Escaping The Walled Garden – Four Ways An Open Fintech Ecosystem Will Revolutionise Finance

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Thomson Reuters’ Albert Lojko explains how open markets and developer ecosystems are changing the fintech industry

Today’s financial trading environment looks remarkably like the world of mobile phones in 2005 or 2006. The hardware is sophisticated enough, but the systems they run are, on the whole, closed and proprietary.This leads to a great deal of manual intervention, redundant cost, wasted time, gaps in data (particularly where proprietary or niche data sets are involved) and, potentially, human error.

The situation in many banks today is analogous to the mobile world roughly a decade ago – a state of affairs known as the ‘walled garden’. In around 2007, smartphone makers shifted the paradigm entirely – creating touchscreen canvases – opening them up to an ecosystem of thousands of independent developers for them to produce and publish their own apps. The rest of the story is well-known – and the average smartphone user today routinely uses dozens of apps, compared with just a handful in the days of the walled garden.

Albert-LojkoIt’s time for financial systems to follow suit. Here are four ways we think open platforms will drive effective innovation in financial services:

  1. Bottom-up innovation – Openness encourages people to think about doing things differently, and empowers users or customers to drive the innovation process from the bottom up.  Retail banking has been transformed by using digital and mobile apps to present information the way customers want to see it. This should also be the case in wholesale financial markets, giving traders, asset managers and all other FS professionals the tools they need to work efficiently.
  1. Empowered ecosystems – True bottom-up innovation will require all players within the ecosystem to create apps, not just the raw data providers. Tech firms from Amazon to Apple know this is how their markets work, and the financial services industry is no different. The data providers may continue to provide the familiar platform which end-users see and interact with, but within lies a whole range of app providers who create choice on the platform.  That’s how ‘killer apps’ come about.
  1. Trust me – providing an open platform on which people can innovate is only half of the solution, having a trusted distribution channel is the other. Apple’s App Store, for example, imposes tight restrictions on developers, and the benefit to end users is total trustworthiness. The same goes for the new ecosystem of apps for institutions – but here, compliance will be the critical factor.  This can only be assured if it is baked into the supporting platform, and it is here where existing big players in the sector have a crucial role to play, bringing trusted expertise and ability to ensure all regulatory requirements are met.
  1. Ubiquity matters – while few institutions would countenance trading on the move there are innumerable ways they can use a whole range of devices, particularly tablets, to work smarter and add greater value to interactions with clients and counterparties. Mobility is increasingly important for businesses in most industries; however the ability to use smartphones and tablets to access genuinely useful information (such as the latest share price news), and to communicate with colleagues and counterparties, relies on the availability of adequate applications to deliver information, chat and other data, often in real-time.

Albert Lojko is the global head of platform, Thomson Reuters.

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