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‘Chinese Dragons’ Overtake U.S. in Financial Tech Investment

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‘Chinese Dragons’ Overtake U.S. in Financial Tech Investment
Robert Hackett
Updated: 4:44 AM

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China has unseated North America as the global investment leader in financial technology, or "fintech," according to Citigroup's (C, -0.77%) latest report on "digital disruption."

The researchers attribute the power shift to the rise of what they term "Chinese dragons," an industry term for the biggest upstarts in Asia. Think of Ant Financial, the payments spinout of Alibaba (BABA, +2.68%), as well as Lu.com, JD Finance, and Qufenqi, emerging eastern juggernauts that are generally less familiar to consumers in the west.

As the report's authors summed up 2016: "The Chinese dragons roared and some previously feted FinTech leaders wilted." (You can read more about Citi's own efforts to embrace fintech in this Fortune feature from June 2016.)

China accounted for more than half of all fintech investments globally in the first nine months of last year, the report said. Specifically in terms of venture capital, the country more than doubled its worldwide share of the investment category, rising to 46% of the global total versus just 19% the same period in 2015.

The U.S., meanwhile, sunk to 41% of the global total from 56% during the same period in 2015, putting it behind China.

A number of factors have placed China at the forefront of financial innovation in recent months.

First, mishaps at fintech upstarts in the Unites States have cooled investor enthusiasm in the private markets there. Once-soaring firms such as Zenefits, Lending Club, OnDeck, and others, have run afoul of regulation, struggled to meet expectations, or both.

In China, the biggest fintech accelerants involve the concurrent explosion of Internet connectivity through mobile devices and the rise of a middle class. This revolution has created an opening for new businesses, filling a void left by incumbent financial firms, which are more accustomed to working with state-owned entities than ordinary consumers.

It also helps that China has "light regulatory touch, at least initially," per the report.

While the U.S. still boasts more fintech "unicorns," startups valued at $1 billion or more, the concentration of wealth is greater in China. The dragons are lately raising more funding per round and achieving larger private valuations than their western kin.

For instance, Lu.com, JD Finance, and Qufenqi raised rounds of $1.2 billion, $1.0 billion, and $0.45 billion respectively last year, making them the global fundraising leaders in fintech.

Furthermore, no unicorns even come close to touching Ant Financial's private valuation of $60 billion. (San Francisco-based Stripe is the U.S.' highest valued fintech unicorn, leaping to a private valuation of $9 billion from $5 billion only after a November raise, which fell outside the purview of the report's nine month period.)

Another difference? Whereas fintech upstarts in the U.S. and elsewhere have been picking off niche areas of to specialize in (e.g. lending, insurance, and wealth management), the Chinese giants are taking a broader approach to build "one-stop financial shops."

http://fortune.com/2017/01/23/china-fintech-invest-citi-report/
 
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Other than this Citigroup report, there is another collaborative report from DBS and EY. The report, titled “The Rise of FinTech in China”, was released in November 2016. The authors see huge potential in China and believe that in the coming years, it could dominate the global FinTech industry with a very strong domestic market.

“The speed at which China’s FinTech landscape has developed is truly remarkable. It’s gotten this far because China’s landscape has operated in a sandbox-like environment conducive for FinTech to thrive — a strong domestic market, coupled with a constant push for innovation and experimentation driven by leading giants, unhindered by international influence. Much of this can be attributed to the favorable government policies and regulations”,

Neal Cross, DBS Chief Innovation Officer, said.​
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China looks set to continue to dominate global fintech industry – Report
Monday, January 9, 2017 10:06 AM UTC

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Details check another thread here: https://defence.pk/threads/china-lo...industry-–-report.471909/page-2#ixzz4WiGP4zyV
 
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I lived thru the rise of Japan era. Had the same headlines. Threatened with the same dire forecasts. :rolleyes:
 
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I lived thru the rise of Japan era. Had the same headlines. Threatened with the same dire forecasts. :rolleyes:

Remember when the panic was that the Japanese are buying up America?
 
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I lived thru the rise of Japan era. Had the same headlines. Threatened with the same dire forecasts. :rolleyes:
Japan is a very small country in both area and population, the sheer scale of China's fast ascending is unpresedented.
 
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Remember when the panic was that the Japanese are buying up America?
difference is Japan is under American occupation thus they can never overtake their master. Does plaza accord ring a bell? China has big landmass, huge educated population with many natural resources that Japan lacked. on top of that, China is a sovereign nation whose leaders answer to the Chinese people, not to US. Putting all these together, Japan was never in a position to overtake US. the jap "taking over US" rhetoric was just sensationalized news put out by MSM, aka the western fake news maker.
 
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Whatever Japan amazed US, China will be 10 times plus more
 
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