HomeNewsWorldJapan looks to kickstart 'fintech' revolution

Japan looks to kickstart 'fintech' revolution

Strict regulation, easy access to credit due to rock-bottom interest rates, and weak demand for innovative financial services from a risk-averse population that still prefers cash to credit cards, have strangled fintech's advance in Japan.

March 28, 2016 / 09:41 IST
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A laggard in embracing the 'fintech', or financial technology, revolution, Japan is set to ease investment restrictions that could free up the flow of capital in an economy sitting on an estimated USD 9 trillion in individuals' cash deposits.
Strict regulation, easy access to credit due to rock-bottom interest rates, and weak demand for innovative financial services from a risk-averse population that still prefers cash to credit cards, have strangled fintech's advance in Japan.

Fintech ventures - usually start-ups leveraging technology from cloud data storage to smartphones to provide loans, insurance and payment services - raised USD 2.7 billion in China last year, and over USD 1.5 billion in India, according to CB Insights data. Ventures in the United States attracted investment of around USD 7.4 billion.

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In comparison, investment in Japanese ventures reached only around USD 44 million in the first nine months of 2015.

Now, Japan's financial industry regulator hopes relaxed rules on investing in financial ventures, and a new system for regulating virtual currency exchanges will pass through parliament by May - a first step in kickstarting the fintech revolution in the world's third-biggest economy.