LendingPoint Hires Citibank Veteran as New CFO
February 1, 2018
LendingPoint, the Atlanta-based online balance sheet lender, announced today that Citibank veteran Tony Martino would be joining the company as CFO. This comes less than one month after the company’s acquisition of LoanHero, a fully integrated, one-stop-shop loan origination and payments platform. LoanHero helps merchants provide access to consumer finance, increase revenue and eliminate friction at point of sale.
Martino, who worked at Citibank for 18 years in multiple roles including CFO for the bank in Israel and Turkey, said he thinks that LendingPoint’s acquisition of LoanHero “triples the size of the markets available to us.”
LendingPoint focuses on making loans to what it calls “near prime” consumers. The company defines “near prime” to include personal-loan applicants with FICO scores from 600 to 700, according to an earlier discussion with AltFinanceDaily. LendingPoint has even trademarked “NEARPRIME” as a single word in all capital letters.
The company’s CEO, Tom Burnside, told AltFinanceDaily in the fall that it received $2.5 billion worth of loan applications in September alone.
“We are delighted to add Tony Martino to our team at LendingPoint,” Burnside said. “His deep experience with multi-product balance sheet lenders as well as his experience in rapidly growing markets match perfectly with where we are in our journey at LendingPoint.”
LendingPoint is not yet four years old and this will be Martino’s first time working at a startup. He told AltFinanceDaily that he’s very excited about this challenge, but acknowledged that his work overseas in emerging markets, like Poland and Turkey, was a lot like working at a startup.
“Although [LendingPoint] is new,” Martino said, “the employees have a depth of experience here.”
Catching Up With LendingPoint
November 6, 2017
At Money2020, we sat down with Chief Executive Officer Tom Burnside and Chief Strategy Officer Juan Tavares, both of LendingPoint, an online consumer lender we examined in the July/August magazine issue. Not mentioned in that story is Tavares’ background at Avanzame Latin America, a merchant cash advance company based in the Dominican Republic. Burnside, however, originally started on the consumer side at First Data, before working for 13 years at CAN Capital, until he left and launched LendingPoint.
The lender focuses on near prime consumers and has even trademarked the word “NEARPRIME.” Their algorithm, which processes data from dozens of APIs in 5 seconds, handles the heavy lifting, the secret sauce of which they could not disclose. “You could use 3,000 attributes but maybe actually 57 attributes could become your core,” Tavares says. Their “credit-first” mentality has allowed the company to build a healthy performing portfolio. And “credit-first” doesn’t necessarily mean FICO scores, Burnside says, it’s about “predictives” to price accordingly for the risk you take. “How you run [the variables] together, that’s the magic,” they say together.
An interesting initiative that they’re now just ramping up, Tavares says, is partnerships with hospitals that allow patients to determine their deductible expenses and obtain credit on the spot to pay for it. Fitting into their “point of need” strategy, Tavares say “We’re at the intersection between credit and payments.”
Burnside says that LendingPoint was on par to finish with $28 million in funded loans for the month of October. “Demand is not the problem,” Tavares interjects. “We’re tempering growth to make sure that we grow wisely.”
And the market to expand that growth is big despite the numerous tech companies competing in the lending space. Burnside reports the company receiving $2.5 billion worth of loan applications in September alone. 60% of their applications come in through mobile devices. Peak application hours are lunch time and late at night, sometimes as late as 1 or 2 in the morning, they say. The entire loan application process can be done on mobile without them ever having to talk to anyone. Tavares qualifies that by saying that doesn’t mean that they take shortcuts.
As to whether an IPO could be in the works, Burnside deflects and says, “we’re busy building something special right now. We’ll see what happens.”
“What I will tell you is, is that investor confidence is up,” Tavares says.
LendingPoint: CAN Capital’s Close Neighbor in Kennesaw
August 14, 2017
LendingPoint, a consumer lender staffed largely by former CAN Capital employees, may have something to teach the alternative small-business finance industry about creditworthiness. Three-year-old LendingPoint claims to go beyond FICO scores to bring each applicant’s sense of fiscal responsibility into sharper focus.
But first, let’s examine the CAN Capital connection. Four or five members of LendingPoint’s top management team came to the company after lengthy tenures at CAN Capital, a LendingPoint official says. That includes Tom Burnside, LendingPoint’s CEO and founder, and Franck Fatras, the company’s president and chief operating officer. Both worked 13 years for CAN Capital, with Burnside leaving as chief operating officer and Fatras departing as chief technology officer, according to biographies posted online.
All told, about 30 of LendingPoint’s 100 or so employees – a total that includes outsourced positions – formerly labored at CAN Capital, according to Fatras. Many put in considerable time at CAN Capital, holding jobs there in management, corporate governance, legal affairs, risk, sales, operations, IT, marketing, analytics, design, customer service, partner success and success delivery, online reports say.
Geography no doubt encourages CAN Capital employees to consider LendingPoint when it’s time to move on to another job. Both companies maintain headquarters in office parks in the Atlanta suburb of Kennesaw. In fact, the two companies operate half a mile apart, both of them just off of Cobb Place Boulevard Northwest, according to Google Maps and Directions.
Great news! Our new logo has OFFICIALLY made it's mark on our new building. What do you think?#Finance #LendingPoint #Logo pic.twitter.com/cpUIQvLy2w
— LPLoans (@LPLoans) March 13, 2017
The way Fatras tells it, LendingPoint hasn’t raided CAN Capital’s workforce. “We post the job, and they end up responding,” he says. “When they’re known quantities and people we have a lot of respect for, we just end up making it work.”
Moreover, LendingPoint’s connections with other companies don’t begin or end with CAN Capital. Some of the people in top management met when they worked at First Data Corp. and Western Union, Fatras recalls. Juan E. Tavares, co-founder and chief strategy officer, and Victor J. Pacheco, chief product officer, came from those relationships, he says.
Regardless of where they became acquainted, Lendingpoint’s leadership team has come together to form a direct balance-sheet consumer lender specializing in what they call a “near prime” clientele. The company defines the phrase “near prime” to include personal-loan applicants with FICO scores from 600 to 700, Fatras says, adding that the segment’s not sub-prime and not prime. The company has even trademarked “NEARPRIME” as a single word in capital letters, and it appears that way on the company website. It regards those consumers as “deserving yet underserved,” Fatras notes.
To qualify those applicants for credit, LendingPoint considers “behavior,” such as work history, education, and timeliness with paying rent, utility bills and cell phone bills, Fatras says. “A lot of what we do is identify patterns,” he says. “It’s all about asking the right questions.” The process requires tapping into multiple sources to collect the data, he observes.
In a blog published online soon after LendingPoint was launched, executives Burnside and Tavares claim that most credit models search for ways to say no to applicants, while their company uses big data to find ways of saying yes. LendingPoint algorithms predict risk with great precision, they say.
In a newspaper opinion piece that ran about the same time, Burnside and Tavares maintain that their model examines cycles in an applicant’s life to pinpoint upward and downward trends. A consumer on the way up deserves a loan, according to the theory.
The company’s willingness to study information that resides outside credit scores did not originate with the CAN Capital connection, Fatras says. “The model is unique and the data structure we are using is unique,” he says. “It’s all about understanding the credit story of the person.”
Latin American lending practices had some influence on LendingPoint, Burnside and Tavares write in one of their editorial pieces. Lenders there review factors other than credit scores because the scores aren’t readily available in some countries, they write.
To analyze that type of non-FICO information, LendingPoint has developed its own internal scoring model and then automated the process, spending a lot of time to develop the technology, Fatras continues. Once again, asking the right questions determines the meaning that the company can extract from the data, he emphasizes. Otherwise, the information’s just not that beneficial, he says.
When consumers come to the LendingPoint website and answer five or six questions, they can receive a firm offer of credit in an average of seven seconds and sometimes as quickly as four seconds, Fatras maintains. The offers are contingent upon the company underwriting department’s validation of income and other figures, ne notes, adding that “we’re pretty happy with the infrastructure we’ve built.”
LendingPoint collects on the loans with automatic payments from customers’ savings or checking accounts twice a month, according to the company website. Deducting the payments twice a month helps customers with budgeting, the site says. Consumers can borrow up to $20,000 and pay it back in 24 to 48 months.
The system was devised by top management with combined experience of more than a century in credit and risk, Fatras says. When those executives with so much commercial lending experience gather around the conference table to talk about the business, the possibility of lending to small businesses occasionally comes up in the conversation.
But Fatras doubts the company will make that move to the commercial side anytime soon because companies in the alternative small-business finance industry are competing for 5 million to 6 million potential customers while the country has 50 million near-prime consumers. “The space is so big where we are,” he says. “The demand could be over a billion dollars a month. We have a lot of room in front of us for growth.”
With that seemingly infinite market, LendingPoint has been growing at a healthy pace, Fatras says. The company, which was self-funded for the first year, made its initial loan in January 2015. In 2016, it did $150 million in business, he notes. By the middle of this year, the company had made a total of $250 million in loans to 25,000 consumers, he says.
It’s a business model that members of the alternative small-business finance community might do well to emulate, Fatras suggests. “There could be a lot of cross-pollination,” between consumer and commercial loans when it comes to going beyond FICO, he says.
LendingPoint executives that were formerly at CAN Capital
Tom Burnside, CEO
formerly a COO and president at CAN
Franck Fatras, President and COO
formerly a CTO at CAN
Mark Lorimer, Chief Marketing Officer
formerly a CMO at CAN
Dave Switzer, Chief Analytics Officer
formerly a VP at CAN
Joe Valeo, EVP of Strategic Development
formerly an EVP at CAN
Lending Industry Expert Joe Valeo Appointed President of SmallBusinessLoans.com
October 20, 2023NEW YORK SmallBusinessLoans.com (SBL) is pleased to announce the appointment of Joe Valeo as its new President. With over 35 years of experience in finance and sales, Valeo brings a breadth of knowledge to his executive leadership role at SBL, where he is committed to making the “right fit” lending solutions more accessible to small business owners.
In his previous positions, Valeo gained strategic development and consumer/business lending experience, serving financial services organizations such as LendingPoint, where he held the position of EVP/GM for POS merchant lending and direct-to-consumer loans. Before that, at Capital Access Network, he led sales strategy and management. His extensive background in payment services to merchants at First Data Corporation and Citicorp, managing e-commerce, ISOs, and franchises, as well as his experience managing acquirer and issuer relationships with key financial institutions at VISA, uniquely positions him to lead SBL to new heights.
Valeo’s vision for SmallBusinessLoans.com is straightforward and ambitious. His growth strategies include connecting with his deep finance industry network and implementing financial and business solutions to meet SMBs’ needs.
With his leadership, SmallBusinessLoans.com is positioned to:
- Be the preeminent destination for small businesses seeking financing and related business services digitally. The SBL platform cuts out time-consuming research and matches small businesses with trusted lenders who offer a variety of financing to suit every business need.
- Provide a simple, efficient application journey to help small businesses qualify for the right product and solution, ensuring easy access to financing and business services.
- Assist business owners in meeting immediate financing needs, helping them thrive in the long run. SBL serves various industries, including agriculture, commercial trucking, construction, landscaping, medical practices, and more.
Known for his problem-solving skills and quick thinking, Valeo is excited about leading a team of dedicated bridge-builders who will connect businesses and consumers to the funding they need to build their businesses and improve their lives. His commitment to customer-centric solutions makes him an ideal fit for SBL.
Valeo expressed his enthusiasm for his new role, “I strongly believe we’re doing something special, different, and market leading. Our mission is to provide a simple and easy way for businesses to access financing and business solutions.”
As passionate advocates for small businesses, Valeo and the SBL team are eager to converse with potential partners and business owners seeking small business financing and operations solutions.
For more information and to connect with us, please visit us at: www.SmallBusinessLoans.com.
About SmallBusinessLoans.com (SBL)
SmallBusinessLoans.com (SBL) helps small business owners connect with their best financing solution. With a commitment to simplifying the lending process and making it easy for business owners to find trusted, reliable lenders, the SBL platform matches business owners with lenders who offer fast funding, flexible terms, personalized options, and more to help small businesses thrive. SBL aims to become the go-to digital destination for small businesses seeking financing and business services. For more information, go to www.SmallBusinessLoans.com
Contact:
Susan Almon-Pesch
sue@speschialpr.com
858-205-0516
Financing Fertility
January 6, 2023
Ever heard of financing in vitro fertilization? LendingPoint offers financing opportunities for IVF to help women trying to get pregnant. On average IVF can cost anywhere from $15,000 to $30,000. That’s not cheap. LendingPoint is widely known in the consumer lending space but the range of why borrowers are looking for financing is wide.
“We have some really impactful financing opportunities where we’re financing IVF programs for women to get pregnant, which is probably some of the most lovely stories that we get to hear and an impact that we get to do on someone’s life,” said Amanda Flashner, Chief Experience Officer at LendingPoint.
Different treatments have different price points and different needs. LendingPoint partners with many merchants so that they can offer their own customers what they need at the point of sale. Other types include medical, dental, and home improvement businesses, for example.
Flashner was recently appointed Chief Experience Officer (CXO) which is a new executive position for the company altogether. Advocating on behalf of their customers, she is responsible for their beginning-to-end experience, making sure it’s personalized to the customer centricity that they’re building.
“It’s a really exciting time. I like to say our customers have always been the heart of our company and they are, and our CEO (Tom Burnside) has been an incredible advocate for the customer experience practice that I helped build here from the ground up at LendingPoint, but now our customers really have a seat at that table, helping make big decisions on their behalf, so that’s really exciting.”
CXO is not commonly heard of like CFO or COO but Flashner said she does see this role becoming more important in an executive committee of other companies.
Where Fintech Ranks on the Inc 5000 List for 2020
August 12, 2020Here’s where fintech and online lending rank on the Inc 5000 list for 2020:
| Ranking | Company Name | Growth |
| 30 | Ocrolus | 7,919% |
| 46 | Yieldstreet | 6,103% |
| 351 | Direct Funding Now | 1,297% |
| 402 | GROUNDFLOOR | 1,141% |
| 486 | LoanPaymentPro | 946% |
| 534 | LendingPoint | 862% |
| 539 | OppLoans | 860% |
| 566 | dv01 | 830% |
| 647 | Fund That Flip | 724% |
| 1031 | Fundera | 449% |
| 1035 | Nav | 447% |
| 1053 | Fundrise | 442% |
| 1103 | Bitcoin Depot | 409% |
| 1229 | Smart Business Funding | 365% |
| 1282 | Global Lending Services | 349% |
| 1360 | CommonBond | 327% |
| 1392 | Forward Financing | 319% |
| 1398 | Fundation Group | 318% |
| 1502 | Fountainhead Commercial Capital | 293% |
| 1736 | Seek Capital | 246% |
| 1746 | PIRS Capital | 244% |
| 1776 | Braviant Holdings | 240% |
| 1933 | Choice Merchant Solutions | 218% |
| 2001 | Fundomate | 212% |
| 2257 | Lighter Capital | 185% |
| 2466 | Bankers Healthcare Group | 167% |
| 2501 | Fund&Grow | 165% |
| 2537 | Central Diligence Group | 162% |
| 2761 | Lendtek | 145% |
| 3062 | Shore Funding Solutions | 127% |
| 3400 | Biz2Credit | 110% |
| 3575 | National Funding | 103% |
| 4344 | Yalber & Got Capital | 76% |
| 4509 | Expansion Capital Group | 70% |
Marketplace Lending Association Members Take Steps To Help Borrowers During The Coronavirus Crisis
March 17, 2020
Members of the Marketplace Lending Association are taking steps to alleviate financial pressure facing borrowers during the recent crisis.
“This includes providing impacted borrowers with forbearance, loan extensions, and other repayment flexibility that is typically provided to borrowers impacted by natural disasters. During the time of payment forbearance, marketplace lenders are also electing not to report borrowers as ‘late on payment’ to the credit bureaus,” a letter to senior members of Congress signed by Exec Director Nathaniel Hoopes states. “Members are also waiving any late fees for borrowers in forbearance due to the COVID-19 pandemic, posting helplines on company homepages, and communicating options via company servicing portals.”
Members of the MLA include:
- Affirm
- Avant
- Funding Circle
- LendingClub
- Marlette Funding
- Prosper
- SoFi
- Upstart
- College Ave Student Loans
- Commonbond
- LendingPoint
- PeerStreet
- Yieldstreet
- Arcadia Funds, LLC
- Citadel SPV
- Colchis Capital
- Community Investment Management
- cross river
- dv01
- eOriginal
- Equifax
- experian
- Fintech Credit Innovations Inc.
- FutureFuel
- Laurel road
- LendIt
- pwc
- Scratch
- SouthEast bank
- TransUnion
- tuition.io
- VantageScore
- Victory Park Capital
- WebBank
Kabbage to Acquire Orchard Platform Markets
April 14, 2018Update 4/26/18: The acquisition is now confirmed
Kabbage is set to acquire Orchard Platform Markets, a provider of lending data and investment advisory services, according to a Bloomberg report yesterday. However, neither company has confirmed this and both companies were unreachable today.
Orchard was founded in 2013 by David Snitkof, Angela Ceresnie, Jonathan Kelfer, Matt Burton and Phil Rosen. Burton and Kelfer both worked previously at Google and Snitkof and Ceresnie worked at Citigroup and American Express. The company has raised nearly $60 million in three rounds, according to Crunchbase, and investors include Spark Capital, Thrive Capital, as well as Vikram Pandit, former CEO of Citigroup and John Mack, former CEO of Morgan Stanley. Indeed, no shabby group.
As this acquisition has not yet been confirmed, the amount Kabbage might be paying for the company is also unknown. According to Orchard’s website, it employs 31 people (including executives) in an office in Manhattan’s Flatiron district, known as a hub for tech startups. The Bloomberg story indicates that co-founders Burton and Snitkof will join Kabbage at its New York office. Founders Ceresnie and Rosen no longer work for Orchard. With headquarters in Atlanta, Kabbage is one of the largest small business lenders in the country and recently launched a new feature of its loan product at LendIt.
Despite the big name investors Orchard had when it started, some suspect the company may have lost momentum. AltFinanceDaily called a number of leaders in the alternative lending space and none were willing to comment until the acquisition was made certain.





























