Canadian fintechs shine as
investments near record
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[January 04, 2017]
By Solarina Ho
TORONTO
(Reuters) - Venture capital-backed investment in Canadian financial
technology companies hit its highest level in almost two decades last
year, even as the flow of funds into major fintech markets like the
United States declined, according to sector data.
Fintechs, or companies that use innovative technology to revamp
everything from banking to fraud security, globally draw billions in
investment annually.
In Canada, fintech is revitalizing the startup scene and has attracted a
new crop of Canadian venture capital funds looking to invest
specifically in young fintech companies.
According to PitchBook, used by the U.S.-based National Venture Capital
Association, venture capital financing in Canadian fintech was $137.7
million in 2016, up more than 35 percent on the year. Five years ago, it
was $21.8 million and in 2000 it was $7.3 million.
Figures compiled by Thomson Reuters show a rise of nearly 74 percent
from 2015 to 2016, to C$264.8 million ($197.41 million), its highest
level since 2000, when venture capital investment in Canadian financial
technology firms reached C$317.9 million.
The data vary as some investors do not disclose full information, while
methodologies can differ on how the information is collected, how many
companies are tracked, what is considered fintech and what constitutes a
venture deal.
The figures pale in comparison to the United States, where investments
reached $4.27 billion in 2016. But the trend in Canada is on the rise,
compared with a decline in the U.S. and Britain.
Investments declined at least 30 percent in the U.S. in 2016, while in
the UK they fell nearly 25 percent and Singaporean fintech investment
sank 65 percent.
Weaker activity in the U.S. and UK was partly due to market uncertainty
around the U.S. election and the Brexit vote in the UK to leave the
European Union, as well as smaller deal sizes, according to data
provider CBInsights and KPMG.
"From a global stage, Canada is a relatively small market," said Adam
Nanjee, who heads the fintech group in Toronto's MaRS research hub.
"But it's one of the best markets to build a company around innovation
because we have a great test market, great infrastructure for financial
services."
The province of Ontario has among the highest concentrations of tech
firms outside Silicon Valley, according to the provincial government,
thanks in part to cheaper costs and the cluster of Toronto and Waterloo
area universities producing engineers and developers.
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Canadian e-commerce company Shopify Inc logo is shown on a computer
screen in the illustration photo in Encinitas, California May 3,
2016. REUTERS/Mike Blake/File Photo
The
re-invigorated startup community lured home Canadians - such as the founder of
online investment startup Wealthsimple, Mike Katchen - keen to trade promising
careers for a more supportive and less cut-throat environment.
"There's no loyalty whatsoever (in Silicon Valley). You're going to overpay for
somebody, they're going to stay with you for six months and they leave for the
next gig," said Christian Lassonde, founder of Canadian-based investor
Impression Ventures.
"Trying to build a successful company in the Valley has actually gotten too
hard."
California-based Lightspeed Venture Partners, early investors in Snapchat and
Nest, has been tracking Canadian fintechs for potential investments.
Lightspeed, which has yet to invest in fintech in Canada, is monitoring startups
including League, which offers alternative employee health plans, and
FundThrough, a lending service for small businesses.
"What
we look for are companies ... that may start with the Canadian economy, but are
thinking beyond Canada," said Lightspeed partner Arif Janmohamed.
Other foreign players are also taking note. Goldman Sachs <GS.N> invested in
Toronto-based Financeit in 2015 and nanoPay in 2016, for example. Meanwhile,
Japan's NTT Data Corp <9613.T>, one of the world's largest technology services
companies, and MaRS announced a partnership in November to help Canadian
startups expand into Japan and give NTT access to technology being developed by
Canadian startups.
Maturing big-name startups such as Shopify, Wattpad, and Hootsuite helped pave
the way, said Wealthsimple's Katchen, for the next "cohort of companies that are
coming of age on the international stage."
(This version of the story was corrected to show that Lightspeed has not
invested in Canadian fintech in ninth paragraph)
(Reporting by Solarina Ho; Editing by Alan Crosby)
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