Fintech Fundings Top $310 Million the Week Ending October 23

We’ve only been tracking fundings on a weekly basis for 11 weeks. But I don’t think there have been many weeks in history, if any, that the money flowing to the fintech sector was bigger. A total of $314 million in equity investments went to 18 companies (in addition, 4 companies received undisclosed new investments). Even without Mozida’s massive $185 million, it was still a huge week. 

There were 10 fundings greater than $7 million including two Finovate alums, Flint Mobile ($9.4 million) and D3 Banking, formerly Lodo Software ($7 million). 
In order of magnitude, the deals from Oct 14 to Oct 20, 2014:
White-labeled mobile payments & ecommerce solutions
Latest round: $185 million
Total raised: $308 million
Tags: Payments, mobile, ecommerce, marketing, shopping, enterprise, New York City
Source: Crunchbase
Digital commerce platform
Latest round: $14.5 million
Total raised: $14.5 million
Tags: Bitcoin, cryptocurrencies, ecommerce, San Francisco, California
Source: Crunchbase

Cloud-based mass payment service
Latest round: $13 million
Total raised: $13 million
Tags: Payments, SMB, Agoura Hills, California
Source: Crunchbase
Alt-financing for the construction industry
Latest round: $12.5 million
Total raised: $12.5 million
Tags: SMB, lending, credit, alt-finance, Scottsdale, Arizona
Source: Crunchbase
Platform to power P2P/direct lenders
Latest round: $12 million
Total raised: $17.4 million
Tags: P2P lending, crowdfunding, platform, direct lending, investing, New York City
Source: Crunchbase
Subscription billing management services
Latest round: $12 million 
Total raised: $19.6 million
Tags: Billpay, invoicing, payments, San Francisco, California
Source: Crunchbase
Consumer debt management
Latest round: $12 million
Total raised: $24.8 million
Tags: Debt, lending, PFM, Cost Mesa, California
Source: FT Partners
Mobile and online payments
Latest round: $9.4 million
Total raised: $20.4 million
Tags: mPay, digital payments, Redwood City, California, Finovate alum
Source: Finovate
Bringing private equity investing to smaller investors
Latest round: $9.3 million
Total raised: $9.3 million
Tags: Alt-finance, SMB, lending, credit, PE, investing, New York City
Source: Crunchbase
D3 Banking (formerly Lodo Software)
Digital banking & personal finance platform 
Latest round: $7 million
Total raised: $12.1 million
Tags: PFM, online, mobile banking, Omaha, Nebraska, Finovate alum
Source: Finovate

Fraud detection in financial services and ecommerce
Latest round: $4.5 million
Total raised: $4.5 million
Tags: Fraud, security, San Mateo, California
Source: FT Partners
Fraud detection technology for banks and credit unions
Latest round: $3.5 million
Total raised: $3.5 millon
Tags: Fraud, security, Wethersfield, Connecticut
Source: FT Partners
Fundraising and payments platform
Latest round: $3.5 million
Total raised: $3.5 million
Tags: Payments, non-profits, fundraising, Dallas, Texas
Source: Crunchbase
UK-based near-bank
Latest round: $3.2 million
Total raised: $6.4 million
Tags: Alt-banking, PFM, personal finance, UK
Source: Crunchbase
Cloud billing provider
Latest round: $1 million
Total raised: $1 million
Tags: Billpay, payments, SMB, invoicing, Annapolis, Maryland
Source: Crunchbase
Equity management platform
Latest round: $1 million
Total raised: $1 million
Tags: SMB, cap table, stock options, Sandy, Utah
Source: FT Partners
SparkProfit trading simulator
Latest round: $600,000
Total raised: $600,000
Tags: Investing, asset management, trading, data analytics, London, UK, Finovate alum
Source: Finovate
Japanese cloud invoice management
Latest round: $650,000
T
otal raised: $1 million
Tags: SMB, accounting, billpay, payments, Japan
Source: Crunchbase
Bitcoin payment gateway
Latest round: Undisclosed
Total raised: $2.1 million
Tags: Cryptocurrenices, ecommerce, Singapore
Source: FT Partners
Real-estate marketplace
Latest round: Undisclosed
Total raised: Unkown
Tags: Homebuying, mortgage, New York City
Source: Crunchbase
Ripple platform in London
Latest round: Undisclosed
Total raised: Unknown
Tags: Cryptocurrencies, London, UK
Source: Crunchbase
Chinese personal finance site
Latest round: Undisclosed
Total raised: Unknown
Tags: PFM, personal finance, investing, Bejing, China
Source: Crunchbase

Finovate Debuts: Thinknum

Finovate Debuts: Thinknum

The Finovate Debuts series introduces new Finovate alums. Today’s feature is Thinknum, which demonstrated its collaboration and comparison tools for financial analysis.

ThinknumLogo

Thinknum’s web-based software is targeted to financial analysts. The collaboration and cloud-computing tools help build better financial models. It seeks to revolutionize asset valuation and empowers analysts to turn complicated spreadsheets into in-depth analyses.

Stats
    • 4,000 analysts on platform
    • $1 million raised
    • Product launched December 2013
The problem
To more accurately value stocks, sophisticated investors create financial models based on metrics such as company sales, website page views, and global events such as spikes in food prices. Often, analysts use simple spreadsheets which can be inefficient in managing complicated data.
Most financial models are shared by email, with different versions saved on various hard drives leading to lost content, mis-used models, and other confusion. Additionally, finding specific data points by sorting through spreadsheets is cumbersome.
Enter Thinknum.
The solution
Thinknum provides analysts with a platform to host their spreadsheet-based models. Users can either upload existing models from Excel or build them directly on the platform. Powerful search capabilities enable users to apply a single model to multiple companies, automatically aggregating company-specific information, such as earnings and revenue.
ThinknumSpreadsheet
Additionally, Thinknum serves as a collaboration platform where 4,000 analysts from major banks and hedge funds across the globe can share and tweak each others’ models using different assumptions.
What sets Thinknum apart? 
1) Computing power
With an overwhelming amount of data and hundreds of APIs created every day, it is impossible to capture all of the information needed for an accurate model. Even if it were possible, analysts would still lack the computing power needed to crunch the numbers in the model. Thinknum’s 50 computing nodes deliver results in seconds, pulling data from thousands of sources.
2) Crowdsourced insights
Similar to Github, Thinknum gives users visibility into the work of other analysts on the platform. This provides insight into how others value certain companies, and can lead to better financial models.
The example below shows how other analysts, listed along the bottom, value Google. The bubbles represent each person’s valuation based on their personal financial model. 
ThinknumModelsPage
From here, analysts can open the model, view its performance, or use the QuickBuilder feature.
With QuickBuilder (below), investors can test their models by simulating the effect of changes in inputs, such as company revenue and cost of goods sold, have on the overall stock price.
ThinknumQuickbuilder
Thinknum’s capabilities extend beyond the QuickBuilder feature. It also provides graphs detailing data from over 2,000 sources such as home prices, construction spending, and the unemployment rate.

Alumni News– October 24, 2014

  • Smarty Pig featured in Washington Post column on ways to save on holiday gift shopping.
  • Wealth Management.com talks with Motif Investing CEO Hardeep Walia on tech trends in the financial services industry.
  • TransferWise and CurrencyFair are highlighted in Forbes review of ways to save on foreign currency exchange.
  • Bob’s Guide profiles cloud-based market data provider, Xignite.
  • Technology Tools for Today interviews Tom Nally, president of TD Ameritrade Institutional.
  • Pymnts interviews EVO Snap* CEO Peter Osberg about Apple Pay.
  • Fitsmallbusiness.com highlights OnDeck, PayPal, & other Finovate alums as small business lending innovators.
  • D3 Banking brings in $7 million, with $3 million more on the way.
  • ABA Banking Journal looks at Karrot, the automated online lending service demoed by Kabbage last month at FinovateFall 2014.
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.

Treating Loan Applicants with Respect

image I’ve been denied credit twice.

The first time, I understood. Sort of. I was starting my first job and had little, if any, credit history. But still, it hurt that my Fortune-50-employer’s credit union wouldn’t give even a $500 credit line to a freshly minted engineer. Luckily, the first big bank I tried had no such qualms and promptly sent me a MasterCard with a $2,000 credit line.  

The second time, 25 years later, made zero sense. I’d received something like 100 direct mail preapproved offers from this issuer before I finally said yes to one. Yet, I was rejected online when I went to accept it and again when I called to appeal. They wouldn’t say why, but it was likely related to that curse of the loan applicant, self-employment (see note 1). 

So, as a consumer and especially as a small biz owner, I’ve always had a bit of a love-hate relationship with banking credit departments (note 2). Having worked in credit/loan product management, I am sympathetic to the tricky underwriting concerns behind the scenes. Granting credit is like being a parent. You have to learn to say “no” a lot.

But also like a parent, you must say it tactfully and respectfully to maintain a healthy relationship. And that’s where many financial institutions lose points.

The reason I bring this up is that I’m in the middle of a refi with a top-10 bank. I originally chose them for my home loan five years ago because of its world-class online mortgage application process and great reputation. But that original note comes due in February, so I must refi once again. I’ve been happy with this company, so I decided to stay with them, even though they weren’t the lowest rate. I hoped that being a long-time customer (14 years) with three deposit accounts, a business credit card (4 years), a personal credit card (3.5 years), and a mortgage (4.5 years) would ease the process.

And maybe it has. But they can sure make me feel like an idiot along the way. The mortgage process began two months ago, via a phone application. And trust me, it could not have been a more cookie-cutter deal in terms of LTV, debt-to-income ratios, credit scores and such. The only complicating factor, underwriting wise, and I guess it’s a huge one, is that I own a substantial stake in a small business.

During the past two months I’ve uploaded 23 documents including explanatory letters, tax returns, and so forth. But here I am at day 66, and I still have no idea if the refi will go through, especially given that it’s past the original lock expiration, a situation they’ve been “looking into” for 4 days (note 3).

Not once has the bank reached out through email to apologize for the delays, or to thank me for continuing through the maze of documentation, or even to provide a simple loan status report (note 4). I have gotten a couple voicemails from the original sales rep asking me for more info, and generally he’s done a good job of being upbeat.

I understand the documentation rules for conforming loans are onerous these days and the bank is not making the rules, only enforcing them. But I feel completely disrespected at this point. And even if this one eventually goes through (note 5), I would be highly unlikely to do another loan with them, nor would I recommend them to someone else. And this is a company that I’ve lavished praise on both in private and in public for a decade and a half.

It doesn’t have to be that way. Here’s how to be a good partner when your customers ask you for money:

1. Educate

Declining someone’s loan application can create huge relationship problems. I’ve never seen the research, but I think it’s safe to say the attrition rate of declined customers is higher than approved ones. So the best way to save declined customers from leaving is to stop them from applying for the loans in the first place (note 3). Good consumer education, including specific information on the applicant’s credit score and likelihood of being approved, is important. 

2. Say thanks

Even though customers are asking you for money, this is actually what keeps the lights on at most banks, so THANK CUSTOMERS profusely in multiple channels.

3. Keep in touch

No one asks for a loan just for the fun of it. And in most cases, time is of the essence. If you have to say no, do it fast. If you are saying, yes, then help them understand the process, deadlines, and expected closing date at every step of the way. If you can swing it cost-wise, maintain real-time status online AND , even more important, communicate every business day as to where the loan stands. It costs approximately ZERO to email your customers. Why would you not?

 4. Offer alternatives

If you have to say no, offer alternatives. When my credit union turned down 22-year-old me for a credit card, they could have retained my business if they had offered a co-signed card option and/or a secured imagecard with a migration plan to unsecured credit. If there are no reasonable alternatives within your product set, send them to others who may be able to help.

5. Be empathetic

Applying for a loan is a humbling activity. No matter who you are, you can still be rejected (see Ben Bernanke’s recent experience). Sure, it may not be your fault. The secondary market investors, having been burned in 2008/2009, are MUCH stricter on the documentation front. And it’s understandably frustrating for banks and their mortgage employees. But don’t pass that irritation on to your customers. You are the trusted advisor. Act that way.

———————

Picture credit: eBay

Notes:
1. Along the same lines, our company has been stonewalled when seeking commercial lines several times. The bank doesn’t outright say no, they just keep asking for more documentation until we finally lose interest.

2. That said, I don’t want to sound completely ungrateful. The mortgages, home equity loans and so forth, have allowed us to purchase a home that has appreciated nicely and to drive cars that don’t need repairing. So overall, I’m grateful to the credit grantors that have taken us under their wings.

3. Because the bank has been so slow in making underwriting decisions, the original 60-day lock has expired and they want an extra $1200 for a lock extension, even though I’ve met every paperwork requirement on schedule. It’s 100% their fault for taking so long. My request for a waiver of this penalty was “sent to management” a few days ago, but naturally I’ve heard nothing.

4. They do have an online mortgage system that helps track
what’s going on, but it doesn’t appear to be accurately reflecting the real status. Several of my doc uploads show a big “rejected” flag, but no one has asked me about them.

5. WARNING: This is a regulatory minefield. You have to be super careful not to show any bias in the application process, especially when discouraging a consumer from applying.

Finovate Debuts: iQuantifi

Finovate Debuts: iQuantifi
iQuantifiLogo

The Finovate Debuts series introduces new Finovate alums. iQuantifi demonstrated the “Cashfinder” and “What if” features of its virtual financial advisor platform at FinovateFall in September.

iQuantifi

iQuantifi is a virtual financial advisor platform geared toward millennials and young families. The technology relies on proprietary algorithms to provide comprehensive, personalized financial advice, and a step-by-step guide to allocating resources in order to achieve financial goals.
iQuantifi_Home2
The Stats:
    • Founded in June 2011
    • Headquarters: Nashville, Tennessee
    • Raised more than $1M in funding
    • Seven employees
    • Tom White is CEO and Founder; Karen White is CPO and Co-Founder
    • Product launched in September 2014
The Story
Tom and Karen White, founders of iQuantifi, don’t run from the “robo-advisor” label. They embrace it.
“There is a huge market of underserved (consumers), and the only way to really reach them is through technology,” Karen explained. “If you can reach more people, what’s wrong with that?”
As far as iQuantifi is concerned, the founders are proud of the fact that they have developed a fully-automated financial planning and investment platform after fifteen years in the financial advisory business. “I can only reach so many people,” Tom said. “We can reach millions now.”
iQuantifi_B2B
A major boost in that direction came a few weeks after iQuantifi’s FinovateFall debut in late September when the company announced that its platform was available to financial institutions. By opening the technology to banks and credit unions, the company hopes to make inroads with their target market: technology-friendly millennials just beginning their adult financial lives. “If you’re 28, making $80,000 a year, and net worth is negative,” Tom asks, “plus married and expecting a kid, where do you get financial advice?”

The Solution
Getting started with iQuantifi is straightforward. The first step is providing personal information. Name, family profile, investment experience, annual income and monthly expenses are the primary categories. Then aggregate your accounts (at least one checking account needs to be linked), and you are ready to begin.
iQuantifi_Welcome
The robo-advisory starts with the Timeline. The Timeline begins with the present and extends all the way through your projected retirement date. Above the Timeline are a set of icons that represent a variety of financial goals, all geared toward millennials and their families. For example, in addition to a “Buy House” goal icon, there is also simply “Relocate” and “Rent” goals icons. 
Click on a goal icon and a pop-up allows you to enter information about the goal. With that, the platform goes to work, determining just how feasible reaching your goal is given your current financial profile. If your goal is attainable in the time you’ve set, the goal icon will appear in your Timeline. If your goal is not attainable, a warning appears telling you “You have a shortage.” 
iQuantifi_Timeline
Here is where one of the key features demoed at FinovateFall comes in. Rather than forcing you to change your goals, the iQuantifi platform’s “Cashfinder” takes a look at the shortage amount and then goes to your financial profile to see what adjustments can be made to cover the shortage amount. You can take the platform’s recommended changes or keep your current levels. 
Even more detailed advice is available by clicking on the green action bar at the bottom below the timeline. Here users of the platform get more specific direction such as “Deposit $458 this month for retirement: Roth account” and “Apply for a Disability Insurance Policy with a $2,437 Monthly Benefit.” The investment section even provides the names of mutual funds, index funds, etc., as well as the percentage allocations required for a diversified portfolio based on the user’s goals.
iQuantifi-CarSummary
IQuantifi provides a Summary feature that lets users get a bird’s eye view of any specific financial goal and the progress being made toward reaching it. For example, a Car Summary Screen might show purchase date, total purchase price, percent savings already reached and amount still left to save in pursuit of a new car – all in a colorful, easy to read graphic. The Summary screen also previews the next action to be taken after the current one.

iQuantifi_Cashfinder

Another compelling feature of iQuantifi is its “What If” feature. This tool allows users to make adjustments to goals and then run scenarios to see how a change in a given goal (a more expensive car, putting off retirement for a few years) affects the overall financial picture, as well as other goals. “iQuantifi lets users update their plan as changes happen in their lives,” Tom said, “and automatically shows the impact of those changes in real-time.”


The Future
In some ways, the future for iQuantifi is already here. The company has opened up its platform to financial institutions, pointing out that the platform can help banks serve the “record numbers of college graduates
(who) are starting their professional life with a tremendous amount of debt.” This is all the more so, in Tom’s opinion, to the extent that millennials have been among the demographics least interested in traditional, brick and mortar banking.
The fact that iQuantifi has signed on with MX, the fintech innovator formerly known as MoneyDesktop, to provide account aggregation services is another positive for the company going forward. A multiple Best of Show award winner at Finovate, MX was a “natural fit” in the words of iQuantifi CTO Jim Siegienski. Calling MX “best in breed for categorization,” Siegienski praised the Utah-based company for the cleanliness of its technology and its ease of use.
As for security, iQuantifi relies on the same 128-bit secure socket layer technology and SHA-256 encryption that banks use when transmitting sensitive financial data. Data is protected on its end with biometric checkpoints, multiple keylock entries, and “constant video surveillance, and the software is “read only” which prevents anyone for accessing your accounts through iQuantifi’s system.
iQuantifi_House
iQuantifi currently offers 30 days free use of the service. After that it’s $9.95 per month or $89 annually. Multiply that number by the 79 million consumers Tom says make up the “millennial market” and it is easy to see why he and the rest of his team are so excited about the future of iQuantifi.

Flint Mobile Announces Verizon-Led $9 Million Investment Round

Flint Mobile Announces Verizon-Led $9 Million Investment Round

Thumbnail image for FlintMobileLogo.jpg

With a just-announced $9.4 million in funding led by Verizon Ventures, Flint Mobile now stands with more than $20 million in total capital. Participating in the Series C alongside Verizon Ventures were existing investors Digicel, Storm Ventures, True Ventures, and new investor, Peninsula Ventures.

A specialist in providing point-of-sale solutions for mobile merchants, Flint Mobile has carved out a niche for itself as the hardware-free Square alternative. The company’s iOS and Android apps rely on a combination of card scanning and manual entry to enable merchants to accept credit and debit cards without a card reader. The technology can create and send invoices, works with Passbook loyalty coupons, and features QuickBooks Online integration, as well.

Flint_homepage
Keeping his cards close to the vest, Flint Mobile CEO Greg Goldfarb had more to say about how and why his company had expanded its offering beyond basic mobile payments than why Verizon Ventures choose to invest in his company. With regard to the former, Goldfarb pointed out that the same small, independent merchants who relied on Flint for payments had started to wonder if there were ancillary services – such as invoicing and advance billing – Flint could provide.
The short answer was “yes.” The somewhat longer answer is Sell Online, the new service launched by Flint at the beginning of the month. Sell Online allows merchants to add a customizable button to their website (or as a link that can be sent through email or social media) that keeps customers on the page, provides a secure, encrypted checkout, and makes online sales and orders easy to track and manage.
Flint_SellOnline
There are no additional costs for merchants using Sell Online. Debit card transactions are 1.95%, with credit card transactions at 2.95%, the same as Flint’s regular fees.
With regard to the company’s future with Verizon, Goldfarb’s refusal to talk much detail about the investment hasn’t stopped others from wondering what might lurk beyond the infusion of capital into Flint. For example while VentureBeat’s coverage quoted Goldfarb linking the new capital to further product development, Gigaom’s coverage of the announcement tantalizingly hinted at the possibility of Verizon offering Flint to its customers “as a simple application download.”
Based in Redwood City, California, and founded in April 2011, Flint demoed its technology as part of FinovateSpring 2012 in San Francisco. See video of Flint in action.

Alumni News– October 23, 2014

  • Finovate-F-Logo.jpgJingit’s Head of Product, Chris Ohlsen, weighs in on loyalty and rewards.
  • Intuit launches developer experience and global app store for QuickBooks Online, including payments API.
  • Anovia Payments partners with CardFlight to offer mobile point of sale solutions to merchants and developers.
  • Richwood Bank hires Insuritas for its insurance agency solution.
  • Bionym forges own path to biometric harmony with the Nymi band.
  • Forte CEO Jeff Thorness comments on why omnichannel  is not just a buzzword.
  • MECU to provide members with digital banking services from Digital Insight.
  • PayPal’s Venmo earns a spot on VentureBeat’s list of 13 must-own apps for your smartphone.
  • Flint announces Verizon-led $9 million investment round.
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.

Alumni News– October 22, 2014

  • Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Finovate-F-Logo.jpgProfitStars introduces new image capture technology with Alogent Interactive Capture.
  • iQuantifi opens its cloud-based virtual advisor platform to financial institutions.
  • Swiss-based PostFinance launches new digital banking platform powered by Backbase.
  • CIO Review names Authentify 1 of the 20 more promising educational tech solution providers.
  • Temenos further expands its US operations.
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.

Apple Pay Works (Duh), But it’s No Starbucks (Yet)

imageWell, that was anticlimactic. But I knew it would be.

Between Starbucks mobile, Square Wallet, Google Wallet and my Discover Card contactless sticker affixed to the back, I’ve made a few hundred in-store purchases with my phone.

So smartphone purchase #247 today was hardly remarkable from a UX standpoint. The only thing that would have made my first Apple Pay experience interesting would have been if it failed (resulting in a much more clickable headline for this post). But although it took three tries (note 1), the phone finally vibrated (the same as my Nexus) telling me that Apple’s NFC magic had indeed triumphed (note 2) adding 1.05 cent to its Q4 numbers (note 3).   

And although I firmly believe we are at “peak plastic” for debit/credit cards and payment via the cloud is inevitable, I don’t see how Apple Pay adds 15 BPS (or a half-cent for debit) of value to the card-using experience. But to play with Apple you have to pay. And 15 BPS is a lot better than the 30% interchange Apple has collected for the past six years on in-app purchases. So I’m neither criticizing the rumored economics, nor the 500 issuers who have signed on. For competitive reasons, you might as well play along (or not, see previous post). 

Bottom lineI’m not giving up on plastic, or merchant-specific apps like Starbucks (or MCX?), quite yet. The iPhone/TouchID experience is great, but at this point, it’s slightly more cumbersome than plastic (note 4) and costs more if you account for my tendency to drop the phone (note 5). 

And Apple Pay’s consumer value for in-store purchases will come in the future with more integration between phone, bank and merchant (note 6). Getting customers to give up plastic is all about the three R’s: rewards, receipts, and relationships (note 7). Starbucks has nailed it (note 8). Apple has not, yet.

———————–

Screenshots

My first Apple Pay in-person transaction
Left: Push notification on top of homescreen
Right: How it looks within the Apple Passbook app

image       image

————————

Notes:
1. The first time I put the phone next to a terminal, nothing happened when I authenticated with TouchID. I’m not sure if it was my phone’s failure or the cashier failed to ready the charge properly. The second time, it did connect, but I was declined with a negative “buzz” from the phone. The cashier readied the charge a third time and this one went through with a pleasant vibration and push notification on the screen. These things happen, even when swiping plastic, so I don’t hold it against Apple Pay. That said, were I a so-called normal consumer, I probably would have pulled out my plastic and waited for Apple Pay 2.0 next year before trying again. 

2. Sadly, I still had to make chicken scratches (aka my signature) on the Verifone display at Bartell Drug for the $6.99 box of tea and also have a paper receipt shoved into my hands. It’s not Apple’s fault, but it does detract from the overall UX. 

3. My $6.99 purchase times the rumored 0.15% interchange rebate to Apple. 

4. I’ve been using TouchID only a month, but so far, I find it clumsy. I have three fingerprints registered, and some work better than others, and overall, I find it can take numerous attempts to get it to authenticate. This is not something I want to experience at the front of the checkout queue. It’s bad enough that I’m standing there waving my new $600 gold smartphone at the terminal. I don’t need to be holding up the line while I fumble with said device. Once the novelty wears off, I’ll probably go back to swiping plastic, at least if there’s a queue. 

5. In addition, every time I pull my phone out, especially when juggling purchases at the point of sale, there is a chance I’ll drop it. And since I detest cases, I crack my screen every year or two. Assuming it costs $100 to fix, and I crack it once every 5 to 10,000 times I handle it, it’s cost me 1 or 2 cents to use my phone in lieu of plastic. 

6. This post is about the physical point of sale. The one-click mobile-payment process for Apple Pay-powered shopping carts and apps has immediate and understandable value for both the consumer and merchant. 

7. You could argue that the increased security from phone payments will move people off plastic. But consumers still do not trust mobile phone security, for good reason. And they know they are covered for plastic security breaches. So the known threat (plastic) probably trumps the unknown (phone) for the time being. 

8. And the Starbucks experience gets better next year when “order ahead” goes national.

Finovate Debuts: MaxMyInterest from Six Trees Capital

Finovate Debuts: MaxMyInterest from Six Trees Capital
MaxMyInterestLogo_FF2014

The Finovate Debuts series introduces new Finovate alums. This past September, Six Trees Capital made its Finovate Debut with MaxMyInterest, an innovative cash management solution for high net worth individuals and their families.

MaxMyInterest

From Six Trees Capital, MaxMyInterest is an automated cash management technology that dynamically allocates cash balances between online savings accounts to ensure FDIC insurance coverage while earning superior yields. Financial institutions gain wallet share and increase customer stickiness from high-net-worth clients.
MaxMyInterest1
The Stats
  • Founded in July 2013
  • Headquartered in New York City, NY
  • Gary Zimmerman is CEO and Founder
  • Technology launched in April 2014
The Story
Some technology, as the saying goes, is almost indistinguishable from magic. Other technology, is almost indistinguishable from “why in the world didn’t I think of that!?”
MaxMyInterest was initially developed as a way to preserve capital rather than a way of helping grow it. Founder and CEO Gary Zimmerman was working as an investment banker recently relocated to Japan when the financial crisis hit in 2008. And to put it mildly, his experience trying to manage and reallocate his cash from the other side of the world in the midst of global financial turmoil was instructive. 
Sure, the FDIC would insure cash deposits up to $100,000 (the limit before October 2008). But as far as the rest of Zimmerman’s cash was concerned, it was every dollar for itself.
MaxMyInterest_Art2
Zimmerman found himself manually moving hundreds of thousands of dollar around from one newly-opened online bank account to the next for three years. And in the process, he realized he had earned tens of thousands of dollars in interest shuffling his money around. In the beginning, Zimmerman explains, it had “nothing to do with interest rates – just protecting the cash.” But his revelation after three years of manual cash management had him thinking: hmmm, if only we could automate this …
The Solution
So what does MaxMyInterest do and how does it do it? Put simply, MaxMyInterest lets high-net-worth savers, those for whom the FDIC’s $250,000 insurance limit is not enough, move their cash holdings dynamically to whichever account provides the highest rate of interest. The money movement is automatic and keeps cash savings accounts under $250,000 so that depositors can make the most of FDIC insurance guarantees. 
Signing up is straightforward. Members link a checking account and at least one savings account in a process that takes less than 15 minutes. Users set up a Target Balance, which tells Max how much money to keep in the checking account. The rest of the cash is allocated into the highest yielding FDIC-insured savings accounts available in a process MaxMyInterest calls “optimizing”. Optimization takes place monthly, but the company says that rebalancing with greater frequency is possible.
MaxMyInterest_Art1
Members track their balances, the status of the optimization or transfer, and have access to their cash at any time (except during the 2-3 day ACH transfer). MaxMyInterest also has an “Intelligent Funds Transfer” feature that allows members to transfer funds back and forth between checking and savings with a single click. Note that Max ever takes actual custody of the funds of its members. 
The service costs 0.02% of the cash being optimized each quarter, or 0.08% per year. This is competitive with money market management fees which can range as high as 0.16%. Zimmerman said his platform can deliver cash returns of 0.80% net of fees.
Where can you use MaxMyInterest? The technology is compatible with checking accounts at:
    • Bank of America
    • Citibank
    • First Republic Bank
    • JPMorgan/Chase
    • Wells Fargo
MaxMyInterest is also compatible with FDIC-insured online savings accounts at:
    • Ally Bank
    • American Express
    • Barclays
    • Capital One 360 (formerly ING Direct)
    • GE Capital
The Technology
Zimmerman admits that initially he wasn’t sure that “MaxMyInterest the Concept” could actually be turned into “MaxMyInterest the Product.” “There’s a lot of difference between having an idea and executing an idea,” he said. Then after four months of work proved that the cash management solution could be built, the sprint to see just how fast it could be built was on. And while there were plenty of moving parts, working with banks and navigating their various security protocols proved to be the biggest challenge.
Zimmerman and Director of Engineering Richard Wu turned to a major security firm to help them build out the architecture and do the requisite testing. The goal was to make MaxMyInterest as secure as the banks they worked with. The lack of common standards for interfacing with the banks was one challenge, especially when much of it was automated. “There were a lot of solutions available,” said Wu, “but none really worked for us.”
MAXMy1
Starting from the ground up, they were able to construct a platform with a simple user interface, smooth and prompt execution, and security strong enough to convince major banks like Bank of America, Citibank, and Wells Fargo to make the service available. 
The Future
Why do banks like MaxMyInterest? Zimmerman admits that some banks he thought wouldn’t like his cash management service actually did. “A lot of banks have a problem with clients holding too much cash,” he said. MaxMyInterest also gives banks the opportunity for competitive advantage. Brick-and-mortar banks can be at a disadvanta
ge of as much as 150 basis points compared to online banks, Zimmerman explained. And online banks pass this savings on to their customers in the former of better returns on cash.
MAXMy2

With MaxMyInterest, banks can offer higher yielding opportunities to their clients. “The irony,” he said, “was that by reducing the stickiness of bank deposits, you increase the stickiness of bank relationships.” Zimmerman thinks that early adopters of his technology will have a major advantage over those that hesitate.

For many in fintech, “cash” is simply shorthand for paper bills and coins. But in reality, “cash” is a $12 trillion dollar field of assets sitting idly in banks and money market funds. “The average American is 40% in cash,” said Zimmerman, cash that is paying on average between zero and 0.15% annual percentage yield. 
MaxMyInterest helps high net worth savers make the best of a low-interest rate world by automatically moving cash to online banks where yields are greater (averaging between 0.75% and 0.95% APY).  And if Zimmerman and his team are able to grow MaxMyInterest in the current environment, it is easy to imagine a bright future for the company – and its members – as online savings options grow and interest rates (eventually) normalize and begin to move higher.

Finovate Debuts: BioCatch

Finovate Debuts: BioCatch

The Finovate Debuts series introduces new Finovate. alums. Today’s feature is BioCatch, which demonstrated its invisible authentication methods at FinovateFall 2014.

By tracking the way users interact with web and mobile banking platforms, BioCatch uses invisible tests to authenticate users and prevent fraud.

The cloud-based solution gets ahead of malicious behavior by intervening before fraudsters enter the system.

Stats

    • Recently moved headquarters to Tel Aviv from Lod, Israel
    • Founded April 2011, launched BioCatch in 2013
    • $10 million raised
    • 25 employees
BioCatchuserDiagram

The experience

BioCatch helps banks and ecommerce enterprises catch fraudsters while authenticating the actual users. It uses 400 different parameters, such as how fast the user types and their usage preferences.

BioCatch starts by building a profile of each user to capture their typical behavior during an online banking session. Once complete, BioCatch is able to flag uncharacteristic usage patterns as fraud.

>> Catching the fraudsters

To determine fraudulent activity, BioCatch considers factors such as:

    • Does the user move between fields using a mouse or using the Tab key?
    • Do they click the submit button or use the Enter key?
    • When entering an amount, do they use the keypad or the number pad?
For each online banking session, the bank views a dashboard that shows geographical location, an analysis of each user’s session, the session flow, the behavioral patterns of the account, an analysis of the threat, as well as device and network risk scores. 
BioCatchAnalystStation1
The authentication analysis scores how the user performs compared to their regular behavior. The information is presented in a dashboard, similar to the one below, which indicates unusual login rythmics and mouse dynamics.
BioCatchAnalystStation
>> Proving the good user

Aside from just detecting and stopping fraud, BioCatch can reduce false positives, as well.

For example, if a New York-based customer is accessing their account while on a trip to Des Moines, the different geographical location may raise some red flags. The out-of-character activity may cause the bank to identify the actual user as a criminal.

The consequence (getting locked out of their account or having to call the bank to authenticate themselves) creates friction in the user experience and can harm the relationship.

What’s new?
BioCatch recently launched The Art of Fraud Catalogue showcasing patterns generated by malware. After analyzing user behavior, BioCatch realized that usage patterns created great art. 

The piece below was captured from fraud discovered in North America. It is titled, The Matrix Fraud.

BioCatchMatrixFraud

The idea is that fraud patterns are all unique, just like art itself.

Bottom line
BioCatch provides a low-friction way to catch fraud. When users don’t have to jump through hoops and are not wrongfully pegged as fraudsters, they have a faster and more pleasant experience.

Check out BioCatch’s demo its authentication methodology at FinovateFall 2014.

Finovate Debuts: Settle

Finovate Debuts: Settle

The Finovate Debuts series introduces new Finovate. alums. Today’s feature is BioCatch, which demonstrated its invisible authentication methods at FinovateFall 2014.

SettleLogo

Settle
Settle’s technology focuses on connecting merchants with their customers. Its built-in ordering system, combined with a loyalty platform and merchant dashboard, are tailored for restaurants and bars.

The stats
    • Founded August 2014
    • $1.8 million in funding
    • 15 employees
    • 50,000 users
    • 500+ merchant partnerships for their loyalty/rewards platform

The experience
To create a better customer experience, Settle provides merchants tools, including:

    • Point-of-sale system
    • Customer-facing pre-order system
    • Loyalty platform
    • Merchant analytic tools

How it works:

Customers

Using the Settle app on an iOS or Android device, customers make a payment at business’ Settle point-of-sale system.

At checkout, customers review their order and select the Pay button. For service-based merchants, such as a coffee shop, bar, or cafe, the customer also selects the tip amount.

The transaction is paperless, with the receipts emailed.

SettleMobileCheckout2

To gather feedback for the merchant, customers are prompted to rate their experience.

SettleMobilePaid2
At restaurants and coffee shops, customers can place their order ahead of time and skip the line. The system also manages reservations.
SettlePreOrder
Merchants
Settle offers a merchant platform that makes entering orders easy. It also helps cashiers personally connect with returning customers. When a Settle user walks in the door, the system prompts the cashier with the customer’s name, their usual order, and notes about the person (i.e., always in a hurry).
SettleMerchantDash
Aside from the point-of-sale interface, Settle comes with two compelling features:
1) Loyalty
Since the loyalty platform does not require stamps, cards, or checking-in, it is a low-friction way to encourage repeat purchases.
The Settle system incentivizes users to spend more in order to receive a larger discount. In the example below, the user needs to spend a total of 3,000 Ukrainian Hryvnia (around $230) to receive a permanent, ongoing 10% discount.
SettleLoyalty1

2) Merchant tools
With Settle’s Smart Engine, merchants see recent customer activity and can download a spreadsheet detailing new and returning customers, their purchase frequency, the total amount spent, average check amount, and how much they tip. Merchants can also evaluate their sales over time (see graph below). 
On the employee side, the system shows ratings for each waiter, along with the number of clients handled per check, and how well they are tipped.
The recommendations engine detects anomalies, such as decline in overall sales or average check, and advises how to fix the issue. Additionally, it automatically creates a list of customers who have not returned, and sets up a discount offer to entice them back.
SettleMerchantAnalytics2
The back-end system also enables merchants to push special deals and messages based on certain parameters, such as average spend and birthday month. Once the offers are sent, merchants can measure their effectiveness by seeing how many opened the message and redeemed the offer.
These examples illustrate the mobile purchasing experience, but Settle can also be used online. For both in-person and online purchases, customers are required to confirm the payment on their mobile device. This built-in two-factor authentication creates a more secure experience.
What’s new
The Settle app is currently working in Ukraine, Russia, and other Eastern European countries. It has plans to expand into Europe and is considering the U.S. market. For this expansion, it is seeking a U.S. bank partner.
Settle’s newest development is a P2P payment platform. Users can pay other Settle users by simply selecting their name, entering the amount, and the confirming payment. To see this work in action, check out Settle’s live demo from FinovateFall 2014.