Fintech ?? Food - 16th Oct 2022
Hey everyone???, thanks for coming back to Brainfood, where I take the week's biggest events and try to get under the skin of what's happening in Fintech. If you're reading this and haven't signed up, join the 22,942 others by clicking below, and to the regular readers, thank you.???
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Hey Fintech Nerds ??
We live in strange times.?
At Macro, the global order is shifting, and the stability we once counted on has evaporated. And for many consumers, it feels the same day to day.
Every week more layoffs, more hacks in web3, and more regulatory pressure appear.?
This week's tweets (bottom of the email) stood out as little snippets of the time we're living in. (I really recommend scrolling all the way down, taking a read of those then reading the rest of this post, it puts it all into a bigger context).
We’re in a time of change.
But for some, perhaps a time of opportunity.
Goldman is closing Marcus as a direct-to-consumer brand but taking the opportunity to double down on the Apple partnership with a savings and direct deposit offer. (More on that next week).
Speaking of opportunities.?
?? I had the opportunity this week to record a little snippet video about interviewing the now-former President and CEO of FTX US,?Brett Harrison, at Money 2020 . "The Sardine and the Whale" is an?all-time classic?name for a 30-minute fireside ???
Is DeFi dead? What happens next in Crypto? Should TradFi and Fintech companies still pay attention? I?cannot wait.?
See you there?
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Weekly Rant ??
Change creates opportunity
I’ve spoken to four separate people in career transition this week and looking to make a move in Fintech.
They’re hyper-aware of the market backdrop and thinking through the next move.
I found myself saying the same things and thought it made sense to share it for a wider audience in case any of you find it valuable.
The Fintech market isn’t what it was 12 months ago.
It feels weird writing about layoffs.
Almost like writing about marriages ending, or a tragic accident, I have an inner desire to avoid the whiff of?schadenfreude ?that?some?folks have watching growth companies stumble.?
News of Brex laying off 11% of its workforce caught the headlines this week. Often the people losing their jobs may be high performers; they just happened to be on the wrong team. For example, Brex is now exiting SMBs as a sector; therefore, that whole team is no longer needed.?
Change can be scary but creates opportunities for individuals and the whole industry.
Individual opportunities.
I have a ton of sympathy for talent going through a layoff. It is a shock and upsetting and can have massive consequences on an individual and their entire family. Especially the underprivileged or those early in their career.
But I believe talent will always find a way.
When a ship sinks, often the first to leave are the most confident swimmers.?
Not all Fintech talent may feel confident.
But they should.
You?should.
It's a tight labor market. Yes, layoffs have started, but we have near-all-time-high employment levels in most developed economies. This is especially true for rare skill sets and industries.
What you do matters, and people need it.
Banks are still spending heavily on digital and need talent with cutting-edge experience.
Some industry parts are cyclical, and debt collection, underwriting, and compliance expertise will get a heavier focus as cost-cutting, and regulatory pressures really bite.
And truly great engineers, product, design, and salespeople are always in demand.
The demand is there; you just have to know where to look.
So where should you look?
Look at the market dynamics and look at who has an opportunity.
I spent some time at the Goldman EMEA Fintech conference this week, listening to various VCs under?Chatham house rules ?try to avoid platitudes.?
It's funny; they'd almost start with a VC trope and then spend the next 5 minutes adding nuance and rationale.
My impression is that if you're a startup at an early stage, the VC market is closed unless you're killing it on the rule of 40 growth or Adam Neumann.?
If you're a talent at the seed stage, conviction matters. But the VC market may change in ~ 6 months (as Macro re-organizes).
If you're late stage and a long way from profit. Worry. There are great products here, but PE and M&A could be on the cards.
Ok, I'm being glib.
The market will turn.?
But if you're a talent, there are new winners in the new reality.
Some are taking advantage of the external market shock (suddenly high-interest rates), and like Fintech in the pandemic, I sense that growth won't last.?
Others benefit from long-term systemic changes like the energy crisis and the push for more consistent financial services protection in Crypto and Fintech.
Make your own mini-thesis about who wins in the new market, how long these market dynamics last, and where to position yourself accordingly.
Outside of just Fintech companies, growth companies are now looking at alternatives to VC cash, like making their deposits work harder and lending.
Do Banks and Fintech companies go from foe to frenemy to fren?
The bank's role in all of this change.
Things aren't easy for the banks either. While interest rates go up, demand for lending decreases as loans become less affordable. Customers in a cost-of-living crisis have fewer savings, and therefore the balance sheet banks can deploy is reduced.
Yet when it comes to those same banks, they're well-capitalized after the global financial crisis (GFC). Where once VCs were chasing Fintech companies to buy equity, now the banks can step in and deploy debt.
Pun not intended, but speaking of stepping in, Step raised a $300m debt facility just this week from?Tripplepoint Capital and Evolve Bank and Trust . If that name sounds familiar, that's the same Evolve bank that does all of the partner banking.
Balance sheet power matters.?
Banks with a small deposit will have an upper limit on how much they can lend. Larger banks?
What was once a story of small partner banks + Fintech companies is now an evolving landscape of lenders, bigger banks, small banks, and Fintech companies. Regionals and larger banks can now make a play for Banking as a Service.?
The outlier in the market for me is JPMC. Jamie Dimon has staked his reputation on dramatically increasing costs to chase the market structure change Fintech created. Launching travel sites, launching in the UK, acquiring countless Fintech companies, and going after BaaS.
Whereas Goldman pushed similarly, they ultimately couldn't sustain the high investment cost (covered in things to know below).
The lesson here is that banks can't build it all alone;?otherwise, things get?way too expensive?to sustain, and by the time they're just starting to bring in revenue, the investors and internal P&L owners are revolting.?
Fortunately, there's a whole ecosystem of Fintech companies that can
But the starting point shouldn't be, let's build an entirely new core and bank that looks like the old one but with modern software. Then attract deposits with a great savings rate and use that as a launch pad to become a universal bank on a new stack.?
That's not?wrong; it's just missing the bigger question.
What has changed in the market??
领英推荐
And for me, what has changed is that infrastructure got massively unbundled and re-bundled. Understand that we might land somewhere different for each part of the value chain.
Speaking of landing.
We're about to land in a different market in 3 to 5 years.
A more balanced market.
Fintech companies became genuinely massive by market cap. At over $100bn, both Block and PayPal would compare against some of the world's largest banks.?
But the market cap can be misleading.
As we're now seeing.
Markets want stable cash flows, not just growth.
Markets correct.
But customers and usage are real.
With 44m MAUs, CashApp has more consumers and active users than all but the top handful of global banks.?
The narrative of the past 5 years can be grossly oversimplified to
Perhaps this is typified by Jamie Dimon, noting he was "scared shitless" of Fintech companies.
Consumer Fintech looked like it could actually disrupt banking like the internet disrupted newspapers and the recording industry.
That's not what has happened.
Events change things.
And sometimes reveal hidden, more complicated truths.
Operators in banks got tired of things being viewed this way, and most Fintech companies know there's a bank behind the scenes powering everything they do.
The best Fintech companies are the ones that not only grok compliance but that push the boundaries and improve on what had always been seen as a tax on doing business.?
So I think that leaves us with a much more balanced market.
Opportunity in the new normal.
Banks and businesses creating deposit yield and lending have a massive opportunity in this market.?
Talent that understands how to build for deposits, lending, the needs of VC-backed startups, compliance, underwriting, or how to design better experiences for all of this has a?massive?role to play in the future of finance.
A few folks reached out in the past few weeks for advice on what to do next.
And the reality is a lot of it depends on you.?
Know yourself, know the market and find your opportunity.
I guess this is my love letter to Fintech talents out there.
We spent the last 5 years changing the shape of the industry, but the job isn't done.
The labor market is?tight.?
And someone needs you.
You got this.
ST.
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4 Fintech Companies ??
*Denotes I have a small angel investment???
1.?Oops Finance ?- The App that makes you better with money
2.?Spleet ?- All-inclusive living
3.?Sugar Wallet ?- Weirdly simple investment
4.?Payable * - Modern Treasury for Europe
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Things to know ??
1.?Binance network ?and Solana-based?Mango Markets ?hacked.
BNB (or Binance Smart Chain), the 5th largest Blockchain and token by market cap, suffered a "bridge hack" last week, resulting in a hacker creating an estimated $570m in new tokens.?The attacker was able to exploit a vulnerability in the Binance Bridge to create these tokens and take them. The impact had been limited by the fact that the attackers could not take their funds off-chain, and Binance was able to shut down the network to contain the issue.
Mango Markets had more than $100m stolen by manipulating prices through an "Oracle" (price feed).?Mango Markets is a Solana-based platform for swapping digital assets and futures contracts.?The hacker manipulated what Mango thought the price was of collateral they had on deposit and used that to take out loans from Mango Treasury.
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Apparently, bowing to pressure, Goldman Sachs will no longer pursue checking accounts for the mass market. Bloomberg reports Goldman will also limit their consumer lending but will continue their existing card partnerships.
?? Quick hits:?
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Good Reads ??
Alex walks through a synopsis of BNPL today, where competition is shrinking margins, the cost of funding their lending has increased (due to rising interest rates), and BNPL providers are now making more revenue from fees because customers are late paying. Oof. He then contrasts that with the sense of control, transparency, and product discovery consumers love about BNPL.?
He then makes some recommendations like diversifying the business model, creating visibility?between?BNPL providers for consumers, and investing in better dispute resolution. This is a must-read and goes beyond the basics into some extensive recommendations. My only thought reading it was.
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Tweets of the week ??
That's all, folks. ??
Remember, if you're enjoying this content, please do tell all your fintech friends to check it out and hit the subscribe button :)
Sales at HeyGen - create & translate AI videos
2 年Love the talent/opportunity section! Have you already wrote about the state of high yield deposit accounts for both consumer&business?
Commercial Banking | Treasury Management | AI Strategy | Customer Experience | Business Deposits
2 年Simon Taylor - Great content!
Global Marketing Leader @Elastic ex SAP, JPM, Citi, BNYM, Amex | B2B SaaS | Financial Services
2 年That graphic is everything
Head of Strategy & Content @ Sardine / Writer FintechBrainfood ??
2 年Subscribe https://sytaylor.substack.com
Programme Director @ CISL | Online Executive Education | Sustainable Business | Sustainable Marketing | Commercial Leader | Systems change for the good of People, Nature, and Climate
2 年Hi Simon Taylor - read the newsletter piece about current talent market in fintech. While many skillsets were mentioned, no reference to marketing? Any thoughts/observations on marketing roles and which sub-functions or in demand/decline in the current climate? And, for both marketing and other specialist skills, are you seeing more appetite for a flexible workforce such as interim or consultant contract roles which don't lock fintechs into a perm head count?