Microsoft Takes Aim at the Ubiquitous Amazon Marketplace

Microsoft Takes Aim at the Ubiquitous Amazon Marketplace

Amazon is generally thought of as an unstoppable behemoth. But that hasn’t discouraged competitors — specifically Microsoft, which this week announced a new service that will let brands create detailed personalized product web pages with room for customer ratings and reviews.

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Real-Time Payment Solutions Push Forward Without The Fed

Real-Time Payment Solutions Push Forward Without The Fed

Volante Technologies makes banks an offer: Get connected to real-time payments for free with our cloud-based Payments as a Service (Paas) solution. Expiration: 12/31/19; some limits apply.

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Asian Financial Supply Chains Get a Boost

Asian Financial Supply Chains Get a Boost

Standard Chartered Bank, based in Singapore, announced last month an alliance with SAP Ariba to expand the bank’s supply chain reach across Asia. We chatted with both to get some perspective about the joint venture.

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Continued Integration of Proptech

Continued Integration of Proptech

Some say that, going forward, proptech (technology innovation focused on real estate and housing) won’t be something to be added on to property management, but will be baked in from the beginning.

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What’s Old Is New Again?

What’s Old Is New Again?

There’s an old saying: Those who forget history are doomed to repeat it. Let’s hope some of the nation’s big banks aren’t making that mistake right now.

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Mr. Zuckerberg Goes to Basel

Mr. Zuckerberg Goes to Basel

Facebook’s proposed digital currency Libra caused quite a stir — most of it negative — when it was first announced earlier this year. It’s clear that regulators and central banks have a keen interest in what Libra is, or may become, which is why Facebook honcho Mark Zuckerberg was in Basel, Switzerland earlier this week.

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Big Data Needs Data Scientists to Make Sense of It All

Big Data Needs Data Scientists to Make Sense of It All

Big data is used for marketing, compliance and investing — it requires deep skills.

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Good Times at Boston FinTech Week

Good Times at Boston FinTech Week

The third edition of Boston FinTech Week took place last week, and the event keeps getting bigger and better. The FR was on hand to witness some great panel discussions and see some of the latest and greatest innovative fintech companies show off their wares.

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Autism on Wall Street

Autism on Wall Street

We noticed an interesting story in Institutional Investor recently, on the unique trials and travails of Wall Streeters who also happen to be on the autism spectrum.

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Insurtech Provides Help for Hurricane Dorian

Insurtech Provides Help for Hurricane Dorian

Major weather events such as hurricanes are also major events for insurers and their customers. Technology can help out with that. 

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Payment Networks Innovate (And So Do Fraudsters)

Payment Networks Innovate (And So Do Fraudsters)

AI is used on both sides of fraud — to create fraudulent transactions and to stop them.

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Two Cloud-Native, SaaS Digital Banking Players Challenge the ‘Big Three’

Two Cloud-Native, SaaS Digital Banking Players Challenge the ‘Big Three’

Temenos beefs up U.S. presence by acquiring digital fintech leader Kony.

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Financial Firms Do the Coding Limbo: How Low Can We Go?

As financial firms move more of their technology to private or public cloud to support new mobile versions of existing apps, they are increasingly turning to low-code solutions rather than writing all the code in house.

In its global survey of developers, Forrester noted 23% used low-code platforms in 2018 and another 22% planned to use low-code within a year or so.

Low code replaces hand-written code, with drag-and-drop visual development tools, components, and APIs. Forrester listed the leaders in low code as Microsoft, OutSystems, Mendix, Kony, and Salesforce.

‘Don’t Reinvent the Wheel’? Have You Heard that Cliche?

“By choosing smaller (cloud) services with narrower scopes and fully functional APIs as building blocks and by breaking solutions into very small pieces, companies can now select services that they don’t need to customize,” wrote OutSystems founder and CEO Paulo Rosado in InfoWorld.

"Low-code technology also helps to level the playing field," said Omar Arab, Vice President of Corporate Business Development for VeriTran, a company focused on driving digital transformation through its low-code platform.

"Platforms like these enable large and small institutions alike to easily modernize the way they develop enterprise apps in a fraction of the time of hand coding, often with higher quality. Also, low-code platforms can extend and update existing applications that need some freshening up, leaving the existing business logic in place,” he added.

OutSystems: Portugal’s First Unicorn 

When AXA needed to offer its brokers electronic access instead of making them use an overburdened call center, it used OutSystems to get a web-based portal — eServe — up and running quickly. Soon after, it offered an expanded version for customer self-service.

“OutSystems has been around for 17 years and was a pioneer in low code before the term was invented,” said Steve Rotter, the company’s chief marketing officer.

In 2018 it announced a $360-million investment from KKR and Goldman Sachs, giving it a valuation well over $1 billion, making it Portugal’s first unicorn.

Forrester wrote that “OutSystems keeps pushing the boundaries of low-code platforms — into apps that process device readings and other streaming data, into AI, and into core business record-keeping systems.”

Kony: Low Code for Finance 

A competitor in financial services is Kony, which provides applications specific to finance such as mobile phone banking and onboarding. Banks often layer Kony solutions on top of dated legacy core banking software from firms like FIS and Fiserv. (Temenos announced on Aug. 28 that it was buying Kony for $559 million and an earn-out of $21 million.)

Tom Hogan, CEO of Kony and now CEO of Temenos North America, said Outsystems is a competitor with Kony’s Quantum, a cross-industry platform for B2B, but not with its retail banking front end, DBX.

‘We never see them in DBX; their sweet spot is more B2B that doesn’t require the high fidelity user experience of B2C,” he said.

Rotter said that OutSystems works with companies across industries, including Schneider and GE.

Scarcity of Programming Talent Amplifies Attractiveness of Low Code

The skeptical conversation about low code vs. traditional development is fading, said Rotter, because firms can’t find enough developers. “IT managers have no choice.”

Michael Aldred, managing director at the UK online bank thinkmoney, said it was impossible to recruit enough good developers in Manchester to do traditional coding.

“Low-code platforms are quick to learn,” he said. “Several of our developers joined us from non-coding backgrounds, and now they’ve mastered the OutSystems platform and produced great results.”

Robo-Advisors Lose Luster

Robo-Advisors Lose Luster

Robo-advisors were once all the rage in the world of fintech and digital financial services. But has the luster worn off?

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More Tax Trouble for Big Tech?

More Tax Trouble for Big Tech?

Big tech seems to be having some tax woes lately, from the efforts of EU antitrust authorities to recover what they say are tens of billion in back taxes to the new “digital tax” imposed by France and a court case that could impact multinationals.

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