After
a drop in 2017 investment levels, 2018 is Australia’s second-highest
year on record. Investment activity was broad, across a number of
sub-sectors, such as payments, lending, regtech and open banking. The
largest transaction for the year was the US$245 million acquisition of
Avoka, a transaction management platform by Temanos.
Australia’s open banking regime gaining interest globally
Blockchain expert and financial consultant, Matthew
Najar, confirmed the findings, stipulating that Australia gained a
significant amount of interest from investors in 2018 with respect to
its open banking and open data regime. “Due to the country (Australia)
developing its open banking policies as an umbrella regime, focused on
customer data as a right, this leads to the increase in investor
interest”, Najar stipulates.
“In the VC space, Australia-based Data Republic
raised US$22 million in Series B funding in Q4’18 led by Singapore-based
Innov8 and Singapore Airlines. Futhermore, we have seen ANZ recently
announce participating in a Series A funding round from UK open banking
platform, Bud”, Najar confirms.
In tandem with the development of its open banking
regime, Australia has also seen increasing interest from fintech
investors in areas that enable open banking, including solutions focused
on data sharing, consent management and digital identity verification.
Ian Pollari, KPMG Australia Head of Banking and Global Co-lead for Fintech, said:
“Investment in Australian fintech ramped up to record
levels in 2018, both in terms of venture capital, but also in terms of
Private Equity and M&A activity. We have rapidly built a thriving
fintech eco-system and investment plays a critical role. Open Banking is
another catalyst for further fintech investment, in particular
investment in overseas fintech companies which we are already starting
to see.”
China still strongly taking the lead in Asia
Asian fintech funding reached a new high of US$22.7
billion in 2018 across 372 deals, representing a fifth of the total
global funding of US$111.8 billion, More than half of the Asian
investment, however, came from one global-record shattering megadeal in
H1’18: an US$14 billion Series C round by Ant Financial. Outside of the
Ant Financial deal, Asia only saw only one additional deal over US$1
billion: a USD$1.3 billion raise by online lending platform Lu.com in December.
China accounted for the lion’s share of Asia fintech
investment, with $18.2 billion in funding during 2018 across 83 deals,
led by Ant Financial’s US$14 billion raise in Q2. In part, this likely
was a result of the maturation of key fintech subsectors in China.
For example, investors were less focused on the
payments space as China has seen the rapid maturation of several
dominant market leaders, leaving little interest for smaller players.
Asia seeing wider rise in activity
There was also an upswell of activity in other Asian
jurisdictions in the region over the course of 2018. Among the top ten
deals during the year, three were based in India (Paytm: US$356 million;
PolicyBazaar: US$200 million; CentrumDirect: US$175 million), one in
Australia (Avoka: US$245 million); and one in the Philippines (Voyager
Innovations: US$215 million).
Investment and deal volume in Singapore grew for the
fourth straight year, accounting for US$347 million across 61 deals.
Australia saw US$572 million across 28 deals.
2018 key global highlights
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Globally and in Asia, mega deals drove a record US$111.8 billion global fintech investment in 2018, led by three US$10 billion+ deals, as well as an additional 14 US$1 billion + M&A deals. All told, 2018 was a year of multiple record highs across fintech investment, including VC, corporate VC, M&A and PE.
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Fintech investment in the Americas rose from US$29 billion in 2017 to US$54.5 billion in 2018. Deals volume also increased from 1,039 deals to 1,245. The US accounted for the bulk of this funding – US$52.5 billion across 1,061 deals.
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European fintech investment for 2018 increased sharply to US$34.2 billion from US$12.2 billion in 2017, thanks to massive M&A and buyout deals, including WorldPay (US$12.8 billion), Nets (US$5.5 billion), iZettle (US$2.2 billion), Fidessa Group (US$2.1 billion), and IRIS Software Group (US$1.75 billion).
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The total Asia Pacific fintech investment for 2018 of US$22.7 billion, up from US$12.5 billion in 2017, was dominated by Ant Financial’s record-setting US$14 billion deal in Q2’18, as fintech investment in the region slowed significantly in the second half of the year.
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Cross-border M&A rose significantly in 2018, with approximately US$53.5 billion invested across borders in 155 deals, up from US$18.9 billion in 153 cross-border deals in 2017. The US drew US$28 billion in cross-border M&A, while Europe attracted US$21.6 billion.
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Investment flowed at a significant pace into key subsectors and technologies – regtech investment surged to US$3.7 billion in 2018 from US$1.2 billion in 2017, while investment in blockchain remained strong at US$4.5 billion in 2018, just off the US$4.8 billion in 2017.
Trends to watch for in 2019
Looking forward, collaboration between fintechs and
banks in Australia and Asia is expected to continue to grow,
particularly in areas like KYC, AML and digital identity management –
including facial recognition and voice recognition.
Blockchain investment is also expected to continue in Asia, with a growing focus on execution over experimentation.
While geopolitical volatility and trade concerns
could put a damper on overall global fintech investment in 2019, the
strong diversity of global fintech hubs, and the strengthening of
subsectors, such as regtech and insurtech, should contribute to
continued growth. AI and automation are expected to remain very hot
areas of investor interest at the technology level.
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