The rise of investment fintech

No longer the preserve of payment solutions developers, fintech startups are gaining ground and increasingly disrupting the investment management industry.

The rise of investment fintech
1 minute

Innovation hubs

The agreement follows the creation of innovation hubs at the FCA and ASIC in October 2014 and April 2015, respectively. The hubs were set up to help businesses with innovative ideas navigate financial regulation, support them through the authorisation process and engage with the regulator.

Christopher Woolard, director of strategy and competition at the FCA, said: “Innovation in financial services isn’t limited by national borders and so it’s important that we support overseas businesses that have new ideas that could benefit British consumers.

“We also know that many British firms wish to use the UK as a springboard to launch their businesses or products internationally, making them potentially more sustainable challengers. That is why this agreement – the first of many, we hope – is important.

“With ASIC, we will reduce the barriers for authorised firms looking to grow to scale overseas and to assist non-UK innovators interested in entering the market we oversee,” Woolard said.

Greg Medcraft, chairman of ASIC, said: “ASIC is committed to encouraging innovation that has the potential to benefit financial consumers and investors. Since ASIC launched its innovation hub last year we have seen a surge in requests by fintech startups seeking assistance about how to navigate the regulatory requirements. In particular we have dealt with robo or digital advice, crowd sourced equity funding, payments, marketplace lending and blockchain business models.

“It is very exciting to observe and clearly some business ideas will want to scale up internationally. We believe this agreement with the FCA will help break down barriers to entry both here and in the UK.”