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Could Salt Lake City Become a Future Fintech Hub? 

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Could Salt Lake City Become a Future Fintech Hub? 

Financial technology (Fintech) is chock-full of specialized algorithms that are not easily understood. But the objective of fintech could not be simpler – technology to improve the delivery and use of financial services. Applying for a mortgage, investing, taking out a car loan, or purchasing a cryptocurrency, fintech advancements make these transactions easy and highly accessible to hundreds of millions worldwide. 

While the Bay Area and New York are still US fintech hubs, a surprising newcomer is attempting to grab some of their market share. Salt Lake City, Utah is best known as an outdoor paradise. Some of the best skiing North America has to offer coupled with national parks and hiking and biking, Salt Lake City has always attracted the sporty adventurer types. Yet, a new education center funded through the University of Utah is seeking to put the western outpost on the fintech map. 

The Stena Center for Financial Technology offers fintech courses and will eventually serve as an incubator for university students and alumni alike seeking to establish fintechs of their own. The Stena Center obtained seed capital from Steve and Jana Smith of the Stena Foundation. Before the foundation, Steve was a co-founder of Finicity, an open-banking platform that was later acquired by Mastercard. Smith noticed during his time at Finicity that employees were well-versed in product development, financial regulation, and software engineering, but few commanded expertise in multiple areas. This is a critical trait when thinking about future products and services and one Smith seeks to foster in this novel fintech incubator. 

Meanwhile, Salt Lake City is thrilled with the proposition. Mayor Erin Mendenhall had coined the city “Tech Lake City” and land-use laws are now favorable for research-and-development and lab-space centers to operate. One of the first firms to take advantage of Tech Lake City was Denali Therapeutics, a biotech firm focusing on neurodegenerative medicines. Perfect Day is another biotech company working on the development of animal-free proteins. Biotech was an initial entry, and now the focus is on complementing it with fintech. 

Perhaps most interesting is the city has also made it easier for lenders to operate, thus fueling the creation of a fintech culture. Celtic Bank and WebBank are active lenders as are a host of industrial loan companies. Fintech-friendly banks provide nascent fintechs with a wider variety of options to scale. Moreover, state tax incentives give companies that expand operations or relocate a refundable tax credit rebate of up to 50% of new revenues over a pre-defined period.    

As of mid-2022 tech and finance employed 180,000+ people in Utah. This is up 18% compared to five years ago. Salt Lake City was already a cheaper city than regional financial centers like Charlotte or Atlanta. By tapping into the state’s universities Salt Lake now has a talent pool and the foundations in place to become a serious fintech hub moving forward. 

From Execution to Insight: How Fintech is Shaping the Future of Accounts Payable

From Execution to Insight: How Fintech is Shaping the Future of Accounts Payable

You have to spend money to make money. That’s an old adage, and it’s true. But actually making the payments takes up a lot of people’s time. It’s critical to your business operations, but it’s not why you’re in business. 

That means there are opportunity costs. You have to spend money on the spending of the money instead of on revenue-generating activities. 

There are also mindshare costs. Making vendor payments is a brute-force activity. Accounts payable (AP) teams are stuck on a hamster wheel, always having to scramble to get payments out the door and then reconcile them on the back end. They’re dealing with a lot of manual work and multiple partially-automated, partially-integrated systems. They spend a lot of time correcting errors. 

It’s all about execution and dealing with all kinds of administrative details along the way. They don’t have the systems and the visibility they need to work more strategically. 

But within the next ten years, AP will go from brute force execution to strategic decision-making, thanks to new fintech offerings. 

We haven’t really seen true fintech offerings for business payments in the market until recently. To make business payments efficiently, you need three things: money, infrastructure, and process. A true fintech brings all three.

Most companies today still make payments through their banks, and there’s no question that they are at the heart and the soul of payments. But banks only help with about one-and-a-half of those three things. They have all kinds of lending products that can help you fund your spending, so they can help with liquidity. 

They also have part of the infrastructure. They are chartered by governments to steward money and move money around. They invest significantly in licensing, regulatory compliance, networks to move money and data, and fraud protection.

But there’s one big piece of B2B payment infrastructure that they don’t have: vendor networks. That has meant that it has been up to each individual company to conduct its own enablement campaigns to move vendors to electronic payments. That’s holding companies back. 

Fintechs are now building B2B vendor networks at scale. Companies can plug right into them and start paying about 80 percent of their vendors electronically right out of the gate.

Where banks really fall down is in the area of process. Process automation is where technology companies, on the other hand, excel. We’ve seen a lot of ERP, procurement, and invoice automation vendors start to offer payments as an add-on. It makes sense because people are already using their software to automate the workflow that leads up to the point of payment. But the software providers do not have vendor networks or the ability to offer liquidity.

This is why making vendor payments is such a disjointed process. Up until recently, no provider has offered the combination of the “fin” and the “tech” needed to address the process from end to end.

Today’s fintechs deliver technology and services that take costs and inefficiencies out of the process. They give AP teams visibility into the status of approvals and payments. But most importantly, they free up mindshare for them to be able to use payments as a strategic lever.

AP teams can get out of the payments processing game and still have all the visibility and control they need to run the business. They have the insight they need to become a management- and decision-making group. They have time to think, versus just trying to keep things moving. 

They can use their knowledge of the inner workings of the company to contribute in any number of areas cash management, job cost accounting, and cost and process optimization. The efficiency gains, combined with increased rebates from leveraging the B2B vendor network to pay more vendors by card, can turn the back office from a cost center into a revenue generator. 

For far too long, companies have had to live with a set of back-office deficiencies that they are well aware of. They recognize the challenges of working with disparate systems. They know there’s too much manual, non-value-added work, and that the time-intensity on error remediation is significant. They’ve resigned themselves to these deficiencies because it’s been that way for decades, and there hasn’t been a better way. 

There is now. It’s been a long time coming because business payments are complicated. To really solve the problem, you need to be a true fintech with a complete set of assets the relationships with the banks and the credit card companies, the network, and the technology. You need to have them at scale because the volume of B2B payments is massive. It’s a new solution that’s been 50 years in the making. It means that vendor payments don’t have to be suboptimal anymore.

Rick Fletcher is Group President of Corpay Payables, which enables businesses to spend less through smarter payment methods.

 

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Fintech Market to Reach $324 billion in 2026

U+ today released “The State of Fintech 2022,” a report that analyzes disruptive fintech trends and industry projections including banking, payments and insurance. The report outlines how and why investors have poured $91.5 billion into fintech firms in 2021, nearly doubling the previous year’s figure. As a result, analysts predict the fintech market to reach $324 billion by 2026.

“The growth and investment in fintech points to closer collaboration between startups and incumbents, as well as regulators, investors and even consumers, as the industry searches for cost reductions, client-friendly experiences and technology upgrades,” said U+ Founder and Chief Executive Officer Jan Beránek. “Since technology use has redefined the financial services industry, incumbents and challengers are competing to acquire and analyze customer data. In an attempt to secure brand loyalty, developing client-friendly experiences is a key focus.”

With convenience and enhanced customer experiences at the top of the priority list in fintech, the U+ report also reveals a demand for software engineers to help businesses keep up with the fast-paced tech initiatives.

Innovative banking solutions have arrived in a major way, with about 30% of all global banking customers using at least one non-traditional financial service. With more than 26,000 fintech companies worldwide, now is the time for all financial service providers to secure their place within this sector, even if it means collaborating with innovative partners to lead the industry using big data and artificial intelligence, for example.

U+ also selected the Top Fintech Innovators after extensive market research, leveraging databases including CB Insights and Crunchbase. Market share, along with the amount and date of funds raised, were also considered as selection criteria.