Cointime

Download App
iOS & Android

Japan FinTech Outlook 2023

Validated Individual Expert

This week, we presented our Japan FinTech Outlook for 2023, a rundown of the current state and what is in store for next year, from the macroeconomic picture, through sector-specific themes across Banking, Payments and Digital Assets.

While the full recording is available on the Tokyo FinTech YouTube channel, this article extracts key highlights in bullet points.

Macro

  • Having re-opened the economy late, the OECD has pegged Japan’s 2023 growth forecast at the highest level among G7 countries.
  • Despite this rather positive outlook, the Japanese consumer good whacked by price increases, and it shows in consumer confidence surveys.
  • The BOJ will see a change of guard, with Governor Kuroda’s term expiring March 2023. Any radical shift in BOJ policy would risk upsetting the markets.
  • Kishida’s “New Capitalism”, published in July, sets out a couple of pages for the “Trusted Web”, which includes every buzzword the FinTech heart desires: Web3, NFTs, DAOs, Blockchain, Metaverse, Digital Securities, Crypto Assets, Payments.
  • The FSA has translated this framework into its own action plan, which includes some helpful adjustments to the regulatory framework, as we have reported previously.
  • The “Five-Year Startup Development Plan” is extremely ambitious, with a goal of 100,000 startups and 100 unicorns by 2027. The lack of a track record in execution does not make us too optimistic, and we highlight core components of the 2018 METI J-Startup initiative to show what to expect.

Banking

  • Digital banks have captured around 3% of balances in Japan, up from 1.7% in FY2016, as the Nikkei reported recently.
  • Japan has been the only shrinking banking market from 2017 to 2021, and it making up only have that it lost until 2022; North America, Latin America and Emerging Asia are the high growth regions.
  • MUFG has left retail banking in the US with the Union Bank sale to US Bank and focuses on South East Asia, where it has built a presence over the last decade; expect more acquisitions next year.
  • SMFG is going in the opposite direction, launching a digital bank in the US in 2023; it does own a bank in Indonesia, but otherwise is not very active; it holds 10% stakes in SBI Holdings and PayPay Bank domestically.
  • Mizuho has built a strong investment banking franchise in the US; in South East Asia, it has made key acquisitions of a digital bank in the Philippines and a payment app in Vietnam.
  • There are two neobank IPOs coming up, SBI Sumishin Net Bank and Rakuten Bank; both are relatively small (USD 2–3bn market cap) compared to international IPOs (Nu in Brazil at ~USD 20bn currently, KakaoBank in Korea at ~USD 10bn), but there price/book ratio at around 2 dwarfs that of the megabanks, who are generally rate at 0.5/0.6.
  • Banking-as-a-Service has developed nicely, with more to come in 2023; SBI Sumishin Net Bank is a key player, Minna Bank and Kiraboshi Bank, among others, are also getting into the game; the latter two have built/acquired new core banking engines in their digital bank deployments.
  • Being late adopters to the cloud, the lines have been drawn among the megabanks, with clear alliances for MUFG (AWS), SMFG (Microsoft), and Mizuho (Google); with international conversations tilting to multi-cloud and hybrid cloud environments, hopefully the Japanese players can learn from that and not risk a single vendor relationship.

Payments

  • Cashless payments, at 32% in 2021, are on track for the 2025 METI target of 40%; while globally, that adoption rate still ranks low, Japan had the highest velocity (coming from a low base) from 2018 to 2020.
  • BNPL adoption to date has been negligible; B2C BNPL will grow steadily as ecommerce growth further, and moves from Web to Mobile; B2B BNPL (supply chain financing) sees some triggers in the digitalization of invoices for consumption tax credits, and the phasing out of promissory notes that will make it a very interesting market over the coming years.
  • Account-to-account payments, recently hyped in the US with a JPMorgan & Mastercard announcement, will also start to be put in place in Japan in 2023; Minna Bank has announced such an initiative with a Kyushu-based supermarket chain
  • Cash-on-delivery is an under-appreciated market opportunity, at JPY 2–3trn, approximately a third of current QR code payments.
  • The FSA has put out a regulatory framework for stablecoins that allows banks, money transmitters and trust banks to operate such schemes fully backed by legal tender.
  • The BOJ’s CBDC proof-of-concept is in Phase 2 until March 2023; while a July paper still was ambiguous around the continuation of the program, recent news indicated a full pilot, with megabank participation, starting in April 2023 and running for two years.

Digital Assets

  • The JVCEA has 33 members, which together have 6.5m accounts; while at the end of the year, the whole Japanese cryptocurrency industry held assets about 1/3 of those of the Coinbase global exchange, given the avoidance of $hitcoins, this gap has narrowed to about half.
  • Early year acquisitions of Liquid by FTX and DeCurret by Amber are seemingly in trouble; Coincheck’s US SPAC deal is still on track based on parent Monex’s last quarterly results.
  • FTX Japan is now under business suspension and business improvement orders (just extended to March 9, 2023), and Exia Digital Assets is under such orders for December; the latter look unlikly to recover in the current environment; that makes it 31 exchanges, with more consolidation expected for 2023.
  • The Osaka Digital Exchange, a joint venture of SBI, SMFG, Nomura & Daiwa, started operating as a PTS this year; the launch of a security token trading venue is postponed until the end of 2023.
Comments

All Comments

Recommended for you

  • Nigeria's Securities Regulator: Global Cryptocurrency Exchanges Have Delisted Naira

    The Nigerian securities regulator recently stated that global cryptocurrency exchanges have complied with its directive to delist Naira from their respective P2P platforms. The US SEC cited Kucoin's recent announcement of Naira's delisting and related services as evidence supporting its claims. The acting director of the Nigerian Securities and Exchange Commission called on platforms engaged in activities that harm national interests to stop such activities.

  • Gnosis Price Rises 20% After Thanefield Capital's $30M Token Buyback Offer

    The crypto fund Thanefield Capital has proposed a buyback plan for the Gnosis DAO native token. The proposal aims to deploy $30 million for regular token buybacks within six months. Gnosis co-founder Martin Köppelmann supports the proposal but warns that buybacks should be tied to growth plans. Since the proposal went live, Gnosis' price has risen by over 20%, reaching a high of $320, and is now trading at $308.

  • Nigerian court denies bail request for Binance chief Tigran Gambaryan

    A Nigerian court has rejected the bail application of Tigran Gambaryan, the compliance chief of Binance Finance. Judge Emeka Nwite believes that if the Binance executive's application is approved, he may not continue to appear in court. A Binance spokesperson expressed disappointment and sadness at the ruling. The court will adjourn for cross-examination on May 23.

  • ICBC: Hong Kong subsidiary has built a complete service system including the redemption, circulation and redemption of digital RMB

    Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC) has officially announced that its overseas subsidiary, ICBC (Asia) located in Hong Kong, has built a complete service system for digital renminbi exchange, circulation, and redemption. At the same time, ICBC Asia has launched a digital renminbi experience activity for local individual customers in Hong Kong.

  • The transaction volume of 6 Hong Kong virtual asset ETFs today was HK$26.1102 million

    According to Hong Kong stock market data, as of the close of trading, the turnover of 6 Hong Kong virtual asset ETFs today was HKD 26.11 million, including:

  • Cointime's Evening Highlights for May 19th

    1.US spot Bitcoin ETFs saw net inflows of $948.3 million this week

  • This year, there have been more than 90 Bitcoin ecosystem-related financings

    There have been more than 90 financing transactions related to the Bitcoin ecosystem since 2024, setting a new record for the highest number of financing transactions in a single year in Bitcoin's history. Kyle Samani, Managing Partner at Multicoin Capital, pointed out that with the emergence of the Bitcoin Taproot upgrade and the Ordinals protocol, the Bitcoin ecosystem is experiencing a "developer renaissance". For some developers, building financial tools on Bitcoin is more attractive because it is the oldest and most secure blockchain. Multicoin Capital's investment trend is reportedly shifting from Solana to the Bitcoin ecosystem. The venture capital firm has invested in projects such as Solana Labs and StarkWare, but recently participated in the funding of the Bitcoin-native music platform Arch Network and the Bitcoin scaling network Mezo.

  • Crypto Industry Rallies Behind House Bill as It Heads Toward Final Vote

    The so-called FIT21 legislation to establish a U.S. regulatory regime for digital assets is set for a floor vote next week, and the sector is telling House leaders the effort is "crucial."

  • $1.911 billion worth of SOL transferred

    According to Whale Alert monitoring, 11,040,253 SOL (US $1,911,291,365) was transferred from an unknown wallet to another unknown wallet.

  • DeFi TVL exceeds $95 billion again

    According to defillama data, as of May 18, 2024, the total value locked (TVL) in DeFi has once again surpassed $95 billion. It is currently reported at $95.069 billion, an increase of nearly $12 billion from the low point of $83.04 billion 35 days ago. Among the top five protocols in terms of TVL, Eigenlayer has the highest 30-day increase, with TVL rising by 19.67% to a total of $15.455 billion.