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Fintech and the Remaking of Financial Institutions

  • Book

  • May 2018
  • Elsevier Science and Technology
  • ID: 4398593

FinTech and the Remaking of Financial Institutions explores the transformative potential of new entrants and innovations on business models. In its survey and analysis of FinTech, the book addresses current and future states of money and banking. It provides broad contexts for understanding financial services, products, technology, regulations and social considerations. The book shows how FinTech has evolved and will drive the future of financial services, while other FinTech books concentrate on particular solutions and adopt perspectives of individual users, companies and investors. It sheds new light on disruption, innovation and opportunity by placing the financial technology revolution in larger contexts.

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Table of Contents

1. Introduction 2. Disruption and Disintermediation in Financial Services and Products: Why Now? 3. Money: A Medium of Exchange, Unit of Account and Store of Wealth 4. Financial Institutions 5. Bubbles, Panics, Crashes, and Crises 6. Bank Lending 7. Time Value of Money: Interest, Bonds, Money Market Funds 8. Equities, Efficient Markets, Exchanges 9. Foreign Exchange 10. Forwards, Futures, and Swaps 11. Commodities 12. Options 13. Startup Financing 14. Fintech in a Global Setting 15. Fintech and Government Regulation 16. Social issues: Income Distribution, Diversity, and Inclusiveness 17. The Future Millennial Bank-Your Parents' Bank Integrates With the Disrupters

Authors

John Hill President and CEO of Derivatives Strategy Group, Rye, NY, USA. John Hill is President and CEO of Derivatives Strategy Group. He previously served as Co-Head of Global Energy Futures at Merrill Lynch and at ABN AMRO bank and as President and CEO of Broadway Futures Group, a small independent broker. He was Senior Vice President of North American Sales for Intercontinental Exchange (ICE), one of the first electronic platforms and was a model to many more recent start-ups. During his tenure at ICE, the company grew from a small, Atlanta-headquartered private company to a public company with an IPO valued at $12 billion. It now owns and operates the NYSE, among other businesses. Mr. Hill was also Senior Vice President at ICAP, the largest interdealer broker, where his focus was developing electronic businesses and planning compliance with Dodd Frank regulations.