A walkway in Dubai International Financial Centre. TISAtech, which went live in November last year, acts as a tech bridge to help corporates and FinTechs collaborate more easily during the crisis. ( Jaime Puebla / The National )
A walkway in Dubai International Financial Centre. TISAtech, which went live in November last year, acts as a tech bridge to help corporates and FinTechs collaborate more easily during the crisis. ( Jaime Puebla / The National )
A walkway in Dubai International Financial Centre. TISAtech, which went live in November last year, acts as a tech bridge to help corporates and FinTechs collaborate more easily during the crisis. ( Jaime Puebla / The National )
A walkway in Dubai International Financial Centre. TISAtech, which went live in November last year, acts as a tech bridge to help corporates and FinTechs collaborate more easily during the crisis. ( J

FinTech matchmaker: TISAtech recruits UAE start-ups looking to expand to Britain


Alice Haine
  • English
  • Arabic

Digital marketplace TISAtech is recruiting UAE FinTechs looking to expand to the UK to help connect British investors with start-ups in the Emirates without getting on a plane during the Covid-19 pandemic.

TISAtech, which acts as a matchmaker for the FinTech sector, is a joint venture between Britain’s The Disruption House (TDH), a benchmarking and scorecard service for the financial sector, and The Investing and Savings Alliance (Tisa).

This is a new world and the new world requires new tools.

The platform, which went live in November last year, acts as a tech bridge to help corporates and FinTechs collaborate more easily during the crisis.

With six UAE FinTechs already profiled on the platform, including robo-advisory Sarwa, chief executive and co-founder of TDH Rupert Bull said TISAtech was looking to engage more start-ups in the Emirates and wider region.

“We are saying to UAE FinTechs, ‘here's a platform that can help you internationalise and access the UK market in a very short time and cost-effective manner’,” Mr Bull said.

The platform offers start-ups a chance to explore the UK market in a low-carbon manner.

“You don't have to hop on the plane, you can hop on the platform. Historically, companies considering the UK market would have gone to the airport, hopped on a plane and come to UK for meetings. That’s not possible at the moment but the platform still allows you do it," he said.

“This is a new world and the new world requires new tools. The fact we have this platform capability means that geography should no longer be a determinant of whether you can do business across borders.”

The joint venture between Tisa and TDH marries Tisa’s 220 corporate members with the 3,600 FinTechs TDH has assessed across the globe. This allows investors or start-up clients to judge the sustainability of a company, while FinTechs can access their next investor or mentor.

With most of the 3,600 FinTechs already on the platform based in the UK and the Americas, it is easy to understand why TISAtech decided to prioritise the UAE as a key market from the Middle East and North Africa.

Rupert Bull of The Disruption House, said FinTechs no longer need to 'hop on a plane' to meet potential investors. Courtesy The Disruption House
Rupert Bull of The Disruption House, said FinTechs no longer need to 'hop on a plane' to meet potential investors. Courtesy The Disruption House

Start-ups in the UAE attracted more than half of the $1 billion in venture capital raised in the region in 2020 and more than a quarter of the total Mena deals, Magnitt's 2021 Emerging Venture Markets report said.

With the UAE’s total share of funding rising 5 per cent to $579m, it means the Arab world's second-biggest economy received the largest share of the funds raised and ranked first in terms of the number of deals.

Meanwhile, the pandemic has encouraged investors to back high-growth industries, such as e-commerce and FinTech, which drew increased demand during the pandemic, the Magnitt report found.

To boost its engagement with the UAE’s FinTech sector, TISAtech this month appointed industry stalwart Fabian Vandenreydt as ambassador to the country.

Mr Vandenreydt said the platform offers options for both sides of the start-up space, with FinTechs able to look for financing and corporates able to hunt for disruptive ideas.

“It is still a very difficult process to put those two together so the marketplace is a great way to do that,” said Mr Vandenreydt, who is normally based in Abu Dhabi's Al Maryah Island but for pandemic reasons was speaking from his native Belgium.

“The big corporations are making sure they don’t miss the boat– they are looking for solutions that extend what they already have, or disrupt or renew the technology or processes they have. But the problem is, it's a big forest and not all the trees are in your own city ... so their issue is having access to a place that helps them scout and discover the right companies for their needs," he said.

The platform is not only about matching corporates with innovative FinTechs, it also curates the start-ups it profiles to ensure viability or due diligence processes are complete.

The work of finding out whether a FinTech is a good start-up or has the right credentials “is already done on the platform”, Mr Vandenreydt said.

“If you have a start-up in the UAE, or in other parts of the GCC, and you are mature enough to export … anything that helps them make the case to clients and investors abroad, such as in the UK, is a welcome addition.”

Mr Vandenreydt is looking to recruit post-Series A FinTechs to ensure the right companies, or those that are “fully functioning businesses in one geography”, are featured.

With 70 per cent of companies that raise at Series A never reaching Series B and 43 per cent that raise at Series B never reaching Series C, Mr Bull said, the platforms also helps its users understand the risks.

“For most businesses, your home market is not big enough to become a very valuable business, so you need to go overseas. But going overseas is very risky and that is what the platform has been designed for, to do risk,” Mr Bull said.

Pre-pandemic companies would have spent "tens of thousands of pounds with management consultants to find out whether the UK market is the right fit for them", Mr Bull said.

“Now you can get access to that same insight for a fraction of that.”

The entry-level cost for start-ups on the TISAtech platform is £3,000 per annum, which includes a TDH assessment and promotion on the platform.

The £4,000 silver package includes a meeting with an expert from your sector, while the £5,000 gold offer includes two meetings with interested parties, and the £6,000 platinum includes four meetings.

Mr Bull said the costs are similar to a business trip for two people flying to the UK for meetings once you factor in flights and accommodation.

However, that cost may be even higher with the UK’s new hotel quarantine rules for travellers from the UAE, which is on the red list.

With TDH assessing another 55 FinTechs in the UAE – including Now Money, a financial services platform for low-income migrant workers, and price comparison site Souqalmal.com – the UAE will soon have a greater presence on the TISAtech platform.

Ian Dillon, co-founder of Now Money, which recently raised $7m in a funding round led by UK venture investor Anthemis Exponential Ventures. Antonie Robertson / The National
Ian Dillon, co-founder of Now Money, which recently raised $7m in a funding round led by UK venture investor Anthemis Exponential Ventures. Antonie Robertson / The National

Ian Dillon, co-founder of Now Money, which recently raised $7m in a funding round led by UK venture investor Anthemis Exponential Ventures, said the benefit for raising its profile through the platform was "being able to be seen and hopefully introduced to traditional regulated financial institutions that could partner with us".

“In terms of raising our profile in the UK, Anthemis is probably the leading FinTech-focused venture capital firm in the world based out of London. They led our round this time and we have a couple of other investors from the UK as well,” Mr Dillon said.

“London has become a massive hub for FinTech, so there's a lot of expertise there so although we are in different geographies, there’s a lot of understanding that goes with the industry and that means it can actually be a really good place for us to find potential investors.”

TISAtech is also looking to recruit UAE investors with a large portfolio of start-ups on their books that want to sign to boost their visibility in the UK.

“There might be investors in Abu Dhabi, for example, that are working on exporting their UAE services to the world that would be interested in having a wholesale agreement with TISAtech to bring their portfolio companies on,” Mr Vandenreydt said.

With the recruitment drive focusing initially on the UAE before expanding to the wider GCC and Mena region, Mr Bull said the platform was also attractive to the Emirates from an inward investment perspective.

If the UAE not only helps people grow “brilliantly in the Emirates” but can also “help them grow fantastically, internationally, into a market that's well-aligned with them”, then that is hugely beneficial for the UAE’s burgeoning ecosystem, he said.

TISAtech is now drawing up a list of FinTechs, investors and government organisations in the Emirates as it looks to grow the UAE segment of its offering.

Ultimately, TISAtech hopes its platform saves the FinTech industry time.

“It takes a lot of time to set up meetings for a start-up and very often you go into a meeting and then you suddenly realise that the person in front of you is not the right person or has a different expectation," Mr Vandenreydt said.

“With this matchmaking system, the chance of having a great meeting is higher.”

FA Cup fifth round draw

Sheffield Wednesday v Manchester City
Reading/Cardiff City v Sheffield United
Chelsea v Shrewsbury Town/Liverpool
West Bromwich Albion v Newcastle United/Oxford United
Leicester City v Coventry City/Birmingham City
Northampton Town/Derby County v Manchester United
Southampton/Tottenham Hotspur v Norwich City
Portsmouth v Arsenal 

In-demand jobs and monthly salaries
  • Technology expert in robotics and automation: Dh20,000 to Dh40,000 
  • Energy engineer: Dh25,000 to Dh30,000 
  • Production engineer: Dh30,000 to Dh40,000 
  • Data-driven supply chain management professional: Dh30,000 to Dh50,000 
  • HR leader: Dh40,000 to Dh60,000 
  • Engineering leader: Dh30,000 to Dh55,000 
  • Project manager: Dh55,000 to Dh65,000 
  • Senior reservoir engineer: Dh40,000 to Dh55,000 
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  • Senior process engineer: Dh28,000 to Dh38,000 
  • Senior maintenance engineer: Dh22,000 to Dh34,000 
  • Field engineer: Dh6,500 to Dh7,500
  • Field supervisor: Dh9,000 to Dh12,000
  • Field operator: Dh5,000 to Dh7,000
Key recommendations
  • Fewer criminals put behind bars and more to serve sentences in the community, with short sentences scrapped and many inmates released earlier.
  • Greater use of curfews and exclusion zones to deliver tougher supervision than ever on criminals.
  • Explore wider powers for judges to punish offenders by blocking them from attending football matches, banning them from driving or travelling abroad through an expansion of ‘ancillary orders’.
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The struggle is on for active managers

David Einhorn closed out 2018 with his biggest annual loss ever for the 22-year-old Greenlight Capital.

The firm’s main hedge fund fell 9 per cent in December, extending this year’s decline to 34 percent, according to an investor update viewed by Bloomberg.

Greenlight posted some of the industry’s best returns in its early years, but has stumbled since losing more than 20 per cent in 2015.

Other value-investing managers have also struggled, as a decade of historically low interest rates and the rise of passive investing and quant trading pushed growth stocks past their inexpensive brethren. Three Bays Capital and SPO Partners & Co., which sought to make wagers on undervalued stocks, closed in 2018. Mr Einhorn has repeatedly expressed his frustration with the poor performance this year, while remaining steadfast in his commitment to value investing.

Greenlight, which posted gains only in May and October, underperformed both the broader market and its peers in 2018. The S&P 500 Index dropped 4.4 per cent, including dividends, while the HFRX Global Hedge Fund Index, an early indicator of industry performance, fell 7 per cent through December. 28.

At the start of the year, Greenlight managed $6.3 billion in assets, according to a regulatory filing. By May, the firm was down to $5.5bn. 

Key changes

Commission caps

For life insurance products with a savings component, Peter Hodgins of Clyde & Co said different caps apply to the saving and protection elements:

• For the saving component, a cap of 4.5 per cent of the annualised premium per year (which may not exceed 90 per cent of the annualised premium over the policy term). 

• On the protection component, there is a cap  of 10 per cent of the annualised premium per year (which may not exceed 160 per cent of the annualised premium over the policy term).

• Indemnity commission, the amount of commission that can be advanced to a product salesperson, can be 50 per cent of the annualised premium for the first year or 50 per cent of the total commissions on the policy calculated. 

• The remaining commission after deduction of the indemnity commission is paid equally over the premium payment term.

• For pure protection products, which only offer a life insurance component, the maximum commission will be 10 per cent of the annualised premium multiplied by the length of the policy in years.

Disclosure

Customers must now be provided with a full illustration of the product they are buying to ensure they understand the potential returns on savings products as well as the effects of any charges. There is also a “free-look” period of 30 days, where insurers must provide a full refund if the buyer wishes to cancel the policy.

“The illustration should provide for at least two scenarios to illustrate the performance of the product,” said Mr Hodgins. “All illustrations are required to be signed by the customer.”

Another illustration must outline surrender charges to ensure they understand the costs of exiting a fixed-term product early.

Illustrations must also be kept updatedand insurers must provide information on the top five investment funds available annually, including at least five years' performance data.

“This may be segregated based on the risk appetite of the customer (in which case, the top five funds for each segment must be provided),” said Mr Hodgins.

Product providers must also disclose the ratio of protection benefit to savings benefits. If a protection benefit ratio is less than 10 per cent "the product must carry a warning stating that it has limited or no protection benefit" Mr Hodgins added.

Terror attacks in Paris, November 13, 2015

- At 9.16pm, three suicide attackers killed one person outside the Atade de France during a foootball match between France and Germany- At 9.25pm, three attackers opened fire on restaurants and cafes over 20 minutes, killing 39 people- Shortly after 9.40pm, three other attackers launched a three-hour raid on the Bataclan, in which 1,500 people had gathered to watch a rock concert. In total, 90 people were killed- Salah Abdeslam, the only survivor of the terrorists, did not directly participate in the attacks, thought to be due to a technical glitch in his suicide vest- He fled to Belgium and was involved in attacks on Brussels in March 2016. He is serving a life sentence in France

Six large-scale objects on show
  • Concrete wall and windows from the now demolished Robin Hood Gardens housing estate in Poplar
  • The 17th Century Agra Colonnade, from the bathhouse of the fort of Agra in India
  • A stagecloth for The Ballet Russes that is 10m high – the largest Picasso in the world
  • Frank Lloyd Wright’s 1930s Kaufmann Office
  • A full-scale Frankfurt Kitchen designed by Margarete Schütte-Lihotzky, which transformed kitchen design in the 20th century
  • Torrijos Palace dome
UAE currency: the story behind the money in your pockets
Calls

Directed by: Fede Alvarez

Starring: Pedro Pascal, Karen Gillian, Aaron Taylor-Johnson

4/5

Results

Women finals: 48kg - Urantsetseg Munkhbat (MGL) bt Distria Krasniqi (KOS); 52kg - Odette Guiffrida (ITA) bt Majlinda Kelmendi (KOS); 57kg - Nora Gjakova (KOS) bt Anastasiia Konkina (Rus)

Men’s finals: 60kg - Amiran Papinashvili (GEO) bt Francisco Garrigos (ESP); 66kg - Vazha Margvelashvili (Geo) bt Yerlan Serikzhanov (KAZ)

Living in...

This article is part of a guide on where to live in the UAE. Our reporters will profile some of the country’s most desirable districts, provide an estimate of rental prices and introduce you to some of the residents who call each area home.

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