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2030 French
FinTech Scenarios To what extent disruptive financial
technologies could impact the
French banking sector?
Nicolas AUCONIE 29/04/2016
2030 French FinTech Scenarios
1 SID 1519049
ANGLIA RUSKIN UNIVERSITY
Dissertation Declaration
Title of Award
BSc (Hons) Business Administration
Date
Friday, April 29, 2016
SID Number
1519049
Name of Supervisor
Elisa Alt
Title of Dissertation
2030 French Fintech Scenarios: To what extent financial disruptive
technologies could impact the French Banking Sector?
Word count
11154
DECLARATION: I declare that the following work is my own and that the material contained herein
has not been substantially used in any other submission for an academic award.
Signed: Date: 29/04/2016
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Abstract
Financial Technologies are about to transform the way we bank, and they have just begun. Thirty
years ago, the advent of communication technologies has revolutionized capitals markets and
merely Finance. Financial products’ increased accessibility has made markets more liquid than ever,
thus increasing trade, growth and development. Since then, human have created technologies which
still was sketched in Fictions books few decades ago. Giant calculators, Internet, Nano-technologies
and micro-computing are today about to change our entire world. Finance is not left aside, quite the
contrary; it is actually deeply concerned by these technologies which progress exponentially and
create opportunities until then unimaginable. Financial technologies’ companies, called FinTech
embody this revolution’ outlooks. Global investments inside those start-ups have doubled from 12
billion in 2014 to 22 billion in 2015. They had just tripled from their 2013’s level (4 billion) and this
trend may keep going yet a while. The last revolution had allowed bank to bank better. Instead, this
one should allow people to bank, but without bank. That the main point of this revolution, it is
disruptive. In this paper, we are going to assess potential threats that the FinTech trend could have
upon traditional French Banks; How French could perceive this change, how FinTech could grow and
how banks could cope.
________________________________________
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Table
Abstract ....................................................................................................................................... 2
Introduction ................................................................................................................................ 4
Methodology ............................................................................................................................... 6
Introduction to methodology ............................................................................................................. 6
Literature Review’s methodology: How academically identify key ideas .......................................... 6
What is Scenario Planning, how we use it? ........................................................................................ 6
How we have proceeded to correctly assess main trends?................................................................ 8
1) We have ensured to correctly assess key macro-environmental factors concerning the
French Financial services industry. ................................................................................................. 8
2) We have ensured to learn enough, in order to globally appreciate trends and ways they
could drive the future. .................................................................................................................... 8
3) We have looked forward current behaviors of financial entities to extract the core points
of our scenarios and strengthen our Drivers. ............................................................................... 10
Literature review ....................................................................................................................... 12
Introduction to the literature ........................................................................................................... 12
Why literature has suggested the Scenario Method the more suitable? ......................................... 12
How Literature has shaped our scenario planning? ......................................................................... 14
1) Research Horizon: What scope for a long term exponential trend? .................................... 14
2) Driver prospection: How a relevant literature has suggested ways to answer? .................. 14
Scenarios Building ...................................................................................................................... 19
Scenario Map .................................................................................................................................... 19
“Digital Banks by 2030” ..................................................................................................................... 20
Why Traditional French Banks could become Digital by 2030? .................................................... 20
“Big Vs Small by 2030” ...................................................................................................................... 23
When former Big become threaten by new Small ....................................................................... 23
“Decline of Banks by 2030” ............................................................................................................... 25
In a fast growing society of low marginal cost, being big is not so well ....................................... 25
“Living in the past by 2030” .............................................................................................................. 27
Do not respond is tantamount to letting die ................................................................................ 27
Conclusion and recommendations .............................................................................................. 29
Conclusion ......................................................................................................................................... 29
Recommendations ............................................................................................................................ 29
Endnote ..................................................................................................................................... 31
Bibliography .............................................................................................................................. 32
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Introduction
Financial technologies are mostly founded on few technologic possibilities. Big Data storage allow
individuals to digitally store Tera-octets of information in their pocket. Statistical Analysis’s tools are
increasingly stronger and supported by complex algorithms (IBM Big Data & Analytics Hub Jul. 14,
2015). Internet connects the entire world within a one single network were information could be
instantaneously shared. Finally, the Block Chain technologies highlighted with crypto-currency like the
Bitcoin is turning out being a huge potential solution to disintermediate trades, transactions and
payment with a peer-to-peer proof mechanism, therefore drastically reducing costs. All these
technologies are shaping an environment conducive to improvements in Finance. As we all know since
2008, Finance is not as responsible as it could be. Over securitization and underlying behaviors have
led to a crisis putting down the entire occidental economy (Khan Academy). Causes are known; lack
of transparency within Financial Institutions, lack of regulation from official market authorities and
lack of responsibility in many professionals’ behavior. Basically we know, but the main interested,
banks, hedge funds, even regulators are still rather under acting (Ferguson, 2010).
FinTech companies embody the opportunity to finally shift toward better patterns and therefore
improve what need to be improved in financial mechanisms. There are basically five kinds of FinTech.
The first one is “Payments and Transfers”. Based on high safety crypto-technologies, it allows people
to pay or exchange money directly with their phone or various electronic device everywhere for
almost no-fees. Block Chain technology evoked above is crucial concerning those FinTech’s
development. The second kind of FinTech is “Lending and Financing”. Those are creating web
platforms were Lender can meet borrowers directly to fund a project or lend an amount of money
without intermediary. Crowdfunding and Peer-to-peer lending are the most famous. Private equity or
financial participative communities are also part of this FinTech category. The third one is “Retail
Banking” FinTech. As its name suggests, it consist in the way to bring together every tools necessary
to perform usual banking activities as account management, transfers or daily check-in. The main
advantage of those is that they completely replace traditional bank’s role in the daily banking
activities. The fourth category of Fintech is a bit different. It doesn’t properly concern bank, but
insurance instead. Nicknamed InsurTech, those companies are using especially Big Data and powerful
statistical analysis tools to better frame insurance need around the world and correctly provide
services more diversified, more flexible. Last two FinTech’s categories are quite closed and are both
intended to provide to everybody a mean to place money in order to make capital gains. In the one
hand “Financial Management” FinTech offer flexible and customizable investment strategy, and make
accessible analysts’ or robot-advisor’s services for a derisory cost. In the other hand, “Markets and
Exchanges” FinTech companies provide intuitive and powerful digital Trading platform. Through those
interfaces, anyone can trade stocks, currencies, indices and even derivative products merely via an
internet connection.
Despite all this advantages, FinTech still mostly remain Strat-up and only a few has substantially reach
a market. However, this trend must keep going higher each years and one day or another, will deeply
impact financial activities. This trends takes different extents according to policies and context of the
country where they are located. In Europe, Britain and its FinTech Innovation Lab are first concerning
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FinTech investment (42% of total European investment) followed by Northern Countries, Netherlands
and Germany (Accenture, 2016). France which is yet an historic economic power (Sixth world
economic power) is in sixth position behind Russia in the European FinTech investment ranking. This
weak position illustrates deep French structural issues. Indeed, a complex legislative process,
traditional strong politic cleavage and social-focused policy make disruptive improvement less easy to
spread because disrupting many social acquis. To illustrate, the revision of the Labor code initiated by
Government by the end of 2015 currently face a huge opposition embody by the movement “Nuit
Debout” bringing together each day since one month thousands of citizen across French main town’s
public places. Yet this revision would have been critically useful to the development of French
Fintech’s Start-up which need flexibility, but French have decided the contrary. French Financial
organizations therefore need useful tool to assess a quite uncertain context. This paper is intended to
provide useful recommendations to French Financial organizations through a scenario planning
framing future eventualities by 2030. As we will soon find out, Scenario Planning is especially useful
concerning this assessment. In order to correctly structure our development and step by step expose
the impact FinTech could have on French traditional Banks, we will proceed as described in the
following table.
Methodology This first part will precisely describe the Scenario method we use and
evidence the way we proceeded to collect a relevant literature.
Literature Review This second part will highlight the main involvement of the literature and
should evidence the way it drives our reflection.
Scenarios This third part will expose our scenario key feature and develop them
throughout four different alternatives stories.
Recommendations This final part will provide advices and recommendation based on scenarios
outcomes. Relevant conclusions will be underlines in order to make decision-
processes more efficient.
________________________________________
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Methodology
Introduction to methodology
Into this chapter, we will cover the overall methodology concerning this piece of work, ensuring to
detail the prospective process and the scenarios method to get a clear overview of the process
providing us axes to our answer our research question.
We will first find out the way we develop the literature review method. Then, we will cover the core
analysis method explaining precisely how our research process consists, from the methodological
construction of scenarios founded on Horizon and Drivers to the key features of these last within the
final stories. Furthermore, we will explain our research methodology and the way we use literature to
bring out relevant conclusions and recommendations based on consistent scenarios.
Literature Review’s methodology: How academically identify key ideas
In this work, the literature review takes place voluntarily after the present methodology section. Thus
having in mind in the first place the core methodology of the research and the relevance of the
scenario method concerning this research, we will further be fully able to figure out through the
literature review the core academic implications and outlooks of this last. Therefore, we will use
various outcomes to evidence gaps related to our research question and develop our scenario
strategy.
In a consolidative way of mind, we will explain how relevant references have feed our strategy in order
to academically evidence the fact that this piece of work improve decision makers’ ability to adapt
their mindset in contemporary French financial services companies. With publications whose major
part was published in 2013-2016, we ensure an updated analysis, questioning the more interesting
recent publications about financial technologies and banking development strategies for next
decades. Above all, it shall highlight the weight of main external and internal factors influencing our
work area and consequently facilitate the scenario construction processes by highlighting Drivers and
consistently research horizon.
What is Scenario Planning, how we use it?
Scenario Planning has been introduced in the modern landscape through military decision processes
needed to be enhance and more long-term focused. Hermann KAHN (1922 – 1923) is considered by
most as Father of the way to formally think about the future in order to apply results to present
decision processes. His main studies having concerned the Cold War, he is especially recognized as the
one who study eventual consequences of a nuclear war. Its work has inspired plenty organizations
which has viewed in this possibility to largely-frame thee future, a strong tool to make decisions in the
present. Among the main ones, the Royal Dutch/Shell have used scenarios to create strategies to reach
2030 French FinTech Scenarios
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Scenario 1
Scenario 2
Scenario 3
Scenario 4
A1
B1
A2
B2
A1
B1 Driver 1:
A2
B2
Driver 2:
exogenous markets. According to the Strategic planning management (Exploring Strategy, Pearson
2014), Scenarios are assessing future by a delimited Horizon.
The research horizon is characterized by a range of eventualities depending on what has happened
from today to the horizon. Given that an infinity of things (Events, Behaviors, Trends, …) could
indirectly influence the horizon and consequently create an infinity of alternative futures, the core
work concerning Scenario Planning is isolate those which will Drive our organization the most; the
Two Drivers. Unlike Givens which are factors partially driving it, that we could forecast at the horizon
or with a correlation with another one forecastable at the horizon, Drivers are Uncertain at the
Horizon and non-correlated between themselves.
Once Both Main Drivers are isolated, we need to use them in order to create a scenario map, the
precise one which is going to be our Scenario Building’s foundations. This future compass’s feature is
described in the following graph and, shaped by the crossing of Main Drivers both characterized by
two alternative outcomes basically opposed.
(from ETUI, 2014)
(from ETUI, 2014)
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How we have proceeded to correctly assess main trends?
1) We have ensured to correctly assess key macro-environmental factors concerning the French
Financial services industry.
To correctly assess potential changes that the French Financial services sector (FFSS) could undergo,
it is required to collect various information like qualitative information and quantitative information
which are part of the FFSS macro-environment. In a first step, as said in the last methodology, PESTEL
analysis turned out especially interesting to identify key macro-environmental factors. The Strategic
Planning Book strengthen this position specifying that PESTEL analysis is a useful analysis tool to bring
out phenomenon influencing scenarios. Indeed, by covering Political influences, Economical,
Sociological, Ecological and Legal ones, this analysis ensure analysts to completely asses environment
having in mind the global overview of factors influencing a given organization. Results collected in
PESTEL Analysis therefore aided us to find Givens and identify precisely those which could turn out
being potential main Scenario Drivers. To complete our analysis and figure out the quantitative
characteristics of French Financial Services Sector, we proceed to a data collection about individual
and professional lending, deposit and various financial health key indicators’ related to FFSS. Through
the FBF (French Bank Federation) figures and those from the official web statistic platform of the
“Banque de France”, we get a trustfully, updated and realistic data base providing a solid quantitative
framework for our scenarios.
In the other hand, in a more qualitative reflection, we chose to pick up academic knowledges among
reliable economic Media whose reports and publications are of exceptional quality and that should be
addressed in the next parts. Basically, for conceptual reflections and information’s about hypothetic
societal and global futures, we mainly used the Harvard Business Review, whose publications like “The
other Disruption” (we will talk about it later) are directly related to our question and turned out being
a huge source of inspiration. We have also used a range of publications and reports from the World
Economic Forum, Bloomberg Business, France FinTech, Mckinsey and the Financial Brand. These
sources are classified in the final bibliography and organized by Websites.
2) We have ensured to learn enough, in order to globally appreciate trends and ways they could
drive the future.
If one thing should be ensured to guarantee than scenarios are representative and closely similar to
future which will takes place, it would be a large and global understanding of main trends driving our
general society. Even if these ones do not directly concern our research question, they basically
encompass and shape trends which directly concern it. On top of that, although each system or entity
has its own particularities and characteristics, making them evolving towards various direction, the
global environment surrounding them could affects all of us and drives them toward a specific
direction whereas nothing previously suggested that kind of divergence. This phenomenon is
particularly true in contexts of big changes like Industrial revolutions, wars or various event impacting
society deeply on the long term. That is why in the first place, we especially pay attention to the long
term environment and context. Without a clear appreciation of forces which shaped the past and
2030 French FinTech Scenarios
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those will shape the future, it’s impossible to correctly forecast one single entity being part of the
future (especially if this entity is as large as Financial Services Companies). We will therefore figure out
how we conduct our research in order to make our mind able to project in relevant hypothetical
futures, supported by solid knowledges of current main trends.
From this will to globally frame current context, I decided to share my large literature around two
books (more complete, more immersive and more rewarding). What mattered the most was to
identify the largest theories and concepts affecting my research question through a nuanced
literature. Because my question is about France, I had not just to find the most relevant books of
general theories about past and future, but had to find those which care the most to French
particularities. I have therefore decided to proceed as follows; To strengthen my knowledges in
general economy and identify current economic context’s involvements for future, I red in the first
place “Capital in the 21 century”, a book from 2013 and yet already famous in academic literature.
The Author, Thomas PIKETTY is a French economist whose past analyses has made him deemed. Its
biggest work (Capital in the 21 century) has made him one of the greatest contemporary economists.
The economic theories supported by PIKKETY are quiet instructive and make me definitely more aware
about world incomes inequalities and capital behavior throughout more than two centuries. This book
was sincerely an impressive analysis upon our economic behavior led throughout centuries by societal
changes. On top of that, even if the book is generally about the world, Thomas PIKETTY often refers
to French societal context through famous book telling stories about former French society (?). These
references analyzed through many pages are inked in a matrix crossing Society behaviors with
Economic phenomenon. This allowed me to do a kind of trip back in time, consequently figuring than
things were enormously different before and supporting me in the idea that they will be more
different than ever in the next decades. Nothing is fixed or acquired and everything changes, even if
for most, it’s hard to accept.
In the second place, I felt the need to enhance my abilities to imagine how future could be, more
specifically. The last PIKETTY’s Book was a perfect overview of the past, but I really needed after that
to get an overview of the future. That’s why I chose as second global literature book “The Zero
Marginal Cost Society”, by Jeremy RIFKIN. I had already red one of these books (The Third Industrial
Revolution), which definitely changed the way I perceive my environment and make me more critic
about a range of topics. Obviously I already knew that RIFKIN had an amazing capacity to identify
current trends and extrapolate them in the future to create Books which seems like future’s arrays
whose consistency is striking. That is why I jumped at the chance and buy his last Books (The Zero
Marginal Cost Society). This Books has turned out extremely relevant as well for this work that for my
general studies. Exposing the way technologies always more improved are reducing the marginal cost
of goods to almost zero. From the Internet of Thing and 3D Printing to MOOC and Work’s changes,
the book sketches such a consistent future according to current main trends leading progressively
toward a more collaborative economy, making our globalized society more social-focusing and finally
reducing world-wide inequalities on the long term.
By reading both books, I have really got global knowledges I expected. From the past to understand
why things are like they are today, to the future to understand how things could change and toward
what direction, these books gave me an authentic and solid work-base to ink my scenarios and
correctly assess main possibilities we could face in next decades. This solid framework is essential for
our prospective research and make us better sensitive to fluctuation affecting future.
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3) We have looked forward current behaviors of financial entities to extract the core points of
our scenarios and strengthen our Drivers.
In this present part, to get a more specific details’ data base, we now need to highlight phenomenon
inked on a shorter term, timely closer to the substance of our research question as technologically as
societally and whose core involvements will be the cement that academically link scenarios’ short term
details to our long term global frame.
First main ideas have been evidenced through a large set of reports picked out among the most
prestigious economic and financial organizations. They are mainly about disruptive involvements of a
new generation of financial services providers, growing in a highly advanced technologic environment.
On the one hand, the report “The Future of FinTech” has suggested a notorious ability from FinTech
to change small business finance in a “significant and sustainable way” thus giving us important trails
concerning scenarios building. Furthermore, exposing a large overview of practices related to FinTech
it strengthens our research provided a range of solutions which could be more widespread in the
future we try to forecast. This report is provided by World Economic Forum which is a trustfully
organization conducting many studies around the world and which release each year voluminous
reports about various current economic trends. On the other hand, I read the Accenture’s report “The
future of FinTech and Banking” which in a different way highlight figures suggesting the FinTech’s
capacity to grow consequently in a proximate future. Moreover, by exposing the way Institutional
banks has to reorganize their structure to cope with this digital innovation’s wave, this report released
key information which concern our second Driver’s features. It underlines possibilities that Banks
don’t apply that transformation soon enough and thus open a real gap for them which has to
reimagine the way they bank to remain as strong as today. In addition to these findings, “The FinTech
Ecosystem Lumascape”, report conducted by Business Insider Intelligence (Business Insider, 2016),
give us a useful apprehension of five big trends which according BI’s analysts could well turn out
widespread like the Block Chain involvements, the mobile ordering and payment as well as
partnership-focusing behavior from banks.
In the second place, looking for quantitative information about French Banks and their general state
of health, we conduct a data collection through a range of paper published by The French Banking
Federation (FBF) which is the professional organization which represent every Banks implanted in the
country and release each month an updated version of key figures concerning French Banking Sector.
Basically the FBF provides us an almost instantaneously overview of current banking behavior in
France with its various papers often updated and which are: “Loans to individuals”, “Loans to small
and medium businesses (SME/TPE)”, “Loans to companies”, “Loans to Economy” and finally “French
Bank Sector’s key figures”. These figure underline something definitely relevant concerning the
unforecastable characteristic of our first Driver. Assuredly, throughout the reading of different figures,
we found out a major part of good indicator suggesting a strength position of the sector in France.
Since the last year, every outstanding loans has respectively follow a +3,9% growth for credit to
individual (Danton Petit, 2016), a +2,1% one for credit to SME/TPE (Céline Meslier, 2016), a +4,8% one
for credit to companies (Céline Meslier, 2016) and finally a +4% growth to general Economy (Ovilier
Lhomme, 2016). In a Country where 99% of people have a bank (Olivier Lhomme, 2016) account (and
where 1,91% rates loans are available to small business (2,71% is the European average), these range
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of positive figures suggests a kind of resistance which suggests the current situation rather uncertain
and make the French FinTech disruption less natural than it could be in other countries.
We have now perfectly figured out the Scenario Planning Method involved in this work. By getting
global long term academic knowledges, we built a solid structure upon which our scenario will be
crafted, thus giving them economic and societal consistency. Then by getting a specialized overview
covering main components of our prospective research (French Banks and FinTech), we found out
details, trends and previsions critically useful to enhance our scenarios, complete them and make
them globally wealthier. Furthermore, it has aided aid us to identify our Givens and isolate our Drivers.
Thus founded on a relevant literature collection, these scenarios ensure to bring out reliable
recommendations and relevant answers to our research question: To what extent French disruptive
FinTech companies could impact the traditional French Financial Services Sector? *
________________________________________
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Literature review
Introduction to the literature
This literature review will enhance our capacity to figure out academic and strategic relevance of this
scenario research. By exposing core documents and sources used throughout the documentation
process, we ensure to globally evidence key gaps covered by the prospective work and strengthen our
methodology choice. Furthermore, this chapter will improve our capacity to frame various concepts
and theories concerning our research question and allow us to find our key methodologic features.
In order to make this literature prism easier to follow and logically ink our scenarios within a global
academic structure, we develop this chapter in 3 parts. First, we will explain how literature has brought
out the prospective method the more relevant and why. Then in a second part, we will find out how
literature has suggested 2030 as a relevant horizon choice. Finally, we will figure out how literature
has given us crucial directions to undergo in order to correctly build our scenarios around credible
Drivers and Horizon.
Why literature has suggested the Scenario Method the more suitable?
As exposed in the introduction, our research process requires a specific academic method to be fully
operated. Indeed, Economic and social trends we analyze here are on the first step of a new cycle
(PIKETTY, 2013). They’re either identified throughout this work as a result of the disruptive
technologies of XXI century which have created a matrix Energy/Communication favorable to the
advent of a New Industrial Revolution (RIFKIN, 2011). Still according to RIFKIN, those news
technologies are adopting an exponentially growing behavior similar to those Moore described with
his famous Curve (Investopedia, 2003). This exponential growth is followed by a large range of new
technologies and especially by those whose improvements disrupt the current patterns, as illustrates
the 3D printing, the computer’s computing power or yet the number of items equipped with an
electronic chip connecting them into the IoT (RIFKIN, 2014). Therefore, in order to build up relevant
conclusions, useful on the long term and suitable to a technologic context which changes
exponentially quickly, we have to ensure a perfect understanding of the various future features which
directly or indirectly influence this work’s subject; Long term Financial Trends. Having in mind such
challenge, the Strategic Planning Book (Anglia, 2014) suggested Scenarios the most relevant to globally
assess futures’ eventualities. According to our research question, we want to figure out what is the
potential impact of Financial Technologies companies (FinTech) on the French Financial Services
industry by 2030. In attempt to get a complete overview of potential future situations, we find out
prospective academic method the more relevant. More precisely, this method involving the
construction of scenarios, is an analysis tools relevant to take long term decisions. According to Ged
Davis (European Trade Unions Institute, 2014):
“Scenarios are stories about the future, but their purpose is make better
decisions in the present.”
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Moreover, as said in the European Trade Union Institute guide for scenario development, scenario
method turns out especially appropriate in context of rapid improvement as the one we face:
“The world is constantly changing, and these changes occur at a more frenetic
pace - to the extent that the context itself has become a variable. It is impossible
to predict with certainty the consequences of decisions made today. In this
context, scenarios help us to cope with the uncertainties of an open future. Like a
map, which enables us to guide us in space, scenarios present us different paths
towards the future.”
Our topic being characterized by a lightning digital revolution, whose impact are wide, many and
sudden, prospective approach turn out critically appropriate.
In a more strategic business mindset, the Shell Scenario Planning (Oliver sparrow, 1993) describes
scenarios as quite suitable to enhance our strategic decision ability upon future situations:
“It helps to add a framework to the process of strategic thinking”
These method is consequently especially suitable concerning this paper, which is a tools for
professionals to frame future trends and find out options to adapt their business strategies according
to various eventual contexts.
According to each of assumptions above, we therefore based our methodology around scenarios
building and enhance our capacity of prospective thinking using the famous Shell Scenario Planning
(Oliver Sparrow, 1993), the Scenario Elaboration Report of the European Trade Union Institute
(Meinert, 2014), the publication of Angela Wilkinson and Roland Kupers “Managing uncertainty, Living
in the future” (Harvard Business Review May 1, 2013), and the Report “Fashion Futures 2025” conduct
by Forum for the Future with Levis Strauss & Co (Forum for the Future, 2010).
Now we understand the relevance of the method to answer our research question, we will step by
step fulfill a pathway toward our final scenario building.
________________________________________
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How Literature has shaped our scenario planning?
1) Research Horizon: What scope for a long term exponential trend?
Phenomenon we treat and analyze in this work are quiet forecastable in the short term (3-5 years),
but face a lack of forecasts concerning their behavior throughout more than 10 years; A time scale
through which is more difficult to forecast such major trends because involving too much macro-
environmental factors whose forecasts encompass a tone of different eventualities. As you can see in
the graph below (European Trade Union Institute, 2014), our research horizon is fixed on 2030. In
order to provide long term strategic recommendations, a horizon at the first century’s third seems
rather suitable and relevant.
2) Driver prospection: How a relevant literature has suggested ways to answer?
I’m personally born in 90’s and consider myself part of this Y generation. Those which did not know
the Cold War or even the constant atomic threat, those which ask “Why?” for everything and those
which by internet could find all answers they desire to find. Basically I’m part of this Y generation,
which main features result entirely from one simple one: Being Connected.
Here is the crucial thing, this connection changes everything and each day inks an additional entity to
the huge international network embodied by Internet. This trend to be always more connected is one
of the main topics of the Jeremy RIFKIN book “The Zero Marginal Cost” that we quoted recently.
Published in 2014, It highlights the next step of this connected revolution, the Internet of Thing (IoT).
The IoT is the phenomenon whereby each items could in the future be connected to a giant Internet,
as the way most of us are connected through social media, blogs or various websites. This technology
combined with Big Data and Quantic Computers, allows engineers to algorithmically manage our
physical environment, organize it, make it more efficient, less entropic. It could make it
environmentally sustainable and even help to struggle inequalities.
Utopias
Hope and
Fatalism
Forecasts
Prediction of
the future
Potential
Scnearios Uncertainties
Certainties
Today Time 2030 2020
(from ETUI, 2014)
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Yes, the Y generation and its connected facet is a generation which more than ever, aspire to change
the world for a better one more egalitarian. It could appear kind of optimistic, maybe idealistic, or
even utopic for most and I agree, it is. Yet I would like we remember us Sir John LENON’s words: “You
say I’m a dreamer. But I’m not the only one”. Obviously, if one day should arrive where dreamers
would no longer feel alone, it will surely be today, in this XXI century that looks like no others (Social
Innovation, World Economic forum 2016).
Let us now link this Assumptions with the Financial trends. Mostly since the 2008 subprime crisis (The
Big Short, 2015), people of the world are aware of global issues and have learnt through medias and
internet to almost systematically bad-mouth behind the back of Financial Capital Markets - It’s not me
who said it, it’s Charles FERGUSON in the documentary Inside Job (FERGUSON, 2010). The question is
actually extremely complex due to the contemporary ultra-varied services provided by banks “Too big
to fail”, hedges fund or various financial services companies which use complex mechanisms as
securitization to create new financial products some time much better some time not. Nevertheless,
some of us nowadays know that complex structural issues concerning Financial Institutions make the
world face numerous obstacle when it’s about support social progress but much less when it’s about
agglomerate capital in few pockets. By and large, we could summarize the situation with the following
forecast graph, picked out from Thomas PIKKETY book “Capital of the XXI century”. You will see, it is
especially relevant to get an overview of the capital behavior, which as we can see follows a trend of
accumulation since its low point in 1950 and could keep going higher. And When we cross this context
of societal frustration resulting from the high concentrated capitals, with the digital disruption’s one,
we actually highlight the key concern we trying to cover with this work: A Financial Disruptive
Revolution is coming and FinTech are initiators of this revolution; Do Banks are prepared enough? Is
France ready?
(from PIKETTY, 2013)
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This is the current situation; we face a society which is influenced by a disruptive social-tech revolution
which once implemented could deeply transform mechanisms many century-old. Meanwhile,
Progress faces difficulties and obstacles ironically brought out by this connected revolution which
because disruptive, makes some people sick. Concerning precisely technologies, although they grow
and fit an exponentially larger part of our industry, our economy and our life, it either start to threat
former patterns which many depend thus bringing out some questions:
To what extent a disruptive revolution could be achieved within a potential negative opinion?
How it could affect our industries first, then our Economy and finally our Life?
The first finding is the growth of a young generation surrounded by technologies since birth. These
new adults born in a connected environment are going to be most adept to apply new high tech
processes to traditional businesses, more than each others could have done before. This environment
influence then since first stages of personal development through connected technologies, Screen and
Video games. According to “The Google Method” by Jeff JARVIS, it also makes them more open-
minded or for the least more aware of the rest of the world (HarperCollins Publishers 2009). They
know how technologies works better than ever, they have used to spend many time on the World
Wide Web since their youngest age, and they are generally more efficient, more self-managed, and
more autonomic. They should as well accept easier disruptive features involved in technologies they
know. This generation therefore fit a potential huge market for financial technologies companies
(FinTech).
Such context could be interpreted as a royal pathway for FinTech companies to develop their activities.
Through a logical forecast process, we therefore could imagine that FinTech breakthrough is
inevitable, aren’t we? Unfortunately for Financial Technologies Companies, it’s not as simple as that.
The Point is the following; we are studding France. France is a country where history, politic values
and traditional principles fit a large place within the common moral concepts (Thomas PIKKETY, 2013)
and especially when it’s about money, wealth or even trade (We are voluntarily generalizing). The
abolition of nobility’s privileges two centuries ago has ink the country in a suspicion climate concerning
high capitals, especially among the left-most fringes of the population, political ancestor of current
socialists and radical labor parties. In addition to two traumatic Word War, French society guided by
“Providence State” throughout the glorious Thirty have basically become definitely more social
focusing and by French extension; suspicious toward high capitals or incomes. Actually, a large part of
French public opinion is rather conservative and still traditionally opposed to liberal legislations (Nuit
Debout, 2016). A wired when we to surf the disruptive waves of a cataclysmic Third Industrial
Revolution (Jeremy RIFKIN, 2013).
French traditional financial companies are especially concerned by these changes because truly bigger
than other-ones, critically sensible and especially able to implement disruptive technologies in their
business patterns (Jeffery D. Sachs, 2016). On top of that, they have to face the possibility to be in
competition with new financial technologies companies (FinTech). Those which provide services of
the same nature, but with lower prices, lower restrictions and which in case of success could be a
sustainable banks’ replacement. FinTech’s are today on the first step of a long path toward a higher
penetration in the markets. In a society cleaved between always more disruptive ideas brought up by
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Reluctant to transit toward financial
technologies companies
Likely to transit toward tinancial
technologies compagnies
young generation and traditional values supported by former generations, only time should answer
to the next question: Is French society ready to disrupt their former economy to transit in a new one
that most have trouble to imagine?
Because nobody can actually forecast precisely to what extent French public opinion could change and
toward what direction, this work has consequently to postpone advises and strategic conclusions for
both following potential situations by 2030 horizon:
An overall French society likely to adopt disruptive financial services provided by FinTech instead
of traditional banks.
An overall French society reluctant to adopt disruptive financial services provided by FinTech
instead of traditional banks.
This divergence in potential future just highlight our first Driver, critically relevant concerning our
scenarios building (Shell, 1993) and influencing horizon both opposed way.
Driver 1: Aptitude of French consumers to transit toward disruptive technologies companies
concerning their wealth management, loans demands and payments.
Drivers are vectors with two directions, both strictly opposed (ETUI, 2014). These two directions
embody two future possibilities. We have above the first Driver, which shape the first dimension of
our scenario map. Nevertheless, now we need to find out the second dimension of this scenario map
in order to make them even more appropriate to answer our research question. The first Drivers give
us an analytic framework related to the FinTech’s growth capacity, which is only one part of the
question. The second part of the question is the potential impact of this growth upon the French
Personal Financial Services Sector.
According to PESTEL analysis suggested to find out Scenarios’ Drivers, FinTech is a new threat in the
banks surrounding. Like Transfer Wise which reduce the fees for foreign transactions, Lending Club
which provide peer-to-peer lends or Yomoni which provides personalized financial advises according
to your strategy and your risk profile, many start-ups are currently emerging with structural
improvements and simplifications allowing them to be more dynamic, efficient and resilient to waves
of digital innovations. To the opposite, Banks face a new challenge and have to schedule new
strategies to implement disruptive technologies within its organizational structure, in order to avoid
being putted away and viewed as old and reluctant to new connected economy.
Driver 1
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Weakly equipped to cope with next wages of digital
innovations
Highly equipped to cope with next wages of digital
innovations
To improve their organizational structure and remain technologically updated, the Report of the
London FinTech Innovation Lab (Accenture, 2015) suggests few key directions strategies should
undergo. We highlighted these key directions in the following illustration:
This scheme suggests the hypothetical best pathway for bank to cope with next waves of digital
innovation. However, a question remains central: Either Banks will implement such strategies soon
enough and quick enough and lead a Personal financial digital revolution, either it may be the contrary
and FinTech too much flexible for institutional banks will snack Financial Services sector’s market
shares and cut the grass under banks’ feet. We consequently face the second divergence concerning
the potential futures of institutional banks patterns:
Reimagine structural organization soon and quick enough to finally being highly equipped to cope
with next waves of digital innovations
De not be able to reimagine it at time and being weakly equipped to cope with next waves of
digital innovations
This divergence therefore allows us to finally shape the second dimension of our scenario map through
the following driver:
Driver 2: How equipped do banks are to cope with next wages of digital innovations
Driver 2
Collaborate
Act Open
Invest
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A1 B1
B2
A2
A1
A2
B1
B2
Driver 2 Concerning French tradtional
Financial compagnies
Driver 1 Concerning Individual wealth
management and needs
Scenarios Building
Scenario Map
From these two main drivers, we are now able to expose our scenario map. This orthonormal frame
allows us to make our scenarios clearly obvious and logically shaped. Indeed, guided by direction of
Drivers, these scenarios will embody together a global hypothetical projection of what the future
Horizon could be.
Digital Banks
Big vs Small
Living in the past
Decline of
Banks
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“Digital Banks by 2030”
This scenario is based on the following hypothesis:
French population rather reluctant to assign their incomes into Start-up using disruptive
financial technologies will remain away from young FinTech and prefer to trust traditional
Banks to manage their wealth.
French Banking sector, aware of the disruptive side of new financial technologies concerning
their viability, will quickly go ahead and implement quick enough what needs to be
implemented to cope with such context.
Into this development, we therefore go to find out how banks could shift their classic patterns trough
new structural and organizational improvements in order to cope efficiently with disruptive waves of
innovation in Financial Technologies. Furthermore, FinTech being one which embodies these
disruptive waves, we also will find out why those last could turn out being inappropriate to reach the
French Market.
Why Traditional French Banks could become Digital by 2030?
2016 – 2018
The average worldwide investments in FinTech has tripled since 2012 and its curve could well follow
an exponential path throughout these next decades following other investments in disruptive
technologies as the Internet of Thing and the 3D printing. The 3rd of May 2016, France FinTech organize
the largest French event related to FinTech outlooks to define what the future holds for all
stakeholders. Heavy politicians and Personalities are part of this like Emmanuel MACRON (French
Minister of Economy), Nick LEEDER (Director of Google FR), Laurent SOLLY (Director at Facebook FR),
François VILLEROY de GALHAU (Governor of Banque de France) or even the ex-COO of Lending Club
John DONOVAN. This conference’s outputs have turned out relevant for Banks and French
Government which picked out main improvement to implement in order to catch the FinTech Wave,
as well legally (make the law more flexible meanwhile strengthen AMF regulation power) than
structurally (Make Banks easier to restructure and encourage partnership with start-up) and
economically (Transit toward a consumer-focusing strategy, reduce additional costs by fulfilling an
open-strategy concerning information share).
2018 – 2020
ADVIZE, a financial advisor start-up which provide a flexible portfolio management service, has been
taken over by BNP PARIBAS (member of the R3CEV block-chain consortium since November 2015)
which follow a Digital strategic plan. Crédit Agricole follows the initiative and take over YOMONI which
is the main French competitor in digital Financial advice. Crédit Agricole already had a range of mobile
solution for its customers and by integrating YOMONI become one of the more customer-focusing
French bank with BNP. Meanwhile, major banks also are in a Frenzy of partnerships and each of us
now have a complete set of mobile application making people able to bank without going to physical
office. This dematerialization make banks globally need to downsize and cut costs removing
unproductive departments (physical offices, personal advisers) to keep investing in sustainable
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restructuration. Following the BNP’s example which in 2016 had deleted 675 jobs, 5 of the biggest
French banks therefore release important redundancy plans.
2020 – 2025
R3CEV consortium now brings together the major part of traditional French banks in collaboration
with several International banks. In 2020, R3CEV announce the first implementation of a global inter-
bank collaboration ecosystem based on the Block Chain Technologies. Through a partnership with
Microsoft and its Azure cloud whose possibilities are endless, R3CEV allow members to transfer
money, share information and create contracts with historically reduced costs and safe framework
protected against fraud. Furthermore, Block Chain ecosystem make French banks able to create smart
contract (self-executing documents) more suitable to individuals’ needs, speed up business
transactions and using powerful algorithms, keeping ledgers synced. Thus complex environments like
banks and financial companies are simpler to analyze and better to manage whereas costs are
substantially cut.
Next years, French FinTech Start-ups specialized in mobile payment explode and enforce to compete
with Apple, Google and Samsung’s payment solutions. Indeed, Block chain ecosystem combined with
Big Data have created a huge opportunity for start-up to develop smart payment applications and
allow people to pay directly with their phone or their smart-watch with almost no additional fees. To
illustrate, 40% of payment are smartly payed by 2022 and 60% by 2024. Nevertheless, 75% of mobile
transaction are still performed trough the famous IT companies’ wallet apps and local FinTech has
barely progressed. Detecting in this business a potential threat to their payment incomes’ sources,
French banks now more horizontally structured and thus agiler to change, have taken over between
2022 and 2025 many Payment FinTech like MangoPay or SlimPay in order to stay competitive with
biggest High-Technologies companies. Therefore, in 2025 French banks are fully equipped and thanks
their FinTech partners are able to propose a qualitative offer to French population, enough
strengthened and customer-focusing to become highly competitive.
2025 – 2030
In 2025, only 20% of the French population keep going into banks’ offices to manage their account
and adapt their services to their profile. The total weight of the classic Banking Sector into total
employment decrease from 15% in 2016 to 5% in 2025. Meanwhile, the Credit high demand trends
begun in 2017 has been confirmed and French individuals’ demand for loans is staidly raising.
Especially in a decade of major transitions, many entrepreneurs want to fund their projects and 10%
of missing former banks’ employees have made inflated this entrepreneurial global behavior
principally by creating Start-up as well numerous as specialized. This need to fund a huge economic,
social and energetic revolution is satisfied by two major means; Digital Banks’ loans on a side and
FinTech solution on the other side (Peer-to-peer lending, crowdfunding, small Business private equity
markets), embodied on the major part by international FinTech (Kick Starter, KissKissBankBank, …).
This bipolar situation quiet profitable for businesses because diversified, actually become rather
dangerous for French economy. Banks which hold the major part of French savings and pensions face
in this second decade’s half face few difficulties to keep strong assets because a fierce competition
with foreign FinTech in credit allocation. To regulate this situation and guarantee pensions and savings
to the population, French Government have decided in 2026 to encourage FinTech Start-up and banks
to bring them together within 5 French Financial Hub implemented in biggest French town. Every
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FinTech which reach a Hub will be financially helped and could work among a wealthy dynamic
environment. These Hubs of financial activities then allow actors (Big Digital Banks and Small
Innovative Start-up) to collaborate efficiently in order to enhance their capacity to create attractive
smart and flexible products to satisfy the loans demand steadily raising. In 2029, Financial Hubs
regroup more than 150 companies, supply 75% of the French credit demand and relaunch the
employment in the sector reaching 10% in 2029. Finally, in 2030 the Government inject 5 Billion in
Financial Hubs and announce the next main economic plan of the France History: Lead a French
Sustainable and Collaborative Economy by 2050
________________________________________
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Big Vs Small by 2030”
This scenario is based on the following hypothesis:
French population rather likely to transit toward new financial technologies to manage their
wealth have begun to join young FinTech start-up and progressively leave traditional Banks to
change the way they bank as soon as they could.
French Banking sector aware that many customers already leave them for FinTech, quickly go
ahead and begin to improve their structure in order to remain competitive with new small.
Into this second development, we are going to evidence a context of high competition between classic
traditional Banks and new FinTech Start-up which quickly turned out being an important threat for
former Banking sector’s sustainability. Trying to imagine how such a situation could happen and how
French financial stakeholders should cope with it to remain competitive.
When former Big become threaten by new Small
2016 – 2018
2017 was a key year concerning FinTech development in France. In the first hand, TransferWize (a
FinTech Start-up which allow people to send money to each other and especially aboard with residual
costs), has known a 120% growth principally supported by a high-communication in social Network
since 2015 aided by a total funding of 91M$ from its unveiling in 2011. Thanks this powerful peer-to-
peer money transfer service, the company cover in 2018 45% of French market shares concerning
money transaction usually handled by traditional Banks which saw their incomes consequently
decrease. Meanwhile, Yomoni and Advize which provide flexible and customizable savings solutions
have both steadily grown and now reach 8% of French total savings (mainly through middle classes).
Finally, the Peer-to-peer credit trends has been strengthened and FinTech specialized in
Crowdfunding, Peer-to-peer lending and Equity Crowdfunding has been used trough 30% of French
financial needs.
2018 – 2020
French Banks has realized a certain vulnerability through the increasing demand for FinTech in peer-
to-peer lending and transfer. Therefore, they have begun since the end of 2017 to restructure their
activities. Indeed, BNP, LCL and other major traditional banks have taken together the opportunity
from R3CEV to strengthen their set of mobile application transferring a large part of their financial
activities toward digital platforms to encourage people using FinTech solutions to transit toward their
new tools. On the opposite, France assist to the emergence of Financial Technologic Pole bringing
together FinTech start-ups within two specialized hubs: The Crowdfunding French Hub implanted in
Nantes gather Ulule (The first European Crowdfunding company), Seedrs (an equity crowdfunding),
Mymajorcompany (a French participative funding company) and 6 other crowdfunding FinTech
specialized respectively in ecological funding, social funding, innovation funding, TPE/PME funding,
Individuals micro-funding and even one political funding. Furthermore, a Technologic Financial Advice
Hub has been implanted close to Paris La Défense bringing together FinTech Start-Up specialized in
Robot-advisors and individuals’ portfolio management (Yomoni, Advize, …). Letting Traditional Banks
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aside, these Hubs promote the end of a Banking Sector too big to fail, the diversification and the
specialization of financial services companies.
2020 – 2025
Both crowdfunding Hub and Technologic Financial Advice Hub surprise the French economy draining
in 2023 more than 35% of global French banking activities thus employing 5% of the total French
payroll. Meanwhile, traditional banks did not have choice and between 2017 and 2025 cut the major
part of their physical activities reducing the classic banking payroll from 15% in 2016 to 3% in 2025.
Forced to specialize to remain competitive against new FinTech Hubs, they have reorganized their
activities, downsized and take over a couple of start-ups which would accept to join them. To better
frame the situation, even Public funds handled by the Government are now entrusted up to 40% to
the Technologic Financial Advice Hub while 60% are held by traditional banks. In order to keep its
market shares and avoid a serious collapse, Traditional smaller banks progressively join FinTech Hubs
which ink the possibility to make them entire part of the new FinTech ecosystem. In counterpart, they
have accepted to reduce their action scope, decentralized their head office and accept to be under
the tutelage of a Hub where each company works with other ones, not against. Otherwise, bigger ones
like BNP or Société Générale which has developed digital activities strong enough to remain
competitive, shift toward new strategy by proposing a global digital ecosystem making credit, savings
advice, money management and payment unified within one platform per bank. Société Générale thus
make available its platform “MFDW” (My Financial Digital World) come to compete with other banks’
unify packages which globally reach 30% of the French population; mainly those who were seeking for
a simple unified platform bringing together all what they need to bank in a single application.
2025 – 2030
Throughout the second half of the decade, the French Global Banking sector is relatively stable and a
clear trend is taking shape for the long term. Indeed, to achieve an energetic transition and transit
toward and collaborative economic revolution involving industries like 3D printing or even global
electric smart grid’s construction, plenty entrepreneur starts their own business. In 2025, 10% of
superior graduated decide to develop their own start-up, and consequently need funds to start the
activities. Official figures are deeply clear; 75% of young businesses chose FinTech funding solution to
support their projects. According to them, more diversified, Crowdfunding FinTech make available to
entrepreneur financial products more flexible, suitable to their size and more relevant because
internationally open. Another heavy trend suggests older Businesses which reached a substantial and
sustainable market, are likelier to set up their activities through a unify platform, easier to manage in
order to increase business efficiency. This trend actually illustrates the cession between big former
Bank which achieve their digital transformation, and smaller companies which enforce to make
finance easier and more accessible to any initiator. In other words, it highlights the main differences
between markets reached by both FinTech companies and Banks; Young companies seeking for
development and risk are likelier to request FinTech services (more diversified, more specialized)
whereas older companies rather seeking durability and security are likelier to request a classic unify
application from classic Bank, making finance management easier and safer. In this Big Vs Small
scenario, banks therefore remain the dominant long term financial services provider, although FinTech
companies brought together in FinTech Hubs became the financial incubator for start-up and a
catalyzer for progress.
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Decline of Banks by 2030”
This scenario is based on the following hypothesis:
French population is rather likely to transit toward new technologies concerning their wealth
management. The general opinion is suspicious about banking sector and new disruptive
solutions appears as a means to make finance fairer.
Major Banks are late and didn’t took decisions soon enough to cope with new disruptive
financial technologies making them weaker.
This scenario is going to improve our ability to manage financial mutation’s context from former too
big to fail Banks toward New Disruptive FinTech companies. It will evidence the way our economy
could be impacted in the situation of a massive transition and thus make us able to be prepared to
cope with such eventuality. Voluntarily underlined, the attractiveness of FinTech solutions are here
considered at their maximum potential and should be analyzed accordingly.
In a fast growing society of low marginal cost, being big is not so well
2016 – 2018
The 3rd of May 2016, The event “FinTech R:EVOLUTION” organized by France Fintech brought out
dozens of French FinTech, those qualified of “The bests French FinTech” among which Yomoni and
Advize (both FinTech leader of French Personal wealth management), Leetchi and Ulule (deemed
among crowdfunding European FinTech) and many others from Payment solutions, to peer to peer
lending and even personal Trading ones. This conference has allowed jewels of French FinTech’s to
know more about the current state of development of their competitors but has also made them more
conscientious about the general long term potential of the disruptive revolution they all embody. The
idea according to what they should bring themselves together within Financial Technologic Hub has
been put on the table and first plans to elaborate such a collaboration began to be scheduled in order
to reach it by 2025.
2018 – 2020
FinTech growth rates are staggering and in 2019 FinTech industry globally grew on average by 15%
each year since 2016 with a 26% growth just in this 2020 year. People who by the past where rather
suspicious concerning FinTech companies have yet well assimilated the opportunity they actually face
through those new players. Thanks to a great communication from France FinTech upon them and an
accurate synchronization in their own communication campaign, French FinTech companies have
reach their goal and perfectly shared the excitement about this new smart way to bank with the
French population. In a study published by the end of 2020 by the INSEE, three French citizens on five
have related having consulted a digital FinTech in order to cover a financial need, 40% declare having
already transfer partially or fully their funds through FinTech personal robot advisors, 55% confess
being interested by crowdfunding to fund their personal projects, 72% usually use Electronic wallet
(for the most using Bitcoins) to pay without fees and 66% has related a willingness to leave their
traditional bank over the next five years. Meanwhile, Banks afraid by this huge reversal of situation
have tried to catch the digital trend the most quickly they could. They however have faced a range of
issues caused by a complex historic structure full of toxic clauses making processes slower. Certain
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have tried to take over FinTech in the hope of taking profit from their experience but just few start-
ups accepted whereas the major part, already in the scope to collaborate in future FinTech Hubs, had
politely declined the offer.
2020 – 2025
FinTech keep going toward the idea to group their activities within Financial Technology Hubs by 2025.
Those enough developed have already begun to implant their activities in strategic places near the
most dynamic French towns. In 2022, bargains between BNP Parisbas and Yomoni which was a hope
for the traditional commercial bank to catch the individual wealth management trend and recover its
past health, has failed and no agreement was found. The following week, the BNP stock fall by 18%.
Resulting in its fall the global trust in institutional banks, 2022 is the year which rush the Banking
exodus. To prevent against serious economic collapses potentially dangerous for French economy and
French Retirement Pension, Government didn’t find alternative that’s hedge his back by transferring
property and funds toward more trustfully and durable entities. Therefore, an emergency plan called
“Transit Toward a Smart Bank; Now or never”. Between 2023 and 2025 government thus injected 15
Billion in the achievement of National Financial Technology Hubs distributed near each of the
following town: Paris, Bordeaux, Nantes, Lyon, Marseille, Clermont-Ferrand and Lilles. Bringing
together French FinTech as well as international ones, France has thus laid the foundations for a
sustainable long term FinTech industry, horizontally structured, led by decentralized decision more
suitable to local needs and each year welcoming New Start-Up which technologically enhance our
financial efficiency.
2025 – 2030
Yet a major Issue remain on the table after this Banking revolution; what will weaker traditional bank
become? In order to help them and save what could be saved, Government encourage those still
standing to join FinTech Hub and accept a total restructuration of their former patterns to aid French
FT-Hubs to lead a collaborative economy revolution bringing on the table their historical experience.
Those which declined were rather rare if not non-existent. In 2028, French Financial Technology Hubs
employ 10% of the total active population (still less than 15% that Banks employed by the past but the
figure is growing each year with Start-ups joining Hubs). The same year, FBF’s Key Figures revealed
positive indicators concerning the French Economy; In 2028, loans to Economy have grown by 15%
(Loans to Individuals by 11%, to SME/TPE by 22% and loans to companies by 12%). On top of that
French savings has been fruited by 6% into Wealth Management FinTech (Robot advisors and Private
Analysts) thus shifting toward an inflation economy suitable to a goal of high Green Growth. In 2030,
France is elected second country the most innovative of the world in the “Top 100 global innovator”
published by Thomson Reuters. This status comes mainly from the fact that French Start-up have
internationally shown an incredible determination to achieve technologic improvement necessary to
globally reduce inequalities and spread those technologies the more they could. The influence of
French Start-ups is catalyzed by a smart financial ecosystem, using Big Data to locate ideas the more
sustainable and fund them, underlying the initiative improving the civic sector and thanks ultra-
diversified FinTech activities able to satisfy needs of thousands of job corps collaborating in specialized
communities. Even if its GDP Growth is yet lower than in powerful economies like China Japan or
United Stated, France’s percentage of Green and Social Growth is more than 40% what means that,
like it was for human rights last centuries, France again spread equality values around the entire world.
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“Living in the past by 2030”
This scenario is based on the following hypothesis:
French population is mostly reluctant to transit toward Disruptive financial technologies
concerning their wealth management, their need to loans or the way they pay. Individuals’
education concerning money is quiet weak and French prefer let the Bank assume risks and
perform operations.
Despite the fact they keep their market shares safe, traditional banks don’t give as much
importance to FinTech improvements and keep going on their traditional strategy remaining
fees stable and collaborating the bare minimum with start-up providing new way to bank.
This last scenario may turn out being the worth for the French economy. It embodies the possibility
that France remain in its conservative mindset thus making the country’s economy weaker against
foreign FinTech initiatives supported by exponential investments and deep reforms. Through this
Hypothetical future, we obviously want to expose the worth direction that France could follow, the
one which could definitely ink the historic powerful economy into a deep aging and progressively relay
it far behind his European neighborhoods.
Do not respond is tantamount to letting die
2016 – 2018
Throughout 2017, Presidential Campaigns have shaken the public opinion and few candidates have
spread nationalist ideas invoking a necessity to protect the country against globalization and free
trade. The 15th of May 2017, the Nationalist party “Front National” has been democratically chosen
by French. Upon the Bank and financial questions, their politic program is clear; Protect French Banks
against eventual competition by ultra-strengthen financial regulations, restrict trading operations
considered too risky, implement banking data protection policies and prevent most foreign
investment in French industries. The following 2018 year, 73% of requests from FinTech start-up to be
legally recognized has financial services provider has been declined by AMF thus slowing down the
French FinTech development. At the same time, banks too busy implementing new legislations
through their complex structure don’t pay attention to the necessity to reorganize their activities
faced with the threat of International Financial Technologies companies.
2018 – 2020
In the absence of possibility to implement technologic tools as foreign banks already did, supported
by FinTech start-ups (partnerships and mergers and acquisitions), major traditional French banks
concentrate its effort to enhance their digital platforms in order to ensure French digital demand is
satisfied. French population is still suspicious about alternative financial services companies as well as
mobile wallets or peer-to-peer loans. Keep going to bank through traditional unified banking apps,
they stay away from Financial Technologies’ start-ups and thus create a general hostile context for
their development. Meanwhile, neighboring investments into FinTech industry has reach an historic
level and the FinTech industry is even designed by most business review as the market with growth
opportunities the important. To respond to this increased willingness to control the French economy
inside border and protect the country against an open world, an important wave of protestation
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supported by Most of Young generations has emerge from every French major town. In 2020, to
celebrate the second decade of the XXI century in their own way, a collective of Hackers supported by
the international movement Anonymous has achieve the bigger hack of the French History. Five Tera-
octets of confidential banking information has been release publically in only one Week containing 40
Million French’s banking information.
2020 – 2025
After The 2020 Banking Information’s Hack, French Banks had to react the most quickly they could to
protect its consumer’s savings, avoid fraud and increase the security level of their confidential
information to keep away new hacking threats. The whole restructuration in order to achieve such
improvement has cost them a lot of money and a lot of time. Foreign countries having already
implemented the Block-Chain technology within their structure are mostly protected against such
Hack and France therefore seems like distraught what cause a global French banks’ stocks 10% falling
down. Of course the government remains positive and announce that French Banks are now stronger
against informatics attacks, what French citizens mostly believe and consequently remain faithful to
their bank. Although the 2020’s Hack has created some breaches in French Banks firewall, it also
initiates something still more interesting; The Years which follows the Hack, French citizen has
received a tone of advertising E-Mail proposing them various banking services provided by foreign
Financial Technologies’ companies. Indeed, Foreign FinTech already well developed have jumped at
the chance and most have even created teams with sole purpose to use data released in 2020 and
reach the more French citizens they could. In 2025, 20% of the French population perceiving fragilities
in French traditional Banks have therefore transited toward Foreign FinTech principally for their
savings management and payment means.
2025 – 2030
Finally understanding the necessity to open data relatives to French Banking habits to support new
French Financial technologies initiatives, the government decide in 2026 to authorize the AMF to
release banking information to Private FinTech companies with the hope to boost the French Fintech
still insignificant compare with its European neighbors. The Consequence was radical and did not come
from where expected. Only in 2027, one year after the legislations was implemented, French
percentage of the population using FinTech climbed from 20% to 55%. This result could appear rather
optimistic for French economy, but actually the Part of the French FinTech among every FinTech
reaching French citizens is only 15%. Bad News for the French Stocks Index, which loose its biggest
players and don’t bail out with new FinTech entrants. In 2028, AXA SA stocks has totally fell from 20,31
in February 2016 to 13,6 in February 2028, CIC’s stock from 173,05 to 120,13, Natixis from 4,87 to
2,95, BNP from 42,45 top 32,62, Crédit Agricole from 9,43 to 6,58 and Société Générale from 32,02 to
21,18. Because French FinTech didn’t reach a sufficient market to become heavy enough to support
the French economy and reach the 40 highest French Market Capitalizations (CAC 40), the French
Index dramatically fall from 4500 in 2016 to 3340 in 2028 initiating a structural low trust-trend
concerning the French economy around the world. In 2030, three traditional Banks on five have gone
bankrupt. French GDP is relay from the 6th position in global ranking to the 10 behind India, Canada,
South Korea and Brazil. French population no longer hoping a revival of the Former Historic Power
progressively leave, emigrate toward more dynamic country. Basically, in 2030 France is living in the
past.
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Conclusion and recommendations
Conclusion
These scenarios have evidenced four main directions that France could undergo concerning the way
its banking environment (Banks and FinTech) will become by 2030. The most probable ones are the
“Big vs Small” and “Digital Banks” scenarios. The first one keeps our both actors safe and implement
a high competition context within the French financial sector, rather profitable to both industries
banks and FinTech and consequently more likely to be follow by the French Institutions. The second
one is also rather probable. Indeed, because the French specificity to be generally reluctant concerning
technologies which disrupt its current social-focused system, Banks which have interest to digitalize
their activities has a large room for maneuver and are less pressurized.
If those scenarios are rather more credible because following the idea according to what Banks will be
equipped soon enough to cope with next waves of digital disruptions, both others could well turn out
preciously useful in the case of a major event would come to change the current context. Whether it
is the election of a nationalist candidate to the precedence, a vindictive initiative from FinTech to walk
away from Banks and properly disrupt them or even a social revolution slowing down the entire
process, those situations still have a substantial probability to happen and will there be critically useful
when it’s about cope with the most unexpected. This Scenario planning should therefore remain
useful for yet a few years.
Recommendations
1. Banks should collaborate more with Start-up, thus creating a trustfully partnership ecosystem
profitable for both banks and FinTech.
2. Banks should increase investments in High Technologies especially in Block Chain which will
radically improve many former mechanisms.
3. The R3CEV consortium should be the main leader of the Block Chain spreading through most
World Wide banks. BNP shouldn’t be the only French bank being part of that.
4. Yomoni and Advize are now big enough to promote their activities and could well become
highly attractive after a few year of positive results. Banks should take a peek for an eventual
acquisition.
5. FinTech Start-up should join the France FinTech group to become member of a dynamic
specialized community where members think the future together.
6. Each French Bank should quickly implement a unify electronic application for their consumers.
It’s imperative and will make further technologic implementations easier to release.
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7. If a nationalist party win next elections, Banks have to quickly partnership with technologic
companies even if those last are not FinTech. Everything shall be done to remain open on the
rest of the world, and only communication technologies could do that when legislation
doesn’t.
8. FinTech should implement their activities in dynamic geographic poles in order to remain
surrounded by various financial companies as well start-ups as Banks.
9. Banks shouldn’t be left aside by FinTech; it could seriously affect the economy on the long
term. FinTech has also to collaborate with big institution in order to act responsibly and safely
transit toward a new economy.
10. Banks should follow an important restructuration plan, cut posts and specialized their activites
if they want to protect their assets against next disruptive waves.
11. FinTech should collaborate with others and create Strategic agglomerates to better organize
their activities and promote together a new way to bank. Then such conglomerate could well
become the Financial Technologic Hubs of our scenarios.
12. Collaborate, collaborate and still collaborate. Don’t forget the long term target: A
collaborative economy.
________________________________________
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Endnote
I hope This work will help French traditional financial companies or FinTech Start-ups to cope
efficiently with the next future. Something huge is happening, whether in Finance that in every
component of our current society. Oil prices are crashing down, Green energies are developed more
quickly than ever, Space X rocket has successfully landed on Earth after being in space, AI has beaten
human in GO which is the game the most complex we ever created, we are 3D printing glass, steal and
cement and even MIT lectures are now available on YouTube. All that to says that obviously, we are
really leaving a historic transition from former individualistic patterns supported by IP and individual
success toward new collaborative ones whose values are Transparency, Sustainability and Open
sourced information. I wish I could support this transition which is full of hope for many people around
the world and I intend to be part of it along my life. Finally, If I should give a last advice, it would be
for French society, especially to all these young people which are fiercely protesting outside:
Let’s be proud of our past, of our traditions, of our legacy and our history but please don’t let us be
nostalgic of a world which doesn’t exist anymore. Let’s be proud of our freedom, proud to claim it,
protect it and being its ambassadors, but do not use it to prevent a step towards the future, because
it’s a step towards the future which formerly allowed this liberty. Stop be stationary, generally
suspicious and sadly desperate. Instead let us be new, express our ideas and discuss about it around
tables. Let us remember our power, we are France! A strong people’s culture, diversity and
engagement. So no matter our backgrounds, let us rethink our way to collaborate, to interact and to
share; Let us catch the future together, it’s time.
Nicolas AUCONIE
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________________________________________
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Ethics Application Form
Section 1: RESEARCHER AND PROJECT DETAILS
Researcher details:
Name(s): Nicolas Pierre Robert AUCONIE
Department:
Faculty:
Anglia Ruskin email address: [email protected]
Status:
Undergraduate yes Taught Postgraduate
Postgraduate Research
Staff
If this is a student project:
SID: 1519049
Course title: Business Administration
Supervisor/tutor name
Project details:
Project title (not module title): How fintech could redefine the French economic landscape?
Data collection start date: (note must be prospective)
19 February 2016
Expected project completion date: April 2016
Is the project externally funded? no
Licence number (if applicable):
CONFIRMATION STATEMENTS – please tick the box to confirm you understand these requirements
The project has a direct benefit to society and/or improves knowledge and understanding. yes
All researchers involved have completed relevant training in research ethics, and consulted the Code of Practice for Applying for Ethical Approval at Anglia Ruskin University.
yes
The risks participants, colleagues or the researchers may be exposed to have been considered and appropriate steps to reduce any risks identified taken (risk assessment(s) must be completed if applicable, available at: http://rm.anglia.ac.uk/extlogin.asp) or the equivalent for Associate Colleges.
yes
My research will comply with the Data Protection Act (1998) and/or data protection laws of the country I am carrying the research out in, as applicable. For further advice please refer to the Question Specific Advice for the Stage 1 Research Ethics Approval.
yes
Project summary (maximum 500 words): Please outline rationale for the research, the project aim, the research questions, research procedure and details of the participant population and how they will be recruited. World financial system change throughout new revolutions in communication technologies. Indeed, the emergence of internet suggest a more collaborative society where former institution become decentralised. Moreover, the Big Date phenomenon allow us to bank differently and make people able to shape a personalized more experience. Finally, news society’s outlooks suggest than finance could become more local, thus supporting local initiatives especially efficient in a decentralised society. Let us therefore analyse how fintech start-ups which combine finance with new technologies, could become new actors able to change finance outlooks in French society.
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Is your research ONLY a desk-based or library-based study that requires no direct or indirect contact with human participants; and which also is likely to have no impact on the environment? Desk-based (or secondary) research involves the summary, collation and/or synthesis of existing research. For further information, see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secondary_research
Yes/No If Yes, proceed to the Declaration in Section 5 and from there to the green channel.
Section 2: RESEARCH ETHICS CHECKLIST - please answer YES or NO to ALL of the questions
below.
WILL YOUR RESEARCH STUDY? YES NO
1 Involve any external organisation for which separate research ethics clearance is required (e.g. NHS, Social Services, Ministry of Justice) For NHS research involving just staff that requires NHS R&D Management Approval only and Social Care research please check with your FREP Chair whether this will be regarded as equivalent to Anglia Ruskin University’s ethical approval.
no
2 Involve individuals aged 16 years of age and over who lack capacity to consent and will therefore fall under the Mental Capacity Act (2005)?
no
3
Collect, use or store any human tissue/DNA including but not limited to serum, plasma, organs, saliva, urine, hairs and nails? Contact [email protected]
no
4 Involve medical research with humans, including clinical trials? no
5 Administer drugs, placebos or other substances (e.g. food substances, vitamins) to human participants?
no
6 Cause (or could cause) pain, physical or psychological harm or negative consequences to human participants?
no
7 Involve the researchers and/or participants in the potential disclosure of any information relating to illegal activities; or observation/handling/storage of material which may be illegal?
no
8 With respect to human participants or stakeholders, involve any deliberate deception, covert data collection or data collection without informed consent?
no
9 Involve interventions with children and young people under 16 years of age? no
10 Relate to military sites, personnel, equipment, or the defence industry? no
11 Risk damage or disturbance to culturally, spiritually or historically significant artefacts or places, or human remains?
no
12 Involve genetic modification, or use of genetically modified organisms above that of routine class one activities? Contact [email protected] (All class one activities must be described in Section 4).
no
13 Contain elements you (or members of your team) are not trained to conduct? no
14 Potentially reveal incidental findings related to human participant health status? no
15 Present a risk of compromising the anonymity or confidentiality of personal, sensitive or confidential information provided by human participants and/or organisations?
no
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16 Involve colleagues, students, employees, business contacts or other individuals whose response may be influenced by your power or relationship with them?
no
17 Require the co-operation of a gatekeeper for initial access to the human participants (e.g. pupils/students, self-help groups, nursing home residents, business, charity, museum, government department, international agency)?
no
18 Offer financial or other incentives to human participants? no
19 Take place outside of the country in which your campus is located, in full or in part?
no
20 Cause a negative impact on the environment (over and above that of normal daily activity)?
no
21 Involve direct and/or indirect contact with human participants? no
22 Raise any other ethical concerns not covered in this checklist? no