The impact of FinTech start-ups on incumbent retail banks’ share prices

Abstract Background This study aims to clarify the role of FinTech digital banking start-ups in the financial industry. We examine the impact of the funding of such start-ups on the stock returns of 47 incumbent US retail banks for 2010 to 2016. Methods To capture the importance of FinTech start-ups...

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Main Authors: Yinqiao Li, Renée Spigt, Laurens Swinkels
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2017-11-01
Series:Financial Innovation
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40854-017-0076-7
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spelling doaj-8fa73380f0cc4508931b788db4c86a412020-11-24T23:55:58ZengSpringerOpenFinancial Innovation2199-47302017-11-013111610.1186/s40854-017-0076-7The impact of FinTech start-ups on incumbent retail banks’ share pricesYinqiao Li0Renée Spigt1Laurens Swinkels2Erasmus University RotterdamErasmus University RotterdamErasmus University RotterdamAbstract Background This study aims to clarify the role of FinTech digital banking start-ups in the financial industry. We examine the impact of the funding of such start-ups on the stock returns of 47 incumbent US retail banks for 2010 to 2016. Methods To capture the importance of FinTech start-ups, we use data on both the dollar-volume of funding and number of deals. We relate these to the stock returns with panel data regression methods. Results Our results indicate a positive relationship exists between the growth in FinTech funding or deals and the contemporaneous stock returns of incumbent retail banks. Conclusions Although these results suggest complementarity between FinTech and traditional banking, we note that our results at the banking industry level are not statistically significant, and that the coefficient signs for about one-third of the banks are negative, but not statistically significant. Since the FinTech industry is young and our sample period short, we cannot rule out that our findings are spurious.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40854-017-0076-7BanksDigital bankingFinanceFinTechInnovationRetail banks
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yinqiao Li
Renée Spigt
Laurens Swinkels
spellingShingle Yinqiao Li
Renée Spigt
Laurens Swinkels
The impact of FinTech start-ups on incumbent retail banks’ share prices
Financial Innovation
Banks
Digital banking
Finance
FinTech
Innovation
Retail banks
author_facet Yinqiao Li
Renée Spigt
Laurens Swinkels
author_sort Yinqiao Li
title The impact of FinTech start-ups on incumbent retail banks’ share prices
title_short The impact of FinTech start-ups on incumbent retail banks’ share prices
title_full The impact of FinTech start-ups on incumbent retail banks’ share prices
title_fullStr The impact of FinTech start-ups on incumbent retail banks’ share prices
title_full_unstemmed The impact of FinTech start-ups on incumbent retail banks’ share prices
title_sort impact of fintech start-ups on incumbent retail banks’ share prices
publisher SpringerOpen
series Financial Innovation
issn 2199-4730
publishDate 2017-11-01
description Abstract Background This study aims to clarify the role of FinTech digital banking start-ups in the financial industry. We examine the impact of the funding of such start-ups on the stock returns of 47 incumbent US retail banks for 2010 to 2016. Methods To capture the importance of FinTech start-ups, we use data on both the dollar-volume of funding and number of deals. We relate these to the stock returns with panel data regression methods. Results Our results indicate a positive relationship exists between the growth in FinTech funding or deals and the contemporaneous stock returns of incumbent retail banks. Conclusions Although these results suggest complementarity between FinTech and traditional banking, we note that our results at the banking industry level are not statistically significant, and that the coefficient signs for about one-third of the banks are negative, but not statistically significant. Since the FinTech industry is young and our sample period short, we cannot rule out that our findings are spurious.
topic Banks
Digital banking
Finance
FinTech
Innovation
Retail banks
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40854-017-0076-7
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