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LeaseQ and ARF Financial Partner to Automate Hospitality Equipment Financing

September 12, 2017
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BOSTON (Sept. 12, 2017)LeaseQ, an online marketplace connecting business owners, equipment sellers, and lenders to make selling and financing equipment fast and easy, today announced a national partnership with ARF Financial, the only FDIC-compliant financial lender that provides short-term, unsecured business loans and lines of credit for restaurant/hospitality business owners and retailers nationwide.

“We are unique in having our own sales organization, and LeaseQ gives our loan consultants around the country a lease product with instant quotes,” ARF Financial CEO Steve Glenn said. “Now we are a one stop lender offering additional products to satisfy our customers funding needs for their businesses.”

Innovations in the equipment finance industry will continue to increase flexibility and convenience for customers, according to the Equipment Leasing and Finance Association’s (ELFA) Top 10 Equipment Acquisition Trends for 2017. Automation fuels advances in instant quotes, soft credit pulls, same-day approvals, one-day funding and blockchain for secure, multi-party transactions – many of which are available today through LeaseQ and ARF Financial.

“You can finance a car in an hour, but not a walk-in freezer to start or expand a restaurant,” said Vernon Tirey, co-founder and CEO of LeaseQ. “One-day funding is a trendy thing to say in equipment financing, but when the restauranteur or hotel manager presses the button to get financing, it has to work. We’re advancing our technology and partnering with lenders like ARF Financial who understand the value of automation to make it happen.”

LeaseQ and ARF Financial offer automated, flexible equipment financing for hospitality merchants who are frustrated with the time it takes to get a bank loan, or who cannot get a bank loan at all, including those:

  • Expanding a facility
  • Upgrading equipment
  • Adding a location and renovating the property
  • Managing working capital, and more

There are currently 150 lenders on the LeaseQ platform serving 28 vertical markets. Learn more at www.leaseq.com.

About LeaseQ
LeaseQ is an online marketplace connecting businesses, equipment sellers, and equipment finance companies to make selling and financing equipment fast and easy. The LeaseQ platform is a free, cloud-based SaaS solution with a suite of on-demand software and data solutions for the equipment leasing industry. LeaseQ provides business process optimization (BPO) and information services that streamline the purchase and financing of business equipment across a broad array of vertical industry segments. Learn more at www.leaseq.com.

About ARF Financial
ARF Financial LLC is a California licensed lender that sources short-term business loans and lines of credit for restaurant/hospitality and retail merchants nationwide. Since 2001, ARF has filled the void between traditional bank financing and less attractive venues of obtaining capital, giving merchants the ability to maintain control of their business, be more profitable and meet their financial goals. The company is managed and staffed by industry veterans with extensive experience in restaurant finance and small to medium retail industries.

For more information on their services, visit their website at www.arffinancial.com. You may fill out their contact form at www.arffinancial.com/contact, call 1-866-702-4430, or send an email to funding@arffinancial.com for inquiries.

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ShopKeep Joins the MCA Crowd. Are Loans Next?

September 8, 2017
Article by:
Michael DeSimone ShopKeep CEO
Above: Michael DeSimone, ShopKeep, CEO

ShopKeep, an iPad-based cloud-connected technology company designed around POS and payments for small businesses, is expanding into MCAs with the launch of ShopKeep Capital in recent days. With its move into funding ShopKeep joins an area that competitor Square already operates in. But while both companies have unlocked the secret of customer acquisition they are not targeting the same small businesses.

Meanwhile this latest move into MCAs is just a step in what ShopKeep CEO Michael DeSimone describes as an evolution, one that could potentially lead to small business lending sooner than later.

“We had a lot of interest from our customers,” said DeSimone, referring to the nearly 25,000 small businesses that are on ShopKeep’s payment and software platform. ShopKeep Capital extends funding offers to eligible small businesses on the ShopKeep platform, and funding is approved within a couple of days.

Playing Field

ShopKeep is entering a space – MCAs — that is only getting more crowded, with the recent addition of iPayment, for instance. And while ShopKeep and Square operate in a similar market segment, they’re targeting different SMBs.

“Our customers tend to be larger than Square and more complex in their business models,” said DeSimone, pointing to the example of a restaurant with numerous employees and multiple locations. On average, customers on the ShopKeep platform generate sales of $350,000 per year.

As a payments company, ShopKeep’s customer acquisition strategy is tied directly to its software and payments businesses.

“THE CLOSER YOU ARE TO THE ACTUAL CUSTOMER, THE MORE YOUR OPPORTUNITY IS TO BE ABLE TO BE TOP OF MIND WHEN THEY NEED SOMETHING”


“This leverages our ability to understand the small business data flowing through our POS platform and manage it the way we do payments based on the premise of greater visibility into their business by the virtue of our payments platform,” said DeSimone.

He is quick to point out that ShopKeep is built on technology, and he said like every other part of the economy tech is disintermediating some parties and bringing others closer to the outcome they desire.

“The closer you are to the actual customer, the more your opportunity is to be able to be top of mind when they need something,” he said. “They have huge amounts of interaction with us. This level of interaction predicated on technology is really what creates the ability to have a relationship with the merchant to then be able to offer them a range of different products and services.”

Pocket_App_Austin_Treaty-Oak_Distillery-1DeSimone describes ShopKeep more as a technology play than a funder.

“We have a lot of information most other providers of capital aren’t going to have unless they ask merchants to do a lot of work,” said DeSimone, pointing to an underwriting model that is almost 100% automated.

“We’ve built it to be largely pre-underwritten We only offer advances based on running the merchant through our underwriting model to see who comes up as a good candidate for ShopKeep Capital and making it available to them. We continually tweak the algorithm to make sure we are not being too tight or too loose,” he added.

Funding is the third revenue stream for ShopKeep, with software and payments representing the other two legs of the revenue stool. Meanwhile ShopKeep Capital is turning to its balance sheet to fund MCAs, but that is not the long-term plan.

“Currently it’s coming off our balance sheet, but it won’t be for very long. We have had several discussions with funding partners. And we expect over time we will migrate to more of a loan product and away from MCAs. We will explore the features and benefits of both to understand both our perspective and that of our customers,” said DeSimone, adding that there could be more clarity about the direction of this evolution in the next six months.

If ShopKeep does move into loans, the company could open up the platform to investors. “They are debt funds looking for returns and specific underwriting criteria. They will buy an advance or a loan eventually from what we originate. That’s the model we think we’ll go toward,” he said.

Something DeSimone and other lenders might want to keep in mind is a credit gap that exists among small businesses today, as described by Karen Mills, a senior fellow at Harvard Business School and former administrator of the U.S. SBA.

“There is no doubt that online lenders have identified an important segment that is not getting enough access to credit, but data also shows that borrowers are less satisfied with the interest rates and repayment terms from online lenders than from traditional banks. So even if small businesses are getting the loan, if it is not at an appropriate price, we should still consider this a credit gap,” Mills said.

Future Plans

While loans could be the next growth phase for ShopKeep Capital, this could be one of many new directions that the payments company takes. For instance, with key competitor Square, which boasts a market cap of approximately $10 billion, in pursuit of obtaining a bank charter, they could have company someday.

“It’s an interesting idea. It’s still very early for us but we’re not ruling anything out at this point,” DeSimone said.

For the near term, however, he is focused on ShopKeep Capital, for which he expects to make a couple of key hires for soon. “In my mind, this helps us to be more competitive with Square. I think it’s a really good service for our customers and it fits very well into the other pieces of our business,” said DeSimone.

You’re Under Arrest: Funder Takes Extreme Measures to Counter Data Theft

September 4, 2017
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employee arrested for data theft at yellowstone capital

Above: Yellowstone Capital CEO Isaac Stern takes the lead as police escort out the arrested employee behind him

An employee of Yellowstone Capital was arrested last month, according to a source who witnessed the events. At the company’s behest, local police entered Yellowstone’s Jersey City office and handcuffed a female employee who was believed to be engaged in the theft and misappropriation of financial data.

A spokesperson for Yellowstone would not comment on the events nor release the name of the accused. AltFinanceDaily nevertheless obtained a photo of the individual being escorted out by police. We’ve blurred out her face to protect her identity. Several of those present, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said that she had been employed by the company for several years.

When asked more generally about the risks of data leakage in the industry, Yellowstone Capital CEO Isaac Stern said that his company is operating on the edge of hyper vigilance. “Yellowstone is investing tons of time, money, and effort to prevent data theft,” Stern said. “We are doing everything in our power, everything, to address it, and we have even enlisted the assistance of an outside security firm.”

The incident does not stand alone. Last year, a man on Long Island pled guilty to attempted criminal possession of computer related material after being implicated in a merchant cash advance backdooring scheme.

Backdooring is industry jargon for when a broker submits a potential deal to a funder and that file ultimately leaks out to third parties whom the broker did not authorize to handle the information. Often times brokers will point their fingers at the funder for mismanaging data they suspect is escaping out the back door. Such accusations can be detrimental to a funder’s reputation not only with the broker community but also with customers they advance funds to. That’s why some funders are taking data security to new levels.

Greenbox Capital, for example, a funder in Miami, FL told AltFinanceDaily back in March that their company designed proprietary software to monitor the actions of all users on their system, which allows them to know who clicked on what when, and for how long. They also developed algorithms to detect suspicious behavior and their security team receives an alert whenever it gets triggered. Greenbox had initially conducted a 90-day probe and discovered that two employees were stealing data. They don’t want that to ever repeat itself.

Using a cell phone to take pictures of confidential data may not help rogue employees evade detection, according to several funders who have said there are methodologies to spot this behavior but declined to explain what they are. And the risk of getting caught may not merely be termination, as evidenced by arrests that have taken place thus far. These funders say there have been other arrests over the last few years but that the companies did not want to draw attention to them.

Indeed, of the two backdooring-related arrests AltFinanceDaily has reported on now, neither would officially confirm them.

“We take ISO information extremely serious,” Yellowstone’s Stern explained, lamenting that the value of deal data can inevitably foster rogue behavior, which they are constantly monitoring for.

Put another way, the personal information of a single performing client could be worth as much as $10,000 or more if it gets into the wrong hands. That’s because it could be used to offer that client a loan, advance or other service. The profit could come in the form of a commission, interest, RTR, a closing fee, or even something more nefarious like stealing their identity.

“We know about the pressure people face to illegally transmit data,” Stern said. “They think we don’t know, but we know the industry. Ultimately we will catch you.”

Credibly Selected to Service Bizfi’s $250M Portfolio

August 30, 2017
Article by:

credibly logo
Troy, MICH. (August 31, 2017) – Credibly, a leading findata small and medium-sized business (SMB) lending platform, announced today that the company is now servicing BizFi’s $250 million portfolio and 5,200 merchants.  Since 2005, BizFi had been a leading capital provider to SMBs and in 2016 was one of nation’s top three largest originators of merchant cash advances.  Numerous SMB direct lenders vied for the BizFi portfolio. Credibly was chosen due to their proprietary data science driven portfolio management strategy.

Credibly also announced that it has crossed the $500 million milestone in capital deployed to tens of thousands of SMBs across the U.S. This is separate from the $250M portfolio the company is now servicing from BizFi.

“Acquiring the servicing rights of BizFi’s portfolio is a testament to our data-driven approach and laser focus on the working capital needs of small businesses,” said Ryan Rosett, Credibly’s Founder and Co-Chief Executive Officer. “We welcome our new customers and are committed to ensuring that their growth capital needs are met.”  

In addition to servicing the BizFi portfolio, Credibly is working with both sales partners and merchants to provide additional working capital to the businesses in BizFi’s portfolio. Credibly’s data science team has the ability to analyze BizFi’s twelve years of data and remittance history, which will allow Credibly to better service both the BizFi and Credibly portfolios. Further, BizFi’s data enhances Credibly’s risk management, scoring models, and portfolio management tools. 

The Small Business Association (SBA) estimates that traditional banks still reject approximately 90 percent of SMB loan applications. Since 2010, Credibly has emerged as a proven platform that leverages data science and analytics to provide SMBs with a simple and intuitive way to access critical working capital.  The company addresses the fundamental capital needs of SMB owners across a broad credit spectrum and through every stage of a business’s life cycle.
 
Main Street SMBs across a wide variety of industries that include restaurants, retail stores, salons, spas, dry cleaners, auto body shops, and doctors’ offices, all rely on Credibly to secure the necessary capital they need to grow.
 
Credibly has achieved widespread industry recognition for its risk management, data technology, and data driven approach. For more information on Credibly, please visit www.credibly.com.
 
About Credibly
Founded in 2010 and with offices in Michigan, Arizona, Massachusetts, and New York, Credibly is a best-in-class Fintech platform that leverages data science and analytics to improve the speed, cost, and choice of capital available to small businesses in the United States. Credibly is dedicated to creating a superior customer experience that meets the needs of all small businesses, regardless of product need or credit profile.
 
Learn more at www.credibly.com. Follow Credibly @credibly360.

Media Contact:
Tracy Rubin / Olivia Levis
JCUTLER media group
323-969-9904
tracy@jcmg.com / olivia@jcmg.com

Ford, MCA Funders Take Pages from Tech-Based Underwriting

August 29, 2017
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FordAlternative lending fever has spilled over into the auto sector, evidenced by the financing arm of automaker Ford’s decision to move beyond FICO and deeper into machine learning for credit decisions. Ford is moving toward alternative lending strategies in an attempt to capture a wider swath of borrowers, including those with “limited credit histories,” and bolster auto sales.

Ford’s decision comes on the heels of a study with fintech play ZestFinance, the results of which favor a machine-learning based approach to credit decisions.

Ford’s decision comes on the heels of a study between Ford Credit and fintech play ZestFinance, the results of which favor a machine-learning based approach to credit decisions.

“There is absolutely no change in Ford Credit’s risk appetite. Ford Credit is maintaining the consistent and prudent standards it has applied for years. This enhanced ability to look at data will help us more appropriately place applicants along the full spectrum of the risk scale. The result will be some that some people may appear on that scale who did not before, and some applications that are approved today might not be approved in the future. The risk appetite remains the same,” Ford Credit spokesperson Margaret Mellott told AltFinanceDaily.

Until now, there has been no aspect of machine learning in Ford Credit’s underwriting process.

“The study showed improved predictive power, which holds promise for more approvals … and even stronger business performance, including lower credit losses,” according to Joy Falotico, Ford Credit chairman and CEO, in a press release.

Ford is targeting consumers with a lack of credit history, especially the millennial generation.

Tech-Driven Underwriting

While Ford embraces tech-driven underwriting, this style is already knit into the fabric of the MCA and online lending communities.

To name a few, Upstart takes a machine learning approach. FundKite developed algorithmic-based underwriting. UpLyft’s underwriting process has an automated component to it.

technologyAlex Shvarts, CTO and director of business development at FundKite, a balance-sheet based funder, said the company has been writing algorithms since the early days. Now the tech- and algorithm-driven funder wants to expand into small business lending in Q1 2018.

“We’re building our technology to the point that by Q1 next year, we will get into automated loan products. Our technology will be able to underwrite loan products within seconds. We have a lot of data we put together, which allows us to price deals and make offers relatively quickly,” he said.

By a lot of data, Shvarts is referring to hundreds of data points that are used to measure merchant performance. FundKite, which has a default rate of far less than 10 percent, takes the data, reworks and combines it, leading to a fast result.

“Besides the data points we look at the merchant from a collections point of view. If this person or business runs into trouble, could they go out of business or would they be okay?” he said.

That’s where the human element to the underwriting process comes in.

Human Element

While FundKite relies on algorithm-driven underwriting, the funder is not running an online app yet. There is still a need for human participation surrounding data input, information that is then verified by machines.

“The human element is entering the information correctly, and the machine spits out predetermined pricing based on the business data points and industry,” said Shvarts, adding that FundKite views that information in the context of micro-trends in the industry as well as the overall market environment.

“We know that during certain seasons some merchants perform worse than others. The numbers say the merchant should get this, but we dig a little deeper and say no, this merchant can’t handle this much of an advance and repayment along those lines. The final touches are done by humans. Our technology is advanced so that we are able to get to that point a lot faster and more accurately,” Shvarts said.

Second Opinion

Michael Massa, CEO and founder of Uplyft Capital, points to a hybrid approach in the company’s credit underwriting, referring to the automated scoring portion of Uplyft’s underwriting model as a second opinion. “We believe there must be a hybrid of human and automated technology,” said Massa.

“THEY’RE LIKE THE PAYPHONE AND WE’RE THE IPHONE. THEY’RE YELLOW CAB AND WE’RE UBER”


Uplyft relies on a proprietary scoring model. The model includes an automated function that attaches a unique rating to the small business based on certain features in the prospective borrower’s profile, such as a home-based versus business location and the number of years the company has been in business, to name a couple.

“It’s only as second opinion for our underwriters, really,” he said, adding that cash flow and affordability are major drivers of the credit decision. “In most cases we price at max affordability for the client while protecting them from overleveraging their accounts, allowing us to provide real help and establish merchant loyalty.”

old payphoneSecond opinion or not the automated function is part of what makes Uplyft a fintech play, setting the funder apart from the banks. “They’re like the payphone and we’re the iPhone. They’re yellow cab and we’re Uber,” said Massa, adding better yet, “we’re Lyft.”

Uplyft is in the process of developing a trio of portals designed for merchants, sales partners and investors to be released shortly. “We are API-ing that now into our CRM,” said Massa.

Merchants can access the portal to apply for funding while sales partners use it to submit files and view a status. Investors can track their participation via the portal. The new portals will be available on the website and through a mobile app that Uplyft is in the final stages of developing.

Uplyft also recently inked an exclusive partnership with an undisclosed software company allowing merchants to link their bank account to the application, capturing six months of actual PDF bank statements in the process.

“It can help us with the initial credit decision and when we’re conducting final verifications. We get the actual bank statement. It’s a legitimate bank statement, not a rendition,” said Massa.

Fintech & Auto Finance

As for the auto industry, don’t be surprised to hear about further collaboration between the automakers and the fintech market. “Financial technology is key … as fintech can contribute to an even more seamless and better personalized vehicle financing experience for the consumer,” according to the Ford press release.

The AltFinanceDaily Golf Outing 2017 Was a Success

August 28, 2017
Article by:

debanked flagsThanks to everyone that attended AltFinanceDaily’s first ever industry golf outing at Marine Park Golf Course in Brooklyn, NY. And thank you to all the sponsors who helped make it a success!

A PHOTO ALBUM IS NOW LIVE

deBanked Golf Outing Display

Official photos from the event should be available soon. In the meantime, follow us on Instagram to see them when they come out.



P.S. The inaugural conference for MCA and business loan brokers is COMING SOON. Visit http://brokerfair.org to receive updates on Broker Fair 2018.

Tech Banks: Will Fintech Dethrone Traditional Banking?

August 20, 2017
Article by:

This story appeared in AltFinanceDaily’s Jul/Aug 2017 magazine issue. To receive copies in print, SUBSCRIBE FREE

On Halloween, 2014, a largely unknown, Boston-based financial institution, First Trade Union Bank, embraced high-technology, went paperless, and officially adopted a new name: Radius Bank.

Will Fintech Dethrone Traditional Banking?In reinventing itself, Radius did more than dump its dowdy moniker. It shuttered five of its six branches, re-staffed its operations with a tech-savvy team, instituted “anytime/anywhere” banking services, and offered customers free access to cash via a nationwide ATM network. And it teamed up with a fistful of financial technology companies to offer an impressive array of online lending and investment products.

Today, the bank’s management boasts that, using their personal mobile phones, some 2,700 people per week are opening up checking accounts, funneling $3 million in consumer deposits into the bank’s virtual vault. That’s a stark contrast from a decade ago when the financial institution was being rocked by the financial crisis and “we couldn’t get anybody to walk into our branches,” says Radius’s chief executive, Mike Butler.

“We tried to leave that old bank behind,” he says. “We’re a virtual retail bank now, an efficiently run organization that offers high levels of customer service and Amazon-like solutions.”

Radius Bank is not alone. At a moment when there is much discussion — and hand-wringing — over the future of seemingly outmoded, highly regulated community banks, a coterie of small but nimble banks is exploiting technology and punching above its weight. Almost overnight, this cohort is combining the skill and hard-won experience of veteran bankers with the lightning-fast, extraordinary power afforded by the Internet and technological advances. As a result, these small and modest-sized institutions are redefining how banking is done.

In addition to Radius Bank, independent banks winning recognition for their bold, innovative – and profitable — exploitation of technology, include: Live Oak Bank in Wilmington, N.C., which adroitly parlays technology to become the No. 2 lender to business and agricultural borrowers backed by the U.S. Small Business Administration; Darien Rowayton Bank in Darien, Conn., which is making a name for itself with coast-to-coast, online refinancing of student loans; and Cross River Bank in Fort Lee, N.J., which does back-end work for a passel of fintech marketplace lenders.

“THESE ARE COMPANIES THAT UNDERSTAND THE VALUE OF A BANK CHARTER”


Interestingly, there’s not much overlap. Each of the banks goes its own way. But what all the banks have in common is that each has struck out on its own, each hitting upon a technological formula for success, each experiencing superior growth.

“These are companies that understand the value of a bank charter,” says Charles Wendel, president of Financial Institutions Consulting in Miami. “They have to work under the watchful eyes of state and federal regulators. But their cost of funds is low and they can offer more attractive rates. Because they’re less likely (than nonbank fintechs) to disappear, run out of money, or get sold,” the bank expert adds, “they also have the image of stability with customers.”

These modest-sized banks are emerging as not only pacesetters for the banking industry. Along with making common cause with the fintechs — which had promised to disrupt the banking industry – they’re even beating the fintechs at their own game.

Cary Whaley
Above: Cary Whaley, First VP, ICBA

“Classically, community banks have looked to technology partners to provide technological innovation,” says Cary Whaley, first vice-president for payment and technology policy at the Independent Community Bankers of America, a Washington, D.C.-based trade group representing a broad swath of the country’s 5,800 Main Street banks. “They still do. You’re seeing more partnerships. But now you also see community banks building innovative products and services outside of that relationship. You see forward-thinking banks developing their own technology to support big ideas like marketplace lending, distributed ledger technology, and emerging payments technology.”

With its extraordinary skill at exploiting technology, Live Oak Bank – which trades on the Nasdaq and is the only public company encountered in the cohort — has become a Wall Street darling. “While several banks have adopted an online-only model, and nearly all banks are shifting more and more delivery through online channels, Live Oak was built from the ground up as a technology-based bank,” Aaron Deer, a San Francisco-based research analyst at Sandler O’Neill Partners, wrote in a recent investment note.

Driving the success of Live Oak, which operates out of a single branch in the North Carolina seacoast town and has only been in business for a decade, is the explosive growth in its SBA lending, the bank’s “core strategy,” Deer notes. Last year, Live Oak lent out $709.5 million in SBA loans in increments of up to $5 million, the federal agency reports, making it the country’s No. 2 SBA lender. It trailed only megabank Wells Fargo Bank, the third largest bank in the U.S. with $1.5 trillion in assets, which made $838.93 million in SBA-backed loans last year.

As its SBA lending has taken off, Live Oak, which qualifies as a “preferred lender” with the federal agency, boasts assets that have nearly tripled to $1.4 billion in 2016, up from $567 million two years earlier. Those are flabbergastingly fantastic growth numbers. But just as incongruously — by nipping at the heels of Wells Fargo — Live Oak has been challenging a bank more than a thousand times its asset size for dominance in SBA lending.

And, interestingly, the bank is able to book those outsized amounts of SBA loans while lending to only 15 industries out of 1,100 approved by the government agency, slightly more than 1% of the universe. That’s up from 13 industries in 2015, and Live Oak is adding two to four additional industries yearly for its SBA loan portfolio, Deer reports. Included among the industries to which the bank made an average SBA loan of $1.29 million last year: Agriculture and poultry, family entertainment, funeral services, medical and dental, self-storage, veterinary, and wine and craft-beverage.

“WHEN YOU SPECIALIZE IN SOMETHING, YOU BECOME EFFICIENT”


The bank has a team of financing specialists dedicated to each of the designated industries. Among Live Oak’s current SBA borrowers are Martin Self Storage in Summerville, S.C.; Utah Turkey Farms in Circleville, Utah; Pinballz Arcade, Austin, Tex.; and Council Brewery Company in San Diego. Steve Smits, chief credit officer at the bank, told NerdWallet: “When you specialize in something, you become efficient. Because we do it every day and we have professionals and specialists, we tend to be more responsive and quicker.”

The heady combination of technological sophistication and banking expertise has allowed the lender to slash its loan-origination time to 45 days, about half the three-month industry average for SBA loans. To speed up loan sourcing and generation, the bank developed its own in-house technology, which led to the formation of the Wilmington-based technology company nCino, which was spun off to shareholders in 2014.

Live Oak did not return calls to discuss its lending strategies, but in SEC filings bank management declared: “The technology-based platform that is pivotal to our success is dependent on the use of the nCino bank operating system” which relies on Force.com’s cloud-computing infrastructure platform, a product of Salesforce.com.

Natalia Moose, a public relations manager at nCino told AltFinanceDaily in an e-mail interview: “We work with Live Oak Bank, in addition to more than 150 other financial institutions in multiple countries with assets ranging from $200 million to $2 trillion, including nine of the top 30 U.S. banks. nCino was started by bankers at Live Oak Bank who found the logistics of shuffling paperwork among loan stakeholders to be unwieldy, inefficient and time-consuming.

Above Video: The nCino community

“nCino’s bank operating system,” Moose adds, “leverages the power and security of the Salesforce platform to deliver an end-to-end banking solution. The bank operating system empowers bank employees and leaders with true insight into the bank, combining CRM (customer relationship management), deposit account opening, loan origination, workflow, enterprise content management, digital engagement portal, and instant, real-time reporting on a single secure, cloud-based platform.”

Live Oak, meanwhile, is not resting on its technological laurels. According to Deer’s report, the bank’s parent company, Live Oak Bancshares, has formed a subsidiary to inject venture capital into fintech companies. It’s already taken a small equity stake in Payrails and Finxact, “the latter of which is developing a completely new core processor to compete against the old legacy systems used by most banks,” the Sandler O’Neill analyst writes. “Quite simply,” he asserts elsewhere in his report, “the company is far beyond any other bank we cover in its technical capabilities and the growth outlook remains outstanding.”

Darien Rowayton Bank - Via Google StreetviewFive hundred and thirty-three miles due north along the Atlantic coast in southeastern Connecticut, Darien Rowayton Bank is also experiencing tremendous success as a lender using a home-grown technology platform. State-chartered by the Connecticut Department of Banking and regulated as well by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., the $600 million-asset bank is winning attention in banking circles for its online student-loan refinancing.

A few years ago, DRB, as it is known, was looking to go beyond mortgage and commercial lending — “the bread and butter for most community banks,” bank president Robert Kettenmann explained to AltFinanceDaily in a telephone interview – and was somewhat at a loss. The bank considered but then rejected the credit card business. Finally, DRB struck paydirt refinancing student loans. “Our chairman really seized on the opportunity,” Kettenmann says, adding: “It’s a $35 billion market.”

Thanks to the National Bank Act, it’s able to operate in all 50 states. As a regulated commercial bank with a strong deposit base, DRB can also offer low rates well below any state’s usury prohibitions.

What is most striking about DRB’s program is its nationwide targeting of upwardly mobile, affluent young professionals. According to a PowerPoint presentation obtained by AltFinanceDaily, all of the bank’s super-prime borrowers, who are mainly in the 28-34 age bracket, have a college degree and a whopping 93% have graduate degrees. Average income is $194,000.

Rising PhoenixForty-eight percent of those refinancing student loans with DRB are doctors or dentists and another 22 percent are pharmacists, nurses or medical employees; only about 20% are paying off their law degrees or MBAs. The heavy concentration of refinancing in the medical field reduces economic risk in an economic downturn. Forty-three percent of the borrowers are home-owners, the rest are renters – and prime candidates for an online, DRB-financed mortgage.

(Once known as “yuppies” today this cohort is “known by the acronym ‘HENRY,’” remarks Cornelius Hurley, a Boston University banking professor and executive director of the Online Lending Institute, explaining the initials stand for “High Earners Not Rich Yet.”)

The Connecticut bank partnered with a third-party on-line vendor, Campus Door, when it commenced making student loans in 2013. In the fall of 2016, however, DRB built out its own, proprietary loan-origination system, Kettenmann reports, emphasizing that CampusDoor had been an excellent partner but that the bank wanted to exercise end-to-end control over the process. DRB employs a seven-pronged, “omni-channel” marketing approach that includes interactive marketing, affinity partnerships, digital/online advertising, direct mail, mass-media advertising, and public relations/brand awareness campaigns.

DRB’s online enrollment provides “pre-approved rates” in less than two minutes with final approval on rates in 24-48 hours. Refinancers can complete the online application at their own speed. Through May, 2017, DRB had made $2.48 billion in refinancing to 20,000 student-loan borrowers, with only ten defaults, five of which were attributed to deaths or “terminal illness.”

On Yelp! the bank has received a batch of reviews ranging from very favorable, five-star (“I had a truly wonderful experience”) to one-star (“awful” and “truly a nightmare”). Many fault the application process as laborious, describing it as “time-consuming.” But for those who have succeeded, like the reviewer who counseled “patience,” the result can be “the lowest rate with DRB…my loan payments went down $100 a month.”

Cross River BankJust about an hour’s drive south and taking its name from its proximity to New York city just over the George Washington Bridge is New Jersey-based, state-chartered Cross River Bank, which has a reputation as a partner-in-arms to fintech companies. “We’re both users and producers of technology,” declares Gilles Gade, the bank’s chief executive.

The bank provides “back-end” and infrastructure support to 17 marketplace lenders that offer a suite of lending products including personal loans, mortgages and home-equity loans. Following loan origination by a fintech company – Marlette Funding, Affirm, Upstart, loanDepot, SoFi, and Quicken Loan, among other partners — Cross River does the actual underwriting. Last year, Gade reports, the bank underwrote 1.9 million loans valued at $4-4.5 billion, about 10% of which Cross River kept on its books. The bulk of the loans are sold “back to the marketplace lenders” or to a third party. “We’ve created a high-velocity automated system,” he says.

Gade is manifestly unapologetic about the bank’s role in assisting fintechs in their competition with the banking establishment. “We’re a banking infrastructure services provider for those who want to disrupt the banking system,” he says. “Consumers expect a lot better than they’ve been getting from traditional banking services.”

Radius BankBack in Boston, Radius Bank’s chief executive reports that forging partnerships with fintechs to provide the full panoply of online banking services was no easy proposition. In its mating ritual, Radius not only had to determine that a fintech company’s offerings were sound and that it had the right characteristics – most especially “a long-term, sustainable business model” – but that its corporate culture meshed comfortably with Radius’s.

After meeting with as many as 500 fintechs and after a fair amount of trial and error, Radius formed partnerships with LevelUp, which enables customers to make mobile payments; with online lender Prosper, for refinancing consumer debt and “credit rehabilitation”; with SmarterBucks, for refinancing student loans; and with online investment firm Aspiration Partners – which allows investors to name their own fees and markets itself to a predominately middle-class audience as the firm “with a conscience.”

Radius employs advertising on social media websites and employs “psychographics” to appeal to “anyone who is zealous about using technology, not necessarily millennials,” Butler says. The data show that 65% of adults in the U.S. would prefer to use a traditional bank and have face-to-face interactions with a teller, he notes, leaving the remaining 35% as Radius’s target audience.

Christopher Tremont, executive vice-president for virtual banking, told AltFinanceDaily that a typical Radius customer is 42 years old, lives in Boston, New York, Chicago “or one of the bigger cities in the West,” is a “technophile,” earns $75,000 a year, and has $100,000 in personal assets.

“COMMUNITY BANKS LOVE THAT PART OF THE BUSINESS—LENDING MONEY”


Radius’s performance since it went paperless has been stellar. The bank has seen a rapid rise in deposits, spurting to $782 million through the first quarter of 2017, up from $565 million at year-end 2014. With little fee income but ample deposits and low-cost funds, Radius realizes the bulk of its revenues – and profits — on the interest-rate spread generated from its loan portfolio.

The bank booked $43.5 million in SBA loans last year, ranking it in the top 50 banks on the SBA’s league tables, while carrying another $105 million in its commercial leasing business at the end of the first quarter this year. Loan generation is driving asset growth, which are currently at $973 billion, up more a third from $726 million in 2014, and Butler expects the bank’s assets to top $1 billion sometime this year.

“Community banks love that part of the business—lending money,” Butler says.

The Scoop on iPayment’s MCA Renaissance

August 18, 2017
Article by:

Tomo Matsuo iPayment Capital

Above: Tomo Matsuo, SVP, iPayment Capital

iPayment, a small business payment processing company, is placing a bet that it could be better the second time around in the MCA industry. iPayment Capital, which is scheduled to launch in the fall, is iPayment’s second foray into the merchant cash advance market. In conjunction with this expansion iPayment tapped Tomo Matsuo as senior vice president to spearhead iPayment Capital.

iPayment’s announcement comes on the heels of industry peers Square Capital’s Q2 loan origination of $318 million and PayPal’s acquisition of Swift Financial. Rather than remain on the sidelines, especially with access to data on some 137,000 small businesses, iPayment is making its move.

“Before Daily ACH loans and MCAs, we all started with the split payment MCA, and it’s exciting to see the recent renaissance of that mechanism with companies like Square and PayPal making it a key product feature. Transaction-based underwriting and variable payback schedules have become much more mainstream thanks to companies like Square and Amazon,” said Matsuo.

iPayment’s timing for getting back into MCAs is apparent but also coincides with the industry being held under a microscope for some questionable practices, not the least of which involves stacking, which can get small businesses in over their heads. Matsuo said the industry has a shared responsibility to fix this.

“I think there’s an opportunity for the industry to clean up some of the stacking and other practices. We all need to do more to better align ourselves with the needs and long-term health of the customers,” said Matsuo.

“TRANSACTION-BASED UNDERWRITING AND VARIABLE PAYBACK SCHEDULES HAVE BECOME MUCH MORE MAINSTREAM THANKS TO COMPANIES LIKE SQUARE AND AMAZON”


Meanwhile David O’Connell, senior analyst at Aite Group, offered his thoughts on the future role of MCA in small business funding: “Although we will always have merchant card advances in large volumes and these will be important to SMBs seeking funding, some of this volume will be replaced as the practices of alternative lenders become more entrenched: the provision of capital to an SMB based on a variety of data sets that achieve a fuller view of an SMB’s ability to repay only some of which is related to credit card volume.”

Balance Sheet Funder

Similar to its predecessor product iFunds, iPayment Capital will be a balance sheet MCA origination business. The company has the benefit of hindsight with iFunds, which was before Matsuo’s time there, as well as any missteps by the industry from which to pull.

“My job is to launch and build our own balance sheet MCA product, and we have a management team committed to the initiative,” said Matsuo. “iPayment is in a unique position because of our long history with the product — as a funder, split payment technology provider, and referral partner — and have a lot of experiences to build upon. There’s a great team at iPayment with a ton of institutional knowledge.”

iPayment’s access to customer data and insights certainly gives the company an edge. “It’s a crowded market going after a finite universe of customers. From a customer acquisition standpoint, iPayment has the benefit of having 137,000 customers,” said Matsuo.

iPayment also has solid industry partners including the likes of RapidAdvance with whom the company serves merchant customers. iPayment will continue to work with RapidAdvance and others on MCA. “We recently had the opportunity to strengthen our balance sheet, and we believe investing in iPayment Capital makes great business sense,” said Matsuo.

Matsuo pointed to opportunities within the smaller merchant segment for MCAs. iPayment Capital’s average funding size will be somewhere between Square Capital’s range of $6,000 – $7,000 and that of ACH alternative lenders at about $40,000. “We’ll be right in the middle,” he said.

Matsuo, a Bizfi alum, officially started in his new role on July 1, and he has no interest in looking in the rearview mirror. “At the end of the day, it comes down to pricing risk appropriately and maintaining proper controls,” said Matsuo, adding: “We all want to grow, but there are responsible ways of doing so.”