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Are Fintech Companies a Step Closer to Getting a Nonbank Charter?

September 15, 2016
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Pushing the agenda further on a limited-purpose charter for non banks, the head of the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) Thomas Curry at an industry event on Tuesday said that the bureau is investigating “unique risks” that fintech companies might pose to the banking system and the economy.

Curry said that the true test for the industry will come under a “less favorable credit cycle.”

He revisited the topic of creating a limited-purpose charter for fintech companies akin to credit card banks and other non-deposit taking entities. The agency which was evaluating its authority to extend the same status to fintech companies might be a step closer. Should that happen, “the institutions who receive the charters will be held to the same strict standards of safety, soundness and fairness that other federally chartered institutions must meet,” Curry was quoted as saying in Reuters.

Short of advocating for a charter, the Innovative Lending Platform Association (ILPA) with companies such as Kabbage, OnDeck and CAN Capital have suggested a licensing system that would eliminate the duplicative patchwork of federal and state laws. 

Apart from this, fintech companies have also urged regulators to put up a united front by coordinating better among themselves and to take a principle-based approach instead of a rules-based one.

Funding The Great White North

September 13, 2016

Canada

As of last year, 98 percent of Canada’s employers were small businesses compared to 0.3 percent (2,933) large companies. Given this and what we know about Canada’s banking oligarchy, dominated by five large banks, it was inevitable that American alternative lenders would go looking for greener pastures in Canada.

When OnDeck set foot in the country two years ago, it accelerated the alternative lending movement by offering loans up to $150,000 CAD. But OnDeck wasn’t the first to discover the Canadian market. Merchant cash advance companies such as Principis Capital and AmeriMerchant (today Capify) have been there since 2010. Principis actually draws close to 15 percent of its business volume from Canada. But the credit that’s due to OnDeck is for expanding the horizons of small businesses who have been conditioned to think that lending begins and ends with banks. The crop of Canadian alternative lenders who do not otherwise have the resources for similar blitzkreig marketing are pleased with the industry’s promotion in general.

“We are happy that some of the bigger US players are coming up here and they are spending millions of dollars on advertising,” said Bruce Marshall, vice president of British Columbia-based Company Capital. “These companies raise awareness of the industry to a higher level and with us being a smaller company, we can ride on their coattails,” he said.

Company Capital has been operating as a balance sheet lender for five years and has provided term loans, working capital loans, merchant cash advances and ‘cash lines’ which are similar to lines of credit. For lenders such as Company Capital which makes loans in the range of $30K – $50K, the presence of bigger players like OnDeck saves them from consumer education-oriented marketing campaigns. “We cannot compete with the advertising of big companies but it works in our favor of creating awareness and becoming more mainstream,” Marshall noted.

And this not only helps the Canadian companies but also smaller US companies that feel comfortable entering a market with a leader. OnDeck’s presence nudged Chad Otar, founder and managing partner of New York-based commercial finance brokerage Excel Capital Management into considering Canada as a viable market. “We saw OnDeck go there and thought that there is some kind of money we can make,” he said.

Funding in the US and CanadaBut for OnDeck, Canada might just as well be another large US state. Most American companies including OnDeck, Principis Capital and Excel Capital run their Canadian operations remotely, treating it much like an extension to their US business with similar products.

“Our range of business is virtually the same in Canada as in the US. We don’t need to have an operation center there,” said Jane Prokop, CEO of Principis Capital. The company approaches Canada just like the US with accounts and customer service being handled in a similar fashion. “It’s a very manageable extension of the US market,” Prokop said. “It’s a smaller market so someone who enters Canada cannot expect the same kinds of volume as in the US.”

It also certainly helps to be spread across the same time zones and in such close proximity where a majority of the country also speaks the same language. If it was that easy though, shouldn’t we have seen more companies doing this?

“The fundamentals of the Canadian market are different. Our banks are established and trusted and in general do quite a good job, so the opportunity for market expansion is different than in the US,” said Jeff Mitelman, CEO of Thinking Capital, one of the country’s first alternative lenders.

Prior to Thinking Capital, Mitelman founded and ran Cardex, Canada’s first ISO which offered lending products with payment services. And that competitive edge helped him recently to partner with payment solution company Everlink to expand its customer base and offer loans online. The company previously secured credit facilities worth $125 million from two of the biggest banks in the country, The Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce and Nova Scotia.

Picking up the same strategy, some American companies decided to bank on these big banks (pun intended) for their success. For instance with Kabbage, it made sense to license its automated platform to Nova Scotia Bank and to rely on them to deploy capital while Kabbage provides the technology and customer experience. “We saw that Canada is ripe for technology but the differences in regulation among other things made us go the partner route,” said Peter Steger, head of business development at Kabbage.

The advantages of having an incumbent customer base, the brand equity and the supply of capital usually outweighs the costs and inconveniences of maneuvering in an unfamiliar business environment that only a few firms have the bandwidth for, some companies contended.

Secondly, there is a lack of reliable and robust data necessary for making lending decisions. Since only a handful of large financial institutions dominate the landscape, the data reported is limited to a small number of players and the outputs from credit bureaus may not be sufficient for making a credit decision. “The availability and access to government and financial data is scarce in Canada compared to other markets,” said Jeff Mitelman. “Most of the data relationships that fintech companies rely on, need to be developed on a one-to-one basis and is often proprietary information.”

Having the data presented in the right format can save a lot of underwriting time. Companies in Canada find the government and financial data available to be scanty and in less than ideal form. David Gens, CEO of Vancouver-based Merchant Advance Capital noted that Canadian merchants are slower to adopt technology which adds to the woes of online lenders. “Believe it or not, some Canadian merchants still use fax,” he said.

Even as the country plays catch up, Canadian lenders consider the market to be large enough for many players. “At this time, education is more important than competition,” said Mitelman.

quebecCanada’s geographical dispersion and regional differences however are peculiar. The four provinces of Quebec, Alberta, Ontario and British Columbia make up 86 percent of the population and the greater part of the economic activity. And Quebec is often avoided, in part because of the bilingual mandate that requires businesses to advertise and produce materials in French. OnDeck and Company Capital both do not operate there, for example.

The cultural differences can also determine how customer relationships are handled, and being a part of that culture has given Canadian companies an upper hand. “It does definitely help to have a home advantage in terms of understanding the local peculiarities,” said David Gens. “Marketing to Canadian merchants is also different — being aggressive might not work very well here and they like to know they are dealing with someone nearby.”

For financial brokers such as Otar, Canadian usury laws can appear restrictive. As per Canadian interest rate rules, Under Section 347 of the Criminal Code (Canada), interest rates exceeding 60 percent per annum are termed “criminal rates of interest” and “interest” in the Criminal Code is broadly defined as a broad range of fees, fines and expenses which includes legal expenses.

“US lenders have had to change their way of doing business. Since, APR is less here, if your product is a loan contract, you will be restricted and you will have to service low risk for low rates,” said David Gens.

Even so, the business emerging out of Canada may now be supplemental for American lenders and the potential for growth beneficial to diversification.

Alt Finance Companies Secure Place on Inc. 5000

August 29, 2016
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If the story of alternative finance has been major growth, Inc. has quantified the latest statistics through its Inc. 5000 2016 list. Here’s a handful that you might recognize:

Rank Company Growth Rate (3 years)
155 Capital Advance Solutions 2328%
176 Channel Partners Capital 2074%
183 Kabbage 2027%
335 Lighter Capital 1144%
346 Quick Bridge Funding 1114%
368 Swift Capital 1047%
705 Credibly 558%
763 Square 523%
912 Reliant Funding 439%
1259 Blue Bridge Financial 307%
1260 loandepot 307%
1392 InterMerchant Services 276%
1576 Fora Financial 240%
1726 National Funding 215%
1928 Tax Guard 193%
2096 Bankers Healthcare Group 177%
2227 Bizfi 164%
3113 Envision Capital Group 109%
3569 Cashbloom 88%
4217 CAN Capital 65%
4691 Capify 50%

Lend Us An Ear: Women in the Industry Speak Their Mind

August 11, 2016

L-R: Danielle Rivelli, Kathryn Petralia, Heather Francis

L-R: Danielle Rivelli, Kathryn Petralia, Heather Francis

The majority (52.5 percent) of employees in the banking and insurance industries are women — if this sounds strange, that’s because it is, considering only 1.4 percent eventually go on to become CEOs. While the male dominance is not apparent at the mid-management executive level, the sex ratio is rather skewed on top. Needless to say?

AltFinanceDaily grabbed the opportunity to speak to three women in the alternative business financing industry, charting their journey, reliving their experience, knowledge and the lessons that got them to where they are. Here are excerpts from the interviews.

Back to Roots

For some, their careers are not a deliberate choice, but a serendipitous stumble.

Heather Francis, CEO of Florida-based Elevate Funding, who went to college to become a healthcare professional entered finance by happenstance. “I went to school for health promotion and education at the University of Florida and graduated in 2007,” said Francis, who comes from a family of entrepreneurs and is a fifth generation Floridian. “I found that the position I was looking for was not a necessity for companies, it was a luxury like setting up gyms, that people were not willing to pay for at that time.”

Francis landed her first job in finance with a private equity firm called Strategic Funding in Gainesville, Florida where she set up the firm’s merchant cash advance business. After spending seven years there, in 2014, she set up Elevate Funding which in a short span of 16 months has made over 1,000 advances to businesses.

For Kabbage Loans cofounder Kathryn Petralia too, fintech was a far cry from wanting to be an English professor. A graduate from Furman University, Petralia’s tryst with finance was when she got roped into a project, valuing companies using data compression tools. Riding on building her tech expertise, she founded her first company at 25 which made store catalogues digital. “I was a kid and did not know anything about marketing or sales, so I ended up selling the startup to the company which helped me build it.” The venture however gave her an in into finance and she went on to work for Revolution Money and eventually built Kabbage Loans.

But for Danille Rivelli, VP of Sales at United Capital Source, however, the jump wasn’t as big or unusual. Although finance was not originally on her mind as an art major, it was a natural path from what she began doing to acquire real-world work experience during school, selling mortgages. Rivelli changed her academic focus and went on to get a business degree from Briarcliff College, where she also played on the softball team.

“A year or two into college, I started doing mortgages, making 5 percent commissions. It was natural and it just kinda flowed,” said Rivelli whose first job out of college was on the sales floor at Merchant Cash Capital, now Bizfi. “I wanted to get out of mortgages and I was hooked when I saw the sales floor, it was fun and upbeat.” She was also one of the company’s youngest salespeople at the time.

Women Can Do No Wrong. Or Can They?

When we asked what women need to do differently at workplaces? The answer was quick, resounding and not surprisingly – be more assertive.

“Women think from the heart more than the mind,” said Rivelli. “I find myself in situations sometimes where I know that I should be ‘leaving the emotions out of it’ so that I’m not second-guessing myself as much.” But it’s what helps her build lasting relationships with clients. “I think most effective sales people will agree that the most important part of our job is listening. You want to really know and understand who your client is and what they’re looking for before you try to sell to them.”

According to Petralia, who thinks of herself as ‘one-of-the-guys,’ the problem lies in overplaying the differences between men and women.I think we perpetuate the stereotype that men are supposed to behave a certain way and women aren’t. I notice that when men crack a joke or use a curse word, they immediately apologize to the women in the room. We are making that happen,” she said. Petralia’s strategy in such scenarios is to swing to the other side and initiate banter. “I am very comfortable with dirty jokes and f-bombs.”

“Men are really good at faking it ’til they make it. They position themselves as experts when they are not but women are unsure of jumping into the deep end when they are not sure they can swim and that’s a big part of what we have to overcome,” Petralia said.

Francis is on the same page, “Men have no problem tooting their horn, but women don’t do that. We cannot expect anyone to stand up for us. If you think you’re getting looked over for a promotion, walk up to your boss and say it,” she said. Francis talks about most of the struggle being personal rather than operational. “I will admit to us having a need to be right… right about decisions, right in arguments and right about where the furniture goes,” she says jokingly. “A lot of what led me to start Elevate was my belief in that you could service the risky credit market without taking advantage or putting insane demands on the performance of the portfolio and still be successful… having that theory validated and accepted and in the end, being right.”

What’s the hurdle, what’s the race?

And the assertiveness comes from one’s belief in their struggle and the value of that struggle. Petralia reminisces of a time when as a scrimping 25-year-old entrepreneur, she pitched a tent and stayed on a campsite in San Francisco while raising money for her startup. Two decades later, she runs a billion dollar lending company. Petralia recognizes that not all women have the same opportunities.

“When I was raising money for Kabbage, I realized that I had only been in one or two meetings where a woman wasn’t bringing me water,” said Petralia who believes that bringing diversity requires work and companies should set targets and find qualified diverse candidates.

Kabbage allows for 12 weeks of maternity leave but that pales in comparison with other countries, says Petralia. “The problem with women is, we have the babies. Women have to choose between their careers and personal life and we are not even close to making that situation better. The key time in their 30s when they are having kids, they come back to compete with younger people who are cheaper.

The movement to make it better, according to her should begin with creating a system of incentives like better child care, easy commute to work etc. where women don’t have to choose between advancing their career and having a child.

And her other gripe is limp handshakes from men. “Shake women’s hands better. Men give this limp, deadfish like handshake at conferences to women and it’s the worst.”

According to Francis, equal footing comes from striving for professional equality and representation. She says being a woman opens many doors but that’s where it stops. “People will talk to you nicely if you’re a woman but they don’t think you are the person making the decision. You have the ability to start the conversation but no one thinks that you can finish it.”

And for Rivelli, that means giving it your all. “The point is to keep being so good that no one can ignore you,” she said.

Non-prime Lender Elevate Expands Credit Facility to $545 Million

July 26, 2016

Texas-based online lender Elevate expanded its credit facility by $100 million with Chicago-based alternative credit investment firm Victory Park Capital, reaching $545 million in total.

Elevate lends to non-prime borrowers with products like ‘Rise,’ an unsecured personal loan and ‘Elastic,’ a bank-issued line of credit in the US and ‘Sunny,’ a short-term loan product in the UK.

The company has originated more than $3 billion in nonprime credit to 1.4 million consumers to date and plans to use the funds to expand its suite of online credit products. The lender delayed its IPO in January this year where it planned to raise $79 million in a public offering, thanks to a down market. Nevertheless, it has grown originations by 80 percent annually to $189 million in Q1 this year.

Victory Park Capital’s other prominent investments in this sector includes Kabbage, Avant, CommonBond, LendUp and Orchard.

Online Consumer Lenders Stumble, While Online Business Lenders Stay On Their Game

July 8, 2016
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Comedy / Tragedy Masks

Something is happening in the land of marketplace lending, painful setbacks. And it’s mostly on the consumer side.

Avant, for example, plans to cut up to 40% of its staff, according to the Wall Street Journal. Prosper is cutting or has cut its workforce by 28%. For Lending Club it’s by 12% and for CommonBond by 10%. And then there’s Kabbage, whose consumer lending division playfully named Karrot, has been wound down altogether.

Kabbage/Karrot CEO Rob Frohwein told the WSJ that Karrot was put to sleep about three or four months ago, right around the time that it became obvious to industry insiders that the temperature had changed.

Ironically, the person who best summed up the problem is the chief executive of a lender that rivals the ones that are suffering, but has announced no such job cuts of his own. In March, SoFi CEO Mike Cagney told the WSJ “In normal environments, we wouldn’t have brought a deal into the market, but we have to lend. This is the problem with our space.” And that is a problem indeed because the success of these businesses becomes entirely dependent on making as many loans as possible so they can raise more capital to make as many more loans as possible so they can raise more capital. Perhaps the end game of that dangerous cycle is to go public, but the market has gotten a glimpse now of what that might look like, and they’re not very impressed with Lending Club.

The pressure of living up to the expectation of eternal loan growth manifested itself when Lending Club manipulated loan data in a $22 million loan sale to an investor, but it was a problem all the way back to their inception. In 2009, the company founder made $722,800 worth of loans to himself and to family members, allegedly to keep up the appearances of continuous loan growth. It was never found out until last month, seven years later.

That is a perfect example of the vulnerability that SoFi’s CEO spoke of months ago when he said, “we have to lend.” Because if they don’t lend or investors won’t give them money to lend, well then we’d probably see things like massive job cuts, falling stocking prices, and a loss of investor confidence. And that’s what we’re seeing now.

This wave of cuts is not affecting much of the business lending side

Despite the rush to the exits on consumer lending, Kabbage’s CEO is still very bullish on their business lending practice, so much so that they intend to increase their staff by more than 25%.

And in the last month alone, four companies that primarily offer merchant cash advances, have announced new credit facilities to the aggregate tune of $118 Million, one of whom is Fundry which landed $75 Million. Meanwhile, Fora Financial secured a $52.5 Million credit facility in May. Fora offers both business loans and MCAs.

And here’s one big difference between the consumer side and the business side. While online consumers lenders have found themselves trapped on the hamster wheel of having to lend, there is very little such pressure on those engaged in business-to-business transactions. Sure, their investors and prospective investors want to see growth, but only a handful are following the Silicon Valley playbook of always trying to get to the next venture round fast enough, lest they self destruct.

Avant’s latest equity investment, for example, was a Series E round. Prosper and Lending Club also hopped from equity round to equity round, progressing on a track with evermore venture capitalists that were likely betting on the companies going public.

But over on the business side, they’re much less likely to involve venture capitalists. Equity deals tend to be one-offs, major stakes acquired by private equity firms or private family offices, sometimes for as much as a majority share. These deals tend to be substantially bigger, are harder to land, and are less likely to be driven by long-shot gambles. In other words, the motivation is less likely to be driven by the hope that the company can simply lend just enough in a short amount of time to land another round of capital from another investor.

Examples:

  • RapidAdvance was acquired by Rockbridge Growth Equity
  • Fora Financial sold an undisclosed but “significant” stake to Palladium Equity Partners
  • Strategic Funding Source sold a large stake to Pine Brook Partners
  • Fundry sold a large stake to a private family office

Business lending behemoth CAN Capital has raised all the way up to a Series C round but they’ve been in existence for 18 years, way longer than any of their online lending peers. Several other of the top companies in the business-to-business space have relied only on wealthy investors that did not even warrant the need for press.

The upside is that these companies are less vulnerable to the whims of market interest and confidence. Having a down month would not trigger an immediate death spiral, where a downtick in loans means less investor interest which means a further downtick in loans, etc.

The margins in the business-to-business side tend to be bigger too, which means it’s the profitability that often motivates investments, rather than pure origination growth potential.

There are outliers, of course. Kabbage, which has raised Series A through E rounds already, admitted to the WSJ that they still aren’t profitable. Funding Circle, which also raised several rounds, disclosed that at the end of 2014, they had lost £19.4 Million for the year, about the equivalent of $30 Million US at the time.

These facts do not mean that either company is in trouble. Kabbage is not limiting themselves to just making loans for instance, since they also have a software strategy to license their underwriting technology to banks like they have already with Spain’s Banco Santander SA and Canada’s Scotiabank. And Funding Circle enjoys government support at least in the UK where they primarily operate. There, the UK government is investing millions of dollars towards loans on their platform as part of an initiative to support small businesses.

Business lenders and merchant cash advance companies may not necessarily be on the same venture capital track as many of their consumer lending peers because it is a lot more difficult to perfect and scale small business loan underwriting. Even the most tech savvy of the bunch are examining tax returns, verifying property leases, reviewing corporate ownership documents, and scrutinizing applicants through phone interviews. While this process can be done much faster than a bank, there’s still a very old-world commercial finance feel to it that lacks a certain sex appeal to a Silicon Valley venture capitalist who may be expecting a standalone world-altering algorithm to do all the risk related work so that marketing and volume becomes all that matters. Maybe on the consumer side something close to that exists.

Instead, a commercial underwriting model steeped in a profitability-first mindset makes online business lenders better suited to be acquired by a traditional finance firm, rather than a venture capitalist that is probably hoping to hitch a ride on the join-the-fintech-frenzy-and-go-public-quickly-so-I-can-make-it-rain express train.

Consumer lenders who had to lend and are faltering lately, will now have to figure out something more long term beyond just making as many loans as possible. It might not be something that excites their venture capitalist friends, but it is crucial to building a company that will last a long time.

Morgan Stanley, Deutsche Bank and Santander Stress Under Fed’s Test

June 30, 2016

The unemployment rate is 10 percent, the stock market is worth half its value and short-term treasury rates are negative making investors pay the US government to hold their money.

This was the Fed’s hypothetical scenario for this year’s stress test for big banks, and all but three of 33 banks passed. 

Wednesday’s stress test announcement pertained to the Fed’s evaluation of how well big banks planned for risk and allocated capital under stress. The first part of the tests announced last week, examined and monitored whether big banks had sufficient capital to sail through economic turbulence, which all 33 banks passed.

Deutsche Bank, Banco Santander and Morgan Stanley were among 33 banks that felt the stress during the second round. The regulator objected to the capital distribution plans put forth by the US subsidiaries of Deutsche Bank and Banco Santander and stopped them from issuing dividends or making share buybacks and asked Morgan Stanley to submit a revised plan for “qualitative reasons.” The banks who passed the test will be able to pay out as much as two thirds of the projected net income for the next four quarters and can also continue to retain capital.

Deutsche Bank has failed the test two years in a row and Santander for three. The Fed is concerned about the banks’ ability to measure risk but in practice, the Fed’s rejection means that these banks cannot send US profits back home until they pass the test.

Santander blamed its regulatory trouble on “growing pains” and said that the bank is building up a holding company to oversee the banking unit and consumer-lending subsidiary.

In part, these capital restrictions placed on big banks under Dodd Frank is what bolsters the alternative non-bank lending sector where lenders pride themselves on being lean and agile. While the industry is still negotiating its relationship with Wall Street, total insulation from bank capital for now seems like a distant dream. Santander is an investor in Atlanta-based small business lender Kabbage and also uses its technology to underwrite loans for small businesses quickly.

Alternative Funders Continue to Look Down Under

June 29, 2016
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deBanked AustraliaAdd CapRock Services to the growing list of US-based small business funders that have joined the scene in Australia.

CapRock has formed Sprout Funding as part of a joint venture with Sydney-based family office Huntwick Holdings. Together, they will provide small businesses with loans or revenue-based MCA products up to $100,000.

What’s truly unique is that CapRock will actually be underwriting the deals from their Dallas-based office. And they hope to fund $20 million in two key Australian markets in their first year. Luke Schmille, CapRock’s CEO, told the Dallas Business Journal that he believes the Australian market is very similar to the US. “70 percent of the population is employed by small to medium sized businesses,” he said.

Other funders in Australia that have US-backing include Capify, Prospa via Strategic Funding Source, Kikka Capital via Kabbage, and OnDeck.

Last Fall, John de Bree, the managing director of Capify’s Sydney-based office, told AltFinanceDaily that he was surprised of the American interest in Australia. “The American market’s 15 times the size of ours,” he said.

One of his competitors, Lachlan Heussler, managing director of Spotcap Australia, was not so shocked. “This is a market that will evolve over time, and we think the opportunity is enormous,” he said.

In an email, CapRock’s Schmille, wrote that they were excited about the expansion abroad.