FinovateFall 2014 — Less than 50 tickets left! Don’t miss out!

btn3_ov.pngFinovateFall 2014 is next week and it’s official that the event will be the largest Finovate to date! Over 1,300 tickets have already been sold and we have less than 50 remaining!

If you’re interested in attending to see the future of fintech debut live on stage via our fast-paced demo-only format, please get your ticket as soon as possible to lock in your seat.

As usual, the auditorium is going to be packed a potent blend of innovative bank
execs, fintech entrepreneurs, venture capitalists, press, and industry
analysts. In case you’re curious, below is a small sample of the great organizations already committed to attend:

  • Accenture
  • Adobe
  • American Express
  • Ameriprise
  • Bain Capital
  • Bank of America
  • Bank of Ireland
  • Bank of Montreal
  • Barclays
  • BBVA Compass
  • BlackRock
  • C1 Bank
  • Capital One
  • CIBC
  • Citi
  • Citi Ventures
  • CFPB
  • DBS Bank
  • Deliotte Consulting
  • Discover
  • Equifax
  • Everbank
  • Experian
  • Fidelity
  • FIS Global
  • Forbes
  • Fortune
  • FTV Capital
  • Gartner
  • Goldman Sachs
  • IBM
  • Intuit
  • Jack Henry
  • JP Morgan Chase
  • KPMG
  • Liberty Mutual
  • MassMutual
  • MasterCard
  • MACU
  • New York Life
  • Nordea
  • Oliver Wyman
  • Paypal
  • Polaris Partners
  • Primerica
  • PwC
  • QED Investors
  • RBC
  • Regions Bank
  • Rockland Trust
  • Route 66 Ventures
  • S&P Capital IQ
  • Santander
  • SAP
  • Saxo Bank
  • Sberbank VC
  • Scottrade
  • Silicon Valley Bank
  • SixThirty
  • Societe Generale
  • Sony
  • Swedbank
  • Tangerine Bank
  • TD Ameritrade
  • The Huffington Post
  • The Principal
  • Umpqua Bank
  • USAA
  • Venrock
  • Visa
  • Wells Fargo
  • World Bank
  • Xignite
  • Yankee Group
  • Zions Bank

We’ll see you in New York in September (or in San Francisco for FinDEVr)!

FinovateFall 2014 is sponsored by: The Bancorp, CapitalSource, Financial Technology Partners, Greater St. Louis Financial Forum, Hudson Cook LLP, Life.SREDA, UK Trade & Investment, Visa, Xignite & Zions Direct

FinovateFall 2014 is partners with: Aite, ABA, Bank Innovators Council, BankersHub, Bobsguide, California Bankers Association, Canada, Celent, Filene Research Institute, Hotwire PR, Javelin Strategy, Mercator, NYPAY, Payment Week, The Paypers, SME Finance Forum, & Visible Banking

Why (Most) Banks Need Not Worry About Apple Pay (Yet)

image I’ll admit to being caught up in the hype. The 48 hours after Tim Cook revealed Apple’s long-rumored foray into payments were some of the most exciting times in fintech since the 1995 to 1997 period when most of the online “firsts” happened (see note 1).

And we’re seeing more thoughtful fintech posts in the past week than we used to see in an entire year. Thanks especially to Tom Noyes, Cherian Abraham, Brian Roemmele, Celent’s Zilvinas Bareisis and finally today from Gonzo’s Steve Williams for helping me see beyond the hype.

I can add little that hasn’t already been said to the discussion about NFC, payment ecosystems, or the future of mobile payments. Clearly, it marks a turning point for mobile payments and improved U.S. security, and the play-out will be fun to watch.

The one area I haven’t seen covered: What does all this mean for the 10,000 U.S. banks and credit unions not on the 11-name list at launch (note 2)?

So here’s my take on the impact of Apple Pay on small- and medium-sized FIs over various time horizons: 

In the short term (2014): ZERO

In the medium term (2015-2016): ZERO

In the long run (2017+): Something, but impossible to quantify at this point
                                     (it could even be net positive)

Here’s why bank/CU execs (outside the top-20 credit-card issuers) should not lose sleep over what Apple is doing:

1. Apple Pay (in the physical world) can be used only at contactless terminals
Supposedly, there are 220,000 contactless terminals in the United States. But if you’ve ever tried to use one, you know that 200,000 of them are either not working or are buried behind beef jerky on the counter. This will change rapidly as merchants upgrade during the next few years.

2. It’s complicated to use (at first)
First, you need an iPhone 6, then you need to figure out how to use Apple’s Passbook program, log in to iTunes or take a picture of your card, successfully authorize it, enable TouchID and so on. Millions of early adopters will figure all that out, but then they won’t be able to find a working contactless terminal (see #1) and then they’ll forget all about it.

3. The number of your customers that care enough to move deposit accounts for NFC payments is near zero (for now)
Let’s do the math. Assume that a year from now there are 5 million Apple Pay active users (making at least one transaction per week) or 2.5% of U.S adults. If you have 20,000 customers, that means 500 will be active users of Apple Pay. Most will be happy to use their existing Capital One, Citi, and other rewards credit cards for the transactions. Very few will care that your debit card doesn’t work on the system. Let’s say it’s around 25%. That means you have something like 125 customers who are disappointed with your mobile payment capabilities. If they like you otherwise, how many will move their checking account to get an Apple Pay-enabled version? While the number is probably zero, let’s say it’s 5% to 10%. That means you could lose 6 to 12 customers. Using the 80/20 rule, only one or two of them are profitable. Will it hurt to lose two profitable customers? Sure, but it’s not going to be on your top-10 or top-25 list of worries.   

4. There are ways to mitigate any lost wallet share to Apple-Pay issuers
Even if my math in #3 is way off, or you are concerned that you will take a material hit to the bottom line, or you just want to be part of Apple Pay, easy routes will undoubtably be built to get your cards enabled into Apple Pay. Maybe not in 2014 (or even 2015), but certainly within the next couple years. And even if I’m wrong and you are locked out of the iPhone indefinitely, you can create an Apple Pay poaching program where your customers make their charges on a bigco bank card, then you automatically pay those charges off and essentially transfer them to your customer’s checking account.

So my final advice. If you have an employer (or spouse) that’s been reluctant to fund your iThings, now is the perfect time to do an upgrade (just don’t show them this post).

——————-

Chase homepage shown to existing customers (15 Sep 2014)
Note: All three links on bottom of page go to the iPhone6 “Apple Pay” features page at Apple.com which leads with Chase (link)

image 

——————————–

Notes:
1. Or perhaps 1999 when Paypal/X.com made P2P payments happen or even 2005/2006 when Zopa/Prosper/LendingClub launched consumer credit exchanges.
2. See Apple Pay launch event clip here, complete with transcript.

Fintech Fundings: 11 Companies Raise $193 million in Week Ending Sep 12

Perhaps competition from Apple kept U.S. fintech quiet on the funding front this week. Through mid-day Friday, only 11 companies had announced fundings. But thanks to $77 million going to Chinese fintech companies, the total was an impressive $92 million, a $5 billion annual run rate! 
Then Friday afternoon it was widely reported that Square had raised another $100 million. If that’s confirmed, the weekly total will be a monster $192 million. 
But the big news around our offices was the $4 million A-round by Finovate Best of Show winner Tink. Tink is a Swedish mobile PFM with a killer UI (see full post here).  
Here are the fundings in order of size from Sep 5 to Sep 12, 2014: 
Square
Mobile payment acquiring
Latest round: $100 million (at $6 billion valuation)
Total raised: $540 million ($440 million equity, $100 million debt)
Tags: Mobile, POS, acquirer, California
Source: Crunchbase
Chinese investment information provider
Latest round: $40 million
Total funding: $53 million
Tags: Investing, China
Source: Crunchbase
Chinese peer-to-peer lending startup 
Latest round: $37.2 million
Total raised: $47.2 million
Tags: Crowdfunding, P2P, lending, mortgage, SMB, China
Source: Crunchbase
Real estate investing platform
Latest round: $5.5 million
Total funding: $5.5 million
Tags: Crowdfunding, home buying, mortgage, California
Source: Crunchbase
Swedish mobile-optimized financial management
Latest round: $4 million
Total raised: $4.8 million
Tags: PFM, mobilie banking, Sweden, Finovate Best of Show
Source: Finovate
Crowdfunding platform for commercial real estate
Latest round: $3 million
Total raised: $3 million
Tags: P2P, lending, credit, mortgage, investing, California
Source: Crunchbase
Microlending in Latin America
Latest round: $1.3 million
Total funding: $1.3 million
Tags: Lending, credit, Mexico

Source: Crunchbase

Payment enabler for mobile and online commerce
Latest round: $1 million
Total funding: $40 million
Tags: Cards, mobile payments, prepaid, New York
Source: Crunchbase
Expense reporting software
Latest round:$175,000
Total raised: $1.1 million
Tags: PFM, accounting, SMB, predictive analytics, big data, Cleveland, Ohio
Source: Crunchbase
For-profit startup helping fund primary research
Tags: Fund-raising, payments, philanthropy, payments, California
Latest round: $150,000
Total raised: $150,000
Source: Crunchbase
Equity crowdfunding platform
Latest round: Undisclosed
Total raised: More than $540,000
Tags: Crowdfunding, SMB, lending, Sweden
Source: Crunchbase

FinDEVr 2014 Last Chance for Early-Bird Tickets!

FinDEVr Logo

FinDEVr San Francisco 2014 — our first event ever focused on fintech developers — is less than three weeks away and we are getting very excited! 

After months of anticipation, we’ve announced the full presenter roster and action-packed two-day agenda. The show is going to be an incredible showcase of the tools, platforms and APIs that are being used to build the next generation of fintech innovation.

Tickets are selling quickly ahead of the early-bird ticket deadline this Friday (register now to save) and we’re expecting a crowd of 400-500 innovators. 

In case you’re curious, here is a small sample of the organizations that are attending:

  • American Express
  • Ameriprise Financial
  • Avoka
  • Backbase
  • BancVue
  • BehavioSec
  • BlackRock
  • Bloomberg
  • Bluefin
  • C-SAM
  • Capital One
  • Cardflight
  • CIBC
  • Cloud Lending
  • Crosslink Capital
  • Devonshire Investors
  • Diebold
  • Eshtapay
  • E*TRADE
  • EVO Snap
  • Exchange Bank
  • Experian
  • Filene
  • Financial Apps
  • Finicity
  • First Republic Bank
  • Fiserv
  • Forte Payment Systems
  • Franklin Templeton
  • GoDaddy
  • Google
  • GTE Financial
  • Incomm
  • Intuit
  • Javelin Strategy
  • LexisNexis
  • Life.SREDA
  • MACU
  • MasterCard
  • Mergermarket
  • Mifos Initiative
  • Modo
  • OnDeck
  • Paradigm4
  • PayNearMe
  • PayPal
  • PSCU
  • SF Fire CU
  • StockTwits
  • Target
  • TD Ameritrade
  • Tradier
  • USAA
  • UW Credit Union
  • VentureBeat
  • Visa
  • Wells Fargo
  • Western Union
  • Worldpay
  • Xero
  • Xignite
  • Yodlee
  • And many more!

If you and/or your technical colleagues are interested in attending to learn about the latest innovations for fintech builders, tickets are on sale at the early-bird discount of $100 off through Friday September 12th.

We’ll see you there!

FinDEVr San Francisco 2014’s VC sponsor is: Life.SREDA

FinDEVr San Francisco 2014 is partners with: BankersHub, BayPay Forum, California Bankers Association, fin-tech.org, Hotwire, Mercator, PaymentWeek & The Paypers

Launching: Self Lender Helps Build Credit with Digital "Credit-Builder" Loans

image Ever since the financial debacle of 2008, it’s been harder for consumers to establish their first credit account. Therefore, with no credit history or score, it becomes even harder to get credit. That’s created a Catch-22 around new credit that Denver-based startup Self Lender looks to address. The company launched today at TechCrunch Disrupt (see full presentation here, at bottom of post).

Self Lender has a fairly straightforward value proposition.

  • Agree to transfer a certain amount of money to yourself for a set period of time via the Self Lender platform.
  • Self Lender reports the payments to credit bureaus as a secured loan.
  • At the end of the contract period, between 3 and 12 months, the user gets their money back (without interest) or can use the funds as a down payment on a vehicle or other item with the balance financed by Self Lender lending partners (see screenshot below).

The funds are held in an FDIC-insured account. Users can make their monthly transfers via ACH, debit card, paper check/money orders, or via cash through PayNearMe’s network. The startup also will accept bitcoin payments, an interesting side note that wasn’t mentioned during their demo.

Self Lender will make a few dollars on interest and lead-gen commissions, but its primary business model revolves around charging $3 per month for the service.

Thoughts: Many banks and credit unions offer products with similar benefits. According to CUNA (note 1), 15% of U.S. credit unions offer “credit builder loans.” Banks and credit unions also offer CD/saving secured loans. But those deposit-secured loans generally require a good sum of cash to get started. For example, Wells Fargo has a $3,000 minimum deposit and $75 origination fee. Self Lender lets you get started with just $25.

So, the concept is good. But I think it will be difficult for the company to get consumers to entrust them directly, so distribution through FI or PFM partners is crucial. To that end, during the Q&A session, Self Lender said it was hoping to ink deals with one or more major banks in the near future. 

———————————–

Self Lender demonstrates how the money saved in the platform can be used as down payment (9 Sep 2014)

image

———————-

Note:
1. Source: NY Times, 6 Feb 2012. http://bucks.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/02/06/credit-builder-loans-can-help-burnish-your-credit-score/

Launching: Allre Will Help You Sell Your House for Zero Commission

imageSo far, the U.S. real estate industry has maintained its 6% standard commission despite mass adoption of the Internet for researching available properties. And the run-up in housing prices in many areas has made real-dollar commissions much larger than they were in 1995. Certainly Redfin and others rebating commissions on the buyer’s side have made inroads. But if the seller’s agent is still taking 3% the total commission remains stubbornly high.

Enter Allre.com, a San Diego-based startup that debuted at TechCrunch Disrupt today (demo video). Taking a page from Zenefits model (free payroll services if you buy your healthcare through them), Allre will do the real estate transaction for free. That would save the average California seller $24,000 in commissions.

The catch? Buyers use the Allre platform to buy their title insurance, homeowner’s insurance, mortgage and other closing services. Allre is able to book these ancillary commissions because as a free service it does not come under RESPA regulations forbidding such arrangements.

Allre said it will work with multiple vendors in each category; however, for now its exclusive mortgage provider in its first market is Prime Lending.

Real estate is a business with huge network effects, which is why the various MLS services around the country continue to maintain a tight grip on real estate marketing, and commissions. So the challenge for Allre, or anyone who wants to take on the local commissioned base, is to get a large cross-section of homes listed on its site. The company has some ideas on how to do that (see the Q&A session that follows the TC demo, specifically, the question at the 7:06 mark), but no one has really cracked that nut yet.  

Relevance for Netbankers: Home ownership, and the financial services surrounding it, is an area that holds significant profit potential for banks and credit unions. Working with Allre or other real estate disrupters could be an effective way to find new mortgage (and banking) customers. 

——————–

Allre homepage (8 Sep 2014)

image

Allre transaction dashboard

image

Fintech Fundings: 20 Companies Raise $275 Million in First Week of Sept.

September is often a busy month in financial services. And it looks like 2014 is no exception. During the first week of September, 19 fintech firms attracted $269 million in new funding. Even if you exclude the $110 million to alt-biz lender Strategic Funding Source, it was still a huge week, despite the short week caused by the USA holiday Monday. 
Here’s your scorecard ranked by size of funding (Aug 30 through Sep 5, 2014):

Strategic Funding Source
Small business financing using advanced technology
Latest round: $110 million
Total raised: Unknown
Tags: SMB, lending, credit, New York
Source: Crunchbase

IEX

Alternative mutual funding trading platform
Latest round: $75 million
Total raised: $101 million
Tags: Investing, trading, exchange, New York
Source: Crunchbase
Real-estate marketing and CRM solution
Latest round: $20.1 million
Tags: Home buying, sales, marketing, mortgage, South Carolina
Source: Crunchbase
Insurance automation technology
Latest round: $16.7 million
Total raised: $16.7 million
Tags: Insurance, distribution, sales, mobile, California
Source: FT Partners
SyndicateRoom
Equity crowdfunding platform
Latest round: $16.6 million
Total raised: $16.6 million
Tags: Crowdfunding, SMB, UK
Source: Crunchbase

Prepaid card in India
Latest round: $15 million
Total raised: Unknown
Tags: Prepaid, debit card, India
Source: Crunchbase
Technology for distributing shareholder and other investor information
Latest round: $7 million
Total raised: $7 million
Tags: Investing, proxies, communications, New York
Source: Crunchbase
Wecash
Chinese big data technology for loan underwriting
Latest round: $6.5 million
Total raised: 
Tags: Big data, underwriting, credit score, China
Source: FT Partners
Health care billing and payments technology (aka VisitPay.com)
Latest round: $5 million
Total raised: $7.1 million
Tags: Payments, medical, Idaho
Source: VentureBeat
Automating private placements (Fundroom.com)
Latest round: $1 million
Total raised: $4 million
Tags: Investing, marketplace, private placements, equity, Virginia
Source: SEC
Manages receivables for healthcare providers
Latest round: $358,000
Total raised: Unknown
Tags: Billpay, accounting, SMB, healthcare, California
Source: SEC
Home search technology
Latest round: $275,000
Total raised: $275,000
Tags: Real estate, mortgage, Texas
Source: Crunchbase
Russian mobile-optimized bank
Latest round: $46,000
Total raised: $446,000
Tags: Near bank, mobile, Russia, Finovate alum (FF13)
Source: Crunchbase
Mobile identity and fraud protection
Latest round: $46,000
Total raised: $1.8 million
Tags: Security, authentication, mobile, MasterCard accelerator, Finland
Source: Crunchbase
Mobile identity and fraud protection
Latest round: $46,000
Total raised: Unknown
Tags: Security, authentication, mobile, MasterCard accelerator, Ireland
Source: Crunchbase
ZenCard
Mobile loyalty with bank integrations
Latest round: $46,000
Total raised: $46,000
Tags: Mobile, loyalty, cards, MasterCard accelerator, Poland
Source: Crunchbase
Indian mobile payments company
Latest round: Undisclosed
Total raised: At least $2.2 million
Tags: Payments, mobile, India
Source: FT Partners
Technology to underwrite credit using mobile phone behavior
Latest round: Unknown (series B)
Total raised: More than $1.5 million
Tags: Credit, lending, underbank
ed, mobile, underwriting, Massachusetts 
Source: FT Partners
Asian payments gateway
Latest round: Undisclosed
Total raised: Undisclosed
Tags: Payments, Singapore
Source: Crunchbase
Russian credit assessments for microfinance applications
Latest round: Undisclosed
Total raised: Undisclosed
Tags: Credit, underwriting, microfinance, Russia
Source: Crunchbase

Capital One Uses Email to Request Cardholder Income Update

I’m always on the lookout for digital process improvements, from the major to the minor. And this one definitely falls in the latter category. But in my 22 years of banking online, I don’t recall ever being prompted to update my income so that my card issuer could reconsider my line size.

But that’s exactly what I received this morning. At first blush, it almost sounded like a crafty fraud attempt. But Capital One wisely inserted my full name, the last four digits on the account, and promised to handle it in just 60 seconds (see first screenshot), so I’m pretty sure it’s legit. They also reassured me that it won’t require a credit bureau inquiry. 

Clicking through the email places the cardholder onto the normal online banking login screen. After logging in, you are sent directly to an account-update page (screenshot 2) to update income and employments status. After completing the two fields, you are thanked and can navigate to other areas or logout (screenshot 3). Total time expended = 87 seconds (Internet times were a little sluggish late afternoon on the West Coast).

Thoughts: This card dates back to 2010, so it’s possible they are on a four-year cycle to update income information; however, I just sent my W2 to Capital One two days ago for a mortgage refinance. So I have to believe this email was triggered by that; if so, it demonstrates solid CRM integration, although it seems curious that the bank wouldn’t just pull my income directly from the mortgage app.

All in all it was a painless experience, and I look forward to seeing whether the bank uses it to alter my credit line.

—————————————

Capital One email asking for an income update (2 Sep 2014)

image

 

Online banking page to enter info

image

After entering info

image

Fintech Fundings: 10 Startups Raise $40 Million This Week Bringing August Total to $410 Million

The last week of August was somewhat slower, but still included 10 new rounds, 3 of which went to Finovate alums. The total raised was $39.5 million. August concludes with a whopping $410 million raised, $215 million in equity and $200 million in debt (see previous posts for details). 
—————
Equity raised in order of deal size (22 Aug through 28 Aug 2014):
Financial services kiosks
Latest round: $25 million
Total funding: Unknown
Tags: Unbanked, kiosks, billpay, card issuing, prepaid, Florida
Source: FT Partners

Ayondo

Social trading platform
Latest round: $4 million
Total raised: More than $4 million
Tags: Investing, social trading, Germany, Finovate alum
Source: Finovate
Korean bitcoin exchange
Latest round: $3 million
Total funding: $4 million
Tags: Cryptocurrency, bitcoin, payments, Korea
Source: Crunchbase 
Socure
Identity-management technology
Latest round: $2.5 million
Total funding: $6.7 million
Tags: Security, identity protection, New York, Finovate alum

Source: Crunchbase
Investment property lender
Latest round: $1.8 million
Total funding: $6.5 million (includes $4.7 million in debt)
Tags: Lending, credit, mortgage, real estate, Texas
Source: Crunchbase
Turkish online payments provider
Latest round: $1.4 million
Total funding: $3.2 million
Tags: Payments, mobile, online, cards, Turkey
Source: Crunchbase 
Knox Payments (See them debut at FinovateFall 2014 – 23/24 Sep)
Latest round: $625,000
Total funding: $1.6 million
Tags: Payments, acquiring, Virginia, Finovate alum
Source: FT Partners
Japanese digital invoicing startup
Latest round: $600,000
Total funding: $600,000
Tags: Invoicing, accounting, SMB, Japan
Source: Crunchbase 
Valuations of small and medium private businesses
Latest round: $300,000
Total raised: $400,000
Tags: SMB, business, investing, Netherlands
Source: Crunchbase 
Real estate virtual tour platform
Latest round: $300,000
Total funding: $300,000
Tags: Real estate, marketing, design, Chicago
Source: Crunchbase

Fintech Fundings: 16 Companies Raise $270 Million this Week

Late summer has proven to be red-hot in the fintech sector. This week, 16 companies received new funds, with 15 equity investments totaling $67 million and one massive debt placement of $200 million to AvantCredit. Combined with the $102 million of equity raised in the first half of August, the sector has attracted $170 million so far this month (not counting the $200 million in debt).  
——————–
New equity rounds this week:
Listed by size of deal (Aug 16 through Aug 22, 2014)

Discount real estate agency in UK
Latest round: $11.7 million
Total raised: $11.7 million
Tags: Real estate, rent, mortgage, UK
Source: Crunchbase
Digital bill presentment and payments
Latest round: $11 million
Total funding: $36.7 million
Tags: Electronic bill presentment, billpay, payments, North Carolina
Source: Crunchbase 

Continuity Control
Compliance as a service (CaaS)
Latest round: $10 million
Total funding: $12 million
Tags: Compliance, legal, regulations, Finovate alum, Connecticut
Source: Finovate
Provides fast access to the block chain for bitcoin developers 
Latest round: $9.5 million
Total funding: $13.7 million
Tags: Bitcoin, cryptocurrency, California
Source: Crunchbase
Helps identify and reduce hidden financial fees in investment accounts
Latest round: $6.5 million
Total funding: $9.5 million
Tags: Investing, fees, disclosures, 401(k), IRA, New York
Mobile biometric security
Latest round: $6 million
Total raised: $10.4 million
Tags: Security, biometrics, Wells Fargo accelerator, Finovate alum, Kansas
Source: Finovate
Mobile security
Latest round: $6 million
Total funding: $9.4 million
Tags: Security, Wells Fargo accelerator, Finovate alum, California
Source: Finovate 
Virtual agent technology
Latest round: $2.3 million
Total funding: $2.3 million
Tags: Customer service, mobile, BBVA (investor), SRI (spin-out), California
Source: Crunchbase
Crowdfunded real estate projects
Latest round: $1 million
Total funding: $1 million
Tags: P2P, investing, debt crowdfunding, rehab, mortgage, lending, North Carolina
Source: Crunchbase
Cryptocurrency distribution platform
Latest round: $800,000
Total funding: $800,000
Tags: Bitcoin, cryptocurrency, India
Source: Crunchbase 

Toopher (see them demo at FinovateFall 2014)
Two-factor authentication
Latest round: $791,000
Total funding: $2.8 million
Tags: Security, Finovate alum, Texas
Source: Crunchbase 
Platform for bitcoin/cryptocurrency intelligence & research
Latest round: $500,000
Total funding: $500,000
Tags: Cryptocurrency, payments, Amsterdam
Source: Crunchbase
Social lending for technical talent development
Latest round: $400,000
Total funding: $400,000
Tags: P2P, crowdfunding, student lending, California
Source: Crunchbase
Payments gateway in Bangkok
Latest round: $300,000
Total raised: $300,000
Tags: Payments, mobile, Thailand
Source: Crunchbase
Weeleo 
Crowdsourced cash currency exchange
Latest round: $20,000
Total funding: Unknown
Tags: Fx, P2P, currency, transfers, Paris
Source: Crunchbase
——————–
Debt Funding:
AvantCredit
Near-prime lender
Latest debt funding: $200 million
Total debt raised: $425 million
Total equity raised: $104 million
Tags: Subprime, credit, lending, Chicago
Source: Crunchbase 

2015 Digital Banking Strategic Planning (part 2)

Continuing on the 2015 strategic planning theme (see part 1: insurance, lifetime transaction archives and subscription fees)….

Here are numbers 4, 5 and 6 in my semi-prioritized list of 2015 priorities:

_______________________________________

4. Small business debt crowdfunding
_________________________________________

While commercial lending in the United States is up this year, the small business segment is still vastly underserved. And while there are good reasons why banks choose to avoid riskier SMBs, none of the reasons make a lick of sense to a business owner. I know from experience. 

Luckily, we live in an era where strangers are willing to lend directly to other strangers via the Internet, provided the returns are attractive enough (thank you Zopa, Prosper, & Lending Club for leading the way). So banks and credit unions, time is a-wasting. Partner with one of the many crowdfunding platforms to extend credit to your small business customers. You can even grab some no-risk loan-fee income in the process. 

______________________________________

5. Mobile deposit time-based fees
__________________________________

Mobile check deposit is one of the more magical services to appear in the digital age. Who would have guessed even five years ago that you could instantly deposit a paper check by snapping a picture of it from your smartphone? And strangely, that there would be no fee for such a miraculous service. 

This feature, that gets people talking about their bank (in a good way), probably needs to live on as a free benefit. However, there is no reason that all deposits must be treated the same. We recommend a tiered approach based on the time it takes to access deposited funds and the amount of the deposit. 

For example, Regions Bank has a brilliant, and from what I hear, very profitable pricing strategy (see post). 

     Immediate credit >>> 1% to 3% of check amount, with $5 minimum
     Credit the same night (8 PM cutoff) >>> $3 per check
     Credit within two days >> $0.50 per check

     There is also a $1 fee to temporarily raise your daily deposit limit to deposit a large check.

________________________________________

6. Relationship mortgages
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In late 2009, I refinanced my home through what was then ING Direct. While the process wasn’t perfect (see post), it went pretty smooth, and I’ve been happy with the bank even as it transitioned to Capital One ownership. I chose a 5-year term (with 30-year amortization) because it was an absurdly low rate at the time (though who knew that wasn’t even close to the bottom). 

The bank has been encouraging me to refinance almost a year in advance of the end of that deal. I finally took them up on their offer. You’d think that since they knew my life history and have pretty much owned my home for 4.5 years, that it would be relatively simple to update. But it doesn’t work that way. While the phone-based refi process has been relatively smooth (there was no online refi option for my loan), I feel like I’m going through the exact same process as a new customer. 

I know the bank has its hands tied by regulation and secondary market requirements, but they could at least make me FEEL as if I were saving time by rolling over an existing loan. How about accessing my account (which I’ve had for 13 years) and letting me verify that the info is correct instead of making me fill out every field over and over again? 

To most families, the home mortgage is the biggest financial bet they will ever make, and it’s time that financial institutions create relationships with the mortgage at the core.  

To be continued………..