PARIS — Dutch digital bank Bunq is hoping it will manage to secure a banking license from U.K. financial regulators later this year or early next year, the firm's CEO and founder Ali Niknam told CNBC.
«I hope we'll get somewhere by the end of the year, maybe early next year, because the U.K.'s processes may be slightly different to Europe because it's a different regulatory area,» Niknam said in an interview last week at the Viva Tech conference in Paris.
«I don't know when they're going to say yes, but so far I have little reason to believe that we won't be successful.»
Bunq, known for its rainbow-colored cards and a focus on so-called «digital nomads» not bound by any one country or location, initially launched in the U.K. in 2019. But the bank was forced to exit the country in late 2020 because of Brexit.
The passage of Brexit into law meant that EU-based financial institutions couldn't rely on their own country authorizations to operate in the U.K. market. Currently, Bunq only holds a banking license with the Dutch central bank.
Now, Bunq is plotting a reentry into the U.K. market. The firm last year submitted an application with the Financial Conduct Authority for an electronic money institution license. It says a U.K. launch would allow it to tap into a «large and underserved» market of some 2.8 million British digital nomads.
That will prove difficult, though. Rival European fintech Revolut, which is based in Britain and currently has an electronic money institution license, has been trying for some years to secure its U.K. banking license.
To be sure, a banking license is different from an e-money license. The key difference is that a banking license gives firms permission to offer loans. Monzo and Starling are
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