New master's offering combines fintech and entrepreneurship

29 August 2017 | Story Supplied. Photo Pixabay.
In a first for Africa, UCT’s new fintech degree equips students to embrace the technological revolution in the financial services industry.
In a first for Africa, UCT’s new fintech degree equips students to embrace the technological revolution in the financial services industry.

The University of Cape Town (UCT) is now the first university on the continent to offer a specialisation in its MPhil degree that is specifically designed to equip students with the necessary skills and knowledge to embrace the technological revolution in the financial services sector.

South Africa’s financial services industry faces a significant challenge: the rise of modern technology, commonly labelled as financial technology, or fintech, combined with a lack of skilled graduates who are able to navigate this complex new terrain.

The new programme, which will be offered for the first time in January 2018, is a Master of Philosophy, specializing in Data Science of Financial Technology.

The course convener, Dr Co-Pierre Georg, senior lecturer at the African Institute of Financial Markets and Risk Management (AIFMRM) at UCT, explains: “We are in constant and close contact with the financial services industry and know that it is facing a shifting demand for skills. In the past, companies were mainly looking for advanced mathematical and modelling skills.

“There still is demand for these skills, but by far the largest demand now is for students who have a thorough understanding of finance combined with a mastery of modern data analytics and software development skills. Our students will be able to develop these skills in the two most exciting areas of fintech: machine learning and blockchain technologies.”

Over the years, machine learning has given the world self-driving cars, speech recognition and a vastly improved understanding of the human genome. In the financial services industry, machine learning is used to analyse vast datasets, for example, to identify a customer’s credit profile, to identify profitable companies, or to find an optimal investment strategy.

Students signing up for the new programme will master machine-learning methods and be able to develop their own applications using these methods.

Interdisciplinary approach

Since the modern workplace requires a broad set of skills from various disciplines, the new programme is highly interdisciplinary and convened together with the Department of Statistical Sciences at UCT. Associate Professor Francesca Little, the head of the department, says: “We started the MPhil [programme] to give students a thorough understanding of the latest methods in statistical learning. This includes the extremely exciting field of machine learning and artificial intelligence.

“The idea then was to bring together UCT’s ‘best and brightest’ from other departments to design a [programme] that is truly special. We are delighted to partner with AIFMRM so that we are able to offer a specialisation in the exciting new field of financial technology.”

The other topical focus of the new offering is blockchain, which is a broad technology that allows companies to store information in a distributed and cryptographically secured database. This makes it possible to store information in a way that is easily accessible and fully transparent, but completely secure at the same time.

The most famous application to date is bitcoin, a cryptographic currency that has recently seen a surge in value on the back of growing demand.

Other applications for blockchain technology range from automated supply-chain management over remittance and other payment services up to health services and insurance. According to industry participants, consulting firms, think tanks and government organisations, blockchain has the potential to completely revolutionise the economy.

Focus on entrepreneurship

Georg adds, “We combine all these hard skills from technology and finance and add to them the magic ingredient that makes our [programme] unique: a strong focus on entrepreneurship. Our students will have the skillset to not only work in the financial services sector, but to go out and start their own companies using what they have learned.

“We partner with a fintech incubator in Cape Town to make sure that students will be embedded in the activities of some of South Africa’s hottest new start-ups and most exciting fintech ventures.
 

“Young start-ups are already challenging the incumbents and our students will be on the forefront of this technological revolution in South Africa.”

“We see extraordinary demand for the [programme] already,” he continues, “also because Cape Town-based students can do the [studies] part-time. This is quite important to us since we want working finance professionals to be able to complete the [programme] and acquire the skills to thrive in a changing industry.

“For students who want to do the [studies] full-time, we do offer full scholarships to ensure that nobody will be excluded financially.

“Fintech offers a unique opportunity to radically transform the industry. Young start-ups are already challenging the incumbents and our students will be on the forefront of this technological revolution in South Africa. Our focus on entrepreneurship means that we will change the students’ mindset so that they not only want to go out and ‘get’ a job, but also to go out and create a job – or a hundred.”

Applications close 31 October 2017.

Read more about the programme…


Creative Commons License This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

Please view the republishing articles page for more information.


Research & innovation






 

 




 
TOP