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Irish fintech Nomupay gets $40 mln investment from SoftBank
Irish fintech Nomupay gets $40 mln investment from SoftBank

Time of India

time3 days ago

  • Business
  • Time of India

Irish fintech Nomupay gets $40 mln investment from SoftBank

Live Events Irish fintech Nomupay said on Tuesday it had received a $40 million investment from an unit of SoftBank Corp at a valuation of $290 million to help it expand in Asian countries such as started operations in 2021 after buying licences from payments company Wirecard, which collapsed a year earlier in Germany's biggest post-war fraud has since raised $120 million, with the last round of $37 million in January valuing it at $200 million."We will integrate the Japanese payment methods that are provided by SoftBank, which means the rest of the world can now access Japan, and then we will jointly expand into other markets," Nomupay CEO Peter Burridge told is a payment processor focusing on local and cross-border payments and operates in an industry dominated by the likes of Stripe and Adyen."We aim to be profitable by the end of the year," Burridge said.

German financial watchdog: AI is helping to catch market abuse
German financial watchdog: AI is helping to catch market abuse

CNA

time4 days ago

  • Business
  • CNA

German financial watchdog: AI is helping to catch market abuse

FRANKFURT :Germany's financial regulator BaFin is using artificial intelligence to help it spot market abuse and suspicious patterns in trading, increasing the chances of catching offenders, a top official warned on Monday. BaFin President Mark Branson said the supervisor had started using artificial intelligence last year in its alert and market analysis system. "We can already see from this that the results of this analysis system have become more accurate," Branson said at a conference. "The chances of being caught in market abuse trading have never been so high, and here in Germany we know that the penalties for this can also be considerably high," he warned. BaFin under Branson has been trying to burnish its reputation after the fall of Wirecard, a former blue-chip hailed as a German success story and once worth $28 billion. The supervisor failed to spot accounting fraud at Wirecard ahead of its collapse in 2020, resulting in an effort to give BaFin "more bite" with a change in top leadership and more powers to spot and investigate wrongdoing.

German financial watchdog: AI is helping to catch market abuse
German financial watchdog: AI is helping to catch market abuse

Time of India

time4 days ago

  • Business
  • Time of India

German financial watchdog: AI is helping to catch market abuse

Germany's financial regulator BaFin is using artificial intelligence to help it spot market abuse and suspicious patterns in trading, increasing the chances of catching offenders, a top official warned on Monday. BaFin President Mark Branson said the supervisor had started using artificial intelligence last year in its alert and market analysis system. "We can already see from this that the results of this analysis system have become more accurate," Branson said at a conference. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like What's my car worth? Take a look here (you might be surprised) Cars | Value Learn More "The chances of being caught in market abuse trading have never been so high, and here in Germany we know that the penalties for this can also be considerably high," he warned. BaFin under Branson has been trying to burnish its reputation after the fall of Wirecard, a former blue-chip hailed as a German success story and once worth $28 billion. Live Events The supervisor failed to spot accounting fraud at Wirecard ahead of its collapse in 2020, resulting in an effort to give BaFin "more bite" with a change in top leadership and more powers to spot and investigate wrongdoing. Discover the stories of your interest Blockchain 5 Stories Cyber-safety 7 Stories Fintech 9 Stories E-comm 9 Stories ML 8 Stories Edtech 6 Stories

German financial watchdog: AI is helping to catch market abuse
German financial watchdog: AI is helping to catch market abuse

The Star

time4 days ago

  • Business
  • The Star

German financial watchdog: AI is helping to catch market abuse

FILE PHOTO: The logo of Germany's Federal Financial Supervisory Authority BaFin (Bundesanstalt fuer Finanzdienstleistungsaufsicht) is pictured outside of an office building of the BaFin in Bonn, Germany, April 15, 2019. REUTERS/Wolfgang Rattay/File Photo FRANKFURT (Reuters) -Germany's financial regulator BaFin is using artificial intelligence to help it spot market abuse and suspicious patterns in trading, increasing the chances of catching offenders, a top official warned on Monday. BaFin President Mark Branson said the supervisor had started using artificial intelligence last year in its alert and market analysis system. "We can already see from this that the results of this analysis system have become more accurate," Branson said at a conference. "The chances of being caught in market abuse trading have never been so high, and here in Germany we know that the penalties for this can also be considerably high," he warned. BaFin under Branson has been trying to burnish its reputation after the fall of Wirecard, a former blue-chip hailed as a German success story and once worth $28 billion. The supervisor failed to spot accounting fraud at Wirecard ahead of its collapse in 2020, resulting in an effort to give BaFin "more bite" with a change in top leadership and more powers to spot and investigate wrongdoing. (Reporting by Tom Sims, Editing by Louise Heavens)

German financial watchdog: AI is helping to catch market abuse
German financial watchdog: AI is helping to catch market abuse

Reuters

time4 days ago

  • Business
  • Reuters

German financial watchdog: AI is helping to catch market abuse

FRANKFURT, June 2 (Reuters) - Germany's financial regulator BaFin is using artificial intelligence to help it spot market abuse and suspicious patterns in trading, increasing the chances of catching offenders, a top official warned on Monday. BaFin President Mark Branson said the supervisor had started using artificial intelligence last year in its alert and market analysis system. "We can already see from this that the results of this analysis system have become more accurate," Branson said at a conference. "The chances of being caught in market abuse trading have never been so high, and here in Germany we know that the penalties for this can also be considerably high," he warned. BaFin under Branson has been trying to burnish its reputation after the fall of Wirecard, a former blue-chip hailed as a German success story and once worth $28 billion. The supervisor failed to spot accounting fraud at Wirecard ahead of its collapse in 2020, resulting in an effort to give BaFin "more bite" with a change in top leadership and more powers to spot and investigate wrongdoing.

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