Quote To Start The Day: We believe that the new commodity upswing, and in particular oil up cycle, has started.
Source: JPMorgan
One Big Thing In Fintech: This month marks the 50th anniversary of Nasdaq’s launch in 1971.
The story of Nasdaq’s first five decades highlights its impact on trading today. The introduction of computers to markets, and sharing of quote data more widely, led to the automation of trading. With that automation came huge cost savings that, together with the internet, have democratized investing and helped the U.S. market stay the biggest, deepest and most cost-efficient market to list and trade in in the world.
Source: Nasdaq
Other Key Fintech Developments:
- LME taps Itiviti for infrastructure, tech.
- 2021 FIS Accelerator accepting entry.
- 86 400 has partnered with OCR Labs.
- Texture Capital, Vertalo expands tech.
- BNY Mellon to custody cryptos, BTC.
- RBC has joined DirectBooks platform.
- Euronext looks at double-digit growth.
- Fidelity has key to take on Robinhood.
- Monzo taps Carol Nelson for US CEO.
- BBVA adds mobile banking dimension.
- Longevity Card eyes Seedrs campaign.
- DLCC intros a digital prime brokerage.
- Mastercard looks to enable crypto flow.
- Finicity promotes FCRA accountability.
- Northern Trust invests in data science.
- Recurring payments friction in the US.
- PeerStreet launches a charity initiative.
- Webull has teamed with Ticker Tocker.
- Crypto platform Bitso bought Quedex.
Watch Out For This: A major global survey of consumers and business leaders has suggested there is a growing belief among consumers and business leaders that robots handle financial tasks better than humans.
Source: E&T
Interesting Reads:
- Tesla’s are failing to hit EPA estimates.
- Alt-financing tools to help with dilution.
- US home prices surge at fastest pace.
- 24 year-old ran a crypto ponzi scheme.
- Crunchbase: hot startups from January.
- Bumble jumped in debut after $2B IPO.
- Biden’s stimulus may bring on big risks.
- Converting content into cold hard cash.
Market Moving Headline: Applications for U.S. state unemployment benefits fell slightly last week in a sign that the labor market is still gradually improving as the vaccine rollout continues and business restrictions ease. After a sharp run-up in equities at the start of February, U.S. stocks have taken a pause as investors weighed the implications of the latest inflation data.
In the background, there’s still a debate over whether more U.S. stimulus, the vaccine distribution and the government’s determination to kickstart growth will cause the American economy to overheat.
Source: Bloomberg
© 2024 Benzinga.com. Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved.
Comments
Trade confidently with insights and alerts from analyst ratings, free reports and breaking news that affects the stocks you care about.
Your update on what’s going on in the Fintech space. Keep up-to-date with news, valuations, mergers, funding, and events. Sign up today!