Financial services is an industry organised by category. A firm is a bank, or a payment institution, or an exchange, or a fund. The category is not merely descriptive. It shapes how the firm is regulated, how it is valued, how it is understood by customers, and how it is compared with its peers. When a firm fits a category cleanly, the category does useful work. When a firm does not, the category becomes a source of confusion — and, occasionally, a signal that something new is being built. The Group builds what it refers to as an Integrated Digital Financial Ecosystem, or IDFE. No established category describes it. This thesis explains why the absence of a name is a feature of the thing, not a failure of description.
Why Existing Labels Fail
Consider the labels available. A neobank is, in essence, a banking interface — a well-designed application sitting on payment and deposit infrastructure. It captures the front end of digital finance. It does not, as a category, extend to digital asset custody, to tokenisation, or to a token economy.
An exchange is a venue for trading assets, increasingly digital ones. It captures the trading of value. It does not, as a category, describe classical payments, multi-currency accounts, or collateralised lending.
A payments company moves money. It captures transfer and settlement. It does not, as a category, reach digital asset services or the issuance and circulation of tokens.
Each label is accurate about a part. None is accurate about the whole. A firm that conducts all of these activities is not well described as a neobank that also runs an exchange, or an exchange that also offers payments. The conjunction "and also" is the signal that the category has run out.
The Components of an Integrated Ecosystem
The IDFE model brings together activities that the market currently treats as belonging to separate firms and separate categories: classical payment instruments, including multi-currency accounts and card programmes; digital asset services, including custody and exchange; collateralised lending, including lending against digital assets; the tokenisation of real-world assets; and an embedded token economy.
The list itself is not unusual. Any one of these activities is offered, somewhere, by an established firm. What is unusual is the proposition that they should be offered together, by one group, within a single compliance framework.
Integration as the Defining Property
The defining property of the IDFE model is not the breadth of the component list. It is integration. A group that offers payments through one subsidiary, custody through another, and lending through a third, with no connective architecture between them, has a portfolio of financial businesses. It does not have an integrated ecosystem.
Integration means that the components are designed to operate as one: that value can move between fiat and digital form within a single environment; that a compliance framework conceived for the whole governs each part; that the customer experiences a continuous system rather than a set of separate products joined at the seams. Integration is an architectural commitment made at the design stage. It cannot be retrofitted onto businesses that were built apart — which is one reason the established categories do not reach it. They describe firms that were built apart.
A Category Defined by Construction
New categories in financial services are rarely named in advance. They are named afterwards, once enough has been built that the thing requires a word. The neobank was not a category before neobanks existed; it was a description applied once they did.
The Group does not claim to have completed the construction of the IDFE category. It claims to be among those building it. The absence of an established term is consistent with that claim, not in tension with it. A category for which a settled name already existed would, by definition, not be new.
The Burden of Precise Description
There is a practical point in all of this, beyond terminology. A firm that does not fit an existing category must be understood on its own terms. It cannot be assessed by simply applying the assumptions that attach to a neobank, or an exchange, or a payments company, because each of those sets of assumptions describes only a part of what the firm is. The Group accepts that this places a burden of explanation on it. The purpose of describing the IDFE model directly — its components, its defining property of integration, and the reason no single label captures it — is to meet that burden. The category does not yet have a name. The architecture, however, can be described precisely, and the Group's position is that precise description is what the absence of a name requires.