why it’s great
Ondot’s innovative Mobile Card Services enable consumer control over payment cards, helping reduce fraud, bank support costs, and increase card usage.
Presenter
Gary Singh, Vice President of Marketing
Singh has extensive specialist knowledge of the IoT market, mobile technologies, marketing, and digital payments. LinkedIn
With the PSD2 compliance deadline having just passed, in this series we speak to some of the relevant firms both in and out of the U.K. about what this means for them and how the industry should move forward. In this installment, we chat to Marten Nelson, VP Marketing at Token. Nelson demoed Token’s PsD2 compliant solution at FinovateEurope 2017 in London.
Finovate: According to Strategy&, 68% of bankers are worried PSD2 will cause them to lose control of the client interface. What’s your advice to these banks?
Nelson: Take your head out of the sand!
Banks need to recognize that their customers’ expectations have changed and it is this, not PSD2, that is the main driver for their loss of control. Banks’ customers have grown accustomed to a new kind of digitized customer experience. One that gives them power to choose and options to choose from. New value. Ultra-convenience. Security. The changing dynamics of the customer have given rise to PSD2, which is now forcing the banks to respond.
I understand banks’ reluctance. Banks are powerful, protective and risk averse. Change is risky. Until now, customers of banks have been loyal. Why would this change? And who would want to throw open their systems to third parties, so they can build apps and services that might pull their customers away?
The hard truth, however, is this: if banks do not respond, their customers will be pulled away anyway. And faster than they might think.
The real risk to banks lies in non-participation. Banks that seek to control or limit the interface through which they engage with other banks, service providers or customers, will fail.
Finovate: Will PSD2’s enhanced security requirements increase friction for end consumers?
Nelson: Perhaps in the short term, while the new model of open banking establishes, but the main point is that consumers will have so many more secure options for financial products and services that any teething problems will ultimately pale into insignificance.
The level of friction in the end-user experience will also depend on how smoothly banks’ APIs integrate, together with which security measures they choose to implement to enable transaction authorisations.
Joining forces behind a common open banking platform – one that is easy, secure, interoperable, low cost and developer friendly, will enable banks to deliver the variety and freedom of services that their customers demand. Currently, TokenOS is the only solution that provides one interface to access all banks in the EU for both payments and data.
Finovate: How do you suggest banks and fintechs communicate about PSD2 to consumers who are scared to share their data because of privacy issues?
Nelson: Consumers do not (and will not) care about PSD2. They will care about what it enables, i.e. being able to access new products and services securely and linking them to their bank account. So, banks and fintechs should not communicate using industry jargon, they should talk in terms of new opportunities, services, facilities and benefits. Everything leads back to how they can meet the customer’s new expectations.
From a security perspective, consumers will want to be reassured that their data is safe.
Finovate: The benefits of PSD2 to fintechs are obvious. How can banks make sure they’re benefitting, as well?
Nelson: Banks that support new apps and services arising from PSD2 will benefit from their kudos, and retain customers and attract new ones as a direct result.
The key for banks lies in their support for developers. A truly open ecosystem will run on one or two APIs and support maximum third party integration.
Competitive forces prevent any bank from establishing its own API as the de-facto choice for all.
Those that try will not recruit enough developers to deliver the depth and variety of third-party services that will meet customer demand and enable them to differentiate in the market.
A single API ecosystem will attract the most developers. More developers means more innovation and more exciting and attractive financial apps and services.
History speaks (again): If there were as many operating systems as there are personal computers or smartphone manufacturers, it would be cost prohibitive for developers to build apps. That’s why there are two platforms each for PCs and mobile devices, because that is the maximum number the developer market can sustain.
Finovate: Should banks be worried that, by opening their APIs to third parties, they risk increased security vulnerabilities?
Nelson: Banks that are working with trusted software providers shouldn’t be. The key here is in adopting an open banking platform that delivers a secure ecosystem and a developer-centric approach. Uniquely, Token combines tokenization and cryptography to make transactions virtually impossible to hack, since the data transmitted between the transacting parties is meaningless to everyone else.
We also use programmable money and an open API. As a result, developers can connect securely to banks to initiate payments or access information. The programmable money element then provides support for a sea of other use cases that can benefit the bank. Since money and information always are combined, reconciling payments, for example, is a breeze. Also, payments are instant between banks on the Token network.
The arrival of open banking will (eventually) prompt both entirely new services and major enhancements to existing services. Louise Beaumont, Co-Chair, Open Bank Working Group at Tech U.K. tells us what this means.
For banks, combining data through APIs will allow them to improve customer experience hugely for processes such as account opening, AML checks and product application processes, where personal information can be pre-populated and information verified from official sources.
But that is an iterative version of today. Where Open Banking gets interesting is looking beyond ‘banking’ to where non-banks start to play. Once payments services providers have access to transaction data, they will be able to anticipate when customers are likely to need a short-term line of credit and offer their service as an alternative.
By reacting defensively and doing no more than comply with the minimum mandated standards for the Open API, some banks will hope to do as little as they can to speed the flow of data out of their organisations, and therefore to carry on as far as possible with business as usual – in a market that is undergoing fundamental change.
This is short-sighted. Assembling richer pools of data from multiple sources will give banks more angles from which to view their customers and more ways to understand them than they could gain just from transactional information. They could profile and segment their customers more precisely and look for behavioural patterns that can be used to refine predictive models. The insights they gain will power new services and improve existing ones within their own defined and manged ecosystem.
One set of potential competitors in the open banking future, the tech titans, excel at this; assembling and analysing data, at scale, as a matter of course. Companies that have data at their heart are getting perpetually smarter because they’re building ever-deeper layers of data. It allows them to make behavioural inferences that enable them to build more predictive, pre-emptive and personalised services.
Banks that choose to engage fully in the new market based on open data will focus on the element of their environment that they can control: which organisations they choose to collaborate with to create new services based on pooled data.
These will be partnerships of mutual advantage, with the potential to create new sources of profit for both parties that will be shared between them. Banks cannot expect to generate all the business ideas themselves that combining data sources will make possible. Success will come from the ability to collaborate most effectively and be open to ideas from outside.
In this new world, the banks will succeed by finding the best fit between their data and that held by other organisations, whether mobile phone companies, energy providers, transport companies, airlines or any number of others. But to succeed in the competition to collaborate most effectively, banks will need the best possible tools for data sharing and analysis. An Open API that complies with the minimum required standard will not be good enough.
What will set the winners apart is the extent to which they go beyond that and actively seek commercial partnerships based on data-pooling. That requires a different mentality: one that sees open data not just as an obligation, but also as an opportunity to learn and find new sources of value.
Dr Louise Beaumont
Open Bank, techUK & Open Bank, SapientRazorfish
Dr Louise Beaumont creates markets, enables scale, and drives growth. She is particularly interested in the intersection between technology, financial services and public sector; and has worked with start-ups, investors, blue chips and everything in between to grow companies and create value.
The way consumers shop, buy and use financial services is changing along with ever-increasing expectations. Despite shopping online, many customers still buy financial products in the branch. Finovate and Quadient invite you to listen to this webinar to learn why an inviting onboarding process for customers is no longer optional.
During this webinar, Bob Meara, Senior Analyst at Celent will discuss:
Why omni-channel customer onboarding is needed
Where many onboarding processes fall short
What’s a bank to do: 4 recommended steps to achieving omni-channel delivery
Focusing on Financial Institutions, Andrew Stevens, Product Marketing Manager at Quadient will discuss the importance of putting the customer at the center of your onboarding journeys in face-to-face environments, and how this method will delight your customers.
The Second Payment Services Directive (PSD2) mandates banks across the European Union to add two-factor Strong Customer Authentication (SCA) and Strong Customer Identity Verification (SCeID) on all remote access to customer accounts.
Both SCA and SCeID are mandated by PSD2, although the latter is not well understood. And failure to implement these capabilities exposes banks to penalties up to 2% of global annual turnover under GDPR.
The aim of this webinar is to examine the links between SCeID and SCA in the context of PSD2 and GDPR, sharing insight into how legislation mandates regulated firms to digitally verify customer identity and what technology helps to achieve this objective.
This Finovate webinar, in association with Jumio, hears from Jumio, Consult Hyperion and leading FinTech businesses to discuss the challenges – and opportunities – of SCA and SCeID. During an interactive panel discussion, the speakers will address a number of key questions, including:
How are SCeID and SCA connected?
How are the various regulatory mandates which require secure authentication and verification, such as PSD2 and GDPR, similar, and how do they differ?
What are the pitfalls to avoid when implementing SCeID and SCA?
Why does the reset process become so critical – and how can banks make sure they have robust protections in place around reset?
What technology solutions can banks leverage to meet their obligations around security and identification?
Speakers
Moderator: Ruth Wandhöfer
Global Head of Regulatory & Market Strategy
Citi
Gordon Harrison Business Development Manager Jumio
Tim Richards Principal Consultant Consult Hyperion
Pascale-Marie Brien Senior Policy Adviser European Banking Federation
Call for Demos at RegTech Rising 1 & 2 November 2017 London.
RegTech Rising is the first large scale event in Europe dedicated to RegTech. We’re bringing together the entire ecosystem – regulators; financial institutions; RegTech providers; industry advisers – to debate how to collaborate in order to accelerate innovation and capture the RegTech opportunity.
The financial crisis of 2008 resulted in a tranche of new regulations for the financial services sector and these reforms dramatically increased costs and complexity for the financial services sector relating to compliance, supervisory and reporting requirements. Many financial services providers have legacy systems that are just not capable of delivering the breadth of functionality required to take the pain out of regulatory compliance. RegTech could be a real breakthrough but there are real challenges in bringing new technology into the institution and integrating it with legacy systems.
RegTech Rising will address all these issues and more.
On 31 October our New Tech For RegTech Lab will examine the new technologies which are driving change and explore applications of artificial intelligence; machine learning; open APIs and distributed ledger technology for regulatory compliance.
On 1 & 2 November the RegTech Rising Conference will explore key strategic issues as well as offering deep dive sessions into specific regulatory areas. Hear from regulators spearheading the RegTech initiative; those leading the charge for change within financial institutions and the providers who are creating the innovative solutions.
If you wish to demo your RegTech solution to Heads of Innovation; Heads of Digital Innovations; Heads of Regulatory Change; Chief Compliance Officers; Chief Technology Officers; Chief Risk Officers; Chief Operating Officers, please contact aman.duggal@knect365.com