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Finovate Blog
Tracking fintech, banking & financial services innovations since 1994
Alliant Credit Union announced a partnership with lending-as-a-service fintech Upstart.
The agreement will make Alliant part of the Upstart Referral Network.
Upstart SVP of Lending Partnerships Michael Lock said the move will help Alliant “grow its membership while providing greater access to affordable credit.”
Alliant Credit Union first partnered with Upstart in May 2022. With today’s announcement, Alliant becomes part of the Upstart Referral Network. Under this agreement, Upstart offers qualified loan applicants tailored loan offers in around five minutes. When the applicant decides to pursue the loan opportunity, Upstart transitions the client from its own user interface to an Alliant-branded experience, where they finish the online member application and close the loan.
“As part of the Upstart Referral Network, Alliant will be able to grow its membership while providing greater access to affordable credit,” said Upstart SVP of Lending Partnerships Michael Lock.
With more than 650,000 members and over $15 billion in assets, Alliant Credit Union is among the top 10 U.S. credit unions. Alliant SVP, Chief Capital Markets Officer, and Head of Commercial Lending Charles Krawitz said that the company is “very particular” when it comes to selecting partners. “Our partners must embrace doing things the right way, with legal and risk compliance maturity,” said Krawitz. “We believe Upstart has invested in robust systems that ensure borrowers are well-vetted, and that they will make a strong partner for delivering value and options to our members.”
Founded in 2012, Upstart differentiates itself in the alternative lending space by partnering with banks and credit unions seeking to increase their approval rates and lower their loss rates. The company’s AI-first lending tool enables financial institutions to reach a wider variety of end customers, including those with less favorable credit files.
Upstart went public in December 2020 and was in the news headlines recently due to concerns about a drop in funding as well as a decline in earnings. Company CEO Dave Girouard said that the decline was “disappointing” and “unacceptable,” adding, “It may be natural for you to question whether Upstart’s AI-powered risk models aren’t working as designed, but we’re confident this isn’t the case, that, in fact, our models continue to improve with respect to accuracy and risk separation.”
Teslar Software announced a partnership with Missouri-based community bank, The Seymour Bank.
Courtesy of the deal, The Seymour Bank will use Teslar’s lending process automation platform to modernize and streamline its commercial lending business.
Teslar Software made its Finovate debut at FinovateSpring 2015 in San Francisco.
The Seymour Bank, a Missouri-based financial institution with more than $137 million in assets, has selected Teslar Software to enhance its commercial lending strategy. The bank will use Teslar’s lending process automation platform to reduce reliance on manual processes and boost efficiencies..
“With Teslar, we will become more accessible to our customers, delivering a portal that allows them to easily and quickly monitor the status of their loans and securely communicate with us,” The Seymour Bank vice president Heather Johns said. “Plus, Teslar’s automated workflows will save time for our employees, resulting in a better, more efficient experience.”
In addition to the digital customer portal, designed to improve convenience, The Seymour Bank will also leverage Teslar’s technology to improve its ability to track documentation and monitor exceptions. The institution, founded in 1939 and headquartered in Seymour, MIssouri, outside of Springfield, prides itself in its commitment to local involvement and customer service. But, in the words of Johns, the bank “also want(s) to be recognized for modern technology and seamless experiences.” The partnership with Teslar will bring the benefits of modern, automated technology to both the bank’s customer-facing and back office operations.
“The Seymour Bank is a locally owned bank that has prioritized serving its customers and community for more than 80 years,” Teslar Software founder and CEO Joe Ehrhardt said. “We look forward to supporting the bank as (it provides) more digitized, seamless interactions to enhance both the customer and employee experience.”
Teslar’s partnership with The Seymour Bank comes just weeks after the firm announced that it had teamed up with National Bank & Trust to streamline the Texas-based financial institution’s lending process with a new suite of automated workflow and portfolio management tools. Chartered in 1888 as The First National and headquartered in La Grange, Texas, National Bank & Trust is a full-service bank dedicated to providing customized service, “lightning fast lending”, and future-focused technology.
Winner of the 2020 Finovate Award for Best Fintech Partnership for its PPP.bank initiative – a free website developed in collaboration with Citizens Bank of Edmonds and Mark Cuban – Teslar Software was founded in 2008 and made its Finovate debut at FinovateSpring in 2015. Since then, the company has grown into a robust, portfolio management system provider and strategic partner to help community and regional banks compete in an increasingly tough and crowded environment for lending services.
The customer journey is vital in today’s financial services landscape and cloud-enabled business innovation is the vital ingredient.
A good user experience is a critical factor in helping consumers differentiate between firms and helping brands build lasting relationships with customers.
According to the Harvard Business Review, firms with leading customer satisfaction rankings can grow their revenues two and a half times faster than their competitors. Moreover, research by Forrester demonstrates that customers are over twice as likely to stick with a brand when their problems are solved quickly.
Yet, great digital experiences rely on intuitive GUIs and an agile, cloud native strategy, both of which are not easy to achieve. In this article, we’ll demystify how to get started with cloud computing in software engineering for banking and help you develop a leading customer UX.
What Are the Challenges of Cloud Business Innovation in Banking?
Approximately US$1.3 trillion was spent in 2020 on digital transformation, yet Deloitte data shows 70% of projects fail. That equates to over US$900 billion wasted — so what’s going wrong?
Just as an HD TV relies on good HD content, great apps need high interactivity with data, an always-on presence, security, and scalability to perform under high demand.
Eric Newcomer, WSO2 CTO, argues that cloud business innovation goes wrong when there’s a messy middle. In other words, when there’s a lack of clarity about how strategy, outcome, and skill coordinate the microservices within a platform, cloud business innovation becomes dysfunctional.
Within banking specifically, the stakes of digital transformation are extremely high. Today’s financial services firms must deal with an onslaught of cyberattacks and regulatory constraints, not to mention increased competition from new fintech entrants better-equipped to deliver excellent customer experiences. So how can financial institutions ensure they foster an innovative and successful cloud-first environment?
How to Overcome These Challenges
Great cloud computing in software engineering needs equally great cloud native practices and technology, focusing specifically on integration and APIs. Without this focus, customers lose the always-on, always integrated feel that today’s users demand.
Therefore, financial services firms require an all-in-one platform delivering accelerated and enhanced engineering processes to speed up innovation in their cloud environment. Unfortunately, building robust and agile platforms from scratch can be timely and costly.
Instead, partnering with existing solutions providers allows financial service firms to focus on developing cloud banking innovations and better deliver security, compliance, and ideal customer experiences. You can read more about overcoming challenges for banks to generate fintech innovation here.
The Role of Digital Platform-as-a-Service Within Financial Services
An “opinionated” digital platform-as-a-service (digital PaaS) accelerates cloud banking innovation by tackling some of the core complexities of developing digital applications. As a result, you can build, deploy, and iterate new versions more easily.
Digital PaaS platforms enable diagrammatic and low-code functionality, providing a great developer experience. In turn, your teams can increase their productivity and attention to quality assurance for end-users.
Moreover, digital PaaS integrates with automated deployment tools using Docker and Kubernetes. As a result, you can test, develop, and deploy new user features for maximum customer satisfaction faster than ever before, using just a few clicks.
Digital PaaS solutions deliver seamless platform functionality and integration with your existing data warehouses, allowing you to leverage efficient and scalable consumer solutions.
How Low-Code Digital PaaS Enables Cloud Computing in Software Engineering
There isn’t a one-size-fits-all solution to cloud computing in software engineering, so what makes a digital PaaS-based method the most appropriate for financial services?
A digital PaaS approach provides a highly stable environment to create and manage APIs since it establishes core conventions and assumptions within your workflows. These assumptions include the programming language and dev environment, all the way to the publishing process on software marketplaces. As a result, you can remove barriers to collaboration and shorten project lead times. Similarly, as a cloud-enabled solution, you provide collaborative space for your teams to work.
Moreover, you can easily build platform microservices and provide teams with autonomy over their software output. Software teams can publish updates to critical platform elements accordingly without jeopardizing the rest of your platform or relying on slower project teams, keeping your user experience competitive.
However, the benefits don’t stop when you hit publish. Digital PaaS solutions allow you to run professional DevOps systems and make improvements in step with live user trends. Consequently, you can remain competitive and establish a close relationship with customers.
Finally, once your APIs are built, you can share them through marketplace and import or export data with other SaaS platforms. As a result, you can leverage other data sources for enhanced features. For example, you can capitalize on open banking ecosystems, enhance your security through additional identity checks, and more.
And so, with complex development and deployment tasks that are both easy to learn and use, you can deliver fresh digital services faster — and more accurately — than ever.
Introducing Choreo by WSO2
With around only three in ten digital transformations being successful and the heightened competition within banking today, financial services companies need to innovate at speed and scale.
Choreo is a digital PaaS that helps companies manage and develop APIs, services, and integrations quickly. Choreo enables developers and operations teams to go from ideation to production in hours or days versus weeks and months via a seamless environment that eliminates the complexity of cloud native computing.
Choreo provides a diagrammatic and pro-code environment side by side, allowing you to create an outline and make detailed tweaks in minutes. It includes a developer marketplace with over 400 pre-built connectors that makes it easy to discover, reuse, publish, and share.
With security and transparency at its foundation, you can easily trace code changes and root issues across your entire development history. You can also benefit from AI-assisted coding and enhanced governance features.
Find out more about Choreo and create an API with just a few clicks.
A look at the companies demoing at FinovateFall in New York on September 12 and 13. Register today and save your spot.
Instnt’s fully-managed Customer Acceptance Platform helps businesses sign up and accept 50% more good customers with zero fraud loss for good, with continuous, portable identity assurance.
Features
One-click frictionless customer acceptance
Day 0 to Day N continuous identity assurance
Decentralized, reusable KYC verification
Why it’s great
Instnt provides frictionless customer acceptance experiences without compromising on security, risk and compliance.
Presenters
Sunil Madhu, CEO Madhu is a serial entrepreneur operating in Security, Risk & Compliance for over 30 years. Recently, he founded and was the CEO of Socure. LinkedIn
Justin Kamerman, CPO Kamerman has over 20 years of experience designing and building high performance distributed systems in the telecommunications, IPTV, identity verification, social media analytics, and IIoT industries. LinkedIn
Frictionless account access without pins/passcodes/passphrases
24/7 customer service with a user friendly, conversational IVR
Better security with biometric voice authentication
Why it’s great
The Illuma Shield Voice Authentication + Posh Conversational IVR integration improves operational efficiency, security, and customer experience for community banks and credit unions.
Presenters
Milind Borkar, CEO & Founder, Illuma Labs Borkar brings a background in R&D and more than 50 successful product launches to his role at Illuma Labs. LinkedIn
Karan Kashyap, CEO & Co-Founder, Posh Posh is a conversational AI fintech working with FIs. Kashyap is an alumni of MIT’s Artificial Intelligence Lab. LinkedIn
Chad Rogers, EVP & COO, Connexus Credit Union At Connexus Credit union ($4.9B in assets), Rogers leads a talented senior leadership team delivering exceptional experiences to ~420K members nationwide. LinkedIn
A look at the companies demoing at FinovateFall in New York on September 12 and 13. Register today and save your spot.
EqualFuture’s Super App reimagines financial wellness through a simplified, integrated way to empower people to plan, simulate, and make smarter decisions.
Features
Includes “Someone Like Me” features that help users create their profiles
Supports goal/scenario-based financial decisions through interactive, gamified tools
Uses cashflow modeling to stay on track
Presenter
Joyce Phillips, CEO & Founder Joyce Phillips is an awarded leader, innovator, and marketer. Phillips brings significant global financial expertise, previously holding executive leadership roles with iconic corporate brands. LinkedIn
A look at the companies demoing at FinovateFall in New York on September 12 and 13. Register today and save your spot.
Debbie is the Noom for debt loss, utilizing behavioral psychology and rewards to motivate and incentivize people to crush their debt, for good.
Features
Utilizes behavioral psychology through a guided debt loss program to help users unwind habits
Provides time trended credit data to pre-qualify users for refi
Offers users micro-rewards for improved behavior
Why it’s great
Debbie users pay down on average $450/month of debt, while setting aside savings of $100/month consistently. For folks in $5k-$10k of debt who are making $50k/year, this is significant.
Presenters
Frida Leibowitz, CEO Ex-Credit Risk at Marcus by Goldman. Immigrant, first-gen student from a single parent home. Passionate about financial security because she’s experienced crushing debt while attending NYU. LinkedIn
Rachel Lauren, COO Former VC at BDMI and software equity research analyst at Credit Suisse. Passionate about financial behavior after seeing her family struggle with money management and financial shame. LinkedIn
A look at the companies demoing at FinovateFall in New York on September 12 and 13. Register today and save your spot.
SESAMm specializes in big data and AI. At FinovateFall, the company is demoing its ESG Monitoring and Alerting product that detects controversies and positive impact events on web data.
Features
ESG controversies and SDGs positive impact topics identification on 5+ million companies
Event monitoring on private and public companies
Delivery methods: Daily emails, cloud and CRM integration, among others
Why it’s great
SESAMm’s ESG and SDG Alerts leverage AI to give firms the ability to monitor millions of public and private companies worldwide, providing more objective indicators.
Presenter
Sylvain Forté, CEO Sylvain Forté, CEO and Co-Founder of SESAMm, created the company in 2014 based on his passion for artificial intelligence and finance after receiving a double degree in engineering. LinkedIn
What is venture capital doing to help promote fintech innovators who come from underrepresented groups and communities?
We caught up with Elizabeth McCluskey, Director of The Discovery Fund at CMFG Ventures, to talk about her work in supporting underrepresented entrepreneurs that are building solutions to drive financial inclusion.
We discussed her own extensive experience in financial services, working in both investment banking and wealth management before moving to venture capital. We also learned why she believes it is important to invest in female founders and founders from communities that are underserved by traditional financial institutions.
Why did you decide to transition from investment banking and wealth management to venture capital? What do you enjoy about working at a venture capital firm?
ElizabethMcCluskey: Investment banking is transactional. I enjoyed being part of transformational deals for companies but missed being there for the long-term impact. When I pivoted to wealth management, I was able to develop more longevity in client relationships, but the investments were focused on public equities with which I had minimal connection. These experiences led me to find the ideal balance in venture capital. Now I can build more intimate relationships with portfolio companies and invest in people and ideas that are meaningful and important to me. It brings joy and satisfaction to support their long-term growth and success.
Tell me more about your current role at CMFG Ventures and the Discovery Fund.
McCluskey:CMFG Ventures is the venture capital arm of CUNA Mutual Group. CMFG Ventures invests in fintechs to help financial institutions grow and provide a brighter financial future for all. The firm adds value to fintechs by leveraging its well-established network of over 6,000 financial institutions and suite of complimentary technology solutions. Since 2016, CMFG Ventures has invested in nearly 50 fintech companies and its Discovery Fund has invested in 14 additional early-stage companies led by BIPOC, LGBTQ+, and women founders.
I am the director of the Discovery Fund. The Discovery Fund was created to support underrepresented entrepreneurs who are building solutions for financial inclusion. We plan to invest $15 million over the next three years in early-stage fintech companies. Through my role, I’m able to see the full scope of venture capital investing, including but not limited to:
Sourcing deals and meeting entrepreneurs
Conducting due diligence
Negotiating the terms of the deal
Providing long-term support for entrepreneurs’ journeys by helping them scale, network, and find the resources they need to continue to succeed.
Why is it important to invest in diverse founders, especially women-led businesses? And what qualities you look for when investing in these companies?
McCluskey: Women entrepreneurs receive less than 3% of venture capital funding. This staggering number demands that we take a step back and focus on supporting diverse founders, especially women-led businesses, to improve equity in the venture capital space. This is not just the right thing to do – it’s good business. A 2018 BCG study concluded that women-founded businesses yielded two times as much revenue per dollar invested as those founded by men.
Women and diverse founders who have been historically underserved by traditional financial services are working hard to create the financial inclusion they wish they had. We are investing in entrepreneurs like them who are deeply connected to the problems they’re solving. Empowering underrepresented leaders is already creating new opportunities for liquidity management, wealth management, credit access, asset protection, and more.
Can you share more about the women-led businesses that CMFG Ventures invests in and supports? How are they helping make the financial services industry more inclusive?
McCluskey: CMFG Ventures has made investments in multiple women-led companies, such as The Beans, Climb, Caribou, and Frich to help the financial services industry become more inclusive.
The Beans simplifies the path to financial balance through evidence-based design and cutting-edge technology, so consumers stress less about money and focus on what they love.
Climb is a student lending and payments platform intended to make career education more affordable and accessible.
Caribou enables financial advisers to engage their clients in healthcare planning to support life transitions and build stronger financial futures.
Frich makes money social. It helps Gen Z develop better financial habits leveraging the power of community and benchmarking.
These female-driven fintechs are transforming the financial services space and improving the financial lives of everyday Americans.
What advice do you typically share with women founders? What about those looking to break into the VC space?
McCluskey: I would give the same advice to women founders as I do with men: always ask for feedback, especially to better understand why someone is telling them “no”. Founders who send updates over time allow me to track their progress, including growth and consistency of their business plans. In several cases, I’ve ended up investing in companies that I passed on in earlier rounds. And even if someone says “no” to doing business together, they can still be a valuable ally. Attempt to stay in touch and leverage their networks. People are often willing to share their connections and provide valuable guidance.
As for those looking to break into the VC space, I believe it is slowly becoming more inclusive and representative, yet it is still a very network-based profession. Similar to my advice for entrepreneurs, start with one person you know (or cold outreach via alumni networks, common interest groups, etc.). From there, ask every person you talk to for an introduction to at least one other person. Focus on growing your network with the goal of building genuine relationships, not necessarily getting a job right away. This is a long-term investment in your career.
We’re more than halfway through the 2022, what do you predict for the rest of the year?
McCluskey: After record levels of investments in 2021, we all knew things had to cool off. However, I believe the pace at which this has happened surprised VCs and entrepreneurs alike.
In fact, startup funding has fallen by 23% over the last 3 months, bringing us back to 2019 levels. For many, it probably feels like the sky is falling, but there is still a significant amount of money in circulation. Venture capitalists today, and by extension founders, are more focused on “real” metrics versus vanity metrics when deciding which companies to fund. The companies that will do well in the second half of the year will have measurable revenues, not just wait lists, and will be managing costs and runway to drive profitability, not endless cash burn.
Social investment platform eToro inked a definitive agreement to acquire stock and options trading app Gatsby for $50 million.
U.S.-based Gatsby offers a commission-free, stock and options trading solution geared toward Millennial and Gen Z investors and traders.
Making its first Finovate appearance in 2011, eToro has won Best of Show in every one of its six appearances on the Finovate stage.
Social investment platform eToro has agreed to acquire Gatsby, a U.S.-based, commission-free, stock and options trading app. The Israel-based company, which has won Best of Show awards in every one of its six appearances on the Finovate stage since 2011, will pay approximately $50 million for the trading company.
As part of the transaction, Gatsby’s co-CEOs and co-founders Jeff Myers and Ryan Belanger-Saleh – along with other senior Gatsby staffers – will join the eToro team. The acquisition of Gatsby will enable eToro to diversify its offering to investors and traders in the U.S., a factor that eToro CEO Yoni Assia called “a strategic focus” for his company.
“Through Gatsby we can provide U.S. users with access to a safe and simple way to trade options,” Assia said, “which we know are particularly attractive in challenging markets.”
Geared toward younger investors and traders, Gatsby was founded in 2018 as a way to bring commission-free options and stock trading to a demographic that has been overlooked until recently. Company co-founder Belanger-Saleh credited eToro as an inspiration for launching Gatsby, calling eToro a social investing pioneer and “the cool older sibling we’d love to hang with.” Joining the eToro team will be Gatsby’s president and chief operating officer (both co-founders), as well as Gatsby’s Chief Technology Officer, Head of Product, and others.
“We are incredibly excited to welcome the Gatsby team to the eToro family,” Assia said. “We have a shared mission of empowering investors through simple, transparent tools.”
The acquisition announcement from eToro comes less than a month after the company launched its private equity portfolio that enables individual retail investors to access private markets that would be otherwise inaccessible to them. eToro’s Private Equity Smart Portfolio gives users exposure to 14 publicly listed asset management and investment companies that manage alternative assets. These firms, including Apollo Global Management, Blackstone, and The Carlyle Group, all feature strong ROIs and get their revenues via a combination of management fees for asset allocation and performance fees based on realized profits.
“Our goal is to open the global markets so that everyone can trade and invest in a simple and transparent way,” eToro Head of Investment Portfolios Dani Brinker said. “With this portfolio we want to leverage the wave of private equity company listings and offer our users a new solution to diversify their portfolio and gain exposure to the revenues generated in private markets.”
Founded in 2007, eToro currently has more than 28 million registered users who share their investment strategies and make it easy for market newcomers to buy, hold, and sell assets ranging from stocks to cryptocurrencies.
A year ago, an Oregon-based fintech called Facteus made its debut at FinovateFall 2021.
“Finovate was started with the idea of showcasing new and exciting innovation in financial services,” Facteus VP Steve Shaw said as he began his company’s demo. “And we’ve seen a lot of great ideas in technology over the past couple of days.”
“But what’s that one thing that ties all of this innovation together and really makes it work?” he asked. “It’s the data behind all this innovation. If you don’t have access to the right data, a lot of this innovation is just for show.”
Founded in 2010, Facteus leverages a massive debit and credit card transaction data set to offer hedge funds, researchers, marketing professionals and others unique insights into the consumer economy. With more than eight years of historical data and 42 billion transactions processed – representing $1.3 trillion in consumer spending – Facteus provides insights into consumer segments, such as youth and the underbanked, whose financial behavior is often overlooked or underappreciated by other data sets.
At FinovateFall 2021, Facteus demoed its MIMIC synthetic data engine, which leverages machine learning to create an artificial copy of sensitive data, removing personally identifiable information (PII). The synthetic copy can be used for analytics, machine learning and AI, segmentation activities, and other data operations, but cannot be reverse engineered back to the original transaction or organization.
“Data is really the fuel for all the innovation we are seeing,” Shaw said. “We truly believe that and we have examples to show that synthetic data is really the key to unlocking the value of your sensitive data.”
Facteus began this year teaming up with 1010data to provide enhanced transaction data insights and analytics to companies in the investment, retail, and consumer brands businesses. As part of the strategic agreement, Facteus acquired 101data’s Equity Intelligence business, enhancing its ability to provide transaction data insights and analysis to the investment services industry. In return, 1010data gained access to Facteus’ U.S. Consumer Payments data panels to help its retail and consumer brand clients.
“Facteus data provides deep insights into the drivers behind consumer spending behavior and business trends not available in other transactional data panels,” Facetus CEO Chris Marsh said. “(Facteus offers) enhanced company analysis and investment strategies for 1010data clients and the investment services industry as a whole.”
By spring, Facteus was in the fintech headlines again, this time announcing an investment of $10 million from Curql Fund, the investment arm for more than 75 credit unions in the U.S. The company said it would use the funding to support the growth of its analytics and insights platform Quantamatics, as well as fuel continued innovation on its platform and expand into new industry verticals. The company’s investment from Curql Fund also gives Facteus access to the significant data assets of Curql Collective owners, representing tens of millions of new consumer debit and credit cards.
In May, the Beaverton-based company launchedPulse, a new consumer transaction data solution it called the most comprehensive in the alternative data industry. With Pulse, Facteus is able to capture up to 5% of all U.S. consumer spending, more than 500 tickers and 1,000+ private companies, and deliver accurate company KPI forecasts with the industry’s lowest forecast errors. A month later, Facteus’ Pulse earned its first official vote of confidence: topping the latest rankings in predictive accuracy in the KPIs of more than 65 public consumer companies.
“This accomplishment is a testament to our commitment to directly acquiring transaction datasets to build the most holistic and stable view of consumer spending across income cohorts and demographics,” Facteus Head of Product and Strategy Lorn Davis said.
Pomelo is launching a family credit card account that gives accountholders up to four cards to give to friends and family overseas.
Because the payments run on credit rails, users save on international money transfer fees.
Pomelo is launching money transfer capabilities between the U.S. and the Philippines.
Pomelo is the newest fintech in the digital banking scene. The company is launching today with $70 million in Seed funding to change the fundamentals of international money transfer.
Leading the round are Keith Rabois at Founders Fund as well as Kevin Hartz, Co-Founder of Xoom and General Partner at A* Capital. Afore Capital, Xfund, Josh Buckley, the Chainsmokers, and the Weeknd also participated.
Frenkiel, who regularly sends money to family overseas, came up with the idea for Pomelo while he was visiting family in the Philippines and thought, “Why can’t I just give a card to my family instead of having to send money through Western Union?” At that point, Frenkiel came up with a way to use credit card payment rails to disburse funds and eliminate transfer fees.
Pomelo is a family account that gives the primary accountholder up to four physical and virtual credit cards to give to loved ones overseas. Users can set limits via the app, pause any of the payment cards, and view how each member is spending their funds. Unlike many shared accounts, Pomelo is not prepaid. The primary accountholder pays for the charges on each card at the end of the month and builds their own credit as they pay off each balance.
Each account comes with a Mastercard credit card issued by Coastal Community Bank. And because the payments run via credit rails, the fees are paid by merchants via interchange and daily foreign exchange rates. This eliminates transfer fees, which can add up to 6%.
“Pomelo is on a mission to change how international money transfer fundamentally works,” said Pomelo Founder and CEO Eric Velasquez Frenkiel. “Our goal is to help our customers establish their financial future here in the United States by building positive credit history with their existing remittance obligations, and to financially include their loved ones in emerging economies with access to modern financial instruments. For many of our customers, Pomelo is their first credit card here in the U.S. and the very first card for their loved ones overseas.”
After beta testing the service for several months, Pomelo is launching money transfer capabilities between the U.S. and the Philippines.