“Having access to unique and exclusive technology, e.g. protected by patents, is an important factor to defining a startup's business proposition and commercial advantage,” said Victor Tse, a counsel at Bird & Bird in Hong Kong.
Treutler added that a strong IP portfolio makes a fintech startup stand out from the competition in an already saturated market. It can also lead to potential businesses, said Nont Horayangura, a partner at Baker McKenzie in Bangkok.
“It is completely logical for a fintech to have a strong IP portfolio of its processes and intellectual creations for funding purposes. The current trend is to consider IP as assets that have value and are capable of being as security or collateral for loans,” said Jose Gabriel R. Benedicto, a partner at Romulo Mabanta Buenaventura Sayoc & de los Angeles in Manila.
According to research by CB Insights, the first quarter of 2021 saw fintech firms across the globe raising $22.8 billion in investments via 614 deals. This is more than twice the amount raised by fintech firms in the last quarter of 2020. This also represents the largest venture capital-backed fintech funding quarter ever seen, outnumbering the figures for the second quarter of 2018 which included the $14 billion funding raised by Ant Financial.
Espie Angelica A. de Leon