Close Menu
Invest Intellect
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Invest Intellect
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • Home
    • Commodities
    • Cryptocurrency
    • Fintech
    • Investments
    • Precious Metal
    • Property
    • Stock Market
    Invest Intellect
    Home»Fintech»At Munk School event, FinTech leaders call for Canada to take “bigger swings”
    Fintech

    At Munk School event, FinTech leaders call for Canada to take “bigger swings”

    October 3, 20255 Mins Read


    As federal budget nears, leaders see an opportunity for Canada to advance long-awaited priorities.

    Canada’s FinTech leaders say they are worried the country and its entrepreneurs aren’t taking bigger swings on priorities like open banking, payments modernization, and stablecoins—or implementing the systems to support them.

    At the University of Toronto’s Munk School of Global Affairs and Public Policy’s third annual The Future event this week, some of the most influential names in Canadian FinTech gathered to take stock of where FinTech stands. Speakers discussed why action is needed now and expressed optimism that shifting geopolitical conditions have created an opportunity for Canada.

    “Somehow and somewhere along the way, we started coasting, we started assuming that what was built would maintain itself.”

    Som Seif,
    Purpose Investments

    Purpose Investments founder and CEO Som Seif kicked off the discussion by arguing that, unlike past generations, Canadians today have “stopped building” and are simply resting on their laurels. 

    “Somehow and somewhere along the way, we started coasting, we started assuming that what was built would maintain itself,” Seif said. He argued that Canadian graduates and entrepreneurs are in a “confidence crisis” as they increasingly choose to build their businesses elsewhere.

    But Seif also asserted that geopolitical uncertainty created by the United States and recent technological advances have created a unique opportunity for Canada to shift its approach. He argued that the country already possesses all of the ingredients necessary to compete on the global stage, from the land to the energy, talent, expertise, and enthusiasm.

    “We need to organize ourselves around a single driving belief that Canada wins and Canada can build,” Seif said. “Not Canada studies, not Canada considers, not Canada forms a committee, but Canada builds. The window is open right now.”

    Other speakers, including Debbie Gamble, chief officer of innovation labs and new ventures at Interac, echoed this belief. “We like to admire the problem,” Gamble said. But with the global economy currently in “crisis,” she argued that now is the time for Canada to focus on execution.

    Seif thinks that Canada would do well to choose bold bets over safety, take advantage of the current window to lure more talent to Canada, launch a sovereign wealth fund, and do a better job of celebrating entrepreneurial success—though whether Canada has the existing infrastructure to attract those skilled workers is another question.

    RELATED: Entrepreneurs face nearly five-year wait for Canada’s Start-up Visa

    On the FinTech infrastructure front specifically, Canada has lagged its peers on not just open banking and payments modernization but also, more recently, stablecoins, and this has constrained industry progress.

    Julien Brazeau, assistant deputy minister of financial sector policy with Canada’s Department of Finance, said Canada got here because it still likes to pat itself on the back for emerging relatively unscathed from the global financial crisis of 2008. He noted that while Canada’s focus on “resilience and stability” has “paid dividends” since then, it has also been “an obstacle in terms of our ability to move on innovation and competitiveness.”

    Brazeau said three consecutive Liberal governments have made it difficult to secure the political willpower to introduce more innovation and potentially greater risk to Canada’s financial services system.

    However, as Portage Capital Solutions general partner and fellow panellist Devon Kirk noted, caution can carry danger of its own. “This idea that if you wait to see what the winning model is going to be, you can sidestep some risks is seductive,” Kirk said.

    Kirk argued that, in practice, innovation tends to come from iteration and build up over time. She asserted that moving too slowly could create “bigger, longer-term risks” to the global competitiveness of national economies and financial systems. “I think we’re seeing that play out currently in Canada,” she said.

    RELATED: Canadian FinTech leaders “cautiously optimistic” about open banking, payments modernization under Mark Carney

    Jaded from years of waiting, Canadian FinTech leaders BetaKit spoke with earlier this year expressed cautious optimism that Prime Minister Mark Carney is the right leader to see through key FinTech priorities like open banking and payments modernization.

    Brazeau noted on stage that Carney “knows these issues through and through,” and said there is a strong desire across the board at the moment to ensure Canadian competitiveness.

    “I see the next few months … as an exciting time to potentially land a lot of these planes that have been circling now for a while, whether it be open banking, payments modernization, or accelerate our work on stablecoins as well, so that we can ensure that we are competitive going forward … [We’re] cognizant that it’s been a slow ride, but we’re committed to action.”

    Tanya Woods, head of government and regulatory affairs and policy counsel at Questrade, argued that, in the meantime, Canada’s FinTech industry ought to focus on organizing and providing the Government of Canada with a consensus, rather than separate, competing asks. “If we bring [the feds] consensus, it’s a much easier sell because our customers are voters,” she said.

    But Woods also quipped to Brazeau that if the feds fail to deliver on key industry priorities once again in their upcoming budget, the pressure will be on from Canadian FinTech.

    “November 4 is a big day,” Woods said. “If you don’t do what you said you’re going to do, we’re going to complain.”

    Feature image courtesy Munk School of Global Affairs and Public Policy





    Source link

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

    Related Posts

    GoCardless founders set for payday after £920m sale to Dutch rival Mollie

    Fintech

    AI in Fintech

    Fintech

    Visa showcases next wave of African fintech innovators at Demo Day in Cape Town

    Fintech

    Top 10 US Fintech Unicorns in 2025

    Fintech

    Business-focused fintech Mercury makes consumer banking push

    Fintech

    South African Fintech Startup Launches Instant Cashless Payments Platform for Tipped Workers – IT News Africa

    Fintech
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Picks
    Fintech

    Klarna’s IPO Breaks The Fintech Drought At A $15 Billion Valuation

    Investments

    Alkemy Capital Investments dit que TVL entre en période de négociations exclusives pour un approvisionnement en lithium à long terme -Le 18 mars 2025 à 08:30

    Investments

    Why People Struggle To Spend What They’ve Earned

    Editors Picks

    Citi investit stratégiquement dans Starburst pour accélérer l’usage de l’IA dans les secteurs régulés

    June 10, 2025

    Latest Market News Today Live Updates October 19, 2024: US SEC grants accelerated approval to 11 Bitcoin ETFs for trading options on New York Stock Exchange

    October 19, 2024

    Dubai-based cryptocurrency exchange Bybit loses $1.5 billion worth Ethereum in theft by hacking

    February 21, 2025

    Fintech firms Tally and Score cease operations, Klarna expands

    August 22, 2024
    What's Hot

    Broward Schools fixes metal detector disaster on second day of school – NBC 6 South Florida

    August 14, 2024

    Conservationist warns Australia’s renewable energy push ‘fragmenting forests’ and wiping out wildlife, as new mapping exposes scale of land clearing for wind and solar projects

    October 6, 2025

    How Banks and Fintech Will Verify in 2026: Regula Study

    November 25, 2025
    Our Picks

    Mobile phone operators to adopt new technology for SIM registration verification

    August 17, 2025

    What are the pros and cons of a Roth conversion for retirement?

    November 25, 2025

    Innovation : La Silver Economie, une niche pour booster l’emploi et la consommation

    May 28, 2025
    Weekly Top

    AI in Fintech

    December 12, 2025

    Is Cardano the Future of Cryptocurrency?

    December 12, 2025

    Top 3 Vanguard Stock ETF Picks for 2026

    December 12, 2025
    Editor's Pick

    Copper climbs – Markets – Business Recorder

    August 4, 2025

    UK Markets Fall as Pound Drops and Fed Weighs on Sentiment​

    November 14, 2025

    Outcrop Silver to Present Live at Battery & Precious Metals Virtual Investor Conference

    July 18, 2024
    © 2025 Invest Intellect
    • Contact us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.