FINTECH ARTICLES OF THE WEEK 12/18/2016
As the year quickly comes to a close, news this week takes a step back to assess the impact of APIs on the financial sector, more emerging insurance trends, and FinTech’s impact on the underbanked and unbanked populations in the U.S. and abroad. We also learned that consumers are waking up to digital banking options, but contrary to the push towards digital everything, people still like cash and plastic cards over mobile wallets. Take a look at these insights and more in this week’s FinTech Rising round-up.
Top 5 Insurtech Trends for 2017
Big data will help insurance companies tailor policies based on consumer needs and expectations, new devices will be introduced to administer insurance services, and there will be more collaborations between InsurTech firms and traditional insurance agencies. These trends and more are broken down in The Financial Brand
U.S. consumers won’t change payment habits
Consumers know about digital payment options, but they aren’t going to switch over to digital payments until the digital options are safer and more seamless than good old debit and credit cards, writes Jim Marous for The Financial Brand. The 2016 North America Consumer Digital Survey, which gathered opinions from more than 4,000 smartphone users in the U.S. and Canada, found that consumers anticipate an increase of mobile wallets, but cash and plastic cards are perfectly fine for their basic needs.
The complex impact of FinTech and legacy systems on banking
While some say the legacy systems banks cling to are the biggest threat to banking, the lack of consensus in the FinTech sector is hindering further FinTech growth, according to Susan Visser’s piece for IBM Banking and Financial Markets Industries blog. From the legacy solutions that can’t meet future demands to resources spent maintaining those outdated systems, it’s clear that traditional banking has a lot of growing to do.
APIs: Delivering the connected ecosystem
The wave of APIs entering the financial services sector brings with it many questions. Who will own the customer relationship? What are the regulator challenges? And how do these third-party APIs create tools to improve customer relationships? The 2016 Capco whitepaper assesses the current state of APIs.
Dial M for Money: Can mobile banking lift people out of poverty?
After using M-PESA, a banking service operated through mobile phones, women-led families with access to a large number of agents set aside 22 percent more in savings between 2008 and 2014. And they bought 18.5 percent more basic goods. This NPR report examines how mobile banking in Kenya helped improve finance management for some of the nation’s poorest citizens.
Is Fintech Small Banks’ Equalizer in Fight with Big Rivals?
Small banks aren’t likely to bankroll pricey innovation incubators like their larger competitors, but they are more nimble and willing to partner with FinTech firms and develop rival products for their customers, giving them a competitive advantage over large banks, writes Bryan Yurcan for American Banker.
Taking a chance on the unbanked
A FDIC annual survey on the underbanked and unbanked found that 7 percent of Americans didn’t have access to banking services in 2015. While banks look at this market as merely risky business, FinTech firms see an opportunity to target users outside of their typical demographic. The use of FinTech products, Chris Tremont asserts in his Finxtech post, could provide more options for individuals who have otherwise been overlooked.