By putting customers first, fintechs are using technology to provide more responsive and cost-effective financial solutions for clients.

Author: Gilly Wright
smartphone finance

Latham, Currency Cloud: Taking [an] open approach to IT development can help banks reduce their development costs and provide innovative new services.
Latham, Currency Cloud: Taking [an] open approach to IT development can help banks reduce their development costs and provide innovative new services.

Financial technology’s meteoric rise—fintech startups raised $12.2 billion globally in 2014, triple the amount raised in 2013—is set to continue as the sector develops products and services to meet banking shortfalls and customer demand for improved convenience and better value. According to financial services IT research firm Celent, only a small portion of the $196.7 billion banks are expected to spend on IT in 2015 will be on innovation, as 75% will get swallowed up maintaining their unwieldy legacy systems and keeping pace with new regulations.

Richard Goldklang, chief technology officer, European Union, at GFT , which specializes in designing and implementing IT solutions for the financial services industry, says investment banks face enormous problems with technology as they have all grown via acquisition. “Each separate area of the bank has its own technology silos, and no one seems to be able to pull it all together; and they have not tens, not hundreds, but literally thousands of systems.”

But it is not just banks’ IT infrastructure that is causing them problems when it comes to keeping pace with fintech startups. Regulation is also having an impact. “Everything is being driven by yet another regulatory compliance deadline, and everyone is spending their whole time rushing after these deadlines, which is very inefficient,” says Goldklang. Rather than adding to the spaghetti of existing architecture with manual work-arounds, banks should invest in getting their architecture and market data correct, adds Goldklang, which would help make future compliance issues easier to resolve.

CORPORATES BENEFIT FROM INNOVATION

For Philippe Gelis, the co-founder and CEO of Kantox, a peer-to-peer foreign exchange platform for businesses, fintech firms are more agile and able to respond to customer needs with greater urgency as a result of their size and leverage of technology. “Fintech looks at traditional finance and aims to improve it through technology, whereas banks are so big, with so many layers of old technology and long-established processes, that it is time-consuming and bureaucratic,” says Gelis.

Customer power in such circumstances is not so strong, adds Gelis, as there is little to no competition that offers a more customer-centric service. “Fintech as a finance subsector is growing exactly because of the failings of the traditional sector, so fintech services are more customer-centric by their very nature,” he explains.

Goldklang, GFT: Each separate area of the bank has its own technology silos, and no one seems to be able to pull it all together.
Goldklang, GFT: Each separate area of the bank has its own technology silos, and no one seems to be able to pull it all together.

Making international payments, for example, is an essential task for any company wishing to operate globally. However, the infrastructure designed to support the thousands of transactions taking place each day within traditional banks often relies on legacy systems and manual operations, says Todd Latham, vice president of marketing at currency payments provider Currency Cloud, which provides a Cloud-based international payments platform to businesses via an application programming interface or API. “As such, businesses often find themselves paying additional fees for such services, which are delayed by drawn-out processes.” Latham says Cloud platforms can automate traditionally laborious payment processes and offer businesses a seamless international payments experience, significantly reducing the cost and time associated with the transaction. By operating their payments online, businesses also have complete control over how they manage their international payments.

Although fintechs are currently meeting the needs of specific banking verticals such as payments and foreign exchange, Gelis believes there will be fintech banks within the next five years. “Fintech banks will provide a platform for convenient access to a marketplace of financial services and a knowledge base that will be indispensable to customer interests.”

Gelis says APIs will enable fintech banks to act as a central point from which the bank can address financial service requests from customers and turn to the services of a relevant third party, be it a fintech company, a financial institution or even old-school banks. For developers, APIs enable them to connect to a bank, through a controlled access channel, to make use of customer data. Developers can then build new services, with banks maintaining complete control over how those services are delivered behind the scenes.

“For banks, the API benefit is clear,” says Latham. an API provides the opportunity to save huge amounts of time and money by integrating the functionality from another offering as part of the bank’s own, which simplifies the process of adding innovative technology services by piecing together building blocks of flexible services, much like financial lego. “Taking this open approach to IT development can help banks reduce their development costs, provide innovative new services and unlock fresh revenue,” he says.

A nimble and customer-centric approach to financial services is behind most fintech innovations. Jean Donnelly, executive director of FinTech Sandbox, a Boston-based nonprofit that helps fintech start-ups, says entrepreneurs look where entry barriers are the lowest, adding greater transparency on the consumer side for payments, currency exchange and platform or alternative lending.

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