March Madness: 2nd Annual Financial Technology Trends Tournament
In honor of the NCAA men’s and women’s basketball tournament starting this week, Dan creates a bracket of the biggest financial technology trends.
The NCAA men’s and women’s basketball tournament starts this week, which means I’m required by law to make some type of reference to it in my column. Last year I made a bracket of eight of the biggest current financial technology trends in the industry. A lot has changed in the past 12 months, so it seems like now is the perfect time to revisit the idea.
So, back for a second straight year, the 2017 Financial Technology Trends (FTT) tournament bracket.
Quarterfinals
No. 1 Artificial Intelligence/Machine Learning vs. No. 8 Virtual Reality
The rise of coverage around AI/ML over the past 12 months is similar to what blockchain experienced last year. The only difference is this technology has actual implementations that are in place at financial firms across the space. That number will only continue to rise, as seemingly every firm has shown great interest in its potential.
To be honest, there might have been a bit of bias by the tournament’s selection committee including virtual reality in the mix. While it’s certainly a technology to keep your eye on, it’s still a few years out. AI/ML in a blowout.
Winner: Artificial Intelligence/Machine Learning
No. 4 Trump vs. No. 5 Brexit
It’s only fair we have the two biggest political stories of 2016—and possibly the decade—meet each other in the first round of the FLL. President Trump has been vocal about revamping the financial regulatory environment. The ramifications for firms’ technology departments would be huge, as systems would need to be greatly altered or wound down.
Brexit brings along its own set of issues. It is unclear what will happen to London’s thriving fintech environment, particularly in the blockchain space, once the UK officially leaves the EU. While it’s an important question to ask, it’s not as pressing as the potentially drastic decisions of the sitting president.
Winner: Trump
No. 3 Mifid II vs. No. 6 CAT
Like a student realizing their midterm paper is due next week, the industry is slowly coming to the realization that Mifid II’s implementation date of January 2018 is sooner rather than later. The European regulation has already been delayed a year, so I don’t think there is any way regulators will want to lose face and push it back even farther, no matter how much firms kick and stomp their feet.
Meanwhile, the Consolidated Audit Trail is well on its way to being built. Again, there may be a little bit of bias including it in the tourney, especially considering the committee recently wrote an in-depth feature about the selection of the plan processor. As important as the CAT is, though, Mifid II has farther-reaching implications.
Winner: Mifid II
No. 2 Blockchain vs. No. 7 Vendor Partnerships
Blockchain has slowed down a bit after coming hot out of the gate. I think a lack of large-scale implementations, while understandable, has caused some in the industry to cool on the technology.
And what do we have here? It’s the plunky underdog that is large and small vendors partnering to create better offerings for clients. While the concept has been around for a while, we’ve seen an uptick in partnerships in the vendor space—particularly between large, established companies and small fintech firms—over the past 16 months. What at first glance seemed like a mismatch actually is a hard fought battle, and win for the No. 7 seed.
Winner: Vendor Partnerships
Semifinals
No. 1 Artificial Intelligence/Machine Learning vs. No. 4 Trump
Donald Trump versus robots. The story writes itself. And while Trump has dominated the news cycle for a while, AI/ML technology is the bigger trend in our space.
Winner: Artificial Intelligence/Machine Learning
No. 3 Mifid II vs. No. 7 Vendor Partnerships
The clock strikes midnight and the stage coach has turned back into a pumpkin in this Cinderella story. Regulations are always a top-of-mind concern for financial firms.
Winner: Mifid II
Final
No. 1 Artificial Intelligence/Machine Learning vs. No. 3 Mifid II
The FLL final is a strong one that plenty could have predicted from the outset. It’s innovative technology against compliance requirements. I love new, interesting technologies as much as the next person, but regulations rule all, and this is a big one coming up fast.
Winner: Mifid II
Only users who have a paid subscription or are part of a corporate subscription are able to print or copy content.
To access these options, along with all other subscription benefits, please contact info@waterstechnology.com or view our subscription options here: https://subscriptions.waterstechnology.com/subscribe
You are currently unable to print this content. Please contact info@waterstechnology.com to find out more.
You are currently unable to copy this content. Please contact info@waterstechnology.com to find out more.
Copyright Infopro Digital Limited. All rights reserved.
As outlined in our terms and conditions, https://www.infopro-digital.com/terms-and-conditions/subscriptions/ (point 2.4), printing is limited to a single copy.
If you would like to purchase additional rights please email info@waterstechnology.com
Copyright Infopro Digital Limited. All rights reserved.
You may share this content using our article tools. As outlined in our terms and conditions, https://www.infopro-digital.com/terms-and-conditions/subscriptions/ (clause 2.4), an Authorised User may only make one copy of the materials for their own personal use. You must also comply with the restrictions in clause 2.5.
If you would like to purchase additional rights please email info@waterstechnology.com
More on Regulation
Waters Wavelength Ep. 342: LexisNexis Risk Solutions’ Sophie Lagouanelle
This week, Sophie Lagouanelle, chief product officer for financial crime compliance at LNRS, joins the podcast to discuss trends in the space moving into 2026.
Citadel Securities, BlackRock, Nasdaq mull tokenized equities’ impact on regulations
An SEC panel of broker-dealers, market-makers and crypto specialists debated the ramifications of a future with tokenized equities.
FIX Trading Community recommends data practices for European CTs
The industry association has published practices and workflows using FIX messaging standards for the upcoming EU consolidated tapes.
Interview: Linda Middleditch, Regnology
Regnology’s Linda Middleditch discusses its acquisition of Wolters Kluwer’s FRR business
Tokenized assets draw interest, but regulation lags behind
Regulators around the globe are showing increased interest in tokenization, but concretely identifying and implementing guardrails and ground rules for tokenized products has remained slow.
Waters Wavelength Ep. 341: Citi’s Pitts and Topa
This week, Citi’s Michele Pitts and Marcello Topa join Wei-Shen to talk about UK and EU T+1.
Why source code access is critical to DORA compliance
As DORA takes hold in EU, Adaptive’s Kevin Covington says that it is shining a light on the criticality of having access to source code.
Nasdaq’s blockchain proposal to SEC gets mixed reviews from peers
Public comment letters and interviews reveal that despite fervor for tokenization, industry stakeholders disagree on its value proposition.