Mahi Sall, Advisor, Fintech-Bank Partnerships, Payments and Financial Inclusivity
January 25th, 2023
Canadian Underwriter | by Angela Stelmakowich | July 25, 2017
Customer wants, needs and demands are guiding players in Canada’s fintech space toward developing simpler, more transparent and customer-centric financial services products, with insurance expected to see a big increase in uptake in future, suggests new research released Tuesday by Ernst & Young (EY).
EY’s Fintech Adoption Index 2017: The rapid emergence of FinTech shows Canada’s fintech adoption rate has increased from 8% to 18% since 2015, notes a statement from EY Canada, which provides assurance, tax, transaction and advisory services.
Looking at past, current and anticipated future use of fintech, the report detailing study findings indicates the percentages for Canada are 8%, 18% and 34%, note the Canadian findings of the report.
Findings further indicate that insurance, money transfer and payments are expected to see the biggest hikes in uptake, the statement adds. Telematics and wearables, regulatory changes and the inclusion of rate comparison services in this year’s survey “will all contribute to the insurance fintech adoption rate of 24% in the future.”
The report notes “insurance has expanded into telematics and wearables (helping companies to predict claim probability better), as well as premium comparison sites in certain markets.”
In fact, “insurance has moved from being the least commonly used service in 2015 to the second most popular service this year, largely due to the inclusion of insurance premium comparison services.” This is an improvement, but still lags things like money transfer and payments fintechs.
The 2017 research reflects input from 20 markets and more than 22,535 online interviews with digitally active adults. The markets are Australia, Belgium and Luxemburg, Brazil, Canada, China, France, Germany, Hong Kong, India, Ireland, Japan, Mexico, the Netherlands, Singapore, South Africa, South Korea, Spain, Switzerland, the United Kingdom and the United States.
“Globally, fintech users have moved from early-adopters in our 2015 study to early majority in 2017, with 33% of the surveyed population indicating they are regular users of fintech services,” states the report.
The research shows the following:
“We now find that, on average, one in three digitally active consumers use two or more fintech services. That is significant enough for us to suggest that fintech has reached early mass adoption,” suggests the report.
In EY’s 2015 study, 16% of “surveyed consumers had used two or more fintech services in the prior six months, with adoption potentially doubling in the near future. The 2017 study reveals this has happened in just 18 months,” it states.
“Fintech firms have reached a tipping point, and are poised for mainstream adoption across our 20 markets,” the report concludes.
Overall, four key consumer themes emerge from the index:
EY points out, though, that the 52% only reflects “the 17 services included in our survey, whereas we can expect the fintech industry of the future to include services that are currently insufficiently mature or yet to be developed.”
“Banks are increasingly looking for improvements across the entire value chain – from gamification of compliance training to surveillance software,” notes the EY Canada statement.
“We believe that the financial services industry has considerable unexplored potential, and are excited to continue monitoring how fintech and financial services evolve in future years,” states the report.
“Established financial services firms face both ‘unbundling’ and ‘rebundling, of their propositions resulting in disruption of traditional customer relationships,” it suggests. “We are moving to a world where products are unbundled from full-service incumbent firms and rebundled by wraparound platforms that let consumers manage their finances on the go via mobile, disrupting traditional customer relationships,” it explains.
This “creates opportunities for start-ups and established firms to collaborate.”
For Canada, however, it has one of the lowest fintech adoption rates around the world. “Only 18% of survey respondents in Canada have used two or more fintech services in the last six months, compared to 33% globally,” EY Canada reports.
Specifically, China led the 20 markets at 69%; India at 52%; the U.K. at 42%; Brazil at 40%; Australia at 37%; Spain at 37%; Mexico at 36%; Germany at 35%; South Africa at 35%; the U.S. at 33%; Hong Kong at 32%; South Korea at 32%; Switzerland at 30%; France at 27%; the Netherlands at 27%; Ireland at 26%; Singapore at 23%; Canada at 18%; Japan at 14%; and Belgium and Luxemburg at 13%.
Not knowing about fintechs is likely the primary reason the adoption rate is not higher in Canada, the statement suggests. Survey findings, for example, indicate 22% of respondents report they had not heard of any fintech – far lower than the 49% of respondents two years ago – but still considerably lower than respondents globally.
All that said, EY Canada expects awareness is poised to increase dramatically, propelling the adoption rate here to 34% in the future.
Overall, EY points out that lack of awareness of fintechs in the six aforementioned markets has dropped since 2015. Overall, respondents who cited this factor as a barrier to using fintech services have declined from 38% to 16%, the report notes. “The average across all 20 markets is 86%,” it points out.
The National Crowdfunding Association of Canada (NCFA Canada) is a cross-Canada non-profit actively engaged with both social and investment crowdfunding stakeholders across the country. NCFA Canada provides education, research, leadership, support, and networking opportunities to over 1600+ members and works closely with industry, government, academia, community and eco-system partners and affiliates to create a strong and vibrant crowdfunding industry in Canada. Learn more at ncfacanada.org.
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