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Let's talk antitrust: Discussing recent cases and emerging competition issues
Recent cases and judgments have shone a light on some emerging themes and trends that companies will want to consider as part of their risk management framework.
South Africa | Publication | July 2019
Financial technology, often referred to as FinTech, is the marriage between financial and technology services. The FinTech offering seeks to provide innovative alternatives to traditional methods in the delivery of financial services. On August 28, 2019, Norton Rose Fulbright South Africa will host a seminar focusing on the impact of FinTech in the legal arena. More information on the FinTech seminar is available here.
As a lead up to the seminar, this blog series aims to provide an introduction to FinTech, as well as insight into the different categories that sit within the ambit of the broader FinTech offering. These include: lending, payments, wealth management and personal finance, digital currencies and blockchain, and banking.
Within each of these categories, FinTech companies can improve a product or service by either make it cheaper and easier to use, and/or by making it available to more people – thus ‘disrupting’ already established financial institutions, from the perspectives of both cost and product offering (FinTech companies are providing new types of services, and are able to appeal to previously untapped markets).
The inherent efficiencies of FinTech are evidenced by industry projections that the global FinTech market will be worth USD 305.7 billion by 20231. On the local front, a recent EY report2 projects South Africa’s FinTech adoption rate as above the global average. This dramatic growth of the FinTech offering has highlighted the need for companies looking to utilise these technical innovations to be aware of the complex and rapidly changing legal and regulatory landscape.
Join us over the next few weeks as we delve into more specific FinTech topics, including regulatory oversight, consumer protections, blockchain, licensing regimes and the internet of things.
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Recent cases and judgments have shone a light on some emerging themes and trends that companies will want to consider as part of their risk management framework.
Publication
After a lacklustre finish to 2022 when compared to the vintage year for M&A that was 2021, dealmakers expected 2023 to see the market continue to cool in most sectors, in response to the economic headwinds of rising inflation (with its corresponding impact on financing costs), declining market valuations, tightening regulatory scrutiny and increasing geopolitical tensions.
Publication
On 18 September 2023, the CMA published its Initial Report (Initial Report) on AI Foundation Models (FM), supplemented in April 2024 with the publication of its “Update Paper” focused on potential antitrust risks associated with FMs and a “Technical Update Report” providing more detail on the development on FMs (collectively the “Reports”). Below, we consider these CMA publications.
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