Archive for 2018

Why KeyBank Acquired Small Business Lending Platform from Bolstr

June 25, 2018
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Jamie Warder KeyBank
Jamie Warder, KeyBank

KeyBank announced last week the acquisition of a digital lending platform for small businesses created by Bolstr. The lending platform will allow KeyBank to more efficiently serve small businesses for their SBA and traditional lending needs, according to Jamie Warder, Head of KeyBank Business Banking.

“We found Bolstr to have a very flexible capability…and we believe that having the platform will allow us to get to a decision faster,” Warder told deBanked.

Founded in 2010 by Charlie Tribbett and Larry Baker in the Chicago area, Bolstr created a marketplace that connected small business borrowers to institutional and retail accredited investors, or individuals. KeyBank acquired the platform that facilitated this, but not the company. Bolstr no longer operates as it had, but it will continue to work with its current clients, according to Warder.

KeyBankWarder said that with this acquisition, KeyBank, a regional bank, hopes to attract more small business customers who are looking for speed and ease in obtaining a loan. He thinks that with Bolstr’s platform, KeyBank can be more competitive, although he didn’t say that the bank’s qualifications for obtaining loans would necessarily change.

The Bolstr platform includes features like easy eSignatures, information gathering and digital questionnaires. Already, KeyBank has hundreds of thousands of small business customers, Warder said. The bank, which is headquartered in Cleveland, OH, is more than 100 years old and operates in 15 states.

 

Tech Changes Lending And Payments The World Over

June 25, 2018
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This story appeared in deBanked’s May/June 2018 magazine issue. To receive copies in print, SUBSCRIBE FREE

Taxis in ShanghaiOn a business trip to China last summer, Matt Burton had plenty of money in his wallet but it was practically useless.

Case in point: He had a lengthy standoff with a Shanghai taxi driver who insisted on a mobile-phone payment. “I spent 20 minutes arguing with the cabbie,” says Burton, one of the founding partners at Orchard Platform, a leading provider of technology and software to the alternative lending industry. “You’d think that — out of all of the professions — a taxi driver would accept cash.”

The New Yorker finally convinced the cab driver to take the payment in renminbi, China’s paper currency. The incident, meanwhile, is illustrative of how deeply and widely mobile payments have penetrated the huge Chinese market. “No one in China carries wallets anymore,” Burton reports. “Everyone pays with their smart-phones. Even the elderly women selling vegetables on the side of the road accept mobile payments,” he adds. “Cash has become a hassle.”

Welcome to China’s financial technology revolution. Almost overnight, China’s population graduated from calculating with the 16th-century abacus to showcasing what is arguably the world’s most sophisticated system of mobile payments. Thanks to financial technology, China is fast becoming a cashless economy. China is just one place outside the U.S. where financial technology is catching on in a big way. As Americans remain, for the most part, wedded to suburban drive-in banks, walk-up automated teller machines, and plastic credit and debit cards, the rest of the world is rapidly embracing digital solutions. And nowhere is that happening more dramatically than in China.

According to the most recent figures released by China’s Internet Network Information Center, the country had 724 million mobile phone users at the end of June 2017. China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology reports, moreover, that consumers paying for everything from food and clothing to utility bills to movie tickets and – you guessed it, cab fare — engaged in 239 billion mobile payment transactions in 2017, a surge of 146 percent over the previous year.

Mobile payments have become a $16 trillion industry in China, the ministry adds, accounting for about half of all such transactions in the world.

And there’s ample room to grow. The World Bank discloses that there are now 772 million Internet users in China, more than double the entire population of the U.S. Yet that leaves 50% of China’s population – mostly in the countryside and rural areas – who are not yet plugged in to the Internet.

aliTwo Chinese mobile-payment platforms dominate the industry. Ant Financial is the 800-pound-gorilla, its Alipay program boasting 520 million global users on its website. It’s an affiliate of publicly traded Alibaba Group Holding, an online merchandiser known as the “Amazon of China” which was founded by entrepreneur Jack Ma, reputedly the richest man in China.

Alipay not only has bragging rights to roughly 60 percent of China’s digital and online payments market but, in 2013, it overtook PayPal as the global leader in third-party payments. With deep roots in e-commerce, Alipay is the go-to payments option for online shoppers, who are steadily migrating from laptops to mobile devices.

WeChat Pay is the upstart in the duopolistic rivalry. Launched in 2013, nearly a decade later than its rival, it’s a unit of conglomerate Tencent Holdings, a social network and messaging platform often compared to Facebook. As WeChat continues to add subscribers, its Tenpay app has been growing accordingly, eroding Alipay’s market share as new users gravitate to the e-payments program. While WeChat records fewer payments than Alipay, Forbes magazine reports that it claims more users.

WeChatWhatever WeChat’s virtues, Ant Financial continues to chew up the scenery. It recently topped the charts as the world’s “most innovative” fintech in 2017, as reckoned by a research team formed by accounting giant KPMG and H2 Ventures. China scored a hat trick, moreover, as two additional homegrown fintechs — online property-and-casualty insurer ZhongAn and credit-provider Qudian Inc. — took second and third place, respectively, in KPMG/H2’s rankings. For good measure, China also claimed five of the top ten spots on the “most innovative” list, edging out the U.S., which had four.

Financial analysts recently surveyed by the Financial Times reckon Ant Financial’s market valuation at $150 billion, catapulting the company into the rarified status of not just a “unicorn,” but a “super-unicorn.” (Named after the rarely seen mythical one-horned horse, “unicorns” are start-ups valued at $1 billion). So robust is Ant Financial’s market valuation that the global investment community is salivating over its impending initial public offering.

(Ant’s progenitor, Alibaba, holds bragging rights as the largest IPO ever, according to the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority. It raised $21.8 billion in 2014; its NYSE-listed stock was trading at $194.36 in mid-May, essentially in the same league as Apple and Facebook, trading at $188.80 and 187.08, respectively, on Nasdaq.)

“Four of the largest fintech unicorns in the world are coming out of Asia,” notes Dorel Blitz, the Tel Aviv-based head of fintech at KPMG. “The companies are getting bigger and stronger,” he adds, “and you’re beginning to see more direct investment in public fintech companies as well.”

Adds Orchard’s Burton: “I think it shows you how massive the opportunities are outside the U.S.”

Ant Financial and WeChat are also serving as a world-class demonstration project on how fintechs can turn a tidy profit while opening up financial services to large populations who lack access to basic financial services, thereby providing entry to the middle class. The two platforms have provided “financial inclusion for tens of millions, if not hundreds of millions of people” who previously were on the periphery of the banking and financial system, says Kai Schmitz, a fintech lender at International Finance Corporation that lends to private businesses in the developing world.

Once people are making electronic payments on their mobile devices, Schmitz notes, it creates a “pathway” to a whole panoply of financial services, including personal and business loans, savings, insurance, and investments.

“You can create a user profile so that a large part of the population that could not be reached (by traditional financial institutions) are now making payments and can be followed on the data track,” he says.

The World Bank reports that two billion adults and 200 million businesses in the developing world are currently unable to access even basic financial services. Through IFC, the World Bank has invested $370 million in fintech companies operating throughout Asia, the Middle East, Africa and Latin America. The fintechs, an IFC communications manager told deBanked, offer “a range of products and services — from e-wallets, virtual banks, lending, and online payments to retail payment points and exchanges.” IFC, she adds, also invests in fintech funds.

“THEY ARE LIVING IN AFRICA, BANGLADESH, CHINA AND ELSEWHERE ON LESS THAN TWO DOLLARS A DAY AND HAVE NO ACCESS TO FINANCIAL SERVICES”

Anju Patwardhan is the U.S.-based managing director at CreditEase Fintech Investment Fund, a $1 billion Chinese venture capital firm that invests in fintechs delivering financial services to “unbanked” and “underbanked” populations. “They are living in Africa, Bangladesh, China and elsewhere on less than two dollars a day and have no access to financial services,” she says.

“But there are also a very large number of people who may be technically included in the financial system but still don’t have access to a full range of financial services at reasonable prices,” she adds. “If someone is borrowing from a moneylender or pawnbroker, it doesn’t count (as financial inclusion). In that case, the number of people is very much more than two billion.”

Once phone towers are built and a payments infrastructure is in place, fintechs promising more sophisticated financial services can operate similarly to the settlers who followed pioneers in the U.S.’s westward expansion. That’s been the story in Kenya and other African countries where M-Pesa (“pesa” is Swahili for money) and other mobile-phone payments systems set up shop a decade ago.

Branch International, based in San Francisco but doing business exclusively in emerging and frontier markets for only three years, is one of the settlers. It boasts that it now has the “No. 1 finance app in Africa.” In March, Branch raised $70 million in a second-stage round of debt and equity financing from a group of venture capitalists led by Trinity Partners that included Patwardhan’s CreditEase and the IFC. Patwardhan will serve as an advisor to Branch’s board.

Father with daughter shopping online using credit cardBranch’s principal business is making loans and micro-loans ranging from as little as $2 to $1,000 in Nigeria, Kenya, and Tanzania. Despite its name, Branch touts itself as a “branchless bank”, all of the credit transactions taking place on mobile devices, says Matt Flannery, Branch’s chief executive and founder. Its average loan amount is $25.

Many of Branch’s customers are individuals and businesses who often had trouble obtaining credit from established financial institutions or were ineligible for loans. But, according to Branch’s website, it’s possible for a prospective borrower to obtain a loan in just a matter of minutes. “Branch eliminates the challenges of getting a loan by using the data on your phone to create a credit score,” the website says. Branch promises privacy, fees that are “fair and transparent,” and terms that “allow for easy repayment” with no “late fees or rollover fees”. “As you pay back on time,” the website also says, “our fees decrease, and you unlock larger loans with more flexible terms.”

The platform, CEO Flannery says, has lent out $100 million dollars to roughly that same number of people. “The formal financial system in African countries is generally composed of old-fashioned banks that are risk-averse and fairly slow to make lending decisions,” he says. “People really appreciate us,” Flannery adds. “I’d say we’re like Uber and they’re the horse-and-buggy.”

The company is growing by 20 percent month-over-month and expects to disburse more than $250 million in 2018. Asked to describe Branch’s typical borrower, Flannery says: “We have some rural users (of Branch’s finance app). But in general we’re serving the commercial middle-class — shopkeepers and entrepreneurs – in urban capitals.” Want to know precisely who Branch’s customers are? “Just go to downtown Lagos (the capital of Nigeria and the largest city on the African continent) and you’ll see all different kinds of businesses and single-owner merchants on street corners,” Flannery says.

Jeff Stewart, the founder and chairman of Lenddo (which recently merged with competitor EFL) asserts that his firm’s machine learning technology and risk modeling techniques, which are being deployed in emerging countries from Costa Rica to The Philippines, have the capacity to assess the “creditworthiness of everyone on the planet.” In the absence of credit history in much of the developing world, he explains, this can done by constructing a risk profile combining both “psychometrics” and a “digital footprint.”

Psychometrics is a behavioral assessment tool based on a prospective borrower’s “Big Five” personality traits: openness to experience, conscientiousness, extraversion, agreeableness, and neuroticism (OCEAN for short). “What we’ve been able to show,” Stewart asserts, “is that certain personality types have a positive and negative correlation with repayment. It’s not 100 percent accurate. But you can predict the statistical recovery ratio on repayment. You can say that, for a person with a high score, something like 88 out of 1,000 people (with his or her profile) would not repay.”

The digital footprint, which is the second “critical component,” Stewart says, analyzes a prospective borrower’s reliability by reconnoitering their smartphone usage. “We’ll look at everything on your phone,” he says, “How you use the phone. Whom you interact with. When you use your phone. There are thousands of features that generate a digital footprint. Everything from meeting someone at a sports bar to the apps on your phone to things like e-mailed receipts that show your financial activity.”

Such methods help build credit for those lacking credit history while rehabilitating those whose credit history is blemished. And all that’s needed is a smartphone. “We’ve turned the smartphone into a credit bureau,” Stewart says.

The acquisition of smartphones is taking place at a blistering pace, Stewart notes, now that cell phone costs are “at the bottom of the cost pyramid” in many countries. For example, a “low-end Android” now fetches as little as $25 in Africa. “One credible study I’ve seen shows that every 10% percent rise in access to smartphones translates into a 1/2 percent rise in a country’s gross domestic product,” Stewart says.

While the private sector is driving the trend to financial inclusion in China and Africa, India’s government-driven model “is setting a new global standard in using financial technologies to support financial inclusion,” declares Patwardhan of CreditEase, who also lectures at Stanford. “The country has become a giant testing ground for financial inclusion and innovation,” she argues in a recent academic paper, “and may become a role model for other emerging economies.”

India’s state-run effort includes a $1.3 billion digital identity program known as Aadhaar. Under Aadhaar (which means “foundation”), the state issues residents a 12-digit identity number that’s based on their biometric data –such as fingerprints and iris scans — and personal information. The ID number covers more than 1.19 billion residents. In just the first two years after Aadhaar’s 2009 debut, Patwardhan says, more than 250 million Indians were able to open bank accounts.

“INDIA’S DIGITAL ID PROGRAM MEANS THAT WIVES AND DAUGHTERS HAVE IDENTITY NOW”

Jo Ann Barefoot, chief executive at Barefoot Innovation Group in Washington, D.C. and a senior fellow emerita at Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government, agrees. She notes that Aadhaar opened up access to both fintech services and bank accounts to women who were long treated as second-class citizens by the social and economic system. “India’s digital ID program means that wives and daughters have identity now,” she says.

“In the past,” she adds, “only (male) heads of households would have family identity documents and a government card — which would be the equivalent of having a Social Security number in the U.S. But the wife wouldn’t have her own card. So this is a massive door-opener to fintech growth. And it’s also opening up (all areas of) finance to millions and millions of people.”

India’s “digitalization” program, moreover, has entailed development of a national payments network called “unified payments interface,” or UPI. The combination of UPI and Aadhaar as well as other digital initiatives have resulted in “a surge of online lending platforms,” says Patwardhan, citing Capital Float, NeoGrowth, Faircent, LendingKart, Quiklo, IndiaLends, CreditExchange, and Onemi.

The homegrown fintechs, however, will be up against tremendous external pressure as India, with 1.3 billion people and poised to overtake China in population growth, is generating enormous interest from global fintechs. Among outside platforms piling into the country are China’s Ant Financial and WeChat. The former took a $1 billion stake in Paytm, an Indian mobile payments and e-commerce company. Similarly, competitor WeChat’s parent, Tencent, has invested in Hike, a mobile wallet valued at $1.4 billion last June, according to CNBC, exciting investor interest as a unicorn.

U.S. companies are getting into the act too. Google launched digital payments app Tez last September, which “is taking advantage of India’s infrastructure and has already gotten 30 million downloads,” Patwardhan says. In February, Facebook rolled out a peer-to-peer payments feature on WhatsApp. Even Branch’s Flannery has announced that his “branchless bank” plans to earmark part of its $70 million war chest to offer $2-to-$1000 loans on the subcontinent.

Having banned high-denomination paper bills as a way to rein in corruption and aiming at a cashless economy, India has been innovating in ways that “have gone the Chinese one better,” marvels Patwardhan. “Their payment systems going through the UPI network are interoperable,” she notes, for example. “You don’t have to be on the same app or with the same bank. India is now on the cutting edge.”

An ISO Brokers Main Street Deals – on Main Street

June 25, 2018
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Horizon Financial - Brooklyn, NYEnvision a giant office filled with rows of commercial finance brokers on the phone, aggressively selling deals to faceless small town merchants. Then step into the office of Horizon Financial Group and meet brothers and business partners James and John Celifarco. The contrast could not be more striking.

The most dramatic difference between their office and that of almost every other broker, or ISO, is that you enter the office from the sidewalk. There’s no lobby and no elevator. It’s just the two brothers (plus one salesperson and one assistant) working on the other side of a glass storefront window.    

AVENUE S BrooklynThe store isn’t on Madison Avenue or Rodeo Drive. It’s on a modest, roughly three-block commercial strip on Avenue S in a working class section of Brooklyn called Marine Park. There’s a deli, a pizzeria, a barbershop, a pet grooming store and a bunch of other stores that you’re likely to find on Main Street, U.S.A. In other words, Horizon Financial Group’s neighbors are the exact kind of small business owners they seek as customers. And since they opened up shop on this quaint stretch at the end of October, many of their store owner neighbors have already become customers.

“It’s a different relationship with the customer,” James said of their neighborhood clients.  “You’re not on the phone. You’re face to face with these people. You’re meeting them, you’re shaking their hands, you’re getting to know them personally, which helps with the longevity of the relationship itself.”

Sitting at the glass conference table by their storefront window, James, 34, and John, 37, counted up to six clients by simply pointing out the window at other small stores across the street. Horizon Financial Group is an ISO that brokers working capital deals and does credit card processing, equipment leasing, ATM machines and commercial mortgages. (James has his New York real estate license, so he can also help local store owners buy or sell a house.) The brothers said that about 40 percent of their business is facilitating deals brought to them by other ISOs, another 40 percent comes from merchants that they find directly, and about 20 percent comes from these local customers they’ve developed from having a physical presence in the neighborhood.

“Obviously you can’t build an entire business on just these two streets,” John said, “but it’s extra business that we wouldn’t have had if we weren’t here. And when we came here, we stopped thinking ‘Who are we going to buy leads from?’ and started thinking more outside of the box.”

An example of this was their decision to approach the Brooklyn Chamber of Commerce where they are now one of the chamber’s preferred vendors, which brings them business from the entire borough.    

James said they’ve made contributions to the local little league and kids football, and whenever a new store opens in the area, they introduce themselves and explain what they do. It also doesn’t hurt that they grew up in Marine Park, so they already know the town pretty well. James recognized someone on the sidewalk and ran outside to say hi. It was someone who used to be a next door neighbor. There is a truly old-fashion sense of community on Avenue S.   

“I ACTUALLY GOT TO SEE THE PIECE OF EQUIPMENT I HELPED FINANCE.”

“I buy my pizza from [the pizza store owner] and he does his credit card processing with us,” James said. “When the dry cleaner needed equipment, we got them capital, and I actually got to see the piece of equipment I helped finance. That almost never happens.”   

Horizon Financial windowBecause there is no building guard or front desk person, customers can stop by whenever they like. As if in a sitcom, a man walked into the store saying to the brothers, “Don’t be mad at me.” It was a customer, the owner of a local paint store. “It’s not completely my fault, but I broke the phone swiper on the job.”

Reassuringly, John told him to come to his desk and he helped the customer with a replacement for a piece of credit card processing equipment.   

The brothers have each been working in the small business financing industry independently for more than a decade. James established Horizon Financial Group by himself in 2009 while John was working for a different company in the credit card processing and MCA space. John joined James at Horizon Financial Group in September 2017.

John said he prefers co-leading Horizon Financial Group, itself a small business, to running a larger operation in Manhattan.

“Compared to somebody in the city with a huge rent and a huge payroll, I don’t need to do the same numbers he’s doing to end up making the same amount of money.”

“A LOT OF PEOPLE DON’T LIKE TO SAY THEY’RE A SMALL COMPANY. I COULDN’T BE HAPPIER THAT WE’RE A SMALL COMPANY.”

John also noted that he doesn’t have to sit on a train for an hour and a half because he lives just six blocks away from the storefront office.

“A lot of people don’t like to say they’re a small company,” John said. “I couldn’t be happier that we’re a small company.”  

Running a small business is familiar to the Celifarcos. Horizon Financial Group gets its name from Horizons Dance Center, a successful Brooklyn dance school founded by James and John’s mother. It has been in business for 46 years and is still going strong.

“The name is good luck,” James said.

James lives a short drive away in Rockaway with his wife and daughter. On running a small business like Horizon Financial Group, James said: “It’s also about quality of life. You don’t need to work 7 to 7. I can be on the beach with my daughter. It’s really a different approach.”   

Lawyers Weigh in on Federal Decision That CFPB is Unconstitutional

June 22, 2018
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In light of a federal court ruling yesterday that the structure of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) is unconstitutional, deBanked spoke with some lawyers to get their perspective on what this decision could mean.

Alan Kaplinsky
Alan Kaplinsky, Partner, Ballard Spahr

Alan Kaplinsky, Partner, Ballard Spahr

“I think it will sow more confusion related to the CFPB. I think it’s important to note that this opinion – while it is precedent that could be cited in other cases…it’s not binding on any other court anywhere in the country, including in the Southern District of New York. That being said, I anticipate that the CFPB will appeal [the decision] if for no other reason than because they have other cases. Ultimately, I would anticipate that the case will end up in the U.S. Supreme Court.”

Lucy Morris
Lucy Morris, Partner, Hudson Cook

Lucy Morris, Partner, Hudson Cook (previously a Deputy Enforcement Director at the CFPB)

“The bottom line is that it creates yet more uncertainty for the bureau, for industry and for consumers. Is this bureau legitimate or not? And if not, what does that mean for all of the many decisions and actions taken by the former [CFPB] director Cordray and the current acting director, Mulvaney.

Maybe this can add to a momentum to create a bipartisan commission to finally resolve this, and to give everyone a commission that…avoids the wide pendulum swings that have been happening. This requires a legislative fix, which is challenging of course.”

Kaplan-Lawrence
Lawrence Kaplan, Of Counsel, Paul Hastings

Lawrence Kaplan, Of Counsel, Paul Hastings

“Typically, in a case like this, you would have a circuit split, where now you have one circuit saying yes and one circuit saying no. And ultimately that would go up to the supreme court. But you could have the administration saying ‘We’re not going to defend this.’ [Given the administration’s unfavorable attitude toward the CFPB], it’s likely that you’re not going to see anyone vigorously defend the agency.

As for alternative lenders, [these] are state issues. And as a result, [lenders] are not off the hook…At the end of the day, everyone will still have to comply with a patchwork of state laws. You’re really taking away the federal hammer. So, [certain cases] may no longer be a federal case. Now, in some ways, be careful what you wish for, because now you have to face 50 executioners [because] a lot of the states would defer to and join with the feds.”

 

Gusto Enables Employees to Choose Their Own Payday

June 21, 2018
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Josh Reeves-GustoGusto announced today the launch of Flexible Pay, a new feature that allows employees to choose their own pay schedule. Employees will no longer have to adjust their finances around employers’ typical twice monthly payments.

“My kids have a better payroll system than I do,” said Josh Reeves, CEO of Gusto, in reference to kids who babysit or mow lawns and get paid immediately after the job is done.

With Flexible Pay, employees can get paid weekly or for work they did the previous day. Gusto gives an advance to the employer to pay the employee. Since this service is brand new, Gusto will be making these loans and keeping them on their own balance sheet. But Gusto spokesperson Rick Chen told deBanked that they are currently in talks with banks.  

“Employees are essentially giving loans to their employers,” Chen said regarding the current system.

While Gusto is a payroll company, it is trying to disrupt the payday lending industry and other online lenders that focus on short-term lending. So far, this service is free. Gusto charges neither the employer nor the employee. The only catch is that the employer has to use Gusto’s payroll system in order to get this perk for its employees. The hope is that this program will incentivize employees to ask their employers for this perk and Gusto will gain new clients, according to Chen.

Founded in 2011, Gusto has over 60,000 payroll customers nationwide and offices in San Francisco and Denver.

 

LendUp Adds Top Capital One Veterans to Its Board

June 21, 2018
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Sasha Orloff
Sasha Orloff, CEO, LendUp

LendUp announced today that Capital One co-founder Nigel Morris joined as board chair, and Frank Rotman, an early Capital One employee and its longtime Chief Credit Officer, joined as board member.

LendUp Co-founder and CEO Sasha Orloff is delighted about this, but not surprised.

“Our mission is to help people have a path to better financial health, which involves helping people improve their credit score and learn better financial behavior,” Orloff said.

He acknowledged that, unlike most banks, Capital One has focused on expanding credit to those with lower credit scores, which is exactly what LendUp focuses on. Orloff told deBanked that half of all Americans have a credit score of 680 or below, yet most banks and fintechs look to serve the top half. LendUp serves the bottom half.

“So it’s no surprise that our board now has Nigel Morris from Capital One and includes Blake Buyers from Google Ventures,” Orloff said. “It’s like an incredible dream to be able to have the best in technology analytics and the best in building financial services, together.”

LendUp provides an alternative to payday lending by offering unsecured loans between $100 and $1,000. LendUp launched a credit card last year that has been so popular, the company was unable to issue more cards and now has a waiting list of 250,000 people, Orloff said.

Prior to establishing LendUp in 2011, Orloff worked on the credit risk team at Citigroup and said one thing that really stood out for him was a study Citigroup helped conduct that revealed that the average person with a subprime credit score will pay $250,000 to credit card companies throughout their life. He wanted to change this. He also mentioned that one’s credit score is based primarily on two factors: on-time repayment and access to credit that you don’t use.

“So we design our loans and our card products to help people make sure they’re paying on time and make sure that they’re only using the credit that they need.”

Orloff said that LendUp places an emphasis on financial education. LendUp actually offers customers more money at lower rates if they take the company’s education courses.

LendUp also offers helpful perks like allowing the borrower to pick the day they want to repay, which Orloff said is a first. And unlike other credit card companies that usually offer either one or zero payment reminder alerts, LendUp sends three reminder alerts which they have found to be very helpful for their customers.

For busy people with children and often more than one job, Orloff said, “the first alert is a reminder, the second is like ‘oh, ok I’ll get to this,’ and the third is ‘ok, I’ve got to pay this now.’”

Based is San Francisco, LendUp employs 250 people.

Lendio Giving Program Funded $70,000 in Microloans Through Kiva

June 20, 2018
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Brock Blake HeadshotLendio announced today that Lendio Gives, its employee contribution and employer matching program, has provided more than $70,000 in microloans to 2,800 underserved entrepreneurs in 78 countries through Kiva. Kiva is a nonprofit with a crowdfunding model that connects lenders to low-income entrepreneur borrowers. These microloans can be for as little as $25.

“At Lendio, we talk about ‘fueling the American Dream,’” Lendio CEO Brock Blake told deBanked. “That’s what we’re passionate about and what we’re driving. At Kiva, their mission is helping entrepreneurs throughout the world.  So it was a natural extension to choose Kiva.”

According to Kiva’s website, Kiva emphasizes character over credit, and uses social underwriting to assess the creditworthiness of its borrowers. To date, Kiva has provided $1.2 billion in loans in 85 countries for everything from water and sanitation needs to working capital for small markets, restaurants and artisans.

The Lendio Gives program with Kiva started in 2016 and, according to a company statement, for every loan facilitated on the company’s marketplace platform, a percentage of the fee is donated to Kiva.

Back in April, Lendio announced that its Turndown program has facilitated nearly $60 million in loans in less than a year since it launched last summer. The Turndown program allows participating lenders to refer declined borrowers to the Lendio marketplace where borrowers can get funding elsewhere.

“The Turndown program is going extremely well,” Blake said. “It’s really helped us grow.”

Blake said that Lendio will be releasing numbers on the Turndown program within the next month or so.

Based in Salt Lake City, UT, Lendio was founded in 2011 and also has an office in New York. Of about 150 employees, 100 work at the headquarters in Salt Lake City and 50 work in New York.

 

Stacking Lawsuit Results in Settlement Before Trial

June 19, 2018
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A lawsuit between RapidAdvance and Pearl Capital over tortious interference will not be going to trial after all, deBanked has learned. Originally scheduled to begin on June 25th, the parties have reportedly reached a settlement.

Neither party would respond for comment.

RapidAdvance filed its lawsuit against Pearl in November 2015 with the hope that they could set a precedent against “stacking.”

The suit was filed in the Circuit Court of Maryland under Small Business Financial Solutions, LLC v. Pearl Beta Funding, LLC, Case No. 411478-V.