January’s M&A Fintech Landscape

January’s M&A Fintech Landscape

When analysts predicted what would happen in the fintech sector after the pandemic hit last year, one of the top forecasts was that the industry would consolidate. That is, companies that had an adaptable business model and were fierce enough to fight would get bigger, while other companies would seek exits or sometimes fold altogether.

The economic crunch from the pandemic isn’t the only thing boosting M&A activity. We’ve seen a rising popularity of using a special purpose acquisition company (SPAC) instead of an IPO to go public. With these two forces boosting deal flow, we saw seven mergers and acquisitions announced last month:

This is quite a boost compared to last January when we saw only four M&A deals. In the next couple of months before the summer slowdown occurs, we can expect to see more M&A deals in the headlines. Keep an eye out specifically for two types of deals. First, SPACs are becoming a more legitimate option for a company to make a public debut. Second, digital bank acquisitions will increase as last year’s explosion of players in the digital banking space begins to deflate to a more sustainable level.

I would be remiss if I didn’t mention Visa’s attempted acquisition of Plaid. Visa formally announced its intentions to take over Plaid for $5.3 billion. The acquisition fell through, however, after the U.S. Department of Justice filed a civil antitrust lawsuit to block the deal.


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Payshield Leverages Visa’s Verifi to Fight Chargebacks

Payshield Leverages Visa’s Verifi to Fight Chargebacks

PCI-DSS innovator PayShield announced a partnership with Visa’s Verifi, a chargeback protection suite solutions provider this week.

PayShield selected Verifi to bolster its Express Resolve chargeback prevention solution in the Asia Pacific (APAC) region. Australia-based PayShield is leveraging Verifi’s dispute management tools that offer pre-dispute management solutions for chargebacks. Specifically, Verifi offers a three-pronged approach, allowing merchants to prevent disputes, resolve disputes, and inform the parties involved.

“PayShield has invested an incredible amount of time, effort, and resources into developing and testing our unique API and we are thrilled to be able to offer our ‘Express Resolve’ product to APAC merchants in partnership with Verifi,” said PayShield CEO Daryn Griggs. “Through the PayShield and Verifi relationship, merchants benefit from a global pre-dispute coverage that enables them to identify, resolve, and respond at unmatched velocity, which in turn, delivers higher successful resolution rates and greater cost savings.”

PayShield’s implementation is a timely one, as many merchants and services have had to move their sales online. This increase in card-not-present transactions has increased the potential of fraudulent activity in online purchases. Integrating Verifi’s dispute management tools offers a holistic solution for PayShield’s merchant clients, ultimately helping them land higher win rates, reduce manual reviews, and boost profits.

Founded in 2005, Verifi was acquired by Visa in 2019 for an undisclosed amount. Today’s deal marks Verifi’s first Australia-based partnership. “Extending global coverage by creating meaningful relationships with partners is important for us to enable sellers and issuers to benefit from pre-dispute solutions and evolve the chargeback process to enhance the cardholder experience,” said Verifi CEO Matthew Katz.


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NAB to Acquire Australian Smart Bank 86 400

NAB to Acquire Australian Smart Bank 86 400

National Australia Bank (NAB) announced its intention to purchase digital “smart bank” 86 400 today. The $664 billion (AUD$867) bank plans to spend $168 million (AUD$220) to purchase the digital newcomer.

Since it was founded in 2017, 86 400 accrued more than 85,000 customers, $375 million of deposits, $270 million in approved residential mortgages, and 2,500 accredited brokers.

NAB will integrate the digital bank into its in-house digital bank competitor, Ubank. Twelve-year-old Ubank, with 600,000 users, anticipates the acquisition will accelerate its growth. Specifically, Ubank cited benefitting from 86 400’s experience and technology platform.

“Bringing together UBank and 86 400 is consistent with NAB’s long-term strategy and growth plans and will enable us to develop a leading digital bank that can attract and retain customers at scale and pace,” said NAB Chief Operating Officer Les Matheson. “The combined business will deliver accelerated innovation and an enhanced customer experience to create a stronger and more competitive banking alternative for Australian customers.”

86 400 sought to be a “smart bank” and differentiated itself with a fee-free, transparent approach and local call center. The startup had raised $26 million (AUD$34 million) and had recently received its banking license.

The deal is pending regulatory approvals and is expected to be completed by mid-2021.


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The Commodification of Payments Platforms

The Commodification of Payments Platforms

The following is a guest post by Sandeep Sood, CEO of Kunai.

Last year, Facebook announced that all Whatsapp users in India would be able to send payments using India’s Unified Payments Interface (UPI).

UPI was responsible for 2 billion payments in India during the last month alone. It makes it possible for Indians to pay each other seamlessly, regardless of the platform or bank account they are using. Add 400 million Whatsapp users to this system, and you have the most powerful payment solution anywhere in the world.

You also have the blueprint for the future of payments. In my view, that future is a delightfully simple one, in which universal payments solutions are an inevitability, with or without government standards like UPI;

The story in India is instructive. Before UPI, Softbank and Alibaba-backed Paytm had spent years and millions of dollars building and marketing proprietary digital wallets. UPI has made their solutions irrelevant overnight.

Today, proprietary wallets and payment platforms around the world are attempting to build moats through features and network effects. Yet, there is an obvious ceiling to what people want from their payment solutions…and the reality is that “pay anyone quickly” captures almost everything customers want.

When competing payment solutions reach feature parity, the only thing left are network effects. This means that each solution will have a choice: join a universal standard or fade into obscurity, like Paytm in India. The vast majority will choose to join a universal standard, which means they will become easy to replace.

This is a great outcome for economic growth and FinTech innovation. It is also fertile ground for the upcoming currency revolution. Universal payment solutions will also accept any form of currency with a large user base, be it the US Dollar, the Chinese Yuan, Bitcoin, or Central Bank Digital Currency (CDBC). The currencies of the future won’t compete based on their network effects, but rather more important attributes, such as their monetary policy. This is good news for currency innovations like Bitcoin.

As a FinTech newbie in 2013, I was surprised to find conferences, websites, and companies dedicated exclusively to ‘payments’. I was ignorant to the fact that payments were still generally clumsy and cumbersome…and that they required so much infrastructure and resources to do well. I’m looking forward to a future where the innovation is happening at a level far beyond the enabling of payments.


Sandeep Sood is the CEO of Kunai. He’s been building quality agencies that attract quality teams in order to build quality products. He sold his first agency, Monsoon, to Capital One in 2015.


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In the Battle for Direct Deposits, Plaid Stands with the Little Guys

In the Battle for Direct Deposits, Plaid Stands with the Little Guys

Plaid’s newest product is sure to make consumers happy and large banks slightly terrified. The company is tapping the power of direct deposits for its new launch, Deposit Switch.

The new offering, which goes live in beta today, does exactly as it sounds. It offers financial institutions and fintechs a tool to help end consumers easily change which account their paychecks are deposited into.

Switching the destination of direct deposits is a hassle for consumers, and generally requires manual paperwork that has to change hands between their bank and employer. Deposit Switch aims to end this headache. The company is relying on its instant switch method that connects a consumer’s payroll account directly through Plaid Link, the quick-start method to integrating with Plaid’s API.

For end users, the direct deposit switch can be done in four steps, as illustrated below:

deposit switch flow

“For financial institutions, high-friction onboarding experiences can lead to consumer drop-off and inactive accounts—and can ultimately prevent banks from becoming a consumer’s primary financial institution,” Plaid noted in a blog post announcement. “A significant opportunity exists for expanded innovation that leads to better consumer outcomes. Plaid can help by building the infrastructure that bridges the gap between financial institutions and payroll data, starting with direct deposits.”

In addition to giving consumers more control over their financial lives, Deposit Switch could also be a boon for smaller financial institutions (FIs) and fintechs. That’s because Deposit Switch is a new tool for them to win over consumer deposits.

Generally, banks use a high interest rate, a one-time bonus, or an enticing gift to incentivize their clients to change their direct deposit. These options are costly, And for smaller FIs and digital banks especially, may not be feasible.

Many digital banks are having difficulty boosting their total assets under management in the first place. This is due to two reasons 1) consumers use them as an “accessory” bank while storing and depositing the bulk of their money in larger institutions and 2) Many clients that use a digital bank as their primary financial institution may not have as much net worth and/or don’t receive as high a salary as those who choose to bank with traditional FIs.

Yotta, a fintech app that helps users build their savings, is one of the fintechs beta testing Plaid’s Deposit Switch. “Working with Plaid, we’ve made it faster and easier for customers to take the first step by establishing and funding their accounts with direct deposit,” said Yotta co-founder, Ben Doyle. “Yotta also integrates with Plaid Exchange, so customers can securely use their Yotta account with other fintech apps for digital payments, financial planning, investments and more. Fintech is the new normal for most Americans and Plaid helps Yotta meet customers where they are.”

So what about large, traditional FIs? Should they be worried that fintechs are making it too easy for clients to pour their paychecks into competing accounts? The short answer: yes.


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Get Ready for Finovate in Focus

Get Ready for Finovate in Focus

Next month, we’re introducing a new way to focus on the hottest themes in fintech through our new event series. Dubbed FinovateFocus, the new series includes two micro-events that take place on the last Thursday of every month.

Each micro-event– FinovateFocus Connect and FinovateFocus Roundtable– serves up new content and ample networking opportunities to help you stay ahead of the curve on a new topic in fintech while forming relationships with key players. And we’re keeping things simple; FinovateFocus Connect is only one hour while FinovateFocus Roundtable is an hour and a half.

You can choose which format works best for you:

FinovateFocus Connect

This event maximizes your time by bringing you nine presentations and nine meetings, all within the span of an hour. The platform will alternate between three-minute presentations and three-minute meetings, which are pre-assigned based on common interests.

FinovateFocus Roundtable

This discussion-based event includes your choice of two moderated, 30-minute roundtables with 15 minutes of networking before and after the roundtable conversation. To encourage engagement, each roundtable is limited to eight participants each.

For the February event, here are the roundtable discussions to choose from:

  • Earning customer trust in the digital age
  • Future of payments –are we turning into a cashless society?
  • Effective customer acquisition, engagement, and retention – the Experience Age
  • Boosting CX in banking with AI – conversation banking: exploring back-end technologies
  • Authentication, biometrics, and digital identity in digitized society
  • Chatbots, AI, automation as a platform for revolutionizing the CX
  • Personalization and customization with data in the banking and payments industry
  • Insights into how to support financial futures for customers in a post-COVID-19 world
  • Customer Service NOW
  • Video banking as a preferred means of customer communication
  • What do customers want – Meeting customer needs
  • APIs and Open Banking – Putting the customer in the driver’s seat

More themes each month

If February’s topic of digital UX doesn’t pique your interest, we’ll be highlighting Small Business Survival in March and Maximizing Your Data’s Value in April. We’ll release the remainder of next quarter’s topics soon so stay tuned.

See you next month!

FinovateFocus starts on February 25 with the topic of digital user experience. The Connect portion will run from 9 am to 10 am Central time while the Roundtable portion will run from 10:15 am to 10:45 am Central time.

Registration opens soon so get ready to secure your spot!


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What’s Next for Roostify After its $32 Million Series C Round

What’s Next for Roostify After its $32 Million Series C Round

Digital home lending solutions provider Roostify landed $32 million in funding yesterday, bringing its total capital to $65 million.

The round was led by Ten Coves Capital, and included contributions from Cota Capital, Mouro Capital, Colchis Capital, Point72 Ventures, and JPMorgan Chase. The investment will help the San Francisco-based company make home lending faster and more transparent for all parties by leveraging AI.

The Series C funding comes at a time of growth for not only Roostify, but also the mortgage industry in general. The Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) estimates that purchase originations will grow 8.5% to a new record of $1.54 trillion in 2021, thanks to low mortgage rates and low housing supply boosting demand.

Roostify has seen the effects of this growth. Last year, the company experienced a 250% increase in the number of applications submitted through its system and processed just under 1.5 million loan applications.

And while Roostify was prepared to handle both the volume and the demand for digital that came in 2020, many mortgage providers were not. “While the recent record-breaking origination volume was certainly welcomed, it also overburdened outdated mortgage lending processes and systems,” said Roostify Founder and CEO Rajesh Bhat. “We need to adopt a digital-first mentality that relies on technology-enabled transformation to solve real business problems. In order to thrive in a digital-first world, mortgage lenders need critical digital transformation initiatives, such as cloud-based technology, self-service solutions for consumers, and meaningful AI deployments.”

Founded in 2012, Roostify helps 200+ lending institutions collectively handle around $50 billion in loan volume each month.

As for what’s next, Roostify said it will continue to focus on leveraging data to transform the mortgage lending process. Key to this goal is the company’s partnership with Google Cloud AI. The two companies announced their collaboration last October in which Roostify began integrating Google Cloud’s Lending DocAI solution into its digital lending platform. As a result of Google Cloud’s AI and ML capabilities, Roostify’s digital lending tool now helps lenders analyze, categorize, and extract data from documents in an automized manner.

Despite the company’s growth, Bhat said that Roostify is “still in its infancy” in terms of its potential impact on the mortgage lending industry. “My team and I believe that it’s not enough to simply do digital lending better. We’re here to empower lenders to go beyond the efficiencies and cost-savings and forge a true connection with the end-user. We’re creating a world where financial success is possible for everyone, thanks to a simplified home lending experience.”


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Dashlane’s New CEO Joins at Pivotal Moment

Dashlane’s New CEO Joins at Pivotal Moment

One of the top themes of 2020 was cybersecurity. The increase in online traffic, spurred by social distancing and stay at home orders, offered cybercriminals more hacking opportunities than in previous years.

This means that for fintechs like Dashlane, it’s time to shine. Dashlane was founded in 2009 and its password management technology has since gained a cult-like following.

The Dashlane app stores the user’s passwords and autofills the corresponding username and password on each of their accounts. In addition to account logins, the app can also help streamline the checkout experience by filling in forms with address and payment card information.

This week, the New York-based company made headlines with the announcement of its new CEO. Dashlane appointed JD Sherman to lead the company. Sherman, who is filling the shoes of former CEO Emmamuel Schalet, comes to the company with decades of experience from leadership roles at IBM, Akamai, and most recently HubSpot, where he served as President and Chief Operating Officer.

“The need for better security practices has become more important than ever for everyone, from individuals to small businesses and larger enterprises, especially with the increase of remote work across every industry,” said Sherman. “I’m thrilled to be joining the Dashlane team at a pivotal moment of growth, and look forward to working with this group of world-class security experts as we continue to build a simpler digital future for people and businesses through secure access.”

The change in leadership comes at a pivotal time for Dashlane as the company seeks to forge more enterprise partnerships. “This is about thinking about its next leg of our scaling strategy, more B2B monetization after being strong in B2C,” Sherman said in an interview with TechCrunch.

Sherman isn’t exaggerating about being strong in the B2C space. The company has scaled to 15 million users– up from 10 million users just two years ago. And since so much of consumers’ lives have moved online in the past year, this growth is expected to increase.

Dashlane has raised a total of $211 million after most recently pulling in $110 million in a Series D round led by Sequoia. While there is no word on an updated valuation for the company, Dashlane was last valued at $500+ million in 2019.

Dashlane’s Finovate debut was at FinovateFall 2012. The company also demoed at FinovateEurope 2013.


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TrueLayer Taps the Power of Open Banking to Launch PayDirect

TrueLayer Taps the Power of Open Banking to Launch PayDirect

Financial app building platform TrueLayer has long been using the power of open banking to facilitate payment activities. Today, the U.K.-based company is taking another step to make the online payments experience even easier with the launch of a new payments product, PayDirect.

PayDirect combines open banking with Europe’s payment rails to offer a customizable solution for instant payments, instant payouts, and smoother payment reconciliation.

“PayDirect builds on our open banking expertise to streamline onboarding, pay-in and payout, to help operators deliver an experience that is fit for the digital age,” said the company’s Chief Product Officer, Ossama Soliman.

Because PayDirect relies on open banking and Europe’s fast payment rails, the solution circumvents many of the headaches associated with traditional card payments. Cards can expire, require manual entry, and are subject to spending limits. These hurdles generally result in an 85% success rate. PayDirect, in comparison, has a 96% success rate. PayDirect also eliminates chargebacks and reduces fraud by authenticating via biometrics directly with the consumer’s bank.

Here’s how the checkout experience works:

Financial services companies that use PayDirect benefit from a single interface for onboarding users, receiving instant deposits into their account, and providing instant withdrawals. Customers, on the other hand, benefit from low risk of fraud, faster refunds and withdrawals, less false positives during fraud checks, and a faster checkout experience.

Founded in 2016, TrueLayer is best known for its payments API that helps financial services companies provide online payments, bill payments, and account top-ups.

The company has offices in five countries across the globe, including London, Sydney, Milan, Hong Kong and Dublin. Francesco Simoneschi is co-founder and CEO.


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NCR Acquires Cardtronics in $2.5 Billion Deal

NCR Acquires Cardtronics in $2.5 Billion Deal

Cardtronics found itself at the center of a bidding war this past month, with NCR Corporation submitting the winning bid this week.

This comes after investment firms Apollo Global Management and Hudson Executive Capital initially agreed to buy the ATM operator last month. NCR agreed to a $2.5 billion deal, agreeing to purchase Cardtronics for $39 a share. This beat the bid from Apollo and Hudson, which totaled $2.3 billion at $35 per share. NCR was required to pay a termination fee of $32.6 million.

Cardronics CEO Edward H. West said that the deal is “a testament to the strength and value of Cardtronics, our talented team and customer base, and the complementary nature of our two businesses.”

NCR anticipates that Cardtronics’ Allpoint ATM network will complement its own payments platform and that combined they will connect retail and banking customers.

“This transaction accelerates the NCR-as-a-Service strategy we laid out at Investor Day in December, further shifts NCR’s revenue mix to software, services and recurring revenue, and adds value for our customers,” said NCR President and CEO Michael D. Hayford. “We have had a long-standing relationship with Cardtronics and its outstanding team… Simply put, we are better together.”

The deal, which has been approved by both companies’ Boards of Directors but is still subject to regulatory approvals and closing conditions, is expected to close in mid-2021. Once the deal is finalized, Cardtronics will become a privately held company.


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Bryan Clagett Joins Moven as Chief Revenue Officer

Bryan Clagett Joins Moven as Chief Revenue Officer

Fintech veteran Bryan Clagett is making moves within Moven this year. Clagett was recently appointed Chief Revenue Officer of Moven after serving as an advisor to the New York-based company for six months.

“Bringing on Bryan was an essential next step in expanding our business maturity as we look to expand our U.S. market presence,” said Moven Founder Brett King. “Having worked on and off with Bryan for 10 years, I’m glad we finally snagged him at a time when our U.S. operations are accelerating rapidly and where COVID has created an extraordinary demand for digital differentiation in the retail digital banking space.”

Clagett’s fintech career started three decades ago, his most notable position being Chief Marketing Officer and Investor at Geezeo, where he served for ten years until the digital banking company was acquired by Jack Henry in 2019. During his tenure, Clagett helped Geezeo grow to more than 550 clients and achieve profitability.

Since his time at Geezeo, Clagett has served as an advisor to Conotext, Blip Labs, Procurity, and StrategyCorps.

“I’m extremely excited to join Moven to lead sales, marketing and partnership strategy as we evolve the company’s growth trajectory. Moven’s client-centric philosophy and emphasis on helping financial services via flexible and innovative, data-driven solutions made this a great fit for me. I’m looking forward to expanding into new markets, strengthening our relationships with our partners, and building the leading GTM function in our space,” said Clagett.

Moven’s appointment of Clagett comes after Moven made a major pivot in March of last year, dropping its B2C offering to focus on its enterprise arm that serves financial institutions. The new B2B approach has been flourishing in recent months, as banking-as-a-service tools have been gaining traction thanks to firms’ heightened focus on their digital presence.


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How Plaid is Helping to Level the Fintech Playing Field

How Plaid is Helping to Level the Fintech Playing Field

Banking technology innovator Plaid is kicking off Black History Month ahead of schedule this year. The San Francisco-based company announced the launch of FinRise today. FinRise is a nine month accelerator program designed to support early-stage founders who are Black, Indigenous, or People of Color (BIPOC).

“While technology has come a long way to level the playing field, the reality is that many minority-owned businesses are still frequently denied access to some of the most basic resources needed to start and grow their businesses,” the company said in a blog post.

The program, which was developed during an internal hackathon, offers three key areas of support:

  1. Access to capital and services
    Plaid is leveraging its network of venture capital firms, network service providers, and accelerators to offer startups networking opportunities, discounted services and ad credits, and pitch practice.
  2. Resources for growth
    The program will kick off with a three-day virtual bootcamp led by Plaid experts and other thought leaders who will lead workshops on technical, product, and business topics. The sessions will focus on topics like communication and storytelling, engineering best practices, navigating the policy and regulatory landscapes, and designing user-centric experiences. 
  3. Mentorship and support
    Participants will receive support for nine months following the bootcamp. In addition to benefitting from others in the bootcamp cohort, startups will have access to a dedicated account manager, an internal skillshare network, and mentorship from Plaid leaders.

The FinRise program certainly fills a gap. Historically, much of the attention on diversity has been focused on driving more women into the fintech sector. With Black History Month starting in February and the Black Lives Matter Movement still fresh in everyone’s mind, we can expect to see more initiatives dedicated to solving the gap in ethnic diversity in fintech and the technology field in general.

The first FinRise program will take place from April to December, 2021.

Eligible startups are U.S.-based, BIPOC majority-owned businesses incorporated in the United States with two or more employees. A panel of Plaid leaders will select the participants, giving preference to those that offer a product that leverages financial data.

Founders can apply starting today and the first cohort will be announced in early March.


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