Fintech Finance presents: The Fintech Magazine 22

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EMBEDDED FINANCE: INFRASTRUCTURE

It’s getting personal Lindsay Davis of earned wage access fintech Atomic and Steve Lemon of cross-border payments specialist Currencycloud on taking the relationship with consumers to the next level – and what’s holding it back The future of finance is embedded and resistance is futile. A fast-growing ecosystem built on the premise of consensual sharing of data is poised to help companies get to know us in the most intimate of ways – through our employment history, tax filings and other personal data – allowing retailers and other non-FS organisations to abstract financial services from banks and offer them to their customers. It’s a game-changer to which more traditional business models, such as those relied on by many incumbent retail banks, will need to radically adapt. The focus so far has been on streamlining payments, lending and insurance, based on bank data. But that's just the start: the data streams that can be used to make supersmart finance a reality are pretty much limitless. Take Atomic, the fintech power behind payroll connectivity. Intelligent earned wage access, Atomic would argue, helps level the financial playing field, not just for the low paid but also the growing number of freelance/gig economy workers. Not least, it could save them from being hit by some of the $4billion in overdraft fees earned by US banks last year. Lindsay Davis, head of markets at Atomic, argues the insights that can be garnered from looking at the flow of money in and out of an account are fundamentally limited if all you are seeing is bank data – and particularly bank data supplied by aggregators, which is, necessarily, after the fact. Whereas, if you have direct access to data on your consumer about their income and employment history, you can build a product road map that is aligned with where they truly are in their financial lives. And while that’s a threat to the traditional model of banking because the products they’ve relied on for so long to create revenue suddenly look a pretty poor option from the consumer’s perspective, if banks embrace the

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TheFintechMagazine | Issue 22

concept, it can unlock new business lines. Take buy now, pay later (BNPL); a runaway success with consumers that was resisted by the establishment until the tide of adoption by retailers made it futile to resist – many banks came up with their own options or integrated with providers. “Now you’re seeing all the cards are getting very aggressive in BNPL. Square making the acquisition, earlier this year, of Afterpay, is sort of validation that this is very much an area that is not going to go away, and a payment method, ultimately, that’s going to be long-term,” says Davis. Steve Lemon, founder of cross-border paytech Currencycloud, traces the current explosion in embedded finance back to the aftermath of the 2008 financial crash, when venture capitalists invested heavily in specialist financial services organisations that saw opportunities to use technology to take on the banks.

There are several different styles of embedded finance companies, but I think there is going to be a petering out for the ones that don’t understand the regulatory frameworks and the complexity Lindsay Davis, Atomic

“It’s the expansion of the API-led economy that’s really, really driven this forward,” he says. “The rebundling of financial services, and banking-as-a-service (BaaS), are bringing together best-in-breed providers of payments, lending and insurance, and presenting the best components, to give customers a really consumable service.”

And addressing how the look of the marketplace is altering. Lemon adds: “In terms of the brands, there are the constituent parts of embedded finance, the organisations providing the underlying service, but there are also those that are now able to offer financial services as part of their brand line-up. It gives completely non-financial services-led organisations the ability to offer banking services, payment services, credit card services, etc.” Lemon sees embedded finance increasingly making the transaction happen in the background with ‘no limit’ to the kinds of financial service that can be provided. Elaborating, he says: “I think in the years ahead it’s about abstracting away the friction, the pain point in a journey. “Nobody wants to go and buy, nobody wants to go and take out a loan, nobody wants to go and take out a mortgage, nobody wants to go out and make a payment. They don’t choose to go and interact with their bank, to make a payment, or execute an insurance policy; it’s normally a by-product of something they’re doing. So, if you’re buying a car, you’re buying a car, you’re not taking out a loan; if you’re buying a house, you’re not taking out a mortgage and the associated insurance products that go with that. “So I think in the future you’re going to see more and more consumer brands in all areas, whether that be retail, automotive, big techs like Apple getting onboard – Amazon and Google are already doing it. You’re going to see a proliferation of transactions that just happen organically in the background, without a conscious need to go and execute them via your bank.” And it’s not just individuals who will benefit. Davis sees embedded finance carrying huge advantages for businesses of all sizes. “Offering BNPL enables retailers to improve the lifetime value of their customer, reduce friction and increase www.fintechf.com


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Articles inside

The platforms taking business lending to a new level

3min
pages 85-86

WTF do we do about WFH?

11min
pages 88-92

Chain reaction

4min
page 87

Hiding in plain sight

6min
pages 82-84

The big reset

7min
pages 79-81

The crowdfunding capital of Europe

6min
pages 75-78

Smarter and faster?

6min
pages 72-74

Investing in the future

7min
pages 69-71

It’s getting personal

7min
pages 64-65

Power to the merchant

3min
page 63

A combined effort

4min
pages 60-62

A potent cocktail

12min
pages 56-59

A life and death fight for the relevance of banking

12min
pages 44-48

Naughty but not so niche

6min
pages 54-55

Z is for

7min
pages 40-43

Bottom-line thinking

7min
pages 49-51

Could Kate snatch Europe’s super-app crown?

8min
pages 52-53

Good to go

9min
pages 36-39

Tales from a fantasy CFO

13min
pages 32-35

Up, up and away

8min
pages 28-31

A question of trust

7min
pages 12-13

Nowhere to hide

15min
pages 6-11

Above and beyond

6min
pages 21-24

How to inspire a start-up nation

8min
pages 14-15

The only way is up

10min
pages 16-20

Unlocking the future

7min
pages 25-27
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