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Finovate Blog
Tracking fintech, banking & financial services innovations since 1994
Mobile payments company BOKUannounced its expansion beyond carrier billing today with the launch of M1ST, a mobile payments network.
M1ST, also known as Mobile First, features 330+ mobile payment methods, including mobile wallets, direct carrier billing, and real-time payments schemes. The payment methods reach 5.7 billion mobile payment accounts across 90 countries.
“Today, we’re launching the M1ST Network to enable global merchants to acquire, monetize, and retain mobile-first consumers,” said BOKU CEO Jon Prideaux. “For merchants to capitalize on the massive potential of mobile-first consumers, they need to accept the payment methods they have and prefer, which are increasingly behind glass screens, not rectangular pieces of plastic.”
The new network, which runs via a single integration, is a solution for the currently fragmented mobile payments space. The technology circumvents many hurdles that come with with payments, including the myriad of tax and legal regulations associated with different geographies.
With M1ST, merchants receive a single, global settlement which eliminates the complexity of local taxes, foreign exchange, and cash repatriation. Additionally, BOKU’s payment licenses enable merchants to accept regulated payments in nearly 50 countries.
BOKU’s new launch comes at a good time in the payments space. As consumers continue transitioning to digital banking and transaction methods, many are becoming increasingly comfortable with digital payments via mobile wallets.
Founded in 2008, BOKU offers digital customer acquisition, customer onboarding, and mobile user authentication tools. The San Francisco-based company currently serves more than 600 global merchant partners and processes $9 billion in payments every year.
Financial data platform MX announced a collaboration with 1.2 million-member BECU (Boeing Employees Credit Union) to build a new mobile app feature called Quick Save that will help members boost their savings. Piloted last year with BECU members that had low savings account balances, Quick Save helps increase savings via an easy-to-use “slide to save” module that enables frequent, small dollar amount transfers.
“BECU is continually innovating and leveraging technology to improve our members’ experience and empower them financially,” BECU Director of Digital Strategy Liz Wagner explained. “It’s been inspiring to see Quick Save go from a concept to a fully functioning tool that members in this pilot are using to build their savings.”
The pilot project was conducted – and evaluated – in coordination with the Financial Health Network (FHN). Over the course of five months, FHN determined that BECU members using the new solution had transferred more than $2 million into savings accounts, representing an 18% increase in savings balance for the credit union’s low-balance savers, and a 26% increase in money movement via mobile transfers. Wagner credited the “combined power” of all three parties involved for both helping build and measure the effectiveness of the Quick Save offering, adding that the solution would “meaningfully improve our members’ financial health.”
Quick Save is only the latest example of the relationship that the Utah-based fintech and BECU have cultivated. More than five years ago, BECU went live with Helios by MX, a cross-platform framework that enables device- and platform-agnostic, full-featured digital banking.
“When it comes to mobile banking, every option we looked at functioned about the same,” BECU VP of Digital Banking Howie Wu said after the technology had been implemented. “We saw Helios as a chance to stand out and provide a very different experience.” Wu highlighted digital money management, aggregation, budgeting, and alert notifications among the offerings available via the framework – “all features that would enable our members to be financially strong,” Wu explained. Within 18 months of its deployment, BECU reported a 170% increase in billpay, a 56% increase in money transfers, and a 22% increase in check deposits.
Headquartered in Tukwila, Washington (a suburb of Seattle) and founded in 1935, BECU has assets of more than $26 billion. The institution is the largest credit union in Washington State and the fourth largest credit union in the U.S.
“BECU and MX have been aligned partners for years, both resolute in our determination to help strengthen the financial well-being of BECU members and their community,” MX Chief Customer Officer Nate Gardner said. He called Quick Save “yet another example of BECU’s wholehearted commitment to financial strength” as well as delivering “intelligent and personalized money experiences for the hundreds of thousands of members they serve.”
The following is a guest post by Todd Thomas, who has been in financial services for more than 20 years.
According to data from the Urban Institute, the median FICO credit score for Hispanic consumers is about 75 points lower than the median white consumer’s. The median credit score for Black consumers is more than 100 points lower than the median white consumer’s. And the approximately 10% of American adults without usable credit files are disproportionately people of color.
These racial, demographic, and geographic disparities are rooted in “historical inequities that reduced wealth and limited economic choices for communities of color,” according to the Urban Institute. It notes that subprime borrowers can pay $3,000 more in interest and fees on a $10,000 car loan over four years.
This unequal status quo has advocates calling for a more objective approach to consumer risk modeling. Innovators have created new technologies and data sources that could do just that.
The following four consumer risk modeling innovations are poised to disrupt the current credit scoring regime to varying degrees. Collectively, they could change the concept beyond recognition and eventually render obsolete what we think of today as “credit scoring.”
1. Forward-Looking Changes to Current Scoring Models
The most recent changes to the FICO scoring model, collectively known as FICO 10 and FICO 10T, are iterative rather than transformational updates. In other words, they don’t radically alter the calculation of credit scores.
But FICO 10 and 10T hint at the direction traditional credit scoring models are moving — and what they might have to do to remain relevant in the future as more disruptive innovations take hold.
FICO 10 and 10T pay closer attention to consumers’ credit mix in the context of their overall debt loads. Specifically, they penalize consumers who take out new personal loans to consolidate existing debts, then continue racking up debt on those current trades (most often, credit cards).
Essentially, they aim to reward good credit behavior(paying down debt) and discourage risky habits (living beyond one’s means).
2. Cash Flow Modeling
Another recent FICO update attacks credit scoring discrepancies more directly. The UltraFICO score — a joint venture between Fair Isaac Corporation, Experian, and Finicity — pulls in noncredit data to provide a more accurate and fair picture of consumers’ credit risk. Cash flow monitoring includes cash flow in a bank account and payment history.
By incorporating banking information, such as account balances and account age, UltraFICO supports credit scoring for about 15 million people who don’t have enough credit history to have traditional credit scores. Unfortunately, those people are disproportionately lower-income and POC — those most likely to be left behind by the credit scoring status quo.
UltraFICO is an example of cash flow modeling. Long used by business lenders, cash flow modeling is working its way into the consumer credit mainstream thanks to adoption by fintech lenders like Accion, Brigit, and Petal.
According to an analysis by FinRegLab, “the predictiveness of the cash flow scores and attributes was generally at least as strong as the traditional credit scores and credit bureau attributes,” suggesting it’s a reliable complement to or replacement for traditional scoring. And cash flow modeling is more equitable than conventional scoring, according to FinRegLab’s data.
3. International Credit Scoring and Risk Modeling
The current credit scoring regime also explicitly discriminates based on nationality. Non-U.S. nationals who come to the United States don’t have the requisite credit history to qualify for FICO scores. They’re essentially invisible to lenders that rely on FICO scores to make lending decisions.
Fortunately, border-based barriers to international credit scoring are already crumbling, thanks to global consumer credit risk models like Nova Credit. As more U.S. lenders begin to trust and adopt these models, new arrivals to the U.S. and Americans relocating abroad could find it easier to obtain credit without traditional country-specific credit scores.
4. A Post-Credit-Score World
Finally, noncredit and not-only-credit scoring models like FICO XD hint at what’s possible in a truly “post-credit-score” world.
FICO XD does not rely entirely — or even principally — on credit bureau information. The model pulls data from property records, leasing databases, and noncredit contracts like utility agreements to develop a comprehensive picture of a consumer’s likelihood of default.
According to Fair Isaac Corporation, FICO XD can produce FICO scores for up to 70% of previously unscorable consumers, including many historically disadvantaged demographic groups.
Final Thoughts
This is an exciting time for consumer risk modeling. From incremental changes to existing models (FICO 10, UltraFICO) to more radical shifts (cash flow modeling, FICO XD) that could supplant credit scoring entirely, we’re seeing a wave of innovation unlike any since the early days of modern underwriting.
These innovations can reduce long-standing credit scoring disparities and produce more accurate consumer credit risk models. But they offer no guarantees. Their actual impact on consumer finance will depend on who wields them and how.
Todd Thomas has been in financial services for more than 20 years.
This summer, as part of our Finovate Fintech Halftime Review, we helped make the case for the U.S. midwest as an under-recognized source of fintech innovation.
Today, our conversation with Nicole Lorch of the First Internet Bank is a reminder of what “America’s Heartland” has to offer in terms of leveraging technology to make online banking a reality for small businesses and families. Founded in 1999 and headquartered in Indiana, First Internet Bank was the first state-chartered, FDIC-insured financial institution to offer exclusively online banking services. At the same time, First Internet Bank has continued to emphasize the importance of personal connection and service to the community.
We caught up with Ms. Lorch recently to talk about First Internet Bank, the evolution of online and digital banking, and her goals as the institution’s new President and Chief Operating Officer.
You joined First Internet Bank as Director of Marketing at its launch in 1999. How has the idea of an “Internet bank” changed over the years?
Nicole Lorch: At the time of our launch, we operated as a direct-to-consumer bank with a fairly standard lineup of products: checking, savings, CDs, and credit cards.
While we actually were the first state chartered, FDIC-insured bank to operate entirely online, a number of competitors quickly emerged. However, many of them couldn’t make it work or were absorbed into another entity:
Compubank (Acquired by NetBank)
Netbank (Closed by OTS, 2007)
Wingspan Bank (Closed by its parent, BankOne, in 2001)
ING Direct (Divested U.S. operations, sold U.S. relationships to Capital One)
Security First Network Bank (Acquired by Royal Bank of Canada)
Telebank (Acquired by E*Trade)
Even with our early successes, many industry pundits believed that moving to more complex banking services, like mortgage and real estate lending, could not be done on a direct-to-consumer, nationwide basis. While we considered ourselves trailblazers in the new world of digital banking, it was critical that we created processes that allowed us to function in a sustainable, repeatable, and compliant way. As a result, we were able to efficiently – and profitably – become leaders in lending.
Imagination has always been fundamental to our existence. Our innovative approach to banking has continued to play an essential role in the development of First Internet Bank – and with it our ability to build a national lending platform with digital DNA behind it.
How has the challenge of educating the public about the Bank’s offerings changed from a time when there were very few if any “Internet banks” to now when the idea is more commonplace?
Lorch: One thing is certain: it is much easier for people I meet to wrap their heads around the concept of a branchless bank now than it was 22 years ago! The world has changed, and consumers have adapted and embraced the digital realm. From shopping and ordering food to conducting financial transactions, it’s all available instantly at our fingertips. But we need to remember, this is a very human business, not one that should be labeled “contactless.” We still pride ourselves in delivering the personal service our customers deserve.
Consumer demand and the way people want to access their money has moved in the direction we predicted: more electronic transactions, fewer cash-based transactions … with so few paper checks these days.
What are your first priorities as President and Chief Operating Officer?
Lorch: My new role with First Internet Bank is evolving. But our strategic agenda remains unchanged – which is good for our team because we move fast and get a lot of things done! We continue to concentrate on improving the customer experience by creating new solutions that foster greater efficiency and ease of use, strengthening our existing business and personal banking relationships, and diversifying our revenue streams. We have a great team that responds to challenges head-on, which makes achieving all our priorities much easier.
What are some of the bigger challenges that financial institutions like First Internet Bank are facing right now?
Lorch: Disruptive fintechs will continue to challenge our industry, bringing with them new consumer expectations and innovation. Fintechs have the ability to disrupt four primary categories of any traditional bank’s business: market share, margins, information security/privacy, and customer churn. However, financial institutions still maintain a greater sense of consumers’ trust.
Many fintechs do not face the same regulatory demands that chartered, insured depositories do, nor do they face the shareholder expectations of a publicly-traded company. Having a leaner virtual operation, more flexibility through not being regulated as a deposit-gathering institution and, in many cases, significant venture capital cash allows fintech startups to attract customers with competitive pricing and to move in a more nimble fashion when market conditions dictate.
We must continue to evolve and look for opportunities where they exist, to meet the changing demands of consumers. There is, however, one important area where we can continue to win: by providing great, high-touch (human) service that backs up our customer-facing technology.
What do your small business customers need most from First Internet Bank? And what kind of help do your retail customers most frequently request?
Lorch: Our customers need us to be creative. Sometimes they think they need a line of credit when they really need a term loan. Sometimes they think that they need a conventional product, when they need an SBA loan. We listen to their needs and customize our responses to their situation, instead of talking at them or selling them something they don’t need or want. If we can’t help them, we go so far as to make introductions to other financial institutions that can help them.
Most importantly, we have always believed that customers need surety of execution and respect for their time. On a loan request, a fast “no” is better than a long, drawn out “maybe.” Whether they are buying a business or a home, they need to know they can count on us to get them to the closing table – and closed – on time.
What of the popular enabling technologies have been most effective in helping First Internet Bank grow its top-line and better engage customers?
Lorch: AI allows us to leverage the data we have to acquire new customers as well as enhance our relationship with existing ones by identifying and offering products, services, features, and partnerships better tailored to their evolving needs. It also assists in fraud prevention.
APIs allow us to extend our platform and rapidly integrate new features, partnering with best-in-class service providers to create a robust, constantly-improving user experience while limiting the burden of legacy technologies and in-house coding.
What are some of the bigger initiatives the bank is pursuing this year?
Lorch: The last eighteen months have really tested our nation’s small business owners. We are poised to help entrepreneurs rebound and accelerate their growth. The pandemic pulled forward consumer acceptance of digital delivery of services by several years. We have a small window, albeit brief, to capitalize on the opportunity to layer our more than 20 years of direct-to-consumer know-how, with a next-generation user-interface, to give consumers a better way to bank.
We are growing our small business lending team while we overhaul the customer experience and our back office processes. It’s like flying the plane while we’re tuning the engine and refurbishing the cabin, but it’s necessary to ensure that our customers receive the level of service they expect from us.
A look at the companies demoing at FinovateFall on September 13-15, 2021. Register today and save your spot.
Akouba by Velocity Solutions is a secure, cloud-based digital lending platform for retail and commercial lending.
Features
Drastically reduce the cost, time, and risk of originating loans
Increase the profitability of all the loans you originate
Reduce processing time
Why it’s great The Akouba platform is built to reduce end-to-end time of loan origination, increase profits, and give both borrowers and financial institutions a streamlined experience.
Presenters
Scott Magruder, Regional Account Manager Magruder is responsible for sales of Akouba Digital Lending solutions to financial institutions across the country. LinkedIn
Christy Heinzmann, Akouba Client Service Manager Heinzmann served as a Senior Trainer for Velocity Solutions before joining the Akouba Digital Lending Team as a Client Service Manager in December 2019. LinkedIn
A look at the companies demoing at FinovateFall on September 13-15, 2021. Register today and save your spot.
Soul Machines creates astonishing Digital People with Autonomous Animation to help organizations better engage and serve their customers through human-like personalized interactions.
Features
Responsive and engaging Digital People 24/7 in 12+ languages
AI technology and Autonomous Animation for empathetic human-machine collaboration
Cost-effective, multi-modal, and scalable user experience
Why it’s great If you are making an investment in conversational AI, you absolutely need to understand how autonomous animation will transform the user experience.
Presenter
Nick Olson, Strategic Accounts Director Olson is an AI and visionary leader of human-machine augmentation for the future of customer experience. He runs strategic accounts at Soul Machines where he works closely with customers. LinkedIn
A look at the companies demoing at FinovateFall on September 13-15, 2021. Register today and save your spot.
Genial Technology, the “AudiTech” startup, is presenting GenialAI Audit. The product was mentioned at the end of their demo at FinovateSpring 2018.
Features
Test 100% of transactions automatically
Find errors and potential frauds 5x faster
Autogenerate OCR settings using patented technology
Why it’s great GenialAI Audit is a secure, online service. Genial Technology also achieved ISO27001 to protect customer data and satisfied security requirements of a Big 4 accounting firm.
Presenter
Aki Abekawa, CEO & Founder Abekawa is an experienced CPA and a Python coder. He worked on 37 IT audit and 12 accounting projects and has an MBA from Carnegie Mellon. LinkedIn
A look at the companies demoing at FinovateFall on September 13-15, 2021. Register today and save your spot.
QuickFi allows business borrowers to obtain low, fixed rate business equipment term-loans in minutes, instead of days or weeks. The borrower completes the loan process on a mobile device, 24/7/365.
Features
Flexible platform integrations for global manufacturers, serving direct, dealer, and e-commerce sales channels
Stated, fixed interest rates with no hidden fees
24/7 equipment financing in 3 minutes
Why it’s great The QuickFi platform is designed to dramatically improve the business borrower experience by enabling self-service, transparent, digital financing available 24/7/365, with no fees and no hidden costs.
Presenters
Nathan Gibbons, COO Gibbons oversees the platform’s operational strategy, leveraging automation and technology to enable dramatic improvements to the borrower experience. LinkedIn
Jillian Munson, Technology Project Manager Munson leads core technology projects at QuickFi. She develops seamless user experiences for both internal and external business processes. LinkedIn
A look at the companies demoing at FinovateFall on September 13-15, 2021. Register today and save your spot.
Stockbossup prioritizes wisdom and profit over all else. It trends members in its community who consistently post helpful, thoughtful, and profitable stock ideas.
Features
Engages users with investment ideas
Finds the best investment opportunities for your financial needs
Trends members in the community with profitable stock ideas
Why it’s great Stockbossup is a social media platform focused on engaging beginner and retail investors in the stock markets by trending performing stock picks.
Presenter
Chaster Johnson, CEO Johnson has 9 years of experience as an Aerospace Manager, one year of experience in the cryptocurrency hedge fund market, and two years spearheading the Stockbossup platform. LinkedIn
A look at the companies demoing at FinovateFall on September 13-15, 2021. Register today and save your spot.
Railz is building the largest financial data network. It is a single point API connecting you to all major accounting service providers.
Features
API to all major accounting service providers
Normalization engine to organize messy data
Analytics and insights on your commercial customer financial data
Why it’s great Railz has the ability to normalize messy accounting data through its proprietary machine learning algorithm.
Presenter
Sohaib Zahid, CEO & Co-Founder Zahid is a serial entrepreneur with a decade of successful experience in building teams, products, and companies. LinkedIn
A look at the companies demoing at FinovateFall on September 13-15, 2021. Register today and save your spot.
MOSTLY AI‘s synthetic data platform allows users to replace sensitive data sets with programmable, synthetic lookalikes to accelerate AI, data science, and product development in a privacy-safe way.
Features
Fully automated synthesization process for easy use
Multi-table with referential integrity for synthesizing entire databases for testing
Programmable, better-than-real data for AI training
Why it’s great You can never have enough of the right data. MOSTLY AI’s synthetic data platform creates the data you need and more, using the data you have.
Presenters
Alexandra Ebert, Chief Trust Officer Ebert is MOSTLY AI’s Chief Trust Officer, AI, privacy, and GDPR expert with a deep understanding of the potential synthetic data unlocks for financial institutions globally. LinkedIn
Jim Hu, Pre-Sales Solutions Engineer Hu has ten years of experience in global tier-one investment banking and asset management firms. He specializes in applying synthetic data to business-driven financial applications. LinkedIn
Financial data and infrastructure platform Plaidannounced today that it received an undisclosed amount of new funding from J.P. Morgan Private Capital Growth Equity Partners and Amex Ventures, which first invested in the California-based company in 2016. The new round boosts Plaid’s total funding somewhere north of $724 million.
In a statement, the company said that today’s investment will help it “further accelerate efforts to meet rising consumer demand for digital finance; a shift powering the rapid growth of Plaid’s diverse customer ecosystem.”
The funds are an add-on to the company’s $425 million Series D round announced in April. While that investment valued Plaid at $13.4 billion, today’s new funds do not alter the valuation.
This may be J.P. Morgan’s first investment in Plaid, but the two have been data partners since 2018. There is also a storied history between Plaid and J.P. Morgan CEO Jamie Dimon. Earlier this year Dimon cited Plaid as an example of a company that improperly uses client data. However, Dimon did not cite any specific scenarios to back up his accusation.
Plaid was founded in 2013. The company builds APIs to connect consumers, financial institutions, and developers. Plaid also offers a suite of analytics products that provides further insights into transactions. As the rise of open finance in the U.S. has begun to impact firms both in and out of fintech, Plaid is on its way to becoming a household name.
“While we’re still in the early innings of the digital transformation in financial services,” said Plaid CEO Zach Perret, “we’re excited to work with the thousands of banks, fintechs and non-financial institutions in our network to create what’s next.”