Fintech is alive and well all over the world doing its best to disrupt existing financial relationships by using technology. In Canada, fintech has been a lesser factor, in part because the local banks emerged in better shape following the global financial crisis and since the banks have a higher-level of satisfaction with their customers compared to other markets.
Those, in a nutshell, were the key suggests emerge from a current report made by analysts at Canaccord Genuity, which, because of where it operates was able to bring a global perspective to fintech. With offices in Canada, U.S., the U.K. and Australia, Canaccord was in a favourable position to comment on new entrants to everything about emerging financial technology – and the results which have been achieved.
“The U.K. appears to have seen probably the most disruption given a higher proportion of GDP associated with the industry, growing government support for financial technology and higher customer dissatisfaction with incumbents,” said the 34-page report that drew around the input of 11 from the firm’s analysts.
The report added the U.S. market – due to entities such as PayPal and Apple C is “highly disrupted” while the Canadian and Australian markets, fintech has already established a “relatively low impact as yet and would prosper to see the U.K. market.”
One way of measuring those regional differences: Research by Ernst & Young, established that while 15.5 per cent of “digitally active consumers” had used at least two fintech products over the previous 6 months, the comparable figure for Hong Kong and Canada was 29 per cent and eight per cent respectively.