Thursday 11 March 2021

Resistance to Peer to Peer Payments is Waning

Resistance to Peer to Peer Payments is Waning:
  • Resistance to P2P services is waning, as many of the reasons for not using these services appear to be losing popularity.
  • The largest overall reason in 2018, “I don’t have a reason to use P2P”, has declined from 47% to 36% in 2020.
  • In 2019, 42% of consumers “prefer to use cash” than P2P services. Not surprisingly in a pandemic environment, that sentiment dipped to 30% in 2020.
  • From 2018 to 2020, 8% of consumers reported they “don’t know how to use these services.”
  • P2P services are increasingly being used to share costs with others, pay bills and pay for things in-stores.
  • In 2020, 23% of consumers used P2P to split a bill, up from 17% in 2018 and 2019.
  • For the last 3 years, one in five P2P consumers used the service to buy a gift.

Wednesday 10 March 2021

How covid-19 is boosting innovation - The Economist

Covid-19 has accelerated the adoption of technologies and pushed the world faster into the future. As businesses and organisations look towards the post-pandemic era, what lessons can be learned about innovation?

Monday 8 March 2021

TOP READS OF THE WEEK (for week ending 5 March)

The latest top reads in banking, fintech, payments, cybersecurity, AI, IoT and risk management

In this weeks selection;

Banks & Credit Unions
Fintech
Cybersecurity
Artificial Intelligence

Data Detox: Smartphones - Firefox

We use our phones for everything from reading news to texting friends to ordering in to playing games. All that convenience at our fingertips comes at a cost: our personal data and mental health. It’s hard to be present in the moment when push notifications and texts are enticing us to look down. Meanwhile, the amount of personal data we share, many times without even realizing, can be alarming.

But not all hope is lost! Here are five simple steps you can take to protect your data and add space between you and your phone when you need it.

Sunday 7 March 2021

Greensill Capital - many small businesses and thousands of jobs at risk

The potential collapse of Greensill Capital could put many small businesses and thousands of jobs at risk. The supply-chain financier’s troubles highlight overlooked risks in the system.

Greensill Capital has become a dominant player in supply chain finance, a once-staid method of corporate funding that exploded in popularity over the past decade. Lex Greensill has become a dominant figure in an increasingly important, corner of finance. But now, some of his biggest backers have severed ties. 

So, what has gone wrong?

Using techniques mastered by the former "slicers-and-dicers" of subprime mortgages, Greesill transformed the bills it took on into bond-like investments. These could be sold to outside investors, such as hedge funds, desperate to find some yield in a low-interest world. As long as the customers kept settling their invoices, a tidy profit could be made for investors—and the financiers behind all the alchemy. By 2019 Greensill claimed to have arranged financing worth more than $140bn to over 10m customers.

Questions over whether the money would indeed keep flowing were never far away. As concerns mounted over the creditworthiness of the companies Greensill had to collect money from, the value of the bonds underpinned by the invoices wobbled. On March 1st Credit Suisse froze $10bn of funds stuffed with paper sourced by Greensill. The Swiss investment bank warned of  “considerable uncertainties” with respect to the valuation of the bonds linked to Greensill.

Read more from The Economist HERE

 
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