SumUp Unveils New Financing

SumUp Unveils New Financing

SumUpHomepage

U.K.-based payments startup SumUp announced a new round of funding today. While the amount remains undisclosed, SumUp CEO Daniel Klein confirmed that the company has now raised a total of $45 million in funding since it was founded in 2012.

According to TechCrunch, Klein estimates the company is now valued somewhere in the range of “healthy hundreds of million” euros.

The newest round comes from Venture Incubator AG, a firm that includes ABB, Bühler, Credit Suisse, Hilti, Nestlé, Novartis, Schindler, SUVA, Sulzer and ZKB. This list of heavy-hitters should come as no surprise, since SumUp’s earlier rounds were led by American Express, Groupon, BBVA and other renowned venture-capital firms.

SumUp’s mobile point-of-sale system includes Chip & PIN as well as EMV processing technology, available on Android and iOS mobile apps. The company will use the funding in two ways:

SumUpCardReader1) Focus on contactless payment hardware.
SumUp differentiates itself by being as vertically integrated as possible. That means that it designs all of its own hardware, and does not rely on third parties. The company sells its terminal for around $90, and considers the hardware to be one of its competitive advantages. Says CEO Klein, “We’ve reached a competitive point in this respect for us to be able to produce terminals at a cost that is lower when we sell it. We are already making a profit on our hardware and continue to do so.”

2) Expand its geographical reach.
SumUp currently operates in 13 countries, and will add two more this year, one of which will be Sweden.

SumUp reported 300,000 merchant customers as of last month. In the last six months, sales volume has doubled on the platform. The startup plans to be profitable by next year.

The company launched at FinovateEurope 2013 in London where it won Best of Show for its portable card reader and point-of-sale solution.

 

 

Bright Funds Closes Seed Round with $1.8 Million Investment

Bright Funds Closes Seed Round with $1.8 Million Investment

BrightFunds_homepage_June2015

Bright Funds has announced the successful closure of its Series Seed funding round. The financing was led by Aspiration Growth and featured participation from investors including 10K Investments, Bloomberg BETA, Mission & Market, and Wellspring Growth Partners. Individual investors Godfrey Sullivan and Frank Yeary were also involved.

Bright Funds CEO and co-founder Ty Walrod said that the funding would help the company “move enterprises large and small beyond the largely transactional employee giving programs in the marketplace today.” Bright Funds has developed technology, the Bright Funds Enterprise platform, that seamlessly integrates into payroll and human resource information systems (HRIS), making it easier to launch and manage charitable giving programs. From vetting potential charities and issuing payments to managing employee contributions and tracking volunteer time, the platform is designed to provide, in Walrod’s words, “a much more rewarding experience for employer and employee alike.”

The funding takes the total equity capital for Bright Funds to more than $3 million.

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From left: Bright Funds co-founders Rutul Dave, chief of products and marketing, and CEO Ty Walrod demonstrated their charitable giving platform at FinovateSpring 2013 in San Francisco.

Bright Funds serves more than 30,000 charitable givers at more than 25 different companies and organizations. Charitable givers on the platform are provided a portfolio that allows them to concentrate all of their donations within a single theme, such as education or the environment, or to divide the contribution over multiple themes (70% Global Health; 30% Anti-Poverty). More than 1.5 million pre-screened nonprofits are represented on the platform. Donations through the platform are 100% tax deductible, and there is no charge to open an account with Bright Funds.

Bright Funds has been in the news recently with its commitment to help facilitate charitable donations to Nepal in the wake of the spring 2015 earthquakes that took the lives of thousands. The company was featured in a Forbes.com column on the relationship between technology and community, and profiled in a San Francisco Business Times article on how Bright Funds “mines tech companies and their employees for philanthropic dollars.”

Bright Funds made its Finovate debut at FinovateSpring 2013. The company was founded in February 2012 and is headquartered in San Francisco, California.

Zooz Launches Insights to Give Merchants Actionable Intelligence on Customer Behavior

Zooz Launches Insights to Give Merchants Actionable Intelligence on Customer Behavior

Zooz_homepage_June2015

Payment platform Zooz unveiled Insights, its new solution that uses transaction data to give merchants actionable intelligence on the behavior of their business customers.

Insights leverages the data that flows through its platform to give companies a single portal to find “the hidden data” in the buying and selling behavior of their customers and clients. “The actionable intelligence we provide through Insights enables retailers to maximize their business performance and optimize each customer journey,” says Oren Levy, Zooz CEO and co-founder.

The new offering from Zooz provides merchants with the analytic tools to both read and take advantage of the consumer data embedded in every transaction. This allows retailers to learn, for example, not only payment and product preferences from geographically diverse customers, but also to learn about payment types that may be more likely to be declined when made from certain areas.

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From left: Peter Donarski, senior executive at First Data; Noam Inbar, VP, business development, demonstrated Zooz Transforming Checkout at FinovateFall 2013 in New York.

In a customer survey exemplifying the power of platform, Zooz showed a significant number (45%) of local cross-border transactions in Brazil were declined due to the merchants’ refusal to honor a given payment method. This compares to a transaction-approval rate in China of more than 60%.

Insights is another way Zooz encourages retailers to take advantage of technologies that can increase sales and engagement, helping them learn more about how to better serve their customers. Writing about how mobile technology and social media affect “the shopping experience,” at Entrepreneur.com, Levy pointed out that both technologies change and reflect consumer habits and preferences. He encourages retailers to “shorten their sales funnel” through “inexpensive mobile apps” and “buy now” buttons deployed on social media platforms. This improves the shopping experience for consumers and deepens the level of engagement retailers have with their customers.

Read our interview with Zooz CEO Oren Levy.

Recent Zooz headlines include the company’s participation in Visa Europe Collab’s “100-Day Innovation Sprint,” and a recognition as “Startup of the Week” by Retail Week in April. The company opened a new office in London in March, and started off the year earning a spot on FinTechCity’s FinTech50. Zooz has raised more than $16 million in funding, the latest investment being $12 million in a round led by Blumberg Capital.

Founded in 2010 and headquartered in Raanana, Israel, Zooz demonstrated its Zooz Transforming Checkout technology at FinovateFall 2013.

Finovate Alumni News

On Finovate.com

  • Bright Funds Closes Seed Round with $1.8 Million Investment
  • Zooz Launches Insights to Give Merchants Actionable Intelligence on Customer Behavior

Around the web

  • APCI Federal Credit Union to deploy core processing technology from Jack Henry & Associates’ Symitar division.
  • EU Startups interviews Sebastian Diemer, Kreditech CEO.
  • New COO David Obrand leads team of new executive hires at Radius.
  • Shell Geismar Federal Credit Union chooses account processing platform from Fiserv.
  • Mambu enhances platform to help smaller FIs manage the requirements of lending to SMEs.
  • Techli St. Louis features Hip Pocket as 1 of 3 finalists for its most promising startups award.
  • Glassdoor ranks Lending Club CEO Renaud Laplanche as one of the highest-rated CEOs for 2015.
  • Hedge funds can run but not hide from disruptors like HedgeCoVest and DarcMatter, according to Daily Fintech.

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.

HedgeCoVest Adds Two New Models to its Platform

HedgeCoVest Adds Two New Models to its Platform

Hedgecovest_homepage_June2015

HedgeCoVest, the startup that makes it possible for average investors to take advantage of the same market-beating and -hedging strategies used by hedge funds, has added two new investing models to its platform.

The models, HedgeCoVestTechnology Short-Only and Ashbury Behavioral Long Short, are examples of the way HedgeCoVest gives average investors access to strategies historically available only to the wealthiest or most well-connected investors. HedgeCoVest Technology Short-Only gives investors the opportunity to hedge or take a position against technology stocks. Ashbury Behavioral Long Short looks to take advantage of “long-term behavioral biases in forecasting, fundamental valuation, and trend following.” The model is managed by Ashbury Heights Capital.

HedgeCoVest_TechShort_new

While the Ashbury Behavioral Long Short model is a single-strategy model, the HedgeCoVest Technology Short-Only model is a composite model. Here, the model takes the “highest-conviction” short positions in technology stocks from the platform’s single-strategy models and combines them into a single model.

HedgeCoVest’s platform works by plugging directly into the hedge fund’s trading operation. As soon as the fund executes a trade for a given strategy, the platform’s “Replicazor” technology picks up the execution report and makes a “best effort” to duplicate that trade in real-time in the client’s account pursuant to that strategy. There are more than 30 different models on the platform for investors to choose from, both single-strategy and composite, and both accredited and nonaccredited investors can use the technology. The minimum investment is $30,000, and HedgeCoVest charges a flat, annual fee of 2.5% of the assets in the client’s account.

HedgeCoVestLongShort_new

The platform went live at the beginning of the month, with more than 1,500 beta users and 45 alternative investment firms participating. Investors appreciate the access to a diverse range of investment strategies typically not available to them. Fund managers and participating firms benefit from access to a cohort of investors who are typically—and in the case of Regulation D, legally—unavailable through the usual channels.

Founded in April 2013 and headquartered in West Palm Beach, Florida, HedgeCoVest made its Finovate debut at FinovateFall 2014 in New York. Evan Rapoport is CEO.

Finovate Debuts: TrueAccord Provides Kinder, Gentler, Automated Debt Collection

Finovate Debuts: TrueAccord Provides Kinder, Gentler, Automated Debt Collection

TrueAccord_homepage_June2015

TrueAccord uses machine learning and behavioral analytics to automate the debt-collection process. The result is an all-in-one, debt portfolio management platform with a multichannel, “humanistic” approach to engage the debt-account holder.

At FinovateSpring 2015, the company demoed the white-label version of its platform. TrueAccord says they have seen recovery improvements of 20% or more in the companies using the technology, and individual agent productivity gains of 10x. The goal at Finovate was to introduce the platform to larger institutions that could use the technology under their own brands to better manage debt accounts.

TrueAccord_FS2015_stage

TrueAccord co-founders: CTO Nadav Samet and CEO Ohad Samet demonstrated their white-label, automated debt-recovery platform at FinovateSpring 2015 in San Jose.

Company facts:

  • Founded in 2014
  • Headquartered in San Francisco, California
  • Services more than $60 million in debt from more than 400,000 debtors
  • Ohad Samet is co-founder and CEO

The story

Ohad Samet left his job as chief risk officer at Klarna to launch TrueAccord. Inspired in part by his own experience with a debt collector, Samet enlisted his brother, Nadav Samet, a veteran of the Israeli intelligence services and a former Google engineer. Together they began to tackle some of the key problems involved in debt collection:

  • Make it easier for lenders to track and manage their debt portfolios. TrueAccord provides institutions with a visually engaging, online dashboard where all debt accounts can be reviewed and monitored.
  • Automate as much of the process as possible. TrueAccord’s platform provides automated repayment plans that can be accepted as-is by borrowers or modified, and creatively engages with the debtor automatically to suggest alternative plans—even if the debtor abandons the process by closing the window.
  • Add the right kind of “human touch.” In building TrueAccord, Samet and his team knew that different debtors would respond differently to requests to repay debt. One debtor may respond better to a lighthearted text with emoticons. Another debtor may be more encouraged to pay off his debt with a more overtly motivational approach. Yet another debtor may just need to “see the math” in order to realize the importance of prioritizing debt repayment.

What’s important is meeting the debtor where he or she is, in the channel of his or her preference, in a voice (or tone or image) that is likely to produce the positive result of turning non- or under-performing loans into performing ones.

How it works

When a company initially logs onto the TrueAccord platform, the first thing to do is add loan accounts, a task easily done either by uploading files via CSV, or by using TrueAccord’s API to set up a two-way integration. Once the loan accounts are uploaded, TrueAccord goes to work classifying the loans and displaying the information graphically in the dashboard (see below).

The dashboard makes it easy to track the kind and quality of loans in the portfolio: working and non-working loans, loans in dispute, loans under a revised payment plan and more. The dashboard also tracks inbound and outbound communication volume; recoveries (with week-to-week and month-to-month comparisons); and disbursements.

trueaccord_dashboard_1

Above: TrueAccord’s dashboard gives the lender all the relevant information in an easy-to-digest graphical format.

The settings control (below) lets the company establish parameters to guide the automated debt-recovery process. Select minimum payments, maximum discounts to be offered, and maximum payment-plan length, and the system does the rest. Administrators can use the settings tab from the dashboard to see what other features TrueAccord’s engineers are developing. Those features are tested for stability before being offered for use on the platform.

trueaccord_settings_2

Above: The settings tab in the dashboard gives the lender the opportunity to customize and adjust the parameters of the loan-repayment terms TrueAccord will offer on its behalf.

Below is an example of the view of the platform from the perspective of an individual agent reviewing accounts. The account view gives the agent all the information he or she needs in order to see exactly what condition any given loan is in. Here, the agent can see the name, outstanding balance, initial loan amount, and contact information. To the right of the Home tab, the history tab displays all of the contact between the company and the debtor. The time and date when the contact was made is noted, as are the channel (email, voicemail, SMS, etc.), and any other substantive details. Interestingly, the platform also lets the agent know if the contacted debtor has tried to access any of the messages (whether or not the debtor actually returned them), including attempts that are abandoned. TrueAccord also lets the agent know if the debtor has visited the web site and which pages have been viewed.

All of this is geared toward increasing engagement with a debtor who probably is at least a little reluctant to be engaged. By studying which channels and which messages have received the most positive responses, TrueAccord is able to provide better outcomes from debt collectors and debtors.

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Above: The TrueAccord platform gives collection agents the details on individual accounts, including a contact history.

Easily one of the most clever features of TrueAccord from this perspective is the way the technology remains engaged with the debtor, even if the debtor abandons the process. For example, if the debtor closes the tab or window in the middle of a repayment “negotiation,” the platform will send the debtor a text or email with a subject line, such as “Let’s Try Again,” a phrase with a more conciliatory tone (or more “encouraging” or more “motivating,” depending on the debtor’s personal characteristics), and a new repayment-plan offer for the debtor to consider.

trueaccord_paymentplan_4

Above: TrueAccord automatically recontacts when debtors abandon the process with an email or text offering a repayment plan that may better suit the debtors needs.

The future

Since its Finovate debut in San Jose this spring, TrueAccord has found itself in the headlines. COO Sofya Pogreb was interviewed as part of Huffington Post Business’ Women In Business series earlier this month, and the company was recently highlighted by Fox Business as one of “30 Hot Fintech Startups to Watch” and by Coin Telegraph as one of “6 Rising FinTech Startups.” The company has raised more than $5 million, with its last funding being a $250,000 Series A round completed in October 2014.

TrueAccord’s primary goal now is to encourage more large financial institutions to adopt their technology. And if the company’s desire to add data analysts is any indication, TrueAccord is optimistic about its prospects of getting FIs to put the platform to work. Writing about the company in the fall of 2014 when it included TrueAccord in a list of “Top 10 Tech Companies to Watch,” the editors of American Banker put it simply: “Debt collection is in dire need of an overhaul. TrueAccord is trying to offer an enlightened approach.”

Often we find companies trying to put a “human face” on technology to make it more palatable. In TrueAccord, we have a company knowledgeable enough about the world of debt collection to do the exact opposite.

CashSentinel Closes Seed Round of Undisclosed Amount

CashSentinel Closes Seed Round of Undisclosed Amount

CashSentinelHomepage

Earlier this year, CashSentinel launched its mobile payment escrow service to the public in Switzerland. The startup aims to create a safe environment for two private parties to buy and sell used vehicles (check out our in-depth review of the platform).

The startup announced today it closed a seed round of an undisclosed amount. Investors include Business Angels Switzerland (BAS), GoBeyond, and other angel investors. Since it was founded in 2012, CashSentinel has received a total of $650,000 in seed funding and grants. Today’s seed round brings the company’s total funding somewhere north of that figure.

CashSentinelCEOPictured: CashSentinel CEO, Sylvain Bertolus, with client

In January, the fintech company made its service available on the website AutoScout24, an online European marketplace for used vehicles. Since then, CashSentinel has seen a steady increase in transactions and recently exceeded $1 million (1 million CHF) processed on its platform.

CashSentinel expects its growth to burgeon in the future, as more than 500,000 used vehicles trade hands every year in Switzerland alone. The startup plans to expand into the greater European market later this year.

CashSentinel debuted at FinovateEurope 2015 in London. The company holds partnerships with Swissquote Bank and AutoScout24.

Finovate Alumni News

On Finovate.com

  • “Finovate Debuts: TrueAccord Provides Kinder, Gentler Automated Debt Collection”
  • “HedgeCoVest Adds Two New Models to its Platform”
  • “CashSentinel Closes Seed Round of Undisclosed Amount”

Around the web

  • Dunkin’ Donuts, Fandango, Sundance Catalog and Williams-Sonoma now accept Visa Checkout.
  • Moven updates Android mobile app.
  • The Fintech blog features Q&A with LendUp CEO Sasha Orloff.
  • Bank Innovation profiles Hedgeable and its “one simple trick.”
  • Westpac Banking Corporation and New Zealand Banking Group are testing Ripple for payment transfers between subsidiaries.
  • Ixaris announces €4m Open Payments Ecosystem (OPE) project to support developers building payment apps.
  • TSYS to support Apple Pay when it launches in the U.K. in July.
  • Omnichannel account-opening solution from Zenmonics goes live at BBVA.
  • Austin Energy to adopt PaySecure platform from Acculynk.
  • Investopedia column on the “Top 5 Myths of Robo-Advisors” features Betterment, Wealthfront, and Vanguard.
  • BrightScope launches Fund Pages to provide detailed information about open-ended mutual funds.
  • Sam’s Club using Lending Club to offer financing to SMB customers.
  • FitSmallBusiness.com names OnDeck best provider of small business loans.
  • SunGard terminal selects Heckyl news and sentiment analysis.
  • Pindrop Security granted patent for phone antifraud and authentication technology.
  • Top Image Systems taps Bob Fresnel as new TIS Americas President.

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.

U.K.-based TransferWise: Growth and Metrics Updates

U.K.-based TransferWise: Growth and Metrics Updates

TransferwiseHomepage

TransferWise, a startup that prides itself on being a “clever new way to beat bank fees,” recently released a few stats.

The company, whose product launched in 2011, is now enabling customers to transfer more than $760 million (£500 million) across the globe every month. At this volume, TransferWise has seized 2% of the market share in U.K.-based global remittances.

In total, TransferWise estimates it is saving consumers an average of $34 million (£22 million) in foreign exchange fees each month.

Co-founder Taavet Hinrikus states that TransferWise moves “tens of millions” of customers’ money every day and estimates that figure to increase as consumers look for alternative money-transfer services to avoid bank fees.

TransferWise demonstrated at FinovateEurope 2013 in London and has raised just over $90 million in funding.

EyeVerify’s Partnership with Turkish Reseller Yields Vodafone Contract

EyeVerify’s Partnership with Turkish Reseller Yields Vodafone Contract

EyeVerify_homepage_June2015

The first dividend from EyeVerify’s just-announced reseller deal with Turkey’s Olcsan CAD Technology has arrived: The biometric authentication specialist will bring its Eyeprint ID to Vodafone’s Cep Cüzdan mobile wallet.

“Together with EyeVerify, we plan to expand our biometric offerings into the mobile space and continue to offer innovative solutions for our clients,” says Burak Sondal, Olcsan CEO.

With just the camera on the average smartphone or mobile device, EyeVerify’s technology scans the patterns of blood vessels in the eye to create a digital identifier, an “eyeprint,” that EyeVerify says is as unique as a fingerprint. The company’s Eyeprint technology has been deployed by financial institutions, most recently at Mountain America Credit Union, looking to secure their mobile apps. And smartphone manufacturer Alcatel announced this spring that it was launching a new phone with EyeVerify’s Eyeprint technology included.

The technology, less expensive than other biometric methods such as iris-scanning, is more “spoof-proof” than facial recognition and more discrete than voice recognition.

Olcsan and EyeVerify had been cooperating on product development for several months and agreed to the reseller deal earlier this year. Founded in 1992, Olcsan CAD Technology is a systems integrator and app developer specializing in smart card, security and biometric authentication technologies for the enterprise. EyeVerify CEO and founder Toby Rush cited Olcsan’s more than 30 years’ experience in providing biometric authentication solutions to its customers as a major reason for forging the partnership. According to Rush, “Their expertise in implementation across numerous vertical markets will be invaluable in generating marketing adoption for Eyeprint ID.”

Vodafone Turkey is the number-two mobile communications company in Turkey. The telecom operates in more than 80 cities in the country, and has more than 20 million users. Vodafone Turkey has more than 1,200 stores and 23,000 points of sale.

Founded in 2012 and headquartered in Kansas City, Kansas, EyeVerify demoed its biometric authentication technology at FinovateSpring 2014, winning Best of Show honors.

PayPal’s Braintree Tapped to Turn Pinterest Browsers into Consumers

PayPal’s Braintree Tapped to Turn Pinterest Browsers into Consumers

BraintreeHomepage

There’s been plenty of buzz lately about Pinterest’s new Buyable Pins, which aim to turn users from window shoppers into paying customers. If you haven’t heard, customers browsing Pinterest will soon be able to purchase items without leaving the mobile app by selecting a “buy it” button placed next to the iconic, red “pin it” button. This is an important step for Pinterest, as its evolution into an e-commerce platform helps justify the company’s $11 billion valuation.

Pinterest tapped PayPalBuyablePin-owned Braintree to be a part of the launch later this month. Many sources reported that Braintree’s role will be to simply “make sure Pinterest never touches credit card information.” Braintree’s role, however, will go deeper than that.

Braintree, which prides itself on making payments so easy that they fade into the background, will indeed handle the transmission and storage of credit card information to help Pinterest remain PCI compliant. However, the payments company will also take on a secondary role to enable Pinterest to accept PayPal as a payment option. Pinterest has also tapped Stripe and Apple Pay as payment options.

Buyable Pins will launch on mobile iOS devices later this month and will soon be available on desktop and Android platforms (though no word on when).

Braintree presented its developer platform, alongside parent company PayPal, at FinDEVr in San Francisco 2014.

If you’re interested in sending your developers to check out the latest APIs in the tech scene, you’re in luck. At FinDEVr San Francisco 2015 (register), we’ll be showcasing the latest tools, platforms and case studies to hundreds of fintech developers, VPs of engineering, and CTOs. We’re returning to the UCSF Mission Bay Conference Center in San Francisco on 6/7 October 2015. Check out the FAQ for more details or contact [email protected].

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Finovate Alumni News

On Finovate.com

  • “PayPal’s Braintree Tapped to Turn Pinterest Browsers into Consumers”
  • “EyeVerify’s Partnership with Turkish Reseller Yields Vodafone Contract”
  • “U.K.-based TransferWise: Growth and Metrics Updates

Around the web

  • TradeHero updates mobile iOS app.
  • WSJ features how Venmo helps users instantly move money more cheaply.
  • Apple lists Xero among group of business apps Apple is using to market the iPad for use in business.
  • Indianapolis Business Journal looks at the rise of robo-advisors Betterment, Wealthfront, Hedgeable, and Motif Investing.
  • TSYS launches its Chip Card on Demand to help issuers make the transition through the October chip-liability shift.
  • Top Image Systems unveils its new mobile account opening and onboarding app, MobiENROLL.
  • Benzinga interviews Igor Gonta, CEO of Market Prophit, on the launch of his Twitter-based, social media, smart beta index.
  • Fox Business features Planwise, LendUp, Trulioo, Plaid, Wealthfront, TrueAccord, WePay, Flint, Lending Club, Prosper, LendingRobot, and FutureAdvisor in its roundup of “30 Hot Fintech Startups to Watch.”
  • New York Business Journal reviews its gamification strategy of PFM solution, Qapital.
  • Financial Times profiles LendUp and the “grubby end of U.S. debt.”

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.