Zopa to Offer Auto Loan Refinancing

Zopa to Offer Auto Loan Refinancing

ZopaHomepage

U.K.-based P2P lender Zopa has expanded its loan offerings to tap into the used-car financing market worth an estimated £12 billion in annual loan originations in the United Kingdom. The company’s new auto loan refinancing product, Zopa CarReFi, enables U.K. consumers to pay off expensive car-financing deals with a loan that’s a better value and has a more flexible agreement.

ZopaCar

The direct-to-consumer offering maintains transparency by offering a free, instant, personalized savings quote. The platform, which was built in-house, uses Zopa’s API to tap into the company’s credit-risk algorithms and combines the data with vehicle information to help users decide if it’s worth refinancing. Similar to traditional auto lending, the ownership of the vehicle remains with Zopa’s lenders until the consumer makes the final payment.

Zopa CEO Jaidev Janardana talked about the motive behind the launch: “Buying a car is by far the most common reason for a customer to take a personal loan from Zopa, so we are proud to now also offer a product that can help customers that already have a car on a finance agreement. With an outstanding team and a deep understanding of technology, it is possible to combine longstanding history and credit excellence with lean, design-led innovation.”

The move comes at a time when P2P lenders in the U.S. are facing a lot of heat. Check out Jim Bruene’s take on the recent news in his piece, Lending Club’s Stock Price is Not a Leading Indicator for Fintech.

Since its launch in 2005, Zopa has matched borrowers with £1.5 billion in P2P-funded loans. The company, which demoed at FinovateSpring 2008, was recently voted MoneySuperMarket’s Best Personal Loans Provider of 2016.

New Investment in Personal Capital Takes Valuation to $500 Million

New Investment in Personal Capital Takes Valuation to $500 Million

PersonalCapital_homepage_May2016

Courtesy of a Series E round led by IGM Financial, digital wealth management giant Personal Capital picked up an investment of $50 million now, with another $25 million coming in 2017. The new capital takes the company’s valuation to $500 million.

Calling IGM Financial “the ideal investor,” Personal Capital CEO Bill Harris said his company would benefit from IGM Financial’s “expertise in financial advice and asset management.” Harris added that the partnership with IGM Financial would help his company meet the growing demand for Personal Capital’s digital wealth-management services.

PersonalCapital_stage_FS2014

Pictured (left to right): Personal Capital’s Jim Del Favero, chief product officer, and CFO Bill Harris demonstrated their platform’s One Click Investment Proposals at FinovateSpring 2014.

In the same statement, IGM President and CEO Jeff Carney praised Personal Capital’s veteran management. “We believe the financial advisory landscape will be enhanced by the type of service that Personal Capital provides,” Carney said. “We’re delighted to be backing the leader in digital wealth management.”

Personal Capital uses a hybrid approach of online technical tools and personalized advice to give average investors the same kind of service historically enjoyed by the high-net-worth clients. “Our approach allows people not only to manage their entire financial life through the mobile devices they carry in their pockets, but also to receive a level of personalized advice previously available only to the ultra-wealthy,” Harris explained. Personal Capital manages $2.4 billion in investments for more than a million investors.

In addition to management, Personal Capital offers investors free resources to help them manage their investments better. These solutions include a dashboard that lets investors see all their investment accounts in one place, as well as a Fee Analyzer and Investment Checkup. For fund management, Personal Capital charges a flat fee based on the percentage of assets managed, starting at 0.89% for the first million.

Founded in 2009 and headquartered in Redwood City, California, Personal Capital demonstrated its technology at FinovateSpring 2014 and presented at FinDEVr San Francisco 2015. The company surpassed $2 billion in assets under management in March, and lowered its investment minimum from $100,000 to $25,000 back in November.

Narrative Science Teams Up with Vermilion, Bringing Advanced NLG to Portfolio Commentary

Narrative Science Teams Up with Vermilion, Bringing Advanced NLG to Portfolio Commentary

NarrativeScience_AssetManagement_homepage_May2016

Courtesy of a new partnership between Narrative Science and Vermilion Software, asset managers will have access to advanced natural language generation (NLG) technology to help them compose portfolio commentary.

“This fully integrated offering will be invaluable to our joint clients, as writing portfolio commentary is a universal pain-point in the reporting process,” Vermilion SVP Ben McCormack said. He added that the technology will give clients an “immediate return” and enable asset management companies to provide “compliant, high-quality client experiences.”

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Pictured (left to right): Narrative Science CTO Kris Hammond and Katy De Leon, VP of marketing, demonstrated  Quill for Financial Services at FinovateSpring 2013.

Calling the partnership a milestone and a “major innovation for the asset management industry,” Narrative Science COO Nick Beil said that the combined technology offers asset managers “a unique competitive advantage … by fully automating the process around commentary creation and distribution.”

Narrative Science’s advanced NLG platform, Quill, will be integrated into the Vermilion Reporting Suite (VRS). The integration will streamline the portfolio commentary creation and distribution process, and scale reporting coverage and frequency “exponentially” to support both high-volume and rapidly growing customer bases. The company says the integration will also boost productivity by reducing the time taken to build portfolio commentary “from weeks to seconds.”

Founded in 2010 and headquartered in Chicago, Illinois, Narrative Science last demonstrated its technology at FinovateFall 2013. The advanced natural language generation specialist launched its Narratives for Power BI technology in April, and Narratives for Qlik in January. Recently profiled in Forbes and featured in The New York Times, Narrative Science has raised more than $29 million in funding. Stuart Frankel is CEO.

 

TSYS to Leverage Featurespace’s Machine Learning Fraud Capabilities

TSYS to Leverage Featurespace’s Machine Learning Fraud Capabilities

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FeaturespaceHomepagePayments service provider TSYS and behavioral analytics company Featurespace have today formed a partnership in which TSYS will leverage Featurespace’s ARIC Engine, software that uses machine learning to monitor online customer behavior in real time to deliver instant fraud decisions.

TSYS, which prides itself on providing faster payments capabilities, can now offer actionable fraud insights to clients in real time. Andrew Mathieson, a group executive for the company, elaborated on plans for the enhanced fraud protection: “We will incorporate these capabilities across the credit risk lifecycle, enabling our issuers to catch more fraudulent transactions while dramatically reducing false-positive alerts for genuine transactions—a sharp contrast to the industry paradigm of blocking more valid transactions in order to detect actual fraudulent activity.”

TSYS has often taken a partner-centric approach, especially when it comes to security. In February. the Georgia-based company partnered with Finovate alum Ethoca (FinovateEurope 2016 demo) to launch the TSYS Transaction Recovery Network, an offering that reduces CNP fraud and minimize chargebacks.

Earlier this month TSYS, which debuted its Authorization Controls at FinovateAsia 2013 in Singapore, appointed Pamela Joseph as new president and COO.

After its debut at FinovateEurope 2016, Featurespace was named a Top 100 company by Red Herring Europe. We covered the U.K.-based company’s launch of its ARIC Sandbox earlier this year.

Tink Pulls in $10 Million to Launch Virtual Bank

Tink Pulls in $10 Million to Launch Virtual Bank

TinkHomepage2016

The creators of Swedish PFM app Tink, Daniel Kjellén and Fredrik Hedberg (pictured below), have just closed on $10 million to launch a virtual bank. The Series B roundDaniel och Fredrik_Tink was led by Creades and SEB; ABN AMRO and Sunstone Capital also contributed. Combined with its Series A round in 2014, the company’s total funding is $14 million.

Tink will use the funds to expand internationally and launch a virtual bank, Tink 2.0. The virtual bank will allow users to transfer money, make payments, scan and approve bills, and manage their money across any account directly from within the Tink app. These new capabilities are made possible by Europe’s new Payment Service Directive (PSD2), approved in January, that opens Europe’s banking infrastructure by making their APIs available to third parties.

Fredrik Hedberg, founder and CTO of Tink, comments on the coming launch: “Ultimately, it’s about building a virtual bank, helping people with banking without being a bank. The consumer will not only get a better understanding, tips and advice on her finances, but also the ability to take action on it.” Founder and CEO Daniel Kjellén chimes says, “We think it should be easy to make smart financial decisions, and we want to contribute to a greater transparency in the industry, which will benefit both the consumer and the best banks. To get investors with such solid experience and the ability to develop partnerships with traditional banks is of course a huge asset for a company like Tink.”

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Tink differentiates itself in the PFM space by collecting two years of historical account data across all of a user’s bank accounts and payment cards. The company uses hands-off spending categorization and simplifies the user’s view of their income and expenses. The app suggests budget options, sends alerts, and offers a feed of the user’s own personal finance highlights.

Since launching the app in Sweden at FinovateEurope 2014, Tink now boasts more than 300,000 users and is currently running beta tests in 10 different European markets to prepare for the international launch later this year.

Finovate Alumni News

On Finovate.com

  • “Tink Pulls in $10 Million to Launch Virtual Bank”
  • “TSYS to Leverage Featurespace’s Machine Learning Fraud Capabilities”
  • “Narrative Science Teams Up with Vermilion, Bringing Advanced NLG to Portfolio Commentary”
  • “New Investment for Personal Capital Takes Valuation to $500 Million”
  • “Zopa to Offer Auto Loan Refinancing”

Around the web

  • TIBCO introduces integration-software solution, Project Flogo and translytical database for big data, TIBCO Graph Database.
  • InFakt accounting system integrates with Valuto open API.
  • Micronotes launches downloadable trial version of Micronotes Cross-Sell Basic.
  • eToro appoints Robert Brown as new non-executive director in the U.K.
  • Socure expands coverage for global watchlist filtering and sanctions compliance.
  • Philippine-based credit union groups to build payments and banking platform based on technology from Temenos.
  • Robotic automation technology from NICE Systems helps prevent credit card fraud at Italian bank, Banca Popolare di Sondrio.
  • Finovate newcomer Student Loan Genius adds Honest Dollar co-founder Henry Yoshida as vice president of partnerships and product strategy.

This post will be updated throughout the day as news and developments emerge. You can also follow all the alumni news headlines on the Finovate Twitter account.

Lending Club’s Stock Price is Not a Leading Indicator for Fintech

Lending Club’s Stock Price is Not a Leading Indicator for Fintech

Lending-Club-NYSE

Lending Club (LC) will always have a fond place in my heart. Renaud Laplanche’s small team presented at our very first Finovate in 2007. And until a few months ago, they were our most successful startup alum, at least measured by company valuation (Credit Karma gets the nod for now). While LendingClub is still a unicorn (market cap = $1.5 billion today), the loss of 7 or 8 unicorns’ worth of market cap in the past 12 months is unsettling.

I have had little interaction with the company in the past few years as it moved from demoing tech at Finovate to keynoting alt-lending events. But I’ve always been a fan, both of the business model, and also of Laplanche and the company as a whole. I will say this, though, they were one of our more intense alums. But that’s not necessarily a negative. That’s often what it takes to scale in the difficult world of consumer credit where one misstep can sink you (RIP Nextcard).

But they’ve also been willing to give back. Laplanche personally introduced us to a potential strategic partner several years ago. He did it purely as a friendly favor. It was long past the point where he had anything to gain from that introduction.

So, yeah, it’s been hard to watch the s***storm of the past 10 days. I was preoccupied with FinovateSpring during the worst of it last week, but I’ve been soaking up the various articles the past few days. I agree with Peter Renton’s post today: Lending Club must overcome some serious challenges in the short-term. But to say that the marketplace lending model is broken (paywall warning), or to jump to the conclusion of a fundamental flaw in the entire fintech industry is just so much hyperbole.

lc ytd stockFrom what I can discern, Lending Club had a relatively minor disclosure issue. And while LC lost major trust-points (albeit a HUGE issue), it’s important to note there were ZERO financial losses for anyone involved other than shareholders (see inset) and fired LC execs. A single bad consumer loan would produce more financial damage to LC lenders than this whole sordid situation.

What does this mean for the future of P2P lending? Well, it’s bad for LC short-term. But for other players, the situation is mixed. Less volume going through the LC platform means more loan demand for other players. But it’s a two-sided market, and clearly some institutional money is pulling back, so it may be harder to fund loans. That means rates go up, which will spike lender returns, bringing more capital back into the system. Money always flows to the best risk-adjusted return. So marketplace lending survives.

And what does all this mean to the other fintech players? We had 72 demos at FinovateSpring last week. Exactly zero of them are impacted negatively by the LC situation. The primary P2P loan-play, Best of Show winner Lending Robot, is probably helped by volatility. As the “Mint for individual P2P lenders,” that YC alum acts as a front-end to multiple loan platforms (see their demo here).

You could argue that the stock-price decline of Lending Club puts a damper on future fintech IPOs. That is probably true for U.S. consumer lending marketplaces like Prosper (which recently laid off 28% of its workforce, which, remember, had doubled in 2015). But serious investors don’t view fintech as one homogeneous field. Returns from angel investing in Hip Pocket or UBS’s recent investment in SigFig, have no correlation with the stock market return of a single public marketplace lender.

So yes, one high-flyer falls back to earth, but that’s not an indictment of an entire, highly diversified industry.

Finovate Debuts: Scalable Capital Brings Advanced Risk Management to Robo-advisory

Finovate Debuts: Scalable Capital Brings Advanced Risk Management to Robo-advisory

ScalableCapital_homepage_UK_May2016

Why does the world need another robo-adviser, the founders of Scalable Capital, a Europe-based automated investment platform, asked from the Finovate stage in London earlier this year.

In the case of Scalable Capital, what’s new and noteworthy about their effort to make investing easier is its proprietary risk management technology. From Scalable Capital’s perspective, the average individual investor can never keep up with high-net-worth and institutional investors because they have access to superior risk modeling and risk management. Give average investors the same level of risk management as wealthier investors and watch the investment returns for individual investors improve.

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Pictured (left to right): Co-founders Erik Podzuweit, co-CEO, and Adam French. UK managing director, demonstrated Scalable Capital at FinovateEurope 2016 in London.

Scalable Capital’s technology is based on the research of German economist Stefan Mittnik who is known for his work on financial risk modeling and portfolio optimization. Mittnik is chair of Financial Econometrics at the Ludwig Maximilians University of Munich and a fellow of the Center for Financial Studies (located in Frankfurt am Main). He serves as an adviser to Scalable Capital, which he helped co-found.

Described as providing a service that is “so cost-efficient, so honest and transparent that even a banker could use it,” Scalable Capital uses exchange-traded funds to provide investors with a globally diversified portfolio. The portfolio is automatically monitored and optimized based on preset risk-parameters, as well as adjusted for market conditions. As French has emphasized, these efficiencies are part of what makes Scalable Capital unique among robo-advisers.

“What we do—and this is truly unique for private investors—is quantify the risks, and we attach an institutional risk measurement to it,” French explained. “We use ‘value at risk’ for each portfolio, which [shows] the maximum loss that won’t be breached with a 95% likelihood over a one-year horizon.”

This emphasis on risk, French said, is what separates the average investor from the professional or institutional investor, and it’s what Scalable Capital focuses on. “Risk, apart from costs, is the most important factor in investing,” he said. “Risk is the currency [that] buys long-term performance. And our clients should decide for themselves how much of that currency they want to put on the table.”

Company facts:

  • Founded in December 2014
  • Headquartered in Munich Germany & London, United Kingdom
  • Total funding of more than €11 million
  • Employs 35 in its Munich and London offices

We spoke briefly with Adam French at FinovateEurope in February. This was shortly after learning that Scalable Capital, the first independent “InvestTech” company to receive a license to operate in Germany, had received FCA approval to operate as a regulated digital investment manager in the U.K.  We followed up with a few questions by email.

ScalableCapital_overviewFinovate: What problem does Scalable Capital solve?

Adam French: Our mission is to revolutionize the current wealth management offering. We want to eliminate the historical shortcomings of wealth managers having high fees and human interference eroding the gains that retail investors should be making.

Instead, we want our clients to be confident that their money is allocated into investments with suitable risks to match their investment goals.

Scalable Capital is a unique new digital investment adviser that offers savvy retail investors institutional-quality products at a low cost. We use a smart, cost-effective, technology-based approach, which offers investors:

  • Globally diversified ETF portfolios, tailored to each customer’s risk preference.
  • A unique dynamic risk management technology, which controls the risk of loss while optimizing performance, developed in collaboration with renowned German economist, Professor Stefan Mittnik.
  • No hidden fees, and a total cost of 0.75% p.a.

Finovate: Who are your primary customers?

French: Scalable Capital meets the needs of savvy customers who understand the value of investing in the capital markets, but don’t have the time to structure their own portfolios. Our service is aimed at professionals too busy to invest on their own and smart enough not to get ripped off.

Finovate: How does your technology solve the problem better?

French: Our dynamic risk management technology takes the digital investment industry to the next level. In contrast to traditional wealth managers, Scalable Capital adopts a fluid approach to the weighting of asset classes in its portfolios. This allows investors to capitalize on markets where risk is rewarded, and limit exposure to excess risk in more volatile conditions. This state-of-the-art technology is an institutional class investment product, available, for the first time, to retail investors, at a fraction of the cost.

Scalable Capital ensures that performance is not eroded by unnecessary costs. The total cost is 0.75 percent p.a. of the average invested capital. This includes account-management and custody fees, as well as all trading costs for portfolio adjustments. For comparison, the total costs of using a traditional investment management service average around 2-3% in the U.K.

ScalableCapital_accountbalanceFinovate: Tell us about your favorite implementation of Scalable Capital.

French: During the recent market turbulence, we were able to really see the value of our solution. We use a unique risk management technology to dynamically adjust our customers’ portfolios so that the risk they are exposed to remains consistent over time and does not fluctuate in tandem with the market.

In Germany, we have dramatically reduced the equity allocations last autumn. We were able to keep the risk level in line with client requirements and significantly mitigate or completely avoid the dramatic market slumps since the beginning. That’s exactly what our model should do in turbulent market times.

Finovate: What in your background gave you the confidence to tackle this challenge?

French: Our friends often asked ‘how should I invest my money?’ but we didn’t have a good answer to that question, as we didn’t feel comfortable recommending any of the existing investment products and services available to regular retail customers. So we decided to build Scalable Capital, building on the investment knowledge we’ve acquired during our time at Goldman Sachs.

Scalable Capital is our answer to the question of what a modern, fair, and professional investment service aimed at retail customers should look like—especially for a digital-savvy target audience. We have focused on eliminating all of the costs of traditional investment management, which have no added value for the customer, and on managing risks in a way that allows our customers to stay invested in the capital markets in the long run.

Finovate: Where do you see your company a year or two from now?

French: We are intrinsically a European company and have already launched in Germany. We have received regulatory approval from the FCA this year, and plan to continue our European expansion in the coming months.

We have a very healthy funding position and limited operating costs which means we are well-positioned to run and grow the business for the foreseeable future. Last year we closed one of the largest seed funding rounds in European fintech, receiving funding of almost €4 million. Last week, we closed another €7 million in funding. Subscribers to the round included Holtzbrinck Ventures, Peng T. Ong’s Monk Hill Ventures, The German Startups Group, and MPGI, all of whom contributed to our first round of funding in 2015. New investors including Tengelmann Ventures also participated.


Check out Scalable Capital’s demonstration video from FinovateEurope 2016.

Hip Money Launches Kickstarter Campaign

Hip Money Launches Kickstarter Campaign

HipMoney_Kickstarter_May2016

Hip Money launched a Kickstarter campaign to help founder Mark Zmarzly and his team take the next step in the development of their new savings app. The campaign began at 11 a.m. Wednesday morning, and Hip Money is throwing a launch party later that afternoon at Fuse Co-Working in Lincoln, Nebraska.  It’s the first fintech app to go the Kickstarter route and is already more than halfway to its $15,000 goal.

“Hip Money is helping to fuel a movement,” Zmarzly wrote in the invitation to the event. The app is designed to help millennials and young professionals save more money easier. With a swipe, Hip Money users can transfer small amounts of money to their savings or to prepay a loan. “Millennials want to live their lives in the present while not feeling like they’re failing when it comes to their financial future,” Zmarzly said.

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Pictured (left to right): Hip Pocket’s Todd Cramer, head of design, and CEO Mark Zmarzly, founder, demonstrated their mortgage comparison software at FinovateSpring 2015 in San Jose, California.

Hip Money is the latest product from Zmarzly, who demoed his Hip Pocket mortgage comparison software solution last year at FinovateSpring 2015. Emphasizing Hip Money’s potential to help borrowers as well as savers, Zmarzly estimates the app will save the average user more than $100 in interest each year by transferring “extra” cash into loan repayments.

And like modern political campaigns, the Hip Money Kickstarter comes with both movement and manifesto. Referring to his app as part of the “Fingers Up” movement (#FINGERSUP), Zmarzly said, “Our goal was to create a movement of people that forces our country’s banks and financial systems to rethink the way they do business—a movement that would force change with a single app and a million FU fingers.”

That’s a swiping, INDEX finger, by the way.

Hip_Money_FingersUp

Summer is once again a busy time for Zmarzly. His Hip Pocket solution was featured in Inc.’s look at the Silicon Prairie last July, a month after Hip Pocket was named one of three finalists for Startup Voodoo’s Most Promising Startups award. Hip Pocket earned a runner’s up spot at the inaugural FinCon FinTech Startup Competition held in Charlotte, North Carolina last fall.

NICE Systems Acquires inContact for $940 Million

NICE Systems Acquires inContact for $940 Million

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Israel-based NICE Systems, a company that uses data to improve customer experience, has agreed to acquire inContact, a provider of contact center optimization tools.

The deal is expected to close in the second half of 2016 for $940 million. inContact stockholders will receive $14 per share  in cash. This represents a 55% premium from inContact’s closing price on May 17 and a 49% premium to the 30-day volume-weighted average price.

NICE is funding the deal with a combination of cash on hand and debt financing of up to $475 million from JPMorgan Chase and Royal Bank of Canada.

inContactPage

NICE—known for its solutions that improve customer experience by guiding customers to the next best action—will combine its Workforce Optimization and Analytics offerings with inContact’s cloud-based services, offering a fully integrated cloud-contact-center solution.

NICE’s CEO Barak Eilam says the integration “creates the deepest and most talented R&D, services and support organization in our industry, allowing us to accelerate our roadmaps and deliver even greater value to our customers.”

NICE demoed its Real Time Authentication solution at FinovateEurope 2015 in London. Real Time Authentication uses voice biometrics to authenticate consumers in a natural conversation with an agent with minimal disruption to the customer experience.

FinDEVr APIntelligence

FinDEVrSV16-LogoV2(wdate)Our FinDEVr New York developer showcase last week was a success! FinDEVr Silicon Valley will be held October 18 & 19 in Santa Clara. Register today and save.

Developer news

  • The Financial Brand considers what is open banking and why does it matter?

On FinDEVr.com

  • “PIMCO Selects Markit and KYC.com to Bolster Onboarding”
  • “Symbiont to Help Delaware Embrace the Blockchain”

The latest from FinDEVr New York 2016 presenters

  • PYMNTS breaks down its discussion with PayPal CEO Dan Schulman.
  • “OutsideIQ Launches Real-Time Risk Monitoring Tool”
  • i-exceed Technology celebrates its fifth anniversary.
  • Technology from Fidor Bank to drive new mobile banking service from Telefonica Germany.

Alumni updates

  • Dallas Area Rapid Transit partners with PayNearMe to reduce cash handling by transit operators.
  • Entrepreneur profiles TD Ameritrade in a look at finalists for the Benzinga Fintech Awards 2016.
  • “Fiona Tee Takes the Helm as Currency Cloud’s New CFO”

Stay current on daily news from the fintech developer community! Follow FinDEVr on Twitter.

TIO Networks Rebrands Consumer-Facing Billpay Site Chargesmart.com to TIO.com

TIO Networks Rebrands Consumer-Facing Billpay Site Chargesmart.com to TIO.com

TIONetworksHomepage2016

Cloud-based bill payment processing company TIO Networks this week announced the rebranding of its consumer-facing billpay-site Chargesmart.com to TIO.com.

The new site marks the company’s first TIO-branded web payments site for consumers, enabling them to pay 9,000 U.S. household billers with credit, debit, or prepaid cards without needing to register. Additionally, users have the option to register to store their account information and payment history in the cloud.

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TIO acquired Chargesmart in 2014 and Jake Cunningham, VP of consumer payments, describes the rebrand as a “natural progression” to improve the user experience across touchpoints. Since launching in 2008, Chargesmart has processed more than $1.2 billion in online payments. When coupled with TIO’s walk-in billpay service, which processes in excess of $8 billion annually, TIO expects to serve a significant number of people who pay bills outside of mainstream banking channels.

The Vancouver, B.C.-based company’s CEO Hamed Shahbazi highlighted his vision for TIO.com to “evolve into a direct-to-consumer financial leader with bill pay serving as a primary and fundamental service offering.” To further implement that vision, Shahbazi says the plan is “to add incremental and contextually relevant services and to expand to new geographies in the future.”

This news comes on the heels of TIO’s acquisition of Softgate Systems in April which expanded the company’s geographical footprint from 15 U.S. states to 46. The company launched TIO Mobile Pay at FinovateSpring 2012.