Ending Soon! Save 33% on All Access

What's In Store For Fintech Sector In 2019? With fintech crawling into every segment of the financial services, it's a good time to take a look at a few trends that will dominate the sector in 2019

By Nidhi Singh

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

You're reading Entrepreneur Asia Pacific, an international franchise of Entrepreneur Media.

Pixabay

Fintech is a hot topic these days. The sector is growing rapidly with startups gaining acceptance globally. A joint report from The Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales (ICAEW) and the Institute of Singapore Chartered Accountants (ISCA) says that London and Singapore are excellent hubs for fintech activity. It further notes that these regions are interesting to explore because they have many of the same strengths, but also very different circumstances, providing a richer picture of fintech development around the world.

With the sector crawling into every segment of the financial services, it's a good time to take a look at a few trends that will dominate the fintech market in 2019.

We asked Prajit Nanu, co-founder and chief executive officer of InstaReM,a cross-border payments company, what's in store for the fintech sector in 2019.

Here's what he had to say. Edited excerpts:

Shutterstock

Money Push

Unlike the funding rush earlier in the decade, investors in 2018 turned more selective and invested in fintechs with scalable business models. This trend will get more pronounced in 2019, with fintech startups going mainstream with further acceptance.

Jacob Lund | Shutterstock

Customer Experience

With startups creating scale and developing new capabilities, consumers will continue to migrate to fintechs that offer superior customer experience and better value for their money and time. While newer fintechs will emerge, the existing ones will continue to scale up and start looking at profitability.

Shutterstock

Inclusion is the Word

Only 27 percent of Southeast Asia's 600 million population had a bank account in 2016, according to KPMG. This means that more than 160 million people are deprived of the opportunities that one gets due to banking access. Rising penetration of Internetenabled mobile devices offers a great opportunity for the unbanked to get access to formal banking. Fintechs are making the most of this opportunity with innovative digital platforms/solutions, thus, taking banking—lending, payments, remittances and more—to the underserved.

Nidhi Singh

Former Correspondent, Entrepreneur Asia-Pacific

A self confessed Bollywood Lover, Travel junkie and Food Evangelist.I like travelling and I believe it is very important to take ones mind off the daily monotony .

Career

Why Entrepreneur Stands Against the PRO Act

The Protecting the Right to Organize Act could do lasting harm to the small-business and franchise community.

Career

How the PRO Act Threatens High-Skill Careers

Lawmakers say the bill is about "gig workers," but in reality, it targets interpreters, translators, financial advisers, bookkeepers and more

Career

Parents and Caregivers Say PRO Act Would Harm Their Families

In professions as wide-ranging as truckers and editors, there's fear that the PRO Act's ABC Test would destroy the freedom needed to raise kids and help aging parents.

Career

Franchise Owners Say PRO Act Threatens Their American Dream

Immigrant and Black Americans say lawmakers should support, not obstruct, the creation of generational wealth

Career

Women Franchise Owners Fear the PRO Act

Franchising helped them become small business owners, and they don't want to be forced back under the corporate thumb.

Career

What Lawmakers Don't Understand About the PRO Act, According to Franchise Owners

Lawmakers are confused about what franchising is, and are threatening the whole business model with a bad bill, experts say.