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Top-20 banks should be investing in disruptors, says Reinventure co-founder Simon Cant

Reinventure Group has announced its third $50 million fintech investment fund and co-founder and managing director Simon Cant says its important for big banks to invest in the very startups that are disrupting their industry.
Reinventure
The Reinventure team. Source: Supplied

As Reinventure announces its third $50 million fintech investment fund, co-founder and managing director Simon Cant says its important for big banks to invest in the very startups that are disrupting their industry.

The latest fund brings the Westpac-backed VC firm’s total funds under management to $150 million, and follows two previous funds, which have invested in 20 startups.

Cant tells StartupSmart that, under its independent venture capital structure, Reinventure is focused on ensuring โ€œour interests are financially aligned with those of the entrepreneurโ€.

Specifically, this third fund will be looking for startups that could be relevant to top-20 banks and their global operations.

While Cant says Reinventure will still be looking for Australian opportunities, with a particular interest in blockchain and artificial intelligence technologies, this fund is also steered towards Asia.

โ€œWeโ€™re seeing a lot of disruptive and potentially disruptive businesses coming out of Asia,โ€ Cant says.

โ€œThereโ€™s a strong chance that we need to understand the market better, and understand whether there are opportunities that could be good investments.โ€

โ€œThere are a number of interesting technologies coming out of that market that sit inside the banking stack,โ€ he adds.ย 

In the Asian market, specifically, a lack of existing banking infrastructure has led to a gap for next-generation companies to emerge.

For example, Cant says, China has historically had โ€œa very poor level of payment terminals, relative to a lot of developed marketsโ€, and as a result the technology in the region โ€œleapfroggedโ€.

โ€œThe payments systems rolled out by Tencent and Alibaba have skipped a generation,โ€ he says.

โ€œNow, [China] has more mobile payments than any developing market.โ€

But the financial services space isnโ€™t exactly well known for its love of change, and there can be some hesitation in embracing the technologies that could change the status quo.

โ€œNo incumbent companies like disruption, and whether there will be disruption and what form it will take is still an open question,โ€ Cant says.

But, he believes changes are coming to the industry in two major ways. First, there is disruption at the distribution level, with โ€œfinancial services embedded into other experiencesโ€, such as marketplaces or real estate platforms.

Then, there are โ€œlayers of the financial services stack that are being outsourced to specialistsโ€.

In some cases, according to Cant, the same new technology product can be applied not only across multiple institutions, but across multiple industries.

โ€œThere are definitely different trends emerging from different corners,โ€ he says.

This is why โ€œthe strategy from Westpac has always been ‘multi-prong’,โ€ he says.ย 

Cant stresses the incumbent financial services companies should be willing to learn from fintechs and other technology companies, and to invest in them.

โ€œIf there is a disruptive future, the most important thing is that youโ€™re invested in the company thatโ€™s going to be number one,โ€ he says.ย 

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