Corporate Finance, DeFi, Blockchain, Web3 News
Corporate Finance, DeFi, Blockchain News

Crazy Fintech Predictions for 2016

“I was not predicting the future, I was trying to prevent it.” Ray Bradbury


Pascal Bouvier
Pascal Bouvier
Without further ado, here is a list of wild, wilder and wildest predictions for 2016, all of which will prove me wrong I am sure:

SECTOR PREDICTIONS =>

1) Lending:
– Defaults begin to spike up by mid 2016 and weak alternative lending platforms focused on consumer credit are exposed. The leading platforms consolidate their advance.
– At least one lending unicorn sells after failing to IPO.
– Alibaba and Amazon steadily grow their own SME lending initiatives.
– More mature securitization comes to SME lending.
– A mortgage lending startup brings delight to the broken mortgage lending process. New unicorn anyone?

2) Capital Markets:
– At least one major exchange announces a Machine Learning proof of concept.
– Banks and buy side actors finally learn how to collaborate together and agree on open standards around new technology stacks, data, interoperability, leading the way for breakthroughs with consensus ledger tech (see below)

3) Insurance:
– Much like Banks in the past 5 years, most insurance incumbents remain asleep at the wheel allowing a multitude of startups to prosper.
– At least 100 digital insurance startups get funded throughout the year.

4) Wealth Management:
– Betterment sells to a large strategic. We all wonder if the sale price was below the latest valuation.
– B2B wealth management startups are the “in” thing.

5) Consensus Ledgers & Crypto currencies:
– Bitcoin trends down below $200 as the Chinese government cracks down on miners smooching off of cheap power (I need at least one crazy controversial statement!)
– Some alt coins become memorabilia items.
– Identity management startups built on consensus ledger tech break out.
– Several countries well on the path to adopt and use their own crypto currencies.
– Consensus Ledger focused startups experiment with property rights.

6) Payments:
– As ApplePay breaks out, Apple decides to make a series of investments in the Payments space, forcing Alphabet and Facebook to follow suit.
– Banks roll out their own wallet solutions, ensues a real digital wallet war for retail payment domination.
– A few interesting cross border payments companies pick up steam, both on b2b and b2c – one may even use crypto rails.
– Many “me too” payments startups close shop.

MARKET TRENDS =>

1) Valuations start to normalize – that is no further growth and slight decreases – and some investment terms become more investor friendly.
2) Financial Wellness or Financial Health becomes a HOT topic.
3) Strategic buyers (banks, insurers, asset managers) increase their partnership and M&A activity with fintech startups that failed to gain significant traction but have interesting technology platforms.
4) London consolidates its dominant fintech lead.
5) Silicon Valley investors cool off slightly to fintech. NYC VCs and new fintech funds pick up the slack.
6) Singapore builds up its status as SEA’s fintech hub.
7) Regulators further adapt to a finserv/fintech sea change and become more flexible and open for business (one can always dream).
8) Following in the footsteps of their UK brethren, US bank regulators signal they welcome digital bank startup applications.

GLOBAL EVENT =>

Alibaba secures an operating foothold in payments, lending and wealth management in Europe and the US, despite initial regulator skittishness.

By all means, add to the conversation. Which likely event have I missed? Which prediction seems far fetched or plain stupid on my part? Explain your own predictions of course.

Original link :
http://finiculture.com/crazy-fintech-predictions-for-2016/

Bio:

Life and work experiences have given Pascal an unmatched vantage point, seeing things as both venture capitalist and aspiring entrepreneur. He currently is a Venture Partner with Santander Innoventures – Santander Group’s Global Fintech fund. Previously he was General Partner with Route 66 Ventures where he built the firm’s venture arm into a top 20 global fintech investor. Pascal puts his experience to work managing early and late stage equity investments (VC/PE). This perspective and his knowledge of banking, financial services and software services have made Pascal a true innovator in the VC arena. His current focus is on emerging and high-growth FinServ and FinTech companies in consensus ledger technology (his term for blockchain and distributed ledger technology), digital banking and insurance in the U.S., Europe, and Asia.

Pascal launched his career as a commercial banker for Europe’s Banque Paribas, in Paris. During the late 1980s, he moved to managing investments at Dai Ichi Kangyo Bank, the world’s largest commercial bank based in Tokyo. Here, he built a diverse, $500+ million portfolio in senior, subordinated loans, and equity investments. Pascal moved to the U.S. in 1990, where he cemented his passion for operating early stage ventures and investing.

Les médias du groupe Finyear


Mardi 19 Janvier 2016




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