Loan chaos for DNB

Also this week:

  • šŸ§ Web3 similar to the promise of PSD2?

  • ā›“ How blockchains can automate registers in Norway

  • šŸ¤³ The comeback of the decade

  • šŸ¤“ All the reports

  • šŸ”¢ Excel world championship

šŸ§ Web3 similar to the promise of PSD2?

Happy new year! It has been little news over the last few weeks as everyone has gone into vacation mode. But the topic that never sleeps is Web3. Over the last month, there has been a ton of debate and conversation about the web as we know it today vs. web3. Many voices have raised doubts about web3. Here are some of the more interesting articles on this topic that we've come across:

  • An Engineer's Hype-Free Observations on Web3 (and its Possibilities)Ā Link

  • The Architecture of a Web 3.0 applicationĀ Link

  • A Normie's Guide to Becoming a Crypto Person. How to (cautiously and skeptically) fall down the rabbit hole.Ā Link

  • Why Web3's Shared Data Across Applications Doesn't MatterĀ Link

  • The Web3 FraudĀ Link

  • Weird Web3 EnergyĀ Link

Fred Wilson summarizes probably theĀ biggest advantage of Web3 in one sentence:Ā 

"users can move from application to application, keeping their data (and their login credentials stored in their wallet) as they go."

Not to be the devil's advocate here, but this sounds a lot like the original promise of PSD2: That the bank with the best UX would win since everyone could switch banking providers as they liked. The result (so far) has not been the revolution we were promised, and banks feared, years ago. The main reason might not be technical limitations, but rather that most people don't like change or don't care enough.

One of the differences between the PSD2 rush in Fintech a couple of years ago and Web3 today is the amount of money Venture Capital is pouring into the space at the moment and all of theĀ talents that are switching jobs. It's safe to say that you can't have this much talent spend all day thinking and working on web3 and have nothing coming from it. But it's still going to be difficult:

ā›“ How blockchains can automate registers in Norway

Here in Norway, Kari Due-Andresen, Chief Economist and Head of Research at Akershus Eiendom, and Liv Freihow, Chief Communications and Public Affairs Officer in Norwegian Block Exchange have written that we should stopĀ looking at the crypto phenomenon as something dangerous that must be banned. Norway is uniquely positioned to develop decentralized financial solutions, and blockchain technology has a lot to offer us.

Jon Ramvi, CEO of Symfoni AS, explainsĀ how blockchain technology can automate registers and bureaucracyĀ and deliver products at a new level of abstraction. Symfoni is currently working with the BrĆønnĆøysund Register Centre to take the shareholder book to the blockchain as the first country in the world. For Kode24, Ramvi alsoĀ explains why cryptocurrencies are a necessary evil for blockchains.

šŸ‘©ā€āš–ļø Loan chaos for DNB

The Financial Supervisory Authority of Norway reports thatĀ DNB may have overestimated borrowers' ability to payĀ and must end their practice of offering more financing than the customer applies for.Ā You can read their whole audit report here.

My understanding of this report is that if you are providing a loan to a customer you need to collect data via (at least) samtykkebasert lĆ„nesĆøknad (SBL), the debt register, and additionally collect information about interest, outstanding debt, and remaining repayment period for the loans that are not in the debt register. This includes, among other car loans and mortgages. The remaining repayment period and interest is information that is rather hard to find for users and highlights the immediate need for getting all customer loans into the debt register, and not just unsecured debt.

Another problematic aspect of this report is the Financial Supervisory Authorities' hard line on ending the practice of offering financing beyond what the customer is applying for. I agree that it's a good business practice to dictate that the bank's offer must be arranged according to the customer's borrowing needs, but what if the customer needs to loan more than they initially have? Based on the last few reports I've read, it's starting to be impossible for banks to digitally meet and guide customers into applying for more loans if they already have a loan.

Customer: Hi! I'm renovating and need to borrow more. How much can I apply for?

Bank: Impossible to say. You have to apply for a specific amount, and then I can tell you yes or no. I know the exact amount based on the information you have provided me and the regulations, but the Financial Supervisory Authority says I can't tell you.

šŸ¤³ The comeback of the decade

šŸ¤“ All the reports

For the last couple of issues, we've linked to 2022 trends and 2021 years in reviews as we've come across them. But Spacecadet, a marketing (?) VC has collected a bunch of them: Graphic design trends, Economist emerging technologies, Forrester predictions, Programmatic trends, PWC AI-predictions for 2022, World economic forums top 10 emerging technologies, you name it.Ā Head over to their site for all the reports.

CSS-tricks has also done the same with theirĀ "2021 Roundup of Web Research".

šŸ”¢ Excel world championship

We have an e-sport team in Stacc, but apparently, theĀ realĀ future of e-sport is spreadsheets and Microsoft Excel. The Financial Modeling World Cup was held last year, and the final was broadcast live.Ā You can follow the two-and-a-half-hour replay here on YouTube.

That's it for this week šŸ‘‹

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Marius Hauken, partner Stacc X