FinTech startups dazzle investors at Accenture event in Hong Kong

Accenture fintech lab
Image credit: Accenture

A select group of FinTech companies demonstrated their products and services to dozens of top banking, venture capital and technology executives at Accenture’s fourth annual FinTech Innovation Lab Asia-Pacific Investor Day at Cyberport in Hong Kong.

Launched by Accenture in June 2014, the FinTech Innovation Lab is a 12-week mentoring program to enhance FinTech innovation and drive high-tech job growth in Asia-Pacific by connecting startups with decision makers at some of the world’s leading financial institutions.

Cindy Chow, executive director of the Alibaba Entrepreneurs Fund, a not-for-profit initiative launched in 2015 with a mandate to “inspire a community of entrepreneurial achievers,” spoke at the event about startups’ role in ensuring that Hong Kong remains a competitive business hub in the region.

“The FinTech Innovation Lab aligns with our efforts to support talented entrepreneurs in their pursuit of innovation and the advancement of technology,” Chow said. “Excellence begets excellence. Innovation spurs more innovation. Put a bunch of startups together and you can spark a fire of excitement for developing new solutions, tackling previously unanswerable challenges and seeking to make the world a better place. These are lofty goals worth pursuing.”

Piyush Singh, a managing director at Accenture and head of the company’s Financial Services practice in Asia-Pacific, said, “The financial institutions in Hong Kong are supportive of working with FinTech startups to help address new challenges ranging from how best to adopt blockchain technology to how to fend off cybercrime. We’re also seeing increased interest from the investor community in the companies we select for the program.”

The ten companies in this year’s event, selected by senior technology executives from participating financial institutions, spent the past 12 weeks receiving intensive mentoring, product- and business-development advice and exposure to senior executives in the financial, technology and venture capital industries. The principal financial institutions that supported the Lab include: Bank of America Merrill Lynch, Commonwealth Bank of Australia, Credit Suisse, Goldman Sachs, HSBC, J.P. Morgan, Macquarie Group, Morgan Stanley, Nomura, Societe Generale and Sun Life Financial. In addition, other participating financial institutions and investment firms include: China CITIC Bank International, China Construction Bank (Asia), Manulife, Maybank, Point72 Ventures, Siam Commercial Bank and Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group (SMFG).

“FinTech is one of the key technology clusters of Cyberport – indeed, we now have a critical mass of more than 200 FinTech companies and start-ups in our community, and we are impressed by the fast development of FinTech in the region,” said Herman Lam, Cyberport’s CEO.

The startups have developed a range of innovations – from wealth management solutions that are precisely oriented to customers’ investment intents, know-your-customer (KYC) services that leverage blockchain technology, and a fraud-prevention program using algorithms based in Chinese characters to help financial institutions flag risk.

Participating startups include:

Blocko – a blockchain infrastructure provider in South Korea, offering customers digital identity, digital signatures and smart contracts. Its product, Coinstack, enables clients to share data with third parties in a cyber-security safe, efficient manner. Blocko is aiming to work with multinational financial institutions across the globe to fulfill their technical needs with its blockchain technology.

CoverGo – a tech platform that consolidates insurance policies from different providers in one place for customers and automatically analyzes them to highlight gaps in coverage. This Hong Kong startup’s app helps connect policyholders with their insurance advisors who manage their clients’ policies. CoverGo automates manual insurance processes to help improve the quality of customer experience and engagement.

FutureFlow – a US based company that enables financial institutions and regulators to collaborate, while protecting customer confidentiality. Its software compiles the topology of the movement of money in the system that extends beyond each individual institution’s immediate field of visibility, with applications into electronic financial crime prevention, economic policymaking and related fields.

KapitalWise – a US-based startup that has built a cost-effective micro-investment platform, delivering personal investing literacy, rule-based micro investing empowered by machine learning and predictive analytics to retail users of financial institutions. It also offers financial institutions an automated investment process to help them attract, engage and convert retail clients to buy investment products.

microUmbrella.com – a Singapore-based micro-insurance buying, managing and claiming platform that offers on-demand protection for the digital economy. Its mobile app enables customers to buy bite-sized protection plans, as well as make a claim, all within minutes. MicroUmbrella.com is introducing an artificial intelligence-powered chatbot that provides a seamless user experience for buying, managing and claiming insurance.

Red Pulse – a Hong Kong-based market intelligence platform covering China’s economy and capital markets and aimed at reducing information overload. The firm employs machine learning and natural-language processing to automate and scale basic data collection, while incorporating cryptocurrency to create an open and transparent sharing economy for research.

Sherlock Garden – an Israel-based startup that provides software with cognitive capabilities to help financial services companies automatically detect compliance, ethics and confidentiality breaches. The software is designed to scan the customer’s computer systems, regardless of file formats, and search for textual information that holds risks or indicates negative situations of ethics and business conduct.

Starling – a US-based applied behavioral sciences RegTech startup that offers augmented risk intelligence tools to help financial services firms manage culture- and conduct-related risks, and identify areas for performance improvement. Starling’s predictive behavioral analytics technology combines machine learning, organizational network analytics and behavioral science to uncover invisible systemic risk; identify opportunities for proactive risk mitigation; and gauge the efficacy of management intervention in real time.

Stash – a healthcare and insurtech startup that provides a single health claims platform for patients, health care providers and insurance companies. The Singapore-based company analyzes claims data to help health providers and insurance companies prevent fraud risk in claims processing and management, while also reducing administrative costs.

Tymbals – an Australia-based insurtech startup that has created a probability network to calculate enterprise risk. It substitutes expensive, time-consuming man hours with inexpensive, unlimited machine minutes. By using machine learning to populate and maintain a distributed ledger of enterprise risk, it aims to provide a secure, efficient and cost-effective service to help C-suite executives manage their businesses.

Accenture launched its FinTech Innovation Lab Asia-Pacific in Hong Kong in 2014. Accenture says that alumni companies of the lab have raised more than $277 million in financing after participating in the program.

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