Holidays Promotions (or lack thereof) at Top-20 Banks

For the past 10 years, I’ve done a year-end post looking at holiday promotions at the largest U.S. banks. And surprisingly, fewer banks than anytime since 2004 were running holiday messages in the days before Christmas. This year, only four of the 20 largest banks referenced the holidays on their homepages. That compares to nine banks last year, eight in 2012, and 10 in 2011.

I’m at a loss to explain the retreat. My guess is that holiday promotions simply don’t drive measurable sales lift. But these are massive retail banks and I’d think that virtual holiday decorations would be in the branding budget. Perhaps that, too, was tapped out by year end.

Here are the holiday participants this year:

As usual, PNC Bank led the pack with its three-decade-long holiday CPI (Christmas Present Index). Fifth Third and Comerica were reasonably decked out for the holidays. Finally, Citizens (RBS) had a small holiday message in the lower right (see screenshots below).

While we catalogued only the top 20, many other banks and credit unions displayed creative holiday promotions and/or messaging. For example, Navy Federal Credit Union featured several holiday messages on its homepage the day before Christmas Eve (see screenshot) and Huntington Bank used an eye-catching graphic to pitch its rewards card (screenshot below).

The scrooge list: top-20 banks with no holiday promotions or graphics on 24 Dec 2014:
Bank of America, Bank of the West (BNP Paribas), BB&T, BBVA Compass, Capital One & Capital One 360 (formerly ING Direct), Chase, Citibank, Harris Bank (BMO), HSBC, Key Bank, SunTrust, TD Bank, Union Bank (Mitsubishi UFJ), US Bank, Wells Fargo, Zions Bank.

Following is a quick overview of the promotions, including a 1- to 5-bulb rating.

Previous year-end holiday posts: 2013, 2012, 2011 (big banks), 2011 (CUs/community banks), 2009 part 1, 2009 part 2, 2007, 2006, 2006, 2004

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Top-20 banks in the holiday spirit
(rated from 1 to 5 bulbs; screenshots from Tuesday morning, 24 Dec 2014)

PNC Bank

  • Animated Great Carol Comeback tied to its annual 12 Days of Christmas CPI price index (which it has published for the past 30 years)
  • Visa tie-in for holiday spending (lower left)

Score: imageimageimageimageimage

Hompage: PNC is leading with its “12 days of Christmas” price index

image

Landing page: Each of the 12 items from the famous song have humorous animations (link)

image

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Fifth Third Bank

  • MasterCard Gift Card promo (#3 in 3-promo rotation)
  • Happy holiday greeting (#2 in 3-promo rotation)

Score: imageimageimageimage

Homepage promo #3

image

Homepage promo #2

image

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Comerica

  • Gift card promo in lower-left of main homepage
  • Large gift card in main promo area on main personal page (#1 in 3-promo rotation) with engaging holiday graphics (same promo ran the last 2 years)

Score: imageimageimage

 

image

 

image

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Citizens Bank (RBS)

  • Holiday tie-in for credit card cashback

Score: image

image

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Bonus standout: Navy Federal Credit Union

  • Happy holiday message with snowman at top of page
  • Cash rewards credit card offer displayed mid-page with bright holiday colors
  • Holiday rewards reminder in lower right

Score: imageimageimageimage

image

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Bonus #2: Huntington Bank

  • Triple rewards credit card offer in mid-page with bright holiday colors

Score: imageimageimage

image

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Notes:
1. Observations taken between 6:30 AM and 8 AM, Eastern Time, on Wed, 24 Dec 2014, from a Florida IP address, running Mac Chrome browser with cookies cleared.
2. Animation from
http://www.millan.net/anims/christmas.html#

Fintech Fundings: 6 Companies Raise $21 Million Week Ending Dec. 26

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As expected with the holidays, just $21 million was invested in the fintech sector last week. It was the smallest week since we began tracking in August. The total included one Finovate alum, Bellevue, Washington-based Finsphere, which added nearly $2 million for its mobile identification technology.
The deals from 20 Dec to 26 Dec 2014, by order of size:

QwikCilver Solutions
Stored-value card technology
Latest round: $10 million
Total raised: $10 million
Tags: Credit & debit cards, prepaid, merchants, SMB, Bangalore, India
Source: Crunchbase

Aspiration
Investment management for middle-class consumers
Latest round: $4.5 million
Total raised: $4.5 million
Tags: Investings, robo-advisor, EFT; Los Angeles, California
Source: FT Partners

BitGold
Gold investing via digital currencies
Latest round: $3.5 million
Total raised: $3.5 million
Tags: Bitcoin, payments, cryptocurrency, investments; Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Source: Crunchbase

Finsphere
Mobile identify solutions
Latest round: $1.8 million
Total raised: $32.5 million
Tags: Security, mobile, authentication, identification; location, Bellevue, Washington, Finovate alum
Source: FT Partners

Finanzarel
Spanish working-capital financing marketplace
Latest round: $830,000
Total raised: $830,000
Tags: Alt-financing, working capital, factoring, P2P, person-to-person, investing, SMB; Barcelona, Spain
Source: Crunchbase

GoCoin
Merchant solutions for accepting digital currencies
Latest round: Undisclosed
Total raised: $2+ million
Tags: Bitcoin, payments, cryptocurrency, merchants, POS, acquiring; Singapore
Source: FT Partners

Fintech Fundings: 17 Companies Raise $510 Million Week Ending Dec. 19

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Last week was surprisingly busy given how close it was to the year-end holiday freeze. But two blockbuster deals, $250 million to Swedish payment company Adyen and $200 million raised in an IPO from Finovate alum OnDeck, made it one of the biggest weeks of the year.
In total, $512 million was raised by 17 fintech companies. Here there are in order of deal size (from Dec. 13 to Dec. 19):

Adyen
Multi-channel payments company
Latest round: $250 million
Total raised: $266 million
Tags: Payments, mobile, online, POS, merchants, Amsterdam, Netherlands
Source: Crunchbase

OnDeck
Online lending to small-and-medium businesses 
Latest round: $200 million (IPO)
Total raised: $610 million (of which $230 million is debt)
Tags: Lending, alt-lender, SMB, underwriting, New York City, Finovate alum
Source: Finovate

Money Forward
Japanese personal financial management services
Latest round: $12.6 million
Total raised: $17.6 million
Tags: PFM, money management, personal accounting, Tokyo, Japan
Source: Crunchbase

PeerNova
Blockchain technology
Latest round: $8.6 million
Total raised: $8.6 million
Tags: Blockchain, bitcoin, cryptocurrency, identification, trust, security, San Jose, California
Source: FT Partners

Zaio Corporation
Online real estate appraisals
Latest round: $8.2 million
Total raised: $13.5 million
Tags: Lending, mortgage, appraisal, compliance, Calgary, Alberta, Canada
Source: FT Partners

CardCash
Online giftcard exchange
Latest round: $6 million (debt from Sterling National Bank)
Total raised: $12 million (of which $6 million is debt)
Tags: Prepaid cards, gift cards, debit, Brick, New Jersey
Source: Crunchbase

InvestX
Private equity marketplace for retail investors
Latest round: $5.2 million
Total raised: $5.2 million
Tags: Investing, wealth management, private equity, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Source: Crunchbase

FolioMetrix
Investment management and research
Latest round: $5 million
Total raised: $5 million
Tags: Investing, wealth management, analytics, Portland, Oregon
Source: Crunchbase

Lendable
Consumer loan marketplace
Latest round: $3.9 million
Total raised: $3.9 million
Tags: Lending, P2P, person-to-person, investing, London, UK
Source: Crunchbase

Prairie Cloudware
Mobile payment platform for financial institutions
Latest round: $3.2 million
Total raised: $4.9 million
Tags: Payments, mobile, digital, enterprise, Omaha, Nebraska
Source: Crunchbase

Triotech
Mobile money transfers

Latest round: $3 million
Total raised: $3 million
Tags: Mobile, funds transfer, payments, Gurgaon, India
Source: FT Partners

Hello Digit
Savings automation tools
Latest round: $2.5 million
Total raised: $2.5 million
Tags: Deposits, savings, PFM, retirement, San Francisco, California
Source: Crunchbase

Splitwise
Expense sharing software
Latest round: $1.4 million
Total raised: $1.4 million
Tags: Expense management, mobile, billing, payments, PFM, Providence, Rhode Island
Source: Crunchbase

Qapital
Mobile budgeting & spending tools
Latest round: $1.3 million
Total raised: $1.6 million
Tags: PFM, money management, online banking, mobile, alt-lender, SMB, underwriting, Stockholm, Sweden, Finovate alum
Source: Finovate

Blispay
Stealth payments company (we presume)
Latest round: $1.2 million
Total raised: $1.2 million
Tags: Payments, Forest Hill, Maryland
Source: Crunchbase

BlueFin Payment Systems 
Integrated payment platform
Latest round: Undisclosed
Total raised: Unknown
Tags: Mobile payments, merchants, SMB, Atlanta, Georgia, Finovate alum
Source: Crunchbase

FreeATM
ATM finder and advertising aggregator
Latest round: Unknown
Total raised: Unknown
Tags: Marketing, advertising, ATM, Brooklyn, New York
Source: FT Partners

Fintech Fundings: 14 Companies Raise $1 Billion Week Ending Dec. 12

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Buoyed by the $865 million raised in Lending Club’s blockbuster IPO, fintech companies raised $1 billion last week. That was the largest amount since we began tracking in August. Granted, without the IPO, it was a more “normal” $135 million week.
Finovate alums accounted for all but $35 million of the total with Dynamics ($70 million), eToro ($27 million) and BehavioSec ($6 mil) joining Lending Club ($865).
Here are the deals from Dec. 6 to Dec 12: 

Lending Club
Consumers loan marketplace
Latest round: $865 million (IPO)
Total raised: $1.25 billion (includes $50 million debt)
Tags: Lending, P2P, person-to-person, loans, credit, investing, San Francisco, California, Finovate alum
Source: Finovate

Dynamics
Interactive plastic for credit & debit cards
Latest round: $70 million
Total raised: $110 million
Tags: Credit/debit cards, plastic, EMV, MasterCard (investor), Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Finovate alum
Source: Finovate

eToro
FX social trading platform
Latest round: $27 million
Total raised: $61 million
Tags: Investing, FX, mirror trading, Cyprus, Finovate alum
Source:Finovate

Insikt
Consumer loan marketplace
Latest round: $16 million
Total raised: $100+ million
Tags: Lending, direct, credit, underwriting, P2P, investing, San Francisco, California
Source: Finovate

BitReserve
Securing digital money
Latest round: $12.5 million
Total raised: $12.5+ million
Tags: Bitcoin, cryptocurrency security, San Francisco, California
Source: Crunchbase

BehavioSec
Biometric security 
Latest round: $6 million
Total raised: $8 million
Tags: Security, biometrics, Luea, Sweden, Finovate alum
Source: Finovate

Quoine
Japanese Bitcoin exchange
Latest round: $2 million
Total raised: $2 million
Tags: Bitcoin, cryptocurrency, exchange, Japan
Source: Crunchbase

WagePoint
Online payroll solutions
Latest round: $2 million
Total raised: $2 million
Tags: SMB, accounting, billing, Kitchner, Ontario, Canada
Source: Crunchbase

iFunding
Real estate investing marketplace 
Latest round: $1 million
Total raised: $1 million
Tags: Real estate, peer-to-peer lending, P2P, crowdfunding, investing, New York City
Source: Crunchbase

Financial Diligence Networks
Hedge fund compliance 
Latest round: $420,000
Total raised: $420,000
Tags: Investing, hedge funds, compliance, regulation, Boston, Massachusetts
Source: Crunchbase

Page365
Invoice & billing services
Latest round: $420,000
Total raised: $420,000
Tags: Bangkok, Thailand
Source: FT Partners

WealthMinder
Retail investment management 
Latest round: $250,000
Total raised: $250,000
Tags: Investing, advising, wealth management, Reston, Virginia
Source: Crunchbase

Avra
Bitcoin technologies & payments
Latest round: $150,000
Total raised: $150,000
Tags: Cryptocurrency, SMB, merchants, payments, Palo Alto, California
Source: Crunchbase

Tappr
Mobile payments & POS solutions
Latest round: Undisclosed
Total raised: Unknown
Tags: Payments, mobile, SMB, merchants, acquiring, Brisbane, Australia
Source: Crunchbase

Oscar Ties Health Insurance Premiums to Fitness Tracker

imageAs we speculate about the usefulness of wearables in payments and money management, an insurance startup has already launched a direct tie-in. Buzzy health insurance startup Oscar is paying customers $1 per day, up to $240 annually, when they hit their step- goal tracked on a Fitbit-like tracker from Misfit.

imageOscar has attracted $150 million in venture capital and is looking to bring modern ecommerce thinking to the massive health insurance market. The company is looking to be on the forefront of insurance tech trends, such as mobile help from physicians, easy access to records, digital communications, and transparent costs (see app here).image

How it works
Customers who buy health insurance through Oscar (available in NJ/NY only, but coming to California and Texas in 2015), are given a free Misfit step-tracker (retail value = $50, currently discounted 50%). The tracker syncs to Oscar’s mobile app (see inset) and credits customers $1 each day a step-goal is achieved. Goals start at a relatively easy 2,000 to 3,000 per day and ratchet up to the 8,000 to 10,000 per day recommended by fitness experts.

The bonuses are paid in Amazon gift certificates in increments of $20. The Amazon credit is likely bought at a discount to par value, reducing costs to Oscar (more details here).

Significance for FIs
Oscar can pay out $200 per year because it’s selling a big-ticket item, health insurance. And it stands to benefit from healthier customers who use less medical care. Unless you are in the health insurance business, you can’t copy this dollar for dollar. The important thing is making a game out of healthy habits by keeping score and delivering tangible rewards (previous post).

Fintech Fundings: 20 Companies Raise $840 million Week Ending Dec 5

Apparently the cyber-monday excitement carried over into the fintech VC sector, as they pulled out their checkbooks in record amounts this week. Counting direct digital financial plays (AvantCredit and Atom Bank), $538 million in equity and $300 million in debt were raised the first week of December. 
Even without Avant and Atom, a $288 million in equity investments flowed in, the third highest week since we began tracking in August. That total included two Finovate alums: SocietyOne ($20 million) and iQauntify ($1 million). 
Fundings from Nov. 29 to Dec 5 by size of deal:
AvantCredit

Direct online lender
Latest round: $525 million ($225 million equity, $300 million debt)
Total funding: $1.03 billion ($334 million equity, $700 million debt)
Tags: Credit, underwriting, lending, sub-prime, near-prime, alt-lending, Chicago, Illinois

Source: Crunchbase
Financing online purchases in China
Latest round: $100 million
Total raised: $100+ million
Tags: Credit, payments, underwriting, lending, POS, Bejing, China
Source: Crunchbase
Stripe

Easy-to-embed online payment processing
Latest round: $70 million (at $3.5 bil valuation)
Total funding: $190 million
Tags: payments, API, programmable web, YC, processing, SMB, mobile, San Francisco, California

Source: Crunchbase
Chinese wealth and investment management
Latest round: $50 million
Total raised: $60 million
Tags: Investing, wealth management, personal finance, Hangzou, China
Source: FT Partners

All-digital UK banking startup
Latest round: $31 million
Total funding: $31 million
Tags: Bank, mobile, Durham, UK 

Source: FT Partners
SocietyOne

Australian marketplace lending platform
Latest round: $20 million
Total funding: $28.5 million
Tags: P2P lending, peer-to-peer, credit, underwriting, investing, marketplace, Sydney, Australia, Finovate alum

Source: Finovate
Equity crowdfunding marketplace
Latest round: $7.8 million
Total funding: $19.7 million
Tags: Investing, P2P, SMB, marketplace, Exeter, UK

Source: FT Partners
MarketInvoice

Peer-to-peer lending against accounts receivables
Latest round: $7.5 million
Total funding: $10 million
Tags: Crowdfunding, peer-to-peer lending, P2P, London, UK

Source: Crunchbase
Borrowell

Canadian online lender
Latest round: $5.4 million
Total funding: $5.4 million
Tags: Lending, credit, underwriting, direct, Toronto, Canada

Source: Crunchbase
Veri-Tax

Ability-to-pay verification system
Latest round: $5 million
Total funding: $5 million
Tags: Credit, underwriting, ID verification, mortgage, compliance, Irvine, California

Source: Crunchbase
SmartVault

Secure storage solutions for the accounting industry
Latest round: $4.5 million
Total funding: $4.5+ million
Tags: Accounting, storage, virtual safe deposit, SMB, Houston, Texas

Source: Crunchbase

ChangeTip

Micropayment system
Latest round: $3.5 million
Total funding: $4.3 million
Tags: Payments, mobile, Bitcoin, Twitter, social, San Francisco, California

Source: Crunchbase
LandBay

Crowdfunding platform for investment properties 
Latest round: $2.4 million
Total funding: $2.9 million
Tags: P2P, peer-to-peer, lending, secured, mortgage, investing, rentals, crowdfunding, London, UK

Source: Crunchbase
Shift Technology

Fraud tools for insurance and ecommerce
Latest round: $1.8 million
Total funding: $1.8 million
Tags: Fraud, security, insurance, ecommerce, Paris, France

Source: Crunchbase
iPad point-of-sale system
Latest round: $1.2 million (grant)
Total funding: $115 million
Tags: Payments, mobile, POS, point-of-sale, merchants, SMB, San Francisco, California

Source: Crunchbase
iQuantify

Personalized financial advice
Latest round: $1 million
Total funding: $3.6 million
Tags: PFM, money management, investing, goals, Franklin, Tennessee, Finovate alum

Source: Finovate
AltPay

Mobile payments
Latest round: $1 million
Total funding: $1 million
Tags: mobile, payments, processing, merchants, SMB, Hollywood, Florida

Source: Crunchbase
BitGold

Bitcoin and precious metals exchange
Latest round: $700,000
Total funding: $1.7 million
Tags: Cryptocurrency, bitcoin, stored value, investing, Toronto, Canada

Source: Crunchbase
DigiByte

Decentralized payment network
Latest round: $250,000
Total funding: $250,000
Tags: Cryptocurrency, Bitcoin, micropayments, Santa Monica, California

Source: Crunchbase
BaseVenture

Private placement platform for real estate investing
Latest round: $30,000
Total funding: $30,000
Tags: Wealth management, private placements, real estate, investing, San Francisco, California

Source: Crunchbase

Fintech Fundings: 17 Companies Raise $167 million Week Ending Nov 28

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It was a short week in the United States with many on holiday Thursday and Friday, so U.S.-based activity was slowed. But the rest of the world more than made up for it. Of the total $167 million raised ($152 million equity, $15 million debt), only $28 million (17%), was to US-based companies. And most of that ($25 million) was to Finovate alums Kensho ($15 million) and Narrative Sciences ($10 million). Another alum (from the first Finovate back in 2007), Monitise, scored $77 million from strategic investors, Santander, MasterCard and Telefonica. 
Here are the deals from Nov 22 to Nov 28 in order of size:
Mobile payments
Latest round: $77 million (post-IPO equity)
Total raised: $232 million (public)
Tags: Mobile, payments, SMB, Santander (investor), MasterCard (investor), London, UK, Finovate alum
Source: Crunchbase
Indian real estate platform
Latest round: $30 million
Total raised: $30 million
Tags: home buying/selling, mortgage, Noida, India
Source: Crunchbase
Data analytics for securities and investing
Latest round: $15 million
Total raised: $25.5 million
Tags: Analytics, big data, investing, Goldman Sachs (investor), Cambridge, Massachusetts, Finovate alum
Source: FT Partners
Russian mobile payment processor
Latest round: $15 million (debt)
Total raised: Unknown
Tags: Account receivables, financing, credit, SMB, payments, acquiring, Russia
Source: FT Partners
Data analytics with automated report generation
Latest round: $10 million
Total raised: $32.4 million
Tags: Big data, analytics, sales, proposals, AI, USAA (investor), Chicago, Illinois, Finovate alum
Source: Finovate
Japanese cloud-based accounting service
Latest round: $8.5 million
Total raised: $8.5 million
Tags: SMB, accounting, money management, Tokyo, Japan
Source: Crunchbase
French mobile payments company
Latest round: $4.5 million
Total raised: $4.5 million
Tags: Mobile, prepaid, loyalty, merchants, SMB, Paris, France
Source: Crunchbase

Canadian mobile payments and ecommerce
Latest round: $2.2 million
Total raised: $2.2 million
Tags: Mobile, ecommerce, merchants, SMB, acquiring, Vancouver, Canada
Source: Crunchbase
Lending technology
Latest round: $2.0 million
Total raised: $3.5 million
Tags: Lending, credit, underwriting, Portland, Oregon
Source:&nbs
p;Crunchbase
Mobile virtual giftcard system
Latest round: $1.5 million
Total raised: $2.5 million
Tags: Mobile, gifting, prepaid, loyalty, merchants, Toronto, Canada
Source: Crunchbase
Mobile document capture technology
Latest round: $775,000
Total raised: $9.6 million (public)
Tags: Mobile, imaging, remote capture, security, account opening, Irvine, California, Finovate alum
Source: Crunchbase
Bitcoin wallet
Latest round: $300,000
Total raised: $300,000
Tags: Mobile, gifting, prepaid, loyalty, merchants, Toronto, Canada
Source: Crunchbase
Bitcoin bookkeeping 
Latest round: $3,000
Total raised: $3,000
Tags: Bitcoin, cryptocurrency, Berlin, Germany
Source: Crunchbase
E-wallet software
Latest round: Undisclosed
Total raised: Unknown
Tags: Mobile, payments, wearables
Source: FT Partners

Medical payments 
Latest round: Undisclosed
Total raised: Unknown
Tags: Healthcare, payments, insurance, Woodbridge, Illinois
Source: Crunchbase
B2B mobile payments
Latest round: Undisclosed
Total raised: Unknown
Tags: B2B, payments, SMB, Mumbai, India
Source: FT Partners
Ultra-high-net-worth segment intelligence and prospecting
Latest round: Undisclosed
Total raised: Unknown
Tags: UHNW, investing, wealth management, sales & marketing, Singapore
Source: FT Partners

Gift Card Season Off to the Races: Square Places New Bet, Starbucks Goes All-In, Banks Stuck at Starting Gate

image

image This week, digital poster child Square jumped into the plastic gift card market. Unlike many of its new endeavors, old-school cards were met with a decided lack of enthusiasm in the tech press (and my Twitter feed). Many recalled the company’s failed efforts with virtual gift cards (which I liked then, and still do). Most people in the tech press (and even more so in my Twitter feed) want their iPhone to handle all transactions, loyalty points, and payments. But that’s not quite how the world works yet. Even Starbucks, claiming 90% of all U.S. mobile payments (pre Apple Pay of course), just launched a major holiday plastic initiative (see below).

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How Square Gift Cards Work
________________________________________

The Square offering is compelling for its core small business clients. The cards are drop-dead simple. Merchants order from their Square dashboard which is powered by eCardSystems. Cards cost $1.50 per card with a minimum order of 125 and are shipped in 3 business days. Merchants load by swiping through Square’s POS dongle or Register, and users are good to go. The merchant receives the entire load amount immediately (less Square’s 2.9% cut).

The cards are heavily merchant branded. The merchant’s name is printed on the front in a choice of fonts and colors and the merchant’s contact info is printed on the back. The card design can be one of 20 generic designs (see screenshot) or can be customized with any image uploaded by merchant (cost is the same, but minimum quantity rises to 500, and turnaround time is 15 business days, so almost too late for the 2014 holiday season). The only Square branding is a small logo, seen back-of-card, lower right (see top of post).

The cards are reloadable, so they can be used as a loyalty platform, with rewards based on load amount. For example, my favorite coffee shop adds an extra 10% of value for each load.

___________________________________

 Starbucks Unveils In-Store “Card Collection”
________________________________________

imageOne of the the Starbucks flagship stores is in my neighborhood, so we occasionally see merchandise being tested. So, I’m not sure if this over-the-top gift card display is in wide use (see its Nov 12 press release). But the Seattle U-Village main Starbucks has two of these massive display cases near the queue (the back side has the usual holiday beans and merchandise). Apparently, there are more than 100 different designs.

It’s no surprise. Last year, the company reported that $1.4 billion was loaded onto cards during 4th quarter and an astonishing 1 out of every 8 U.S. adults received a Starbucks card. It looks like they are going for 1 in 7 this year.

_________________________________

Bank Opportunities
______________________________________

I’ve been following bank efforts in gift cards for 10 years and have found little exciting to report (see archives). While a few bursts of activity have occurred at holiday times the last few years (previous posts), banks seem content to let their customers pick up cards at Safeway. Even Chase, which has a great card that my son uses, and was the highest-rated big-bank card in Consumer Reports (Aug 2013, Prepaid Buying Guide), has zero merchandising for “gift cards” on its website (see third screenshot below). 

Few banks are going to emulate Square’s approach and build gift cards for acquiring clients. But I do see an opportunity to develop a retail gift card marketplace offering both plastic and virtual cards with distribution via online, mobile, in-branch and even ATM. It’s on my short list of ways FIs could turn a buck from their presence (see post).

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#1: First step in ordering plastic gift cards from Square’s merchant dashboard

image

#2 Choose your card design (or upload your own image)

image

 

#3 Searching for “gift card” at Chase Bank

image

Fintech Fundings: 16 Companies Raise $82 Million Week Ending Nov 21

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With no blockbuster fundings ($25 mil+), the weekly total of $82 million was the fourth-lowest since we began tracking August 1. However, the overall number of companies was 16, making it a busy week. 
And we were glad to see one Finovate alum, Advance Merchant Payments ($5 mil) on the list. In addition, there was a future Finovate alum, Buttercoin. The hot cryptocurrency startup will be demoing at FinovateEurope in February. 

Here are the deals in order of size from Nov. 15 to Nov 21

Value exchange technology
Latest round: $21 million
Total raised: $21 million
Tags: Bitcoin, cryptocurrency, blockchain, payments, Montreal, Canada
Source: Crunchbase
Merchant advances in the digital media industry
Latest round: $15 million
Total raised: $50 million
Tags: Lending, merchant, credit, underwriting, Beverly Hills, California
Source: Crunchbase
Zibby, integrated lease-to-own financing for online purchases
Latest round: $10 million (includes some debt)
Total raised: $10 million (includes some debt)
Tags: Lending, ecommerce, shopping, credit, New York City
Source: FT Partners
Digital currency technology
Latest round: $7.2 million
Total raised: $7.2 million
Tags: Bitcoin, payments, cryptocurrency, remittances, San Francisco, California
Source: Crunchbase
Home search platform
Latest round: $6.0 million
Total raised: $7.1 million
Tags: Real estate, home buying, mortgage, Mountain View, California
Source: Crunchbase
Powers small unsecured SMB loans at banks
Latest round: $5.0 million
Total raised: $5.0 million
Tags: Lending, Alt-lending, SMB, underwriting, installment loans, Hong Kong, Finovate alum
Source: Finovate
Working capital financing through accounts payable financing
Latest round: $4.7 million
Total raised: $4.7 million
Tags: Financing, billing, credit, accounts payables, London, UK
Source: Crunchbase
Commercial loan and lease information provider
Latest round: $4.4 million
Total raised: $10 million
Tags: Commerial lending, underwriting, data, real estate, New York City
Source: Crunchbase
French online and mobile payments processor
Latest round: $4.1 million
Total raised: $6.8 million
Tags: Payments, mobile, digital, merchants, acquiring, SMB, Paris, France
Source: FT Partners
Automated hedge fund investing
Latest round: $2.0 million
Total raised: $2.0 million
Tags: Investing, hedge funds, San Francisco, California
Source: Crunchbase
White pages directory for Bitcoin
Latest round: $1.5 million
Total raised: $1.6 million
Tags: Cryptocurrency, bitcoin, identity, New York City
Source: Crunchbase
Automated investment research
Latest round: $1.5 million
Total raised: $1.5 million
Tags: Investing, information, Palo Alto, California
Source: Crunchbase
New Zealand equity crowdfunding platform
Latest round: $100,000
Total raised: $100,000
Tags: Crowdfunding, SMB, P2P, lending, credit, investing, Wellington, New Zealand
Source: Crunchbase
Open-source digital trading engine
Latest round: Undisclosed
Total raised: $1.3+ million
Tags: Bitcoin, cryptocurrency, payments, YC, Palo Alto, California, Finovate alum (see at FinovateEurope 2015)
Source: FT Partners
Pricing and profitability analytics for financial institutions
Latest round: Undisclosed
Total raised: Unknown
Tags: Analytics, big data, pricing, management, Australia
Source: Fortune
Coinffeine

Spanish Bitcoin company focusing on P2P transfers
Latest round: Undisclosed
Total raised: Undisclosed
Tags: Bitcoin, cryptocurrency, payments, remittances, Bankinter (investor), Spain
Source: FT Partners

Six Digital Myths Hampering Banks’ 2015 Strategic Planning

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In late summer, I published a two-part post detailing the most important retail banking projects for next year (here and here). I’ve got another installment or two in the pipeline, but since it’s already starting to feel like we are making our final descent into 2015, I wanted to take a step back and explain WHY those projects rose to the top. 

So here, in semi-prioritized order, are six myths that continue to hamper the strategic planning of retail banks (at least in the United States). 
———
Myth 1 >> Bank branches are needed for “complex” financial matters

Truth
: Branch banking is on the way out.
Prediction: The U.S. brick-and-mortar footprint will fall 30% to 40% by 2020.
Thoughts:
  • I get that people like the local branch. My wife loved Blockbuster. My grandparents operated a much-loved corner grocery. But neither survived when the economics turned against them. Bank branches will survive in my lifetime, but their footprint (square feet & staffing) will decline 5% to 10% per year for the foreseeable future. 

  • Name one thing done in a branch that can’t be done more efficiently and/or more effectively through digital means or an ATM (let’s assume that the customer believes resolution can be obtained from either method). Sure, people still go to the branch for advice and problem solving since that’s a long-standing tradition and it’s comforting to talk to a nice person in a pressed blue shirt. But it’s also an inefficient way to get things done, for both the bank and the customer. My last trip to the branch was to open a college checking account at the bank we’ve held accounts for seven years (and whose associates know us by sight). It took an hour! And that doesn’t include the travel time for two trips to the branch (we forgot to bring a SECOND picture ID). It all could have been done in a few minutes online or via mobile had that option been available. 
———

Myth 2 >> Desktop online banking is still needed for “serious” work
TruthBanking by the desktop has peaked, too. 

Prediction: The amount of time spent banking online via desktop will fall 20% to 30% by 2020.
Thoughts
  • Many people still think that “important work” requires a browser and the real estate of a 13-inch screen. I agree for writing or design tasks, that’s true. But the average banking interaction amounts to looking at a few two- and three-digit numbers and typing a search term every now and then. Those things can be easily done on mobile. 

  • In fact, by building the UI mobile first, designers are forced to focus on the most important data elements, creating a better experience. 

———

Myth 3 >> Marketplace (P2P) lending won’t be used by “our” customers

Truth: Consumer and SMB lending could be disrupted by new players (but that’s far from a given). 

Prediction: Marketplaces take 5% to 10% share by 2020

Thoughts
  • I’m not one to throw “disruption” around lightly. In fact, it has never appeared in a title in my 10 years of blogging. Why not? Because I’ve been working in the online banking industry for 22 years and have seen nearly ZERO market share shift in the U.S. banking system over that time. The only major U.S. Internet-only success was ING Direct (now Capital One). And they don’t count because it was a division of a huge legacy player expanding their geographic reach. (Note: There has been market share shifts in the acquiring side due to PayPal, Square and others, but that was mostly wrested away from non-banks.)
  • But marketplace lending (aka P2P) is the first thing I’ve seen that actually is taking share away from legacy players. Lending Club is over $2 billion; Prosper and Zoka are over $1 billion; and SOFI is probably there as well. And there are more than 100 equity and debt crowdfunding companies funding small and medium businesses. While this is still small change in the multi-trillion consumer and SMB lending market, there are signs that these companies are posed to grab meaningful share. 
  • What makes the lending marketplace model potentially disruptive is that they can bring together large pools of capital with very different risk tolerances and price the loans dynamically, which is much harder for traditional players to do (though regulation is a wildcard here as marketplaces could end up with draconian “safeguards” that would render their risk-based pricing advantage moot)
  • But I don’t count out the big players yet. While it’s not easy, they can and probably will, copy the marketplace lending model, and perhaps continue their role as primary credit providers. However, having been a lending-product manager at a major bank, I can attest that it is extremely difficult to change historic patterns in loan underwriting. 
———-
Myth 4 >> Consumers gravitate to best-of-breed providers for every financial need
Truth: Consumers HATE to proactively work on their finances and will often settle for what’s most convenient. 
Prediction: The primary “financial institution” (which can mean many things) will gain share of wallet going forward IF they integrate other services into online/mobile banking.

Thoughts:
  • Ever since I’ve been involved, it’s been debated whether banks could be “the one-stop shop” for financial services. In the pre-Internet era, it was prohibitively expensive to put world-class mortgage bankers, investment advisors, insurance experts, remittance providers, SMB services, and so forth into the branch-based delivery model. 
  • But in today’s interconnected “API” world, that is not the case. The financial provider with the most trust — or as Richard Crone says, “The company that enrolls, controls” — can deliver the best of everything related to money management, retirement planning, value investing, and risk management/insurance. Consumers actually do gravitate towards one source if they believe it’s delivering value across disparate items. Case in point: Amazon.com. (Note: I penned my favorite report of all time around that theme, Building the Amazon.com of Financial Services (original in 1998, updated in 2000.)
———
Myth 5: Consumers trust YOUR security (it’s the others that keep letting them down)
Truth: Your customers are VERY AFRAID you’ll cause a nightmare scenario security-wise. Why do you think people log in so many times each week? 
Prediction: You can thank Apple for making biometrics mainstream.
Thoughts
  • I’m not sure how banks have gotten away with such lax consumer/SMB-facing security for so long. It’s a testament to the strength of their core businesses that they can cover billions in losses every year. 
  • It’s also an unintended consequence of offering all digital banking services free of charge. Every tweak to the website and mobile app are new costs without any tangible revenue bump (see Myth 6 below). 
  • But we are finally reaching the end of the username/password era with better authentication via smartphone, far more sophisticated back-end fraud-monitoring, and seamless biometrics (aka TouchID). I, for one, will be able to sleep better, knowing our business isn’t constantly on the brink of a devastating cybertheft.

——–

Myth 6 >> Consumers won’t pay for digital banking value-adds
Truth: A lucrative segment of the population prefers deluxe or premium versions of goods and services. 
PredictionFinancial institutions are leaving BILLIONS on the table each year due to their lack of creativity in charging for value-adds. I give up trying to predict when it will happen, but once one of the Big-4 launches Platinum Digital Banking, the entire industry will rush to copy. 

Thoughts: I’ve written about this so many times, I’ll just point you to the most recent post (here).

——–
Since our comments are broken, hit me up on Twitter @netbanker with your thoughts. 
——–
Picture credit: Get your six-pack of wrong turn signs on eBay

Fintech Fundings: More than $145 Million Raised Week Ending Nov 14

fintechfunding_license.jpg

For the most part, Fintech investors took a small breather this week. Other than the VCs sending a cool tenth-of-a-billion-dollars off to POS provider Revel Systems, the rest of the sector pulled in about $50 million. 
Two of the 10 newly funded are Finovate alums: 
  1. Austin, TX-based SimplyTapp attracted $6 million to expand its NFC mobile payment technology. 
  2. FinanceIT secured an undisclosed investment from Toronto neighbor BEST Funds. 
The deals from Nov 8 to Nov 13 in order of size:
Point-of-sale systems
Latest round: $100 million (of which $25 million is a credit line)
Total raised: $114 million 
Tags: POS, acquiring, SMB, San Francisco, California
Source: Crunchbase
Gift card marketplace
Latest round: $18.1 million
Total raised: $21.7 million 
Tags: Giftcards, loyalty, payments, Chicago, Illinois
Source: Crunchbase
Payment services for merchants
Latest round: $8.2 million
Total raised: $8.2 million 
Tags: Credit/debit cards, acquiring, SMB, merchants, loyalty, Sunnyvale, California
Source: Crunchbase
French marketplace for short-term capital financing
Latest round: $7.5 million
Total raised: $7.6 millon 
Tags: Lending, receivables, working capital, SMB, Paris, France
Source: Crunchbase
Digital payment processor
Latest round: $6 million
Total raised: $7.6 million 
Tags: Credit/debit cards, acquiring, POS, SMB, NFC, Austin, Texas, Finovate alum
Source: FT Partners
Franchise financing marketplace
Latest round: $3.8 million
Total raised: $7.5 million 
Tags: Credit, lending, underwriting, SMB, loans, investing, P2P, crowdfunding, 
Source: Crunchbase
Digital payment processor
Latest round: $600,000
Total raised: $820,000 
Tags: Credit/debit cards, acquiring, SMB, Kuopio, Finland
Source: Crunchbase
Customer financing at the retailer’s point of sale
Latest round: Undisclosed
Total funding: $21 million (not including latest round)
Tags: POS, lending, SMB, merchants, Toronto, Canada
Source: FT Partners
Payment solution for U.S. merchants to accept Chinese UnionPay cards
Latest round: Undisclosed
Total raised: Unknown
Tags: Credit cards, debit cards, acquiring, payment processing, Palo Alto, California
Source: Crunchbase
Indian digital payments layer
Latest round: Undisclosed (Series A)
Total funding: $500,000 (prior to latest funding)
Tags: Payments, social media, merchants, acquiring, Mumbai, India
Source: Crunchbase

Neo-Banking is Just Getting Started

image

Definition: Neo-Bank
Delivering banking services without touching the funds

————————-

This morning, Celent’s Stephen Greer published a post called, The Challenges of the New Neo-Bank, wherein he states:

In recent months, the neo-bank model (e.g., Simple, Moven, GoBank) has hit a few stumbling blocks that call into question the promise of the digital-only model…

Stephen lays out four scenarios for the future of neo-banks:

1. Neo-banks are acquired and assimilated into larger financial brands

2. Larger brands start their own digital “neo-bank-like” brands

3. Neo-banking fails to become a viable business model, but nevertheless influences the industry

4. Neo-banking becomes the dominant method of accessing underlying accounts held at traditional banks

My thoughts: We already see #1 and #2 happening, so the question comes down to whether we are headed long-term towards #3 or #4. Like most analysts, I’m firmly in the “it depends” camp. But I’ll go out on a limb a bit. I believe we will see dozens, if not hundreds, of neo-banks launch in the next few years. Here’s why:

image1. Simple’s $100-million exit to BBVA
I’m not sure how much equity the founders held at the end, but it must have been a multi-million dollar payday for five-plus years of hard work. While that’s not enough to make the cover of Forbes, it’s a huge win for most entrepreneurs.

2.  Marketplace lending provides a path to profitability
The problem with the neo-bank model in an era of low deposit rates and shrinking interchange, is that those traditional income sources are not enough to pay competent developers, execs and customer service folk. With consumers loath to pay fees, most startups end up forced into the ad-supported model, which strains their credibility with customers.

But with the growing popularity, and proven profit potential, of marketplace lending (aka P2P lending), neo-banks can partner with or build their own loan platforms to profitably put those deposits to work (sounds less “neo” and more “banking” doesn’t it?). So I envision the day where neo-banks allow you to store your funds in the prepaid account for no interest, or put it to work in a lending marketplace to earn a few percentage points on the funds, with the neo-bank pocketing a bit of the spread.

3. Third-party financial watchdogs become trusted services
Another advantage of being an independent neo-bank is that it’s easier to become an unbiased watchdog over all things financial. The neo-bank can track all your accounts (Mint/Yodlee), find areas where you are overpaying or have potentially been defrauded (BillGuard), monitor your credit score (Credit Karma) and even analyze the effectiveness of your 401k (Brightscope).

Right now, it’s still almost impossible for third-party startups to get to scale because customers just don’t trust them. But that will slowly change as the newcomers gain brand recognition (for example, Intuit’s Quicken, Quickbooks, and TurboTax brands).

4. It’s much, much harder to launch a real bank
Ten years ago, we were seeing about 10 new banks launched every month. Due to all the failures brought on by the Great Recession (and I would argue, way too much deposit insurance), there has only been one new bank launched in the past three years (through end of 2013). So, if you want to get a banking business started, you have little choice but to go with a non-bank model.

—————

Comments? Give me a shout @netbanker

Picture credit: Article from NY Times, 20 Feb 2014 (link); sign in background from Simple HQ