Sustainably green: Creating a sustainable future for finance

About this report

The concept of sustainable investment is not new. Its origins lie in the 1980s with the advent of socially responsible investment. However, particularly since 1995, investors have taken measures to include environmental, social and governance (ESG) factors in their decision-making processes. “Green” investment has come to be very much tied to developments in the most established of “sustainable” finance markets, the green bond market. 

Long-term planning can help allay Canadian investors’ concerns for the future

Planning is crucial in boosting financial well-being and protecting wealth

Key findings

The end of cash: Why, when and how to flick the switch

Will the 21st century see the rise of a cashless society? The introduction of credit cards, digital wallets and cryptocurrencies have led experts over the past decade to speculate on the progressive demise of physical money, with stakeholders such as banks, consumers and governments seemingly gaining from the change.

If the world went cashless tomorrow, banks may rejoice at no longer handling notes and coins, which can be counterfeited or stolen. Digital payments would also give banks and payment processors greater information on their customers’ lifestyle.

Managing Application Development: The financial services perspective

The financial services industry is playing catch-up in a digital age. Amid a period of intense change where regulations are intensifying and competitors with advanced technologies are entering the market, traditional players are intent on remaining relevant. Many are using the cloud and advanced application-development techniques to secure that edge.

Whose Customer Are You? The Reality of Digital Banking in Europe

Europeans spent May 2018 dealing with email pleas from companies begging them to stay friends. Thanks to the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), over half a billion EU citizens now wield more power over who holds data on them and what companies can do with that valuable information.

At the same time, the second Payment Services Directive (PSD2) is making its presence felt. It aims to encourage competition by allowing non-bank players to access customer bank account information and to initiate payments.

A view from the top: Holistic spend management for financial control

Yet, as industries are disrupted and business models evolve, developing a targeted spend management strategy is vital to supporting CFOs’ efforts to achieve the business’s financial goals, including profitability. In our conversations with the CFOs of two major corporations— steel manufacturer Essar Steel and insurance firm Sun Life Financial—two themes emerged that seem to underpin these efforts: the role of digitalisation and open communication with internal and external stakeholders.

The need for a holistic view

 

Smoothing out the fluctuations of working capital

The task is particularly timely at the present point in the economic cycle. Led by the US Federal Reserve, central banks are tightening monetary policy and increasing interest rates. As a result, companies will need to put idle cash to work and manage their debt levels accordingly. Payables and receivables, which make up over half of working capital figures on average, as well as cash conversion cycles, are bound to become top of mind for finance functions dealing with increasingly complex global supply chains.

Whose Customer Are You? The Reality of Digital Banking in the Middle East and Africa

Africa and the Middle East share many common features: young populations, high smartphone penetration rates, and problems with unequal access to banks and banking services, particularly in rural areas. These demographically young and fast-growing regions include hundreds of millions of consumers who are growing up with a deep attachment to their phones and the benefits that the internet has to offer. Historically, banks across the Middle East and Africa may have been slow to react to the demographic and technological changes around them, but this is no longer the case.

Steering through collaboration: CFOs driving new priorities for the future

It is well established that the modern CFO has a more strategic role to play in a business, but a clear action plan to achieve this is lacking. A key element of this is helping the business to deal with change. Some changes are planned: launching a new product or service, setting up operations in a new region or acquiring a competitor. Others may be unexpected: a major disruption to supply-chain operations, the emergence of new regulation and legal reporting requirements or the unpredictable impacts of global economic uncertainty.

The new world of regtech in managing regulatory data

Regtech can help by automating what would otherwise be tactical and manual processes—such as data collection and reporting—and making these tasks more cost effective, efficient and strategic. Advances in areas like artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning make it possible to automatically parse through regulatory filings, track employee compliance and more. Advanced regtech analytics solutions can also match and cleanse data from various legacy systems quickly and accurately.

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