Expensive but maybe it has some advantages compared with eastern Europe?Liechtenstein
If you're not comfortable committing a few million: don't. Just partner with a Banking-as-a-Service provider like Modulr, OpenPayd, or Intergiro if all you want to do is build a good product.
Liechtenstein
Liechtenstein is interesting, but I'm not sure it's really fair to look at such a vague description as above and call Liechtenstein the best.First class reputation, low taxes and fast licencing process. And you are entitled to a Swiss National Bank account
Thank you for an indepth response. Our working plan was to hire two experienced staffers in Lithuania, one for AML/compliance, another for finance operations, set up a small local office in the country. Put up around 200k for expenses + 350k capital. Then handle the application procedure by our internal knowledge ( maybe copy some blueprint EMI records that are public), and use our own IT-wallet system which we have developed. But maybe this is native thinking?If you're not comfortable committing a few million: don't. Just partner with a Banking-as-a-Service provider like Modulr, OpenPayd, or Intergiro if all you want to do is build a good product.
The bare costs might just be a few hundred thousand in theory, but most regulators expect to see a capital commitment of a few million or they will be very hesitant to issue a license. Issuing a license is a lot of upfront and ongoing work for a regulator. You pose an economic, regulatory, and reputational risk. Regulators don't want to issue license to someone who's going to fail and cause a mess, or someone who knowingly or inadvertently becomes a laundromat for criminals.
If you have a few million, then look at jurisdictions less form a cost perspective and more from a suitability perspective. Who are your customers? What do they do? Why are you targeting them?
Liechtenstein is interesting, but I'm not sure it's really fair to look at such a vague description as above and call Liechtenstein the best.
The focus in the description we got here is on cost and openness. I don't think Liechtenstein satisfies those two particularly well. It's a high-cost jurisdiction and a regulator that doesn't exactly exude a welcoming aura. They're not hostile, but they have a long way to go compared to most of their peers.
It's a strong banking jurisdiction but for fintech, it's practically unheard of. IIRC, it has lost more EMI and PI licensees than it currently has active (four). And two of the current licensees subsidiaries/majority owned by Swiss banks (Cornèr and Hypothekarbank Lenzburg).
Headline tax is generally not a concern when people start financial institutions. If it were, there wouldn't be huge fintech sectors in countries like Germany, France, Netherlands, and Spain. But if headline tax rate truly mattered much, why would anyone form an EMI in Germany when they could go to Malta and simply passport the license? However, if headline tax rate is a major concern, you can get very similar or lower in for example Lithuania, Malta, Cyprus, and Ireland.
I'm not sure how one would even quantity speed of licensing Liechtenstein. If my memory is right, FMA has handled fewer than 10 total EMI and PI licenses in total. Compare that to the enormous numbers in Lithuania, Cyprus, Malta, Germany, France, Spain, Luxembourg, Netherlands. Yes, those places may have backlogs at times but at least the people there are experienced. You know what to expect. FMA might be fast — who knows? You're throwing yourself into the unknown.
I'm not saying Liechtenstein is bad. But I'd only pick Liechtenstein after carefully considering the business plan and how well it matches with FMA's expertise and experience. For a cookie cutter setup, I'd go with a place that has issued a couple of dozen licenses.
There are two options. Either you are real good or you are completely naive. You can look at your code quality, you will most likely see within 1 minute which one is the case.Thabk
Thank you for an indepth response. Our working plan was to hire two experienced staffers in Lithuania, one for AML/compliance, another for finance operations, set up a small local office in the country. Put up around 200k for expenses + 350k capital. Then handle the application procedure by our internal knowledge ( maybe copy some blueprint EMI records that are public), and use our own IT-wallet system which we have developed. But maybe this is native thinking?![]()
I completely agree. I will share the results with you in 1 year, and then we'll seeThere are two options. Either you are real good or you are completely naive. You can look at your code quality, you will most likely see within 1 minute which one is the case.
Yes, and of course we hope that you are real good! Please let us know when there is a beta available to try!I completely agree. I will share the results with you in 1 year, and then we'll see
You will not get a license with that budget.Thabk
Thank you for an indepth response. Our working plan was to hire two experienced staffers in Lithuania, one for AML/compliance, another for finance operations, set up a small local office in the country. Put up around 200k for expenses + 350k capital. Then handle the application procedure by our internal knowledge ( maybe copy some blueprint EMI records that are public), and use our own IT-wallet system which we have developed. But maybe this is native thinking?![]()
Harsh reality. But when you say that I need a couple of millions are you referring to the authorities requirement of internal financial strength, or the capital needed to succeed with all other business aspects marketing etc?You will not get a license with that budget.
Go speak with Modulr, OpenPayds, Intergiro, and other BaaS providers. Find someone who's aligned with you. Build a product. Get customers. Then once you have a couple of millions and some momentum, you'll be in a much better position to get a license.
They're the same thing. The regulator wants to see that you have enough money to execute your business plan.Harsh reality. But when you say that I need a couple of millions are you referring to the authorities requirement of internal financial strength, or the capital needed to succeed with all other business aspects marketing etc?
Cyprus is a very strong jurisdictions for EMIs, with more and more "big players" obtaining licenses here.Harsh reality. But when you say that I need a couple of millions are you referring to the authorities requirement of internal financial strength, or the capital needed to succeed with all other business aspects marketing etc?
You are a (man) of hands on experience, appreciate the detaild input given. It roughly aligns with my expectations, except for the delayed licensing time and possible increase of own funds. I was calculating that own funds of 350k euro would be sufficuent if outstanding deposits is below 15 m euro.They're the same thing. The regulator wants to see that you have enough money to execute your business plan.
The licensing process is not...
Do you have 350,000 EUR?
Do you have a compliance?
OK, great, here's your license.
The licensing process is more like...
Do you have 350,000 EUR?
What kind of customers will you target?
What kind of services will you offer?
How will you market?
Who is your MLRO? What is their background?
What is your AML/KYC framework?
Show month by month for the next 36 months your transaction volumes and average balances. But hold on, show me 2—4 different calculations to show how you handle adverse market changes.
Show CVs of your management team demonstrating that they have years of experience in financial services.
Show a detailed business plan for the next three years.
And so...
Based on your answers and the regulators' findings, they will calculate how much you must have in "Own Funds," which is often a cash reserve calculated as a percentage of volumes and balances. The Own Funds are there to cover for losses in a going concern.
The licensing process usually takes 12—24 months. With a budget of 200,000 EUR for expenses, you don't have anywhere near enough for all the staff, software subscriptions, memberships, and other costs that you will need to pay. Some costs can wait until after launch but some cannot. You'll typically be paying a couple of people's salaries for several months just to make sure they are ready when the license arrives.
Go speak with Modulr, OpenPayds, Intergiro, and other BaaS providers. Find someone who's aligned with you. Build a product. Get customers. Then once you have a couple of millions and some momentum, you'll be in a much better position to get a license.