Pagaya Uses AI to Help U.S. Bank Customers Qualify for Unsecured Loans

Pagaya Uses AI to Help U.S. Bank Customers Qualify for Unsecured Loans
  • U.S. Bank is using technology from Pagaya to help underwrite unsecured personal loans.
  • Pagaya’s AI model generates underwriting recommendations and completes a secondary credit decisioning review of borrowers who were originally rejected.
  • The partnership, which has the potential to expand U.S. Bank’s borrower pool, has already led to the approval of more than 2,000 personal loans over the past few months.

U.S. Bank announced today it has tapped alternative underwriting solutions company Pagaya to help more borrowers qualify for loans.

U.S. Bank initiated the partnership to help more clients access personal loans, which often pose more risk for lenders because they are unsecured. Pagaya leverages AI to complete a secondary credit decisioning review of borrowers who are initially rejected. If Pagaya approves the borrower, U.S. Bank will originate and service the loan.

Key to the solution is Pagaya’s AI model that analyzes thousands of data points to generate tailored underwriting recommendations. Because the model uses more data than a traditional regression model, U.S. Bank can more efficiently find applicants who are responsible borrowers, but who don’t fit into the bank’s FICO score cutoff.

As interest rates remain high, banks will continue to face challenges in managing their lending operations. When higher interest rates lead to increased borrowing costs, some customers are unable to afford previously attainable loans. Also contributing to the smaller borrower pool, banks have become more selective in their lending practices by focusing on borrowers with strong credit profiles and stable financial histories.

“We know that we have many clients who don’t fall within our traditional credit parameters,” said U.S. Bank Head of Consumer Lending Partnerships Mike Shepard. “By expanding access to responsible credit solutions, we are giving clients access to funds when they need it the most, through their existing and trusted banking relationship with us.”

Ultimately, using Pagaya helps U.S. Bank extend loans to more clients by delivering credit to individuals who would otherwise be rejected. Since U.S. Bank began working with Pagaya for underwriting a few months ago, the bank has been able to approve more than 2,000 clients for personal loans.

New York-based Pagaya was founded in 2016 and has raised $1.6 billion in combined debt and equity across ten funding rounds. The company went public via a SPAC merger in 2021 and currently trades on the NASDAQ under the ticker PGY with a market capitalization of $8.95 million.

“We share U.S. Bank’s commitment to increasing access to life-changing financial products and services,” said Pagaya Chief Growth Officer Leslie Gillin. “With Pagaya’s integrated and seamlessly embedded lending technology, our lending partners can expand and deepen their client relationships to a more diverse group of borrowers.”


Photo by Ketut Subiyanto

Ripple to Acquire Digital Asset Platform Standard Custody

Ripple to Acquire Digital Asset Platform Standard Custody
  • Decentralized finance company Ripple acquired Standard Custody & Trust Company, a firm that offers institutional-grade custody, escrow, and settlement platform for digital assets.
  • The California-based company says the purchase not only underscores its commitment to regulatory compliance, but that it will also help bolster its existing product offerings.
  • Terms of the deal were undisclosed.

Blockchain and crypto solutions company Ripple announced its fourth acquisition today. The company bought Standard Custody & Trust Company for an undisclosed amount.

Ripple said the move serves two purposes. First, it underscores the company’s “commitment to regulatory compliance,” and second, it will enable Ripple to strengthen its existing offerings and add new products to its lineup. Specifically, the California-based company has its eye on Standard Custody’s limited purpose trust charter and its money transmitter licenses. Both will complement Ripple’s existing portfolio of regulatory licenses.

“Ripple and Standard Custody are dedicated to enabling enterprises to reap the benefits of blockchain across a host of financial use cases building institutional-grade solutions to tokenize, store, move, and exchange value. By expanding our licenses portfolio and making smart acquisitions, Ripple is well-positioned to take advantage of the current market opportunities and further strengthen our crypto infrastructure solutions,” said Ripple President Monica Long. “We will continue to leverage our strong financial standing to expand our product offerings, support new initiatives on the product roadmap and serve a broader segment of customers.”

Owned by blockchain infrastructure company PolySign, Standard Custody was founded to create an institutional-grade custody, escrow, and settlement platform for digital assets. “Together with Ripple, we will further innovate and extend our leadership position in providing crypto infrastructure,” said Standard Custody CEO Jack McDonald.

Amid an environment of increased scrutiny of decentralized finance tools and digital assets, Ripple is looking to conduct its operations in the most transparent, regulatory compliant way. The company and its subsidiaries have acquired a New York BitLicense, nearly 40 U.S. money transmitter licenses, a Major Payment Institution License from the Monetary Authority of Singapore, and a Virtual Asset Service Provider registration with the Central Bank of Ireland.

Ripple was founded in 2012 and offers tools for global money transfers, CBDCs, and digital assets. Last year, the company acquired digital asset management solutions company Metaco for $250 million. Additionally, Ripple has recently partnered with HSBC, BBVA, and Zodia Custody, and launched its payments offering in Africa. The company supports live commercial custody offerings in 20 regulatory jurisdictions, and facilitates payments to 70 countries worldwide.

Wealthify Taps ClearBank to Launch Instant Access Savings Account

Wealthify Taps ClearBank to Launch Instant Access Savings Account

U.K.-based Wealthify has sought out ClearBank to serve as its embedded banking partner. Online saving and investing service Wealthify will leverage ClearBank’s banking license and API to launch its Instant Access Savings Account.

ClearBank’s API offers real-time clearing access, or instant money transfers. Wealthify’s new savings account, which tracks the Bank of England’s base rate, pays out 4.91% AER (Annual Equivalent Rate), which equals 4.80% gross at the time of publishing.

Wealthify hopes the new account will help support customers in today’s cost of living crisis. “The way people save has evolved rapidly over the last decade,” said Wealthify CEO Andy Russell. “People want more from their money, and choices during different economic conditions, and we’re thrilled to provide it to them. Wealthify’s savings account—powered by ClearBank—offers speedy setup, a great rate, and the ability to see savings and investments all in one place—a holistic view of your finances, at your fingertips.”

Originally founded in 2016, Wealthify demoed its online investing service at FinovateEurope 2017 and had raised $3.15 million (£2.5 million) before being acquired by financial services giant Aviva in 2020. Wealthify currently offers investment products– including stocks and shares ISAs, junior ISAs, self-invested personal pensions– and general investment accounts along with its savings accounts.

The company’s tech-forward approach leverages human intelligence. All of the investments are managed by a team of professionals. “For wealth management experts like Wealthify, our embedded banking offering is an efficient way for them to focus on quality customer service, without spending unnecessary time and resources on licenses or outsourced projects,” said ClearBank CEO Charles McManus.

ClearBank was founded in 2015 by former Worldpay CEO Nick Ogden. The UK-based company earned its banking license from the FCA in late 2016. While ClearBank itself does not lend, provide credit, or invest end users’ funds, the company does allow its banking-as-a-service clients to leverage its banking license to provide banking services. End customers benefit from $107,000 (£85,000) in deposit insurance from the FSCS.


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Nordic Capital Acquires Canadian Fintech Zafin

Nordic Capital Acquires Canadian Fintech Zafin
  • Nordic Capital has agreed to acquire Canadian banking technology company Zafin.
  • The acquisition will help Zafin become a “global leader in banking technology solutions.”
  • Zafin made its Finvoate debut at FinovateFall in 2017.

Nordic Capital agreed this week to acquire a majority share in Canadian SaaS core modernization solution provider for FIs, Zafin. In a statement, Nordic Capital noted that the investment was made “in close partnership with Zafin’s founders and management, who will reinvest in the company alongside Nordic Capital.”

Terms of the transaction were not disclosed. The deal is expected to be completed during the first quarter of this year, subject to standard closing conditions.

Zafin CEO Al Karim Somji called the transaction an “absolute game-changer” for his team and its customers. “We have been powering the modernization and transformation of banks and future-proofing their banking technology investments for years,” Somji said. “With Nordic Capital’s scale, technology expertise, and deep market understanding, this partnership enables us to become a global leader in banking technology solutions.”

Nordic Capital Advisors Partner Mohit Agnihotri said the deal will help Zafin “emerge as a gold standard in bank IT modernization efforts.” He added, “Nordic Capital has been highly impressed with Zafin’s innovative approach to helping its customers react to a constantly changing business landscape.” Based in Stockholm, Sweden, Nordic Capital invests in companies headquartered in both Northern Europe and North America. The firm has made 24 technology and payments platform investments since 2001, deploying $6.5 billion (€5.8 billion) in equity capital. Nordic Capital includes Finovate alums boost.ai, Signicat, and Trustly among its portfolio companies.

Zafin’s customers include FIs such as Wells Fargo, US Bank, HSBC, Truist, and PNC. The company’s core SaaS platform enables users to collaborate in the design and management of pricing, products, and packages. The platform also gives users the ability to respond dynamically to changing customer preferences and market opportunities. This means faster time to market, greater potential revenues, lower operating costs, and fewer operational risks – all while maintaining compliance and transparency.

Banks using Zafin’s technology have experienced 129% increase in deposits, 50% improvement in time to market, and 70% reduction in annual fee change processing costs. Five of the top seven banks in the U.S. run on Zafin’s platform. The company processes more than 500 million accounts every day.

Zafin made its Finovate debut at FinovateFall in 2017. At the conference, the company demoed its enterprise banking platform that enables FIs to manage dynamic multi-product offerings, real-time pricing and billing, loyalty and rewards, analytics, and cash management.

Headquartered in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, Zafin was founded in 2002. A few months ago, we caught up with Zafin President of Modernization and Transformation Charbel Safadi. In a wide-ranging conversation, we discussed the challenges faced by banks when it comes to digital transformation. Safadi also shared his thoughts on what FIs can do to future-proof their businesses.


Photo by Brett Sayles

Fintech Rundown: A Rapid Review of Weekly News

Fintech Rundown: A Rapid Review of Weekly News

We’re already well into the second month of 2024, and while funding has slowed down a bit, news in the decentralized finance world has picked up. Take a look at some of the top headlines in fintech and banking this week.


Digital Banking

Israel-based digital bank oneZero unveils its new GenAI-powered assistant, Ella.

HighRadius acquires Cforia.

Payments

Tuition payments solution for trade and technical school students Mia Share raises $6.5 million in funding.

Fiserv expands in-person bill payment network to NCR Atleos ATMs.

Airbase appoints Mathew Schulz from Forrester as its new Vice President of Procurement Strategy. 

Blackhawk Network launches Select Codes to allow quick distribution of rewards.

NMI launches NMI Payments, a comprehensive embedded payments solution.

Tradeshift appoints Iain Balchin as Chief Financial Officer.

i2c Inc. adds new clients in Brazil, Dominican Republic, Mexico, Peru, and Puerto Rico.

Banking-as-a-Service

Nordic Capital inks agreement to acquire majority stake in SaaS core modernization provider Zafin.

Crypto

Crypto wallet app COCA introduces virtual cards.

Cryptocurrency exchange OKX expands to Argentina.

Crypto custodian BitGo acquires private securities and alternative investment infrastructure provider Brassica.

Open banking / Open finance

Moneyhub named supplier of Crown Commercial Service’s (CCS) Open Banking Dynamic Purchasing System framework for the U.K. government.

Akoya, Envestnet | Yodlee, MX, and Plaid to integrate into FISOpen Access platform.

FIS and Banked partner to create new pay-by-bank solutions.

Wealth management & Investing

Swedish investment platform Kameo secures $1.3 million (£1.1million) investment from Incore Invest.

Attune Solutions launches Attune WealthData powered by BridgeFT.

Clearwater Analytics launches Clearwater MLx, mortgage loan investment solution.

Blue Ocean Technologies and DriveWealth partner to expand geographic reach and trading services.

Exponential Markets receives strategic investment from Citi.

Card Issuance/Management

Card issuing platform Marqeta inks travel management software company, Internet Travel Solutions (ITS).

ConnexPay launches ConnexPay Flex, a new variable-rate virtual card.

Mastercard and the Bank of Punjab expand their partnership to cover the commercial segment.

Lending

Yardline and AMZ Pathfinder partner on ecommerce funding.

Traditional finance

Barclays to acquire Tesco Bank’s retail banking business.

AtlasClear combines with SPAC and acquires Wilson-Davis & Co.

NCR Atleos to bring surcharge-free cash access to American Express checking customers.

Clearwater Analytics extends support for accounting with fund accounting and pooled participant interaction.

Fraud & security

Signzy launches one-touch KYC for seamless digital onboarding.

TruShield Insurance collaborates with Visa to help address cybersecurity risks facing small businesses.

Tina Stewart joins Utimaco as Chief Marketing Officer.

Data Zoo names former London Stock Exchange Group executive Charlie Minutella as new CEO.

Canada’s EQ Bank partners with Trulioo for identity document and biometric verification.

Armilla AI lands $4.5 million in Seed funding to help de-risk AI adoption for enterprises.

Mortgagetech

Better launches digital VA loans powered by Tinman.


Photo by AbsolutVision on Unsplash

Revolut to Add New Telecom Service

Revolut to Add New Telecom Service
  • Revolut has partnered with 1Global to offer telecom services to its users.
  • Starting this week, Revolut will offer eSIMs to customers in all five membership tiers.
  • Users in Revolut’s Ultra membership tier will benefit from 3GB of data they can use across international borders. Members in other tiers can pay to top up their data.

In an exclusive announcement with CNBC, global financial services innovator Revolut revealed it plans to begin offering telecom services in the U.K. The move, which is made possible via a partnership with 1Global, will make Revolut one of the only fintechs to offer telecom services.

Starting this week, Revolut will begin rolling out eSIMs, which are small, programmable chips embedded directly into a smartphone, tablet, or wearable device. While eSIMs serve the same purpose as a traditional, physical SIM card, the eSIM is permanently embedded into the device and cannot be removed or swapped out.

While the new eSIM service is available to Revolut members under any of the company’s five plans, customers that pay for the Ultra membership tier will receive 3GB of data they can use across the globe, with no roaming charges. The company launched the Ultra membership option last year. For $69.47 (£55) per month, users will benefit from a platinum-plated payment card and “top-of-the-line experiences” such as airport lounge access, up to 10% cashback on travel accommodations, and more.

Users that fall into the other four Revolut membership categories will receive the standard eSIM plan, which allows them to access the Revolut app at any time and top up their Revolut phone plan if they run out of data with their current provider. The company is offering its non-Ultra members 100MB of free data if they sign up before May 1.

Adding telecom services will bolster the company’s robust travel benefit offerings. Revolut’s Premium, Metal, and Ultra subscribers receive cashback on accommodations, global medical insurance, winter sports insurance, fee-free currency exchange, and more. Adding a benefit as essential as communication is a logical next step, and may convince the company’s Standard and Plus members to pay the extra money to level up their memberships.

The London-based company made it clear that the eSIM benefit is about more than just an added travel reward. As Revolut GM of Premium Products Tara Massoudi explained to CNBC, “Our ambition is very much to be the financial super app. This is really in that direction.”

Since the company was founded in 2015 it has received $1.7 billion in funding and has expanded to serve 35+ million personal customers and more than 500,000 business customers.

Interestingly, not many fintechs have made similar moves into the telecom space. India-based credit card fintech Zolve began offering eSIM and SIM services last August in packages ranging from $30 per month to $60 per month.


Photo by Andrey Matveev

Finastra and Tesselate Team Up to Power Trade Finance Digitization

Finastra and Tesselate Team Up to Power Trade Finance Digitization
  • Finastra and Tesselate announced a partnership to facilitate faster and easier trade finance digitization.
  • The two companies launched Tegula Trade Finance as a Service which enables banks to automate manual processes, increase efficiencies, and reduce processing times.
  • Finastra was formed in 2017 from a merger between Finovate alum Misys and D+H.

A partnership between Finastra and digital transformation consultancy Tesselate will facilitate faster and easier trade finance digitization courtesy of a new end-to-end pre-packaged service. Launched today, Tegula Trade Finance as a Service empowers banks in the U.S. to automate manual processes and adapt to emerging events with a faster time to market and value. Banks can also leverage Finastra FusionFabric.cloud to integrate fintech applications and take advantage of enabling technologies such as AI and the blockchain.

“Our combined service with Tesselate delivers the automation and intelligence needed to increase efficiencies and decrease processing times, risk, errors, and total cost of ownership,” Finastra Managing Director and Head of Enterprise Sales and Strategic Partnerships, Americas, Jim McMahon said. “Importantly, the all-in-one solution promotes interoperability of trade finance processes to reduce friction and complexity, while giving banks the agility to enhance existing or launch new services.”

The new offering is powered by Finastra Trade Innovation and Corporate Channels. Finastra Trade Innovation is an end-to-end solution that facilitates frictionless trade and supply chain finance via straight-through processing, digitization, and data analytics to support growth and agility. Corporate Channels is a digital banking platform that gives banks a unified portal for trade, cash, supply-chain finance, lending, and treasury services for corporates. These technologies, and easy integration, help make Tegula Trade Finance as a Service a tool banks can use in order to boost revenue, take advantage of new market opportunities, enhance security, and future-proof their business.

“By delivering our all-in-one joint solution as a highly secure managed service, banks do not need to invest in significant amounts of additional resources or take them away from their core business to pursue digitization,” Tesselate Chief Revenue Officer and Managing Partner Alexandre Arnoux said. “Banks can take a modular approach to implementation for better cost and resource control, and we provide the ongoing updates, enhancements, and new capabilities at speed.”

A digital transformation consultancy and integrator headquartered in Paris, France, Tesselate advises FIs on digital strategy and supports them in their digital transformation journeys. This includes helping them implement and integrate enabling technologies and software solutions from Tesselate’s partners to improve operational efficiency and support growth. Founded in 2010, the company last month announced a partnership with Swiss fintech MITech.

Formed via a merger between Finovate alum Misys and D+H in 2017, Finastra serves financial institutions of all sizes with a wide variety of solutions and services across lending, payments, treasury and capital markets, as well as universal banking. The company’s offerings help FIs develop and grow banking relationships via channels such as embedded finance and Banking as a Service. More than 8,000 institutions – including 45 of the top 50 banks in the world – use Finastra’s technology to support open banking and fuel collaboration.

Headquartered in London, Finastra began the year announcing an upgraded partnership with Allied Banking Corporation and a new collaboration with Vietnam-based LPBank. The company also announced last month that it has teamed up with data and AI company Databricks. The partnership will enable Finastra to further leverage its data and to deliver value-added solutions with Generative AI capabilities. Finastra has also used Databricks to set up a data platform, Secure Zone, for its developers. Simon Paris is Finastra’s CEO.


Photo by Pixabay

Entrust Confirms Plans to Acquire Onfido

Entrust Confirms Plans to Acquire Onfido
  • Payments, identities, and data security company Entrust confirmed that it has entered “exclusive discussions” to acquire identity verification technology company Onfido.
  • The acquisition will bring AI/ML-based biometric and document IDV technology to Entrust’s portfolio of identity solutions.
  • Both Entrust and Onfido are Finovate alums. Entrust has twice presented at our developers conference, FinDEVrSiliconValley. Onfido made its Finovate debut at FinovateEurope in 2018.

Trusted payments, identities, and data security company Entrust may be on the verge of acquiring identity verification (IDV) technology company Onfido. Entrust confirmed this week that it has entered “exclusive discussions” on the potential deal.

The acquisition would add an AI/ML-based biometric and document IDV tech stack to Entrust’s current portfolio of identity solutions. Entrust would also be able to leverage biometric, phishing-resistant authentication for use in high-value transactions.

Entrust President and CEO Todd Wilkinson praised Onfido’s IDV team, capabilities, and tech stack, calling them “best-in-class.” Wilkinson also pointed to the evolution of fraud – driven by new AI capabilities – that have created new challenges for identity verification. “Deepfakes and synthetic identity are driving a global need for a powerful level of identity assurance that facilitates crucial digital journeys in banking, finance, government, travel, and more,” Wilkinson said. “Step-up authentication using biometric-based, AI-driven identity verification will be critical to ensuring security, privacy, and trust in these high-value digital-first interactions.”

Headquartered in London and founded in 2012, Onfido leverages machine learning, AI, and automation to offer a digital identity solution that creates trust at the point of onboarding and beyond. The company’s technology helps businesses acquire new customers and keep costs low, while remaining compliant with regard to both KYC and AML. Onfido made its Finovate debut at FinovateEurope in 2018 and returned to the Finovate stage months later for FinovateFall in New York.

Most recently, Onfido launched its Compliance Suite. The new offering, unveiled in late January, is an all-in-one identity verification solution that brings qualified electronic signature (QES) and One-time Password (OTP) to Onfido’s Real Identity Platform. The combination enables businesses to customize their onboarding workflows to meet local compliance obligations, increase customer conversions, and keep fraudsters at bay.

Entrust made its Finovate debut at our developers conference, FinDEVrSiliconValley 2015, and returned the following year to participate in FinDEVrSiliconValley 2016 (as “Entrust Datacard”). The company rebranded to “Entrust” in 2020, in a move that Wilkinson called “an evolution of our brand that honors our heritage as we look forward to our critical role in enabling companies to secure identity, payments, and data protection in a rapidly changing world.”

Today, Entrust has issued more than 20 billion payment cards, protects more than 100 million workforce and consumer identities, and encrypts and secures 24+ Swift messages daily. Founded in 1969 as DataCard Corporation, the company acquired Entrust in 2013, and Entrust Datacard was launched the following year.


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Expense Management Platform Fyle Integrates with American Express

Expense Management Platform Fyle Integrates with American Express
  • Expense management innovator Fyle integrated with American Express this week.
  • The integration will enable U.S. Business and Corporate Card members to issue on-demand virtual cards linked to their physical cards.
  • Fyle made its Finovate debut at FinovateFall last year.

Expense management platform Fyle has announced an integration with American Express. The partnership will enable U.S. Business and Corporate Card members to issue on-demand virtual cards from the Fyle platform. The virtual cards feature built-in controls, as well as enhanced security. The integration was made possible by Fyle’s participation in the American Express Sync Commercial Partner Program.

The ability to issue unlimited virtual cards linked to existing physical cards provides a number of benefits. Among them are:

  • Card-specific controls including spending limits and expiration dates
  • Real-time transaction data and notifications via text message
  • Automated receipt collection to accelerate reconciliation via Fyle’s expense management platform

The integration will also provide payment flexibility. Companies can leverage virtual cards to pay suppliers and take advantage of their American Express billing cycle to manage cash flow until their card payment is due.

“We are teaming up with American Express to give our customers access to the control, enhanced security, and cash flow management that come with using an American Express virtual card, alongside the ability to automate receipt tracking, credit card reconciliation, and expense accounting with Fyle,” company founder and CEO Yashwanth Madhusudhan said. “The integration helps us provide an elevated user experience and more value to our customers.”

Founded in 2016, Fyle made its Finovate debut at FinovateFall 2023. At the conference, Madhusudan showed how Fyle’s technology brings a modern, “fintech-like” experience to bank-issued card programs.


Photo by Paul IJsendoorn

Fintech Rundown: A Rapid Review of Weekly News

Fintech Rundown: A Rapid Review of Weekly News

This week’s Fintech Rundown features partnership and expansion news from a handful of Finovate alums, as well as some interesting fundings in the cryptocurrency and charitable giving space.


Wealth Management

Digital wealth and payments company Mogo expands its relationship with data cloud company Snowflake.

U.K.-based wealth app Chip launches its first Cash ISA.

WiseAlpha unveils new wealth management portal and white-label solution.

Digital Banking

Segura Bank International (SBI), an FI based in Puerto Rico, launches a new digital bank powered by Temenos’ core banking platform.

North Carolina-based Mechanics & Farmers Bank has gone live on the nCino Cloud Banking Platform.

Indian payment solutions provider PayU migrates its credit service LazyPay to Thought Machine’s core banking platform.

10x Banking announces expansion to Africa, starting in South Africa.

Core banking provider Tuum raises $26.8 million (EUR 25 million) in Series B financing.

HSBC U.K. introduces its Cash Pod to expand customer access to cash in areas without bank branches.

Mortgagetech

Phoebus launches its SaaS-based mortgage servicing platform.

Raymond James Bank deploys ICE Mortgage Technology’s Encompass lending solution.

Payments

Atlantic Money secures authorization to bring its money transfer service to the U.S., Canada, and Australia.

Overflow, a fintech that facilitates charitable giving, raises $20 million in new funding.

Worldpay completes its separation from FIS.

Airwallex forges multi-year partnership with McLaren Formula 1 team to support its treasury management and cross-border payout operations.

MENA-based payment orchestration solution provider PayTabs Group partners with Saudi Arabian payment-infrastructure-as-a-service fintech Nearpay.

Lending

Pagaya secures a five-year, $280 million credit facility led by BlackRock, JPMorgan, and others.

Allica Bank completes more than £2 billion in lending to businesses in the U.K.

Challenger banking

LendingClub moves closer to fulfilling the requirements to launch a new bank.

Open banking / Open finance

MX and Jack Henry announce an expanded agreement to enhance data sharing.

Trustly integrates MX data enhancement as part of its Open Banking product suite.

Norway-based open banking company Neonomics teams up with credit management firm Lowell.

Expense management / BFM

The Boston Celtics name Brex as its corporate card and spend management partner.

Expense management platform Fyle forges new integration with American Express.

Cryptocurrencies / DeFi

Oobit, a cryptocurrency payments app based in Singapore, raised $25 million in Series A funding.

Fnality to bring its blockchain-based payment system to the U.S. following its successful launch in the U.K.

Embedded finance

EY announces an alliance with embedded finance platform MoneyLion.

Identity Verification/Management

Entrust confirms that it is negotiating a potential acquisition of ID verification firm Onfido.


Photo by Markus Winkler on Unsplash

Liberis Teams Up with Identity Risk Management Company Alloy

Liberis Teams Up with Identity Risk Management Company Alloy
  • Embedded finance platform Liberis announced a partnership with identity risk management innovator Alloy.
  • The partnership will enable Liberis to leverage Alloy’s platform to add automated compliance verifications to the funding application process.
  • Alloy made its Finovate debut at our developers conference, FinDEVrSilicon Valley 2016.

Embedded finance platform Liberis has teamed up with identity risk management innovator Alloy. Courtesy of the newly announced partnership, Liberis will leverage Alloy’s technology to integrate automated compliance verifications directly into the funding application process. The integration enables Liberis to accelerate its international growth and simplify the merchant experience.

“Alloy is designed to help businesses take control of fraud, credit, and compliance risk, while growing with the clearest picture of their customers,” Alloy CEO Tommy Nicholas said. “We’re confident that our partnership will help Liberis achieve its goal and provide its merchants with a seamless onboarding experience.”

LIberis will gain access and integrations to a global network of more than 190 data sources to streamline KYC, KYB, and AML operations and stop financial crime. The platform will also support the creation of custom, white-label onboarding experiences for partners.

“Alloy’s platform will allow us to enter new markets quickly, optimize our merchants’ fully digitized application for funding and scale to meet our partners’ demand, while also maintaining our high standards for compliance,” Liberis’ Chief Legal & Compliance Officer Alexis Alexander said. Alexander added that one main challenge with compliance checks is that they can increase friction during the onboarding process. To this end, Alloy’s identity risk solution automates and manages onboarding, fraud monitoring, and credit underwriting processes, reducing the amount of paperwork. For those businesses that need more extensive documentation, Liberis will provide a custom, white-label experience tailored to the needs of merchants and partners alike.

Founded in 2015 and headquartered in New York City, Alloy made its Finovate debut at our developers conference, FinDEVrSiliconValley 2016. Today, more than 500 banks and fintechs have partnered with Alloy to manage identity risk at origination as well as throughout the customer lifecycle. Alloy processes millions of identity decisions daily for the world’s top banks and fintechs in 40 countries across North America, EMEA, Latin America, and APAC. The company has raised more than $207 million in funding from investors including Avid Ventures and Felicis.

Just a few days ago, Alloy issued its 2024 State of Fraud Benchmark Report. The report featured some good news on the fight against fraud. According to the 450+ financial industry fraud decision makers who responded to the firm’s survey, the number of reported fraud attacks has begun to “even out – and for some organizations, to decelerate.” Nevertheless, there were devils in the details, including the number of companies reporting an increase in attempted fraud attacks via consumer accounts (61% of companies) and as well as through business accounts (54% of companies).

“It’s encouraging to see companies getting fraud volume under control using the wide array of identity data and technology available on the market,” Nicholas said when the report was release in late January. “But fraud remains a critical problem because bad actors are always finding new tools – such as generative AI – to steal increasingly large amounts of money.” Indeed, Alloy’s report noted that 56% of respondents lost more than EUR 500,000 ($537,000) to fraud in the last 12 months. Over the same time period, a quarter of respondents had lost more than EUR 1 million ($1.7 million).


Photo by SHOCKPhoto by Szoka Sebastian

Privakey Unveils Single Sign-On Solution for Enterprises

Privakey Unveils Single Sign-On Solution for Enterprises
  • Authentication platform Privakey has launched its Single Sign-On (SSO) solution, Privakey SSO.
  • The new offering enables enterprises to leverage passwordless authentication and authorization.
  • Headquartered in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Privakey made its Finovate debut at FinovateFall 2017 in New York.

Passwordless authentication solution provider Privakey launched its Single Sign-On (SSO) solution last week. Designed for enterprises, Privakey SSO responds to the demand for passwordless authentication as cybercriminals leverage social engineering to take advantage of traditional password-based systems.

“Privakey SSO is designed for speed and simplicity in both implementation and user experience,” company CEO Charles Durkin explained. “Small and medium-sized businesses can have Privakey SSO up and running within hours. Large enterprises benefit from a single, highly secure passwordless gateway to authorized applications and services.”

The new offering leverages a strong cryptographic authenticator to incorporate biometric data, PIN, and passkey for both authentication and authorization. Users supply the biometric or PIN, and a device-based secure passkey provides an additional layer of security by verifying the user’s identity as initially registered. Privakey SSO removes the inconvenience of passwords and out-of-band codes. Businesses can deploy the technology as a standalone, company identity platform, or integrate it to enable passwordless login to enterprise identity solutions from companies ranging from Microsoft to Google to Okta.

“We’ve engineered our solution to be fast, easy to use, scalable, and robust, ready to help you eliminate passwords – the primary target of cybercriminals,” Durkin said. He added that the solution was “ideal” for a variety of verticals including financial services, ecommerce, and IT.

Privakey is currently inviting companies interested in its technology to participate in its Privakey SSO Free Beta Test. The beta testing period runs from January 30, 2024 to May 31, 2024.

Headquartered in Philadelphia Pennsylvania, and founded in 2016, Privakey made its Finovate debut at FinovateFall 2017 in New York. At the conference, the company demoed its cloud-based, password-free alternative to identity authentication that is consistent, convenient, and secure.


Photo by Aphiwat chuangchoem