Alumni News– June 10, 2014

  • Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Finovate-F-Logo.jpgFinovate Alums LendingRobot and Wallaby Among 2014 Innotribe New York Winners.
  • TransferWise Announces $25 Million Investment; Support from Sir Richard Branson.
  • Top Image Systems and Cintas Document Management form technology partnership to provide advanced BPO solutions.
  • PayPal President David Marcus leaves for Facebook job.
  • Arxan Technologies will now be sold by IBM as part of its portfolio of security products.
  • Insuritas signs Florida-based Tyndall FCU ($1.1 billion in assets) to provide insurance options to its almost 100,000 members.
  • P2Binvestor reaches $2 million in deals over the past 2 months after providing funding to Colorado-based beverage company.
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.

Behind the Scenes with BodeTree, Roostify, and SmartAsset

Behind the Scenes with BodeTree, Roostify, and SmartAsset

This week, we’re featuring BodeTree, Roostify, and SmartAsset whose solutions range from a small business management platform, to a home mortgage application solution, and a mobile financial education product.

Previously in our Behind the Scenes feature, we’ve looked at:


What they do
BodeTree focuses on helping owners of revenue-generating small businesses, who are required to play many roles in their company, to better manage their operations.

BodeTree gives its users a complete view of where their business stands, what their competitors are doing, and offers tools to help them determine where they want their business to be in the future. 
To help users reach their business goals, it works with funding sources to provide financing to serve as working capital. Because BodeTree has visibility into the small business’ operational data, it can work with the funding source to help underwrite and furnish the loan in as few as seven days.  
Stats
    • Minimizes loan acquisition time from 120 days to 7 days
    • Raised $4.5 million
    • 13 funding partners
    • 50,000 small business users
The experience
BodeTree gives small business owners an all-in-one business management tool by serving up accounting, sales, and CRM tools on a single, intuitive interface. It helps them understand their budget and business data by showing the information graphically, and provides tools for planning. 
Additionally, BodeTree gives users a an automated view of their business’ valuation and even shows how they are doing in comparison to their business’ peers.
Simply said, the platform shows them: 
    • Where their business has been
    • Where it is currently
    • Helps them determine where they want to go 
BodeTreeLaunchpad
Within 30 minutes, the small business can apply for funding, which they can receive in as few as seven days, as opposed to the traditional 120 days it takes to get a loan.
If the user is pursuing a loan, BodeTree gives its funding partners visibility to the individual business’ performance metrics to help them underwrite the loan.
BodeTreeDesktop
In addition to helping its users understand the daily operations of their business and providing funding options, BodeTree also enables business owners to view:
    • Valuation of their small business
    • A quick view of their business’ health
    • A peer comparison to other small businesses
    • Financial statements with easy-to-understand graphs
The platform’s report-building tool gives them an easy way to customize and build professional looking reports, like the one below, to serve as a tangible item they can share about their business.
BodeTreeREports
Overall, BodeTree serves as a home base for small businesses to see how their business is doing, determine where they want to go, and access quick funding to help them get there.

RoostifyLogo

Roostify


What they do
By bringing transparency to the home buying process, Roostify seeks to demystify the home loan and closing experience by making it easier and faster for both the borrower and the lender. Its platform facilitates communication between lenders and borrowers, enabling them to share and track information necessary for the mortgage and closing process.
This visibility, combined with the platform’s ability to gather key documents, helps speed the entire home-buying process.
Stats
    • Can process a full mortgage application in 10 minutes
    • Can process a full loan package (mortgage application plus documentation) in 20 minutes
The experience
For the homebuyer, Roostify works a bit like TurboTax for a mortgage application. It customizes fields on the application based on the user’s answers to previous questions.
Once the loan application is submitted, the borrower’s dashboard walks the prospective homebuyer through the remaining process. Three notable items include:
1) The explanation on the right panel of the screen, which provides transparency into why certain items are needed and how they will be used in the process
2) The calendar view, which shows both the borrower and the lender due dates of action items
3) The documents page, which helps borrowers and lenders submit and manage the necessary documents for the mortgage process

All documents are held on the Roostify platform in a secure repository, which eliminates the need for the lender to download the documents. Additionally, its esignature capabilities eliminate the need for printing and faxing documents.

roostifyUploaddocs
To assist with the underwriting process, borrowers can connect their external accounts directly within the Roositfy platform. The borrower can give lenders access to bank accounts, retirement accounts, and savings accounts without ever leaving Roostify.
roostifyForm
Roostify also benefits the lender by giving them complete visibility into the process. The screen below shows a feed of completed tasks (on the right) and outstanding tasks (in the center) for both the borrower and lender. 
roostifyLenderWorkflow

Even after the home loan application process is complete, the system details the home closing workflow, notifying the two parties what items need to be completed by what time frame. 

Lenders can white label Roostify to create a branded solution that gives their borrowers an end-to-end service that consumers have come to expect.

What they do
SmartAsset’s website serves as a resource for personalized and automated advice about personal finances. At FinovateSpring 2014, SmartAsset launched its native mobile app on iOS and Android.
Its platform combines user information with its automated financial modeling technology to answer questions across a range of subjects. Its goal is to help people make better financial decisions. 
To serve as a guide, SmartAsset’s referral service matches users with targeted financial products to help them maximize their net wealth.
Stats
    • Has grown at 40% per month for the last 15 months
    • Expects roughly half a million people to visit Smartasset.com this month
    • Has 130 different data partnerships, including Moody’s
The experience
SmartAsset’s greatest penetration is with users between the ages of 25 to 40 who are planning to make one or more big financial decision this year, such as get married, have a baby, or buy a house.
The screenshot below illustrates the user experience of determining whether to rent or buy a home. Note the targeted ad from Quicken Loans at the bottom, offering a 30-year FHA mortgage.
SmartAssetMobileBuyVRent
If the user wants to purchase a home, they can use SmartAsset’s in-app tools to determine how much house they can afford. The sliders make it easy to change the estimation of the down payment and mortgage. When adjusted, all other calculations are immediately updated to reflect the change.
SmartAssetMobileAffordability
It also helps in planning for retirement. The screenshot below illustrates the recommended amount of retirement savings the user needs to put away per month in order to retire at their desired age of 67.
SmartAssetmobilRetirement3
Aside from real estate and retirement calculations, and SmartAsset also uses its algorithms to assist with:
 
    • life insurance questions
    • credit cards
    • bank accounts
    • student loans

Stay tuned later this week for our final Behind the Scenes look at fintech from FinovateSpring 2014.

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Finovate Alums LendingRobot, Wallaby Among 2014 Innotribe New York Winners

Finovate Alums LendingRobot, Wallaby Among 2014 Innotribe New York Winners
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Today, New York. Tomorrow, Boston and the world.

LendingRobot and Wallaby Financial were among the five companies to win the 2014 Innotribe Startup Challenge in New York last week. The two companies will join fellow winners, Epiphyte, Juntos Finanzas, and Standard Treasury – as well as winners from competitions held in Singapore and London – for the final competition in Boston this September where an overall winner for 2014 will be crowned.

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LendingRobot demoed its technology at FinovateSpring 2014 in San Jose. The company’s solution not only helps investors manage their P2P loan portfolios, but also uses automation to help them compete against experienced and institutional investors who themselves use technology to spot the best loans available from companies like Lending Club.

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Wallaby Financial helps consumers choose which credit card in their wallet is the optimal one to use with any given transaction. Demoing its Wallet Boost technology as part of the FinovateSpring show in 2013, Wallaby was recently in the news announcing a new service called WalletUp. Available from its new partner, CreditCards.com, WalletUp makes it even easier for consumers to have and use the best mix of credit cards for them.
Also participating in the Innotribe competition in New York were a handful of other Finovate alums including CUneXus, Socure, and Digital Retail Apps. See FinovateSpring 2014 demos of CUneXus here, and Digital Retail Apps here. Socure’s demo from FinovateFall 2013 is available here.

Alumni News– June 9, 2014

  • Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Finovate-F-Logo.jpgFive Weeks to SixThirty: Accelerator Program Sets July 11th Deadline.
  • VerifyValid announced partnership with Lake Michigan Credit Union.
  • ACI Worldwide’s Point to Point Encryption solution adopted by Ecentric Payment Systems in South Africa.
  • Chicago Tribune’s Blue Sky Innovation column takes a look at fraud detection innovator, Rippleshot.
  • NYmag features fintech from FinovateSpring 2014.
  • E27 looks at PlayMoolah’s Indiegogo campaign.
  • Cortera to bring its business credit risk management to Equipment Street’s marketplace.
  • Weight Watchers selects Kony to power mobile point of sale capabilities.
  • CoinDesk interviews Fidor Bank COO Michael Maier on the Munich-based bank’s decision to use Ripple Labs to move money.
  • Financial Guard, FutureAdvisor, Betterment, Jemstep, SigFig, and Wealthfront make Kiplinger’s Best Online Advisory list.
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.

Five Weeks to SixThirty: Accelerator Program Sets July 11th Deadline

Five Weeks to SixThirty: Accelerator Program Sets July 11th Deadline

sixthirty_logo.jpgAre you a fintech startup looking to up your game? Then SixThirty has a date for you.

Friday, July 11th: the deadline for applications for its Fall 2014 Accelerator class.
Click here for more information and to get the process started.
SixThirty gives fintech startups $100,000 in funding (in exchange for an equity stake between 5-10%). The young companies also get valuable training, mentoring, and networking connections with some of the biggest financial services companies in the area. 
And for the uninitiated, it’s worth knowing that St. Louis, where SixThirty is located, is a growing financial hub, serving as the home base for financial corporations such as Edward Jones, Scottrade, and Wells Fargo Advisors. The region has received high marks from SixThirty program participants, as well.
SixThirty_homepage_new
Add to that Square co-founder Jim McKelvey serving as SixThirty’s managing director and it is no surprise to see the positive buzz the program has generated in the little time it has been a part of the accelerator/incubator scene.
The accelerator program is divided into spring and fall sessions, with four startups participating in each for a total of eight companies a year. Joining Finovate alum, gremlin in SixThirty’s most recent Spring 2014 cohort were PromisePay, LendingStandard, and WealthAccess. Alongside Finovate alum, miiCard in the program’s previous, Fall 2013 cohort were Upside, Hedgeable, and XYverify.
SixThirty is backed by the St. Louis Chamber of Commerce and Cultivation Capital, a venture capital firm based in St. Louis.

Wealthfront Reaches More Than $1 Billion Assets Under Management

Wealthfront Reaches More Than $1 Billion Assets Under Management
wealthfrontLogoSmall

Automated investment service, Wealthfront, announced this week that it now has $1 billion in assets under management. This is fast-paced growth, considering it had $100 million under management in early 2013, $500 million by December of 2013, and $800 million in March of this year.

This growth confirms the trend we’ve been seeing in the explosion of automated wealth management fintech services, the oft-called robo-advisors.

U.S.-based companies such as Betterment, LearnVest, Personal Capital, SigFig and European companies Nutmeg, Money on Toast, and rplan are all vying for consumers’ portfolios, trying to compete with superior algorithms.

wealthfronthomepage

Palo Alto-based Wealthfront differentiates itself by offering a Single-Stock Diversification service. This service enables users with a large portion of their net worth tied up in a single stock to transfer their holdings to Wealthfront, which will slowly sell off the stocks commission free, and with a tax-aware approach. While the service is currently available only for Twitter employees, ex-employees, and its investors, Wealthfront plans to open it up for more companies in the future.

Wealthfront demonstrated at FinovateStartup 2009, when it went by the name KaChing.

Alumni News– June 6, 2014

  • Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Finovate-F-Logo.jpgEverybody into the algos! Quantopian launches open beta program; announces $100 million in trades guided by platform algorithms.
  • CRIF announces acquisition of majority stake in High Mark Credit Information Services.
  • Financeit closes $C35 million renewable purchase facility and a $C5 million warehouse line facility with Pacific & Western Bank of Canada.
  • Wealthfront reaches more than $1 billion assets under management.
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.

FinovateSpring: Behind the Scenes with Pellucid Analytics, Red Giant, and Zumigo

FinovateSpring: Behind the Scenes with Pellucid Analytics, Red Giant, and Zumigo

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Nearly half the companies at FinovateSpring this year were making their Finovate debuts. And our Behind the Scenes series is designed specifically to help you get to know these Finovate newbies better.

If you missed any one of our earlier episodes, check out our handy Behind the Scenes directory to the series below.

Today we take a closer look at another trio of Finovate newcomers: pitchbook specialist Pellucid Analytics, Red Giant with its lockable debit card, and mobile-authentication-meets-mobile-payments innovator, Zumigo.

Pellucid_Analytics_hi_res_FS2014

Pellucid Analytics

What they do
In short, Pellucid Analytics “fixes pitchbooks.”
Here’s why that’s a big deal. Pitchbooks are a key part of the investment banking business. They can essentially make the difference, expressed in data, as to whether a company is worthy of new investment, continued investment, or no investment at all.
The problem is that putting pitchbooks together is a very labor-intensive, time-consuming task. So much so that Pellucid Analystics CEO and co-founder Adrian Crockett says the junior investment bankers who build them often consider it among the least appealing aspects of their job.
Pellucid Analytics makes this process easier for all involved. The company’s iPad and browser-based technology takes the half of pitchbook formation that is relatively standard in the business, and automates much of it. Pellucid provides pre-rendered content, pre-designed charts, all pre-populated with the necessary corporate data. In addition to helping save time, this approach reduces the error rate as well.
The stats
  • Company founded in November 2011
  • Technology launched in April 2014
  • 39 team members
  • Pre-rendered content populates 40% of the typical pitchbook
The experience
“Review, select, tweak, tell” is the way co-founder and Chief Scientist Jamie Ballingall describes the process of building pitchbooks using Pellucid. The technology leverages a sizable variety of templates and drag and drop technology to make the initial composition process faster and easier. 
Pellucid_homepage
Start in the library where the charts are kept. The way that data is presented in these charts can be customized so that investment bankers are looking at and presenting the data they way they believe it is best presented. Drag the charts down to the content drawer in order to select the charts to be used in the pitchbook.
Actually building the pitchbook is simply a matter of dragging the charts from the drawer back into the main field (the “Deck”) in the preferred order. Here again charts can be reconfigured, giving the pitchbook builder some flexibility in terms of design, such as multiple-exhibit layouts, or the ability to respond faster to requests for changes.
SlideLayout_Pellucid_1
Above: Zoomed out library, with the content drawer open and an exhibit in the process of being dragged into the drawer. 
And because pitchbooks themselves are sales instruments (“the physical representations of the ideas” financial institutions sell), how they look is paramount. To this end, in addition to being repopulated with up-to-date market data and information, Pellucid’s pitchbooks are custom formatted to match corporate brands. “It means I can use them immediately,” Jamie explains, “They’re ready to go.”
The small amounts of time-saving, the 20 minutes here, the 15 minutes, there, are where Pellucid shines. Rather than re-inventing pitchbooks, Pellucid simply takes advantage of the fact that many bankers are still operating on technology that is in some instances more than 20 years old. This allows bankers the ability to focus on the stories, the “tell” in Pellucid’s model, behind the opportunities they are trying to provide to their clients and customers.
Library-Pellucid_2
Above: Slide editor, with the drawer open and an exhibit being dragged into a placeholder.
 
For Adrian, the argument in favor of Pellucid’s solution is as simple as math. Major investment banks spend half a billion dollars every year on pitchbook production. And as Pellucid learned when doing research on pitchbook development, the average 42-page pitchbook with an average price tag of $40,000 actually took more than 135 pages during the ideation process. Given this,  the opportunity became clear.
“Pellucid can automate 40% of the process, saving bankers hundreds of millions of dollars a year,” said Adrian.
With their Finovate debut and platform launch behind them, Pellucid Analytics is focused currently on the investment banking community. But the company sees itself looking at other verticals, such as high net worth individuals, as early as 2015.

Red_Giant_hi_res_FS2014

Red Giant

What they do
The virtue of Red Giant’s solution is in its simplicity: the company’s technology allows consumers to “lock” their debit card when it is not being used (i.e., most of the time). The card can be unlocked using Red Giant’s mobile app, and consumers can take and shop with their card anywhere regular credit and debit cards are accepted.
Asked about the customer experience, Red Giant CEO Robert Sears talks about how quickly the technology draws a crowd at the point of sale. “People have a visceral reaction,” he says. The task at hand now, he adds, is “to get the technology out to as many people as possible as fast as possible.”
The stats
  • Company founded in June 2008
  • Technology launched in April 2014
The experience
Red Giant’s solution consists of a MasterCard debit card and a mobile app that gives the cardholder the ability to completely control the payment card. Not only that, but consumers can use the app to see their account balance, compare spending versus savings targets, and read on-screen receipts.
RedGiantMobile_homepage_1
As Red Giant CEO Robert Sears explains, a locked card will be declined at the point of sale. When a consumer wants to unlock her card, all she has to do is touch the lock icon, which overlays the Red Giant logo. Once unlocked, the app shows the account balance and free-to-spend calculations for the month.
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Unlocking the card, says Robert, “puts a SecureZone around you.” As soon as the consumer leaves this zone, the card automatically locks.
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The app also provides an on-screen receipt for each purchase or transaction. Consumers can manage receipts by taking notes, categorizing them within a budget, as well as a few other management functions.
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For online purchases, the app can serve as a digital card. The digital card, Robert emphasizes, is a separate card: separate number, separate source of funds, etc. from your physical card. One advantage here is that if the consumer’s physical card is stolen, there is no need to change the card on file at the consumer’s online merchants where the completely separate digital card was used.
RedGiant_BtS_1993
Currently Red Giant’s app is iOS-ready and works with a MasterCard debit card. An Android app is considered among the company’s next steps – potentially as early as the second half of 2014 – as is the idea of bringing in additional cards that can be used with the app. 
Additional features could also be a part of Red Giant’s near-term future. Robert talks about providing tools to enhance day-to-day financial decision-making in the app, as well as budgeting assistance. Red Giant is available right now only by invitation, and those interested in drawing your own crowd around the old POS the next time you’re out shopping, are encouraged to give the technology a try.


Zumigo_hi_res_FS2014

Zumigo

What they do
Nowhere is the challenge of blending convenience and security more prominent than at the nexus of retail commerce and mobile payments.
While consumers often claim to want ever more secure transactions, merchants know that additional anti-fraud measures can cost them customers who find new or added security to be nuisance enough to abandon the site.
Zumigo’s Assure technology seeks to take on both the issues of convenience and security in the same solution. The company’s mobile-identity technology now both enables secure transactions for all mobile phone activities, as well as making commerce shopping that much more efficient for consumers.
The stats
  • Company founded in December 2009
  • Technology launched in April 2014
The experience
How does Zumigo’s Assure work? In the words of CEO and founder Chirag Bakshi, Assure almost turns an e-commerce website into an Amazon Prime-like operation, moving consumers quickly, efficiently, and securely through the shopping process.
Zumigo_homepage
Below is a screenshot of the Express Checkout screen for a commerce site enabled with Zumigo’s Assure. Consumers shop as they would on any mobile device and, when they’re ready to pay, access the Express Checkout. 
Here, after entering the last four digits of the credit card and the CVV, the technology identifies the owner of the mobile device and gives the user the option of having the form completed based on that information. 
Zumigo_Assure_Identity
While the information can still be entered manually, the autofill option for the consumer is faster and designed to reduce both error, fraud and, potentially, customer abandonment. 
Zumigo accomplishes this ID authentication through relationships with mobile carriers that allow their technology to dynamically identify the mobile device.
And speaking of relationships, it is the one with Equifax that has enabled Zumigo to make their most recent step: combining mobile identification with payment information. This further reduces the need for manual data-entry on the mobile device. No prior account or relationship with the merchant is necessary, nor does the technology need to access other apps or features like address books to retrieve data. Instead, Zumigo’s technology pulls it from the network itself. “Only your phone knows your data,” explains Chirag.
Below is an example of what Zumigo looks like from the point of view of the merchant. The consumer data that populates the form comes from a server-side analysis that Zumigo sends to the merchant. As the screenshot shows, the verification process includes matching names and addresses, as well as geolocation information.
Zumigo_Assure_Identity_Validation
At root, Zumigo’s Assure approaches the issue of secure mobile payments and identification in a tripartite fashion: locating the consumer as being in the correct place to make the transaction; identifying the legitimacy of the device being used; and, last, authenticating the owner of the device.
“Even if the SIM card is swapped or the phone is stolen the account is still secure because of this triangulation,” said Chirag.  

Stay tuned for our next Behind the Scenes feature next week.

New $4 Million Investment for fastacash to Help Drive Growth, Product Development

New $4 Million Investment for fastacash to Help Drive Growth, Product Development

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Just a few months from their Finovate debut, Singapore-based social payments enabler fastacash has raised another $4 million in funding. The capital from new and existing investors takes the company’s total to $8.5 million.

Participating in the round were Jagdish Chanrai, principal of Kelwalram Chanrai Group, and Golden Oriole Investments, as well as other current investors.

fastacash_homepage
The company said it plans to use the new capital to help fund expansion. fastacash chairman and CEO Vince Tallent cited partnerships with payments companies in India, Kenya, Russia, and Vietnam as examples of the kind of global presence his company seeks. The investment will also help speed up product development and deployment.
From the Finovate stage in February, Vince described fastacash’s vision as making “value transfers between two end users a very simple and secure experience.” However two end users define value – money, airtime, coupons – fastacash’s technology lets the sender and the receiver choose the channel and make the exchange. That channel could be Facebook, Instagram, Skype, Whatsapp, or any number of other social networks and messaging platforms.
By letting end users attach digital content ranging from pictures to audio to video, the appeal of the platform ranges from everyday transfers of value between individuals to banks, international remittance companies and others who want to, as Vince put it, send “marketing messages as a value transfer.”
Founded in April 2012 and based in Singapore, fastacash made its Finovate debut this February in London as part of FinovateEurope. See a demo of the company’s technology here.

Former Visa Executive Elizabeth Buse Joins Monitise as Co-CEO

Former Visa Executive Elizabeth Buse Joins Monitise as Co-CEO

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Mobile money innovator Monitise (Finovate 2007) has announced that Elizabeth Buse will join the company as co-CEO.

Elizabeth Buse will bring more than 15 years of payments experience from her time at Visa, where she was last Executive Vice President of Solutions. Elizabeth is no stranger to Monitise, having served on the company’s board of directors from July 2010 to October 2012.

Elizabeth Buse - World Economic Forum on Afric...

Elizabeth Buse – World Economic Forum on Africa 2012 (Photo credit: World Economic Forum)

Elizabeth’s primary responsibilities at Monitise will involve day-to-day operations of the company, particularly marketing, product, sales, and technology. Working alongside Elizabeth, company founder Alastair Lukies will serve as co-CEO, with an emphasis on industry partnership building and corporate development.

Monitise specializes in technology that helps financial institutions deploy mobile banking, mobile payments, and other services. Founded in 2003 and headquartered in London, Monitise currently serves more than 350 financial institutions and brands around the world. The company processes more than 3.4 billion mobile transactions a year, valued at more than $70 billion.
Named one of the top three most innovative companies in the world by Forbes, Monitise has operations in the United Kingdom, the United States, India, Hong Kong, and Indonesia.

Alumni News– June 5, 2014

  • Finovate-F-Logo.jpgNetbanker looks at the effect Apple’s TouchID will have on fintech companies, including Mint and CardFlight.
  • ValidSoft featured in Speech and Voice Recognition White Paper and recognized as a global leaders in voice biometrics.
  • Bolstr co-founders Larry Baker and Charlie Tribbett named to Techweek 100.
  • Arroweye Solutions partners with Caledonian Global Financial Services to provide digital on-demand debit card production.
  • Former Visa executive Elizabeth Buse joins Monitise as co-CEO.
  • New $4 Million Investment for fastacash to help drive growth, product development.
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 Touches Off First Wave of Mobile Banking Biometrics

image We’ve known this day was coming ever since Apple acquired AuthenTec two years ago for $350 million. That was real money back in the pre-Beats/Nest/Oculus days.

Monday, Apple made it official at its annual developers’ conference: The fingerprint authentication system built into the iPhone 5S (Touch ID) will open to outside developers in the next iOS update (v8.0 expected in mid-September). That means that app publishers, including banks, credit unions & wallet providers, will be able to use it to provide initial authorization into a secure app. 

image The new feature was demonstrated on stage by logging in to Mint (see inset, screen cap tweeted by Bradley Leimer Monday). In the demo, Mint users are prompted to use the touchpad to open the app (the small type says, “Please authenticate in order to proceed”). Users are also given a password option.

Most likely, banks will use Touch ID, as well as other handset-resident biometric systems (note 1) to deliver “read-only” access to data. It’s an approach that’s been catching on around the world even before Apple’s biometric wizardry. Citibank is the most recent to provide a no-login glimpse in its mobile app (called SnapShot), rolling it out nationwide two weeks ago (press release). It’s also used at Westpac (NZ), Commonwealth (AU), Bank of the West, City Bank of Texas and many more (note 2).

For anything transactional, such as a wire transfer, banks will likely require additional authentication (see our Nine Circles of Security).

And of course, these security changes will generally need to be optional for customers until they become commonly accepted practices. Most users are still extremely wary of security on mobile phones, even though it is a marked improvement over the desktop (note 3).

While it’s too early to know if any financial institutions will have it enabled by September, one fintech payment provider, CardFlight, wasted no time, announcing support for Touch ID just a few hours after the Apple keynote (note 4).

—————————

Notes:
1. Celent’s Jacob Jegher showed me his facial recognition login on his Android phone (Samsung?) at last month’s FinovateSpring. Very cool, though he doesn’t have it enabled since it slows up the login process just slightly.
2. Malauzai Software powers more than 90 credit unions and banks alone (post).
3. See our latest report on Mobile Security (March 2014, subscription) for more info.
4. Cardflight will be showing off its latest tools at our first developer event, FinDEVr, 30 Sep 2014, in San Francisco.