How to Play the Fintech Stocks Making Cashless Payments a Reality

Cash is dead. And the latest evolution in how we pay could be one of the biggest investment opportunities of the year.

Humans have used all sorts of things as a store of value since the dawn of time. Rare metals, cattle, salt, shells, even jugs of whiskey in the late 1700s. Over time, we have transitioned from items of value to items that represent value, from coins and paper to digital forms. Since Roman times, people have tried out many alternatives to carrying cash. Arab merchants developed bills of exchange in the eighth century, and the first check in the United States was said to have been first used in 1681.

The first major payment revolution began in 1949. Businessman Frank McNamara was out for a nice meal in New York City when he realized one thing - he had forgotten his wallet. An embarrassment he never wanted to face again, he started thinking. Only a few short months later, he returned to the very same restaurant - and when the bill arrived, he paid with a small cardboard card, known today as a Diners Club Card. This event was hailed as the "First Supper," paving the way for what we now know as the credit card.

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Almost 70 years later, in 2018, a major tipping point took place for the first time in history. Physical currency took a back seat to debit cards, which made up 28% of payments.

Since that event three short years ago, the next major payment revolution has begun: contactless payments.

And it could be one of the most profitable tech breakthroughs this year...

The Cashless Revolution Could Pad Your Wallet

Now, this revolution may have been a quiet one going on the background, but it has suddenly been thrust into the spotlight. Just last week, PayPal's CEO said on its earnings call, "I believe we will look back at this time as a tipping point, where digital payments both offline and online become an essential element of our lives."

Right now, we can all relate to this. Many parts of our lives have changed over the last few weeks, including the places we go, the people we see, how we travel, and how we pay for it all. In fact, for the past two months I have not touched a single dollar bill or coin, instead relying exclusively on electronic payments systems. I don't even want to touch the number pad when using my credit card at the grocery store.

I'm sure you are thinking the same thing to yourself, and you are not alone. Online merchants such as Amazon.com Inc. (NASDAQ: AMZN) and Shopify Inc. (NYSE: SHOP) are thriving. More and more brick-and-mortar stores have shifted to systems where you order and pay ahead of time and pick up curbside. Publix, a national grocery chain with over 1,000 locations, is now rolling out contactless Apple Pay. And according to research conducted for the Daily Mail, half of small businesses have already banned cash or plan to do so soon in the UK.

We are moving faster than ever before to a cashless system.

Here are just a few more examples of what is happening:

  • Deliveroo, a London-based food ordering company, is launching a "no contact" option that allows customers to order food without interacting with the delivery driver. Uber Eats does this as well.
  • Nordstrom is going to start reopening its almost 400 stores and will stop accepting cash.
  • Amazon has had to put new online grocery shoppers on a wait list since it cannot keep up with demand.
  • Samsung is launching a Samsung Pay debit card.

Are we about to abandon a practice that dates back over 5,000 years to ancient Egypt? The coronavirus pandemic, and our efforts to cut the transmission of this disease to protect our neighbors, is forcing us to ask whether we have outgrown the need to carry and use money in a physical form.

Whether it's tapping a credit card on a contactless payment terminal, using a digital credit card on your Apple iPhone, or completing a payment through PayPal, the rise of digital currency has been given a gigantic boost by the pandemic.

And it's here to stay....

How to Grab Your Share of This $2 Trillion Dollar Industry

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In a moment, I'm going to reveal a way investors can access this entire industry and the companies benefiting from this shift...

Just look at PayPal Holdings Inc. (NASDAQ: PYPL) and Square Inc. (NYSE: SQ), two of the largest digital payments companies that just reported earnings. I want to show you just how big this space really is. In only a single quarter, PayPal saw an additional 20 million accounts, now totaling 325 million. For payment volume in the same time period, PayPal saw almost $200 billion spent, up 19% on the year. That number is pretty impressive when you consider that Visa, the second largest card payment organization in the world, processed roughly $1 trillion. Square is also showing impressive growth in digital payments with its Bitcoin transactions growing by five times in only one year. In the first quarter of 2020, total USD volume of Bitcoin totaled 306.1 million.

With cash still representing over 25% of consumer spend, there is still plenty of runway for digital payment companies to grow. This is why I'm looking at ARK Fintech Innovations ETF (NYSEArca: ARKF).

ARK's Fintech Innovations ETF not only holds great growing payment companies like Paypal and Square, it also holds companies that are benefiting from the shift to digital payments. This ETF believes in six major business platforms: transaction innovations, blockchain technology, risk transformation, frictionless funding platforms, customer-facing platforms, and new intermediaries.

This is exactly what it is doing. Its second and fourth largest positions are MercadoLibre, South America's equivalent to Amazon and Apple, a company pulling off a huge digital transformation with Apple TV Plus and Apple Arcade, its mobile game subscription product. It is no wonder that its services business is only behind its iPhone business in revenue. It also holds innovative companies like Docusign, a company that makes signing documents like mortgage papers completely digital.

What I really like about this fund is that it is actively managed. This means that if ARK finds better investments it can add them in. Currently this fund is up over 5% on the year where the S&P 500 is down over 10%.

Bottom Line: The ARK Fintech Innovations ETF is the best way to cash in on the way cashless payments are disrupting the economy. And as an actively managed ETF, you won't miss the gains from the hottest fintech firms making cashless happen.

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