I was flicking through the Economist this week and was surprised to see a big quarterly special all about Fintech. Wow, this stuff is hot, hot, hot. That’s what the magazine makes clear:
From payments to wealth management, from peer-to-peer lending to crowdfunding, a new generation of startups is taking aim at the heart of the industry—and a pot of revenues that Goldman Sachs estimates is worth $4.7 trillion. Like other disrupters from Silicon Valley, “fintech” firms are growing fast. They attracted $12 billion of investment in 2014, up from $4 billion the year before.
The magazine probes these areas in depth, citing Lending Club, Venmo and others on my list as disruptors and concludes that: “the bigger effect from the fintech revolution will be to force flabby incumbents to cut costs and improve the quality of their service. That will change finance as profoundly as any regulator has”.
In other words, the industry does not disappear, just the big, fat, lazy players. I agree.
By coincidence, this article hit my radar the same day as the great guys over at Finovate were running their annual West Coast bash. In preparation for this, Jim Bruene posted a list of Unicorns – start-up firms founded since 2000 that have achieved over $1 billion valuations – and notes that the list has tripled over the preceding year, from just 11 companies in 2014 to 35 in 2015. Simlar to other lists, a third of these are in lending and credit markets and a third in payments – that’s where the action si ffolks.
With a big thank you to Jim for compiling this, here’s the names of the biggest Fintech firms around:
1. Lufax (Lending)
2. LendingClub (Lending)
3. Square (Payments)
4. Zillow (Real estate)
5. Zenefits (Insurance)
6. Stripe (Payments)
7. Powa Technologies (Payments)
8. Klarna (Payments)
9. Xero (Accounting)
10. CommonBond (Lending)
10. CreditKarma (Credit Reports)
10. Oscar (Insurance)
10. One97 (Payments)
14. Prosper (Lending)
15. Dataminr (Analytics)
16. Zuora (Payments)
16. FinancialForce (Accounting)
16. LifeLock (Credit Reports)
16. Adyen (Payments)
20. iZettle (Payments)
21. SoFI (Lending)
21. Housing.com (Real estate)
21. Qufenqi (Lending)
21. Revel Systems (Payments)
25. On Deck (Lending)
26. FundingCircle (Lending)
26. Jimubox (Lending)
26. Kofax (Doc mgmt)
26. TransferWise (Payments)
26. Trusteer (Security)
26. Mozido (Payments)
32. Avant (Lending)
32. IEX Group (Investing)
32. RenRenDai (Lending)
32. Coinbase (Bitcoin)
32. ClimateCorp (Insurance)
Semi-unicorns
Wonga (Lending)
Wealthfront (Investing)
Rong360 (Lending)
Betterment (Investing)
Braintree (Payments)
Q2 (Banking)
WorldRemit (Payments)
Taulia (Payments)
Radius (Marketing)
Oportun (Progreso Financiero) (Lending)
Circle Internet Finance (Bitcoin)
AnJuke (Real estate)
Kabbage (Lending)
EzBob (Lending)
FangDD (Real estate)
VivaReal (Real estate)
Motif Investing (Investing)
Snowball Finance (Investing)
PolicyBazaar (Insurance)
Credorax (Payments)
Cardlytics (Marketing)
Zopa (Lending)
CAN Capital (Lending)
Receivables Exchange (Lending)
Affirm (Lending)
Ayadsi (Analytics)
21 Inc (Bitcoin)
Bill.com (Payments)
FreeCharge (Payments)
U51 (Lending)
Financial Software Systems (Risk Mgmt)
Strategic Funding Source (Lending)
Ping Identity (Security)
————
Source: Compiled by Finovate, 8 May 2015
Chris M Skinner
Chris Skinner is best known as an independent commentator on the financial markets through his blog, TheFinanser.com, as author of the bestselling book Digital Bank, and Chair of the European networking forum the Financial Services Club. He has been voted one of the most influential people in banking by The Financial Brand (as well as one of the best blogs), a FinTech Titan (Next Bank), one of the Fintech Leaders you need to follow (City AM, Deluxe and Jax Finance), as well as one of the Top 40 most influential people in financial technology by the Wall Street Journal's Financial News. To learn more click here...