I usually start the new year by making some predictions, but so many others have been writing about 2018 trends that I’m not going to. There are four big things for 2018 from a FinTech viewpoint that are obvious to me however, which are:
These four big things are trends rather than predictions, and I’ve decided that predictions are no longer relevant. After all, who wants to predict the price of a bitcoin? Who had any idea it would rise from under $1,000 to $20,000 a coin last year? Can we predict which FinTech firms will breakout this year? Who had any idea that Coinbase would become one of the biggest FinTech unicorns last year?
Therefore, rather than me making predictions, I thought it interesting to review the views of other commentators.
My partner firm 11FS wrote a blog just before Christmas with their predictions. I particularly liked Sam Maule’s regarding 2018 for the USA. Well worth a read .
Jim Marous of The Financial Brand crowdsourced a whole range of expert opinions for 2018, which are summarised as the 10 priorities for this year as being:
The top trends for retail banking are:
And the top strategic priorities for 2018 include:
Jim also wrote another piece that nicely summarises Forrester’s predictions for 2018 which include:
Similar to my own views therefore.
Saxo Bank’s Payments business sent me a press release with their top three predictions, which are:
The demise of traditional, slow, expensive cross border payments
The correspondent banking network has for some time been under pressure, and 2018 will see that trend continue. Financial utilities will step in to pick up the slack. Allowing a third party to handle non-core activities enables financial institutions to innovate and expand their core domestic offering, whilst focusing its own energies on improving and maintaining the all-important customer relationship.
Payment Service Providers (PSPs) will help merchants to expand internationally
Many barriers to cross border trade are coming down, and payments must follow suit by removing cost and time barriers sooner rather than later. PSPs must work harder to provide new global payment methods, which meet the merchant’s needs – fast payments, low fees, good FX rates, transparency, compliance, security. Otherwise, merchants will be forced to seek alternatives and PSPs will be left behind.
Related: What Were the Top FinTech Trends of 2017
Tech giants move into banking
The current vertical separation of the value chain in the financial industry has created an opportunity for large tech businesses to monetise their user base by delivering financial services. This is why 2018 is being tipped as the year of the Bank of Amazon or Google Bank. These trusted household brand names are perfectly placed to provide banking services. Not only do they have the funding and ambition to rapidly increase scale and reach international markets, but they have enormous customer bases who already trust them with huge amounts of their personal data, so using them for banking is not such a big step.
I actually disagree with the last one here, as I don’t think the big Tech giants want to be banks. They want to steal bank business, particularly margin on payments and credit, but I really do not see them wanting to be full-service deposit account holding banks. Too much overhead of compliance.
Another interesting forecast came from a firm called Romexsoft , who think that 2018 will see:
Let’s Talk Payments has 10 2018 predictions as follows:
Certainly, I agree that 2018 will be the year that the regulators crack down on ICOs and cryptocurrencies … or try to, at least.
Pascal Bouvier, Venture Partner with Santander InnoVentures, has a slightly more negative view of 2018, doubling down on his macro risks optics first discussed in 2017 . Pascal believes that there is a strong possibility of trade wars between nations and regions, regulatory divergence, cryptocurrency risks, cyber attacks and such like. Not so cheerful, but useful to bear in mind.
Meanwhile, I will say that one thing is certain in 2018, which is that cryptocurrencies valuations continue to rise ( some say bitcoin will exceed $100,000 soon), and regulators will focus upon these markets to try and lock them down.