Finovate’s Credit Union Spotlight Showcases Challenges and Opportunities for CUs

Finovate’s Credit Union Spotlight Showcases Challenges and Opportunities for CUs

Finovate’s Credit Union Spotlight is back! This month at FinovateSpring – May 21 through May 23 – Finovate will host a special session to give leaders and professionals working at credit unions an opportunity to meet and network with their peers as well as with fintech innovators who are building solutions specifically for credit unions.

Coordinated by Finovate Vice President and Director of Fintech Strategy Greg Palmer and Sam Das, Managing Director of TruStage Ventures, the Credit Union Spotlight gives those running credit unions the opportunity to speak freely and candidly about the challenges – and opportunities – facing credit unions and their members today.

We caught up with Greg Palmer to talk about the state of credit unions in 2024 and what the Credit Union Spotlight at FinovateSpring this year hopes to achieve.

What challenges are credit unions facing right now?

Greg Palmer: Credit unions are facing a myriad of challenges at the moment. High interest rates and economic uncertainty are putting pressure on everyone, but local financial institutions like credit unions are particularly vulnerable. The good news is that the fintech industry is increasingly aware of what CUs are going through, and we’re seeing more and more technologies built with CUs in mind. These technologies are arriving just in time, and it’s about to get a lot easier for smaller FIs to compete with the multinational banks that tend to dominate the headlines.

How can better, deeper relationships with fintechs help credit unions overcome these challenges?

Palmer: It’s difficult for CUs to compete with larger financial institutions with bigger budgets, more marketing power, and teams of technologists creating new innovations in-house. These same factors, though, are also making it more difficult for fintech companies to sell their solutions into those big banks. The result is that a lot of newer fintech innovators are looking at credit unions as a target demographic. CUs both need the technologies they can provide and are less likely to be able to create their own alternatives, which is why it’s so imperative for us to bring both groups together.

How important is it to give credit unions the opportunity to network more exclusively with fintech providers, as well as with each other?

Palmer: Credit unions are fundamentally different from for-profit financial institutions, and they look at new technologies through a slightly different lens. That’s why it’s so important to separate out CU executives into their own space where they can network with each other, share experiences, and view new technologies together.

Finovate’s Credit Union Spotlight will take place on May 23, Day Three of FinovateSpring. The session will be held around midday and will last for approximately 90 minutes.

Read more about the Credit Union Spotlight at FinovateSpring in this feature at Finopotamus and don’t forget to take an early look at our demo companies in our Sneak Peek series. And if you haven’t picked up your ticket yet, Friday is the deadline to take advantage of big, early-bird savings. Visit our FinovateSpring hub today and save your seat!

FIS Launches Embedded Finance Platform Atelio

FIS Launches Embedded Finance Platform Atelio
  • FIS unveiled its embedded finance platform, Atelio by FIS, this week.
  • The platform leverages FIS’ existing technology to enable businesses to embed a variety of financial products and services into their offerings.
  • FIS made its Finovate debut at FinovateSpring in 2013. Stephanie Ferris is CEO and President.

FIS is the latest company to introduce a platform to make it easier for businesses and software developers to embed financial services and fintech solutions into their products and services. Atelio by FIS, launched this week, is one of the first banking-as-a-service offerings from a major core provider. The technology will serve B2C fintechs and enable financial and non-financial services companies alike to implement embedded finance into their existing offerings

“Welcome to the future of financial services,” FIS President of Platform and Enterprise Products Tarun Bhatnagar said. “Atelio by FIS is our vision to lead where fintech is going, which is outside the boundaries of how businesses enable, and their customers consume, financial services today.”

Atelio leverages FIS existing technology by way of easily embeddable and consumable components. The platform enables non-financial companies to offer their customers a wide variety of financial experiences: collecting deposits, moving money, issuing cards, sending invoices, and more. Atelio also provides tools to help companies fight fraud, anticipate cash flows, and gain insights into consumer preferences and behaviors.

FIS’ latest offering comes at a time when growth in embedded finance is expected to soar. In its product announcement, the company pointed to research from Bain Capital that indicated that embedded finance will represent 10% of all transactions by 2026. The firm values these transactions at $7 trillion, or more than $50 billion in total revenue. Additionally, research from S&P Global Intelligence showed that banks that offered embedded finance solutions outperformed their peers in terms of deposit growth.

“More than just a new solution, Atelio is built to lend the expertise, tools, and distribution so that our users and clients can focus on creating,” Bhatnagar said. “Our scale, distribution and continued investment in technology have given us the foundation to unlock our financial capabilities to a wider audience and power the next generation of financial innovation.”

Three FIS clients – KeyBank, private student loan provider College Ave, and payment system and billing platform Royal Pay – have already deployed Atelio and are building solutions on the platform.

Jacksonville, Florida-based FIS made its Finovate debut at FinovateSpring 2013. Currently, the company enables 95% of the world’s banks, moves more than $1 trillion a month, and processes $50 trillion via its asset management technology every year. The company’s new product announcement came one day after FIS announced first quarter 2024 results which included the firm’s “fifth straight quarter of exceeding our financial outlook,” according to FIS CEO and President Stephanie Ferris.


Photo by ian dooley on Unsplash

Insights from the Frontlines: Five Fintech Founders Share Their Stories

Insights from the Frontlines: Five Fintech Founders Share Their Stories

In the fast-evolving world of fintech, founders are a breed apart, characterized by their unique blend of grit, determination, and adaptability. Their journeys are often marked by challenges, triumphs, and invaluable insights. In this series of interviews, we delve into the minds of five fintech founders to uncover the lessons they’ve learned, the key traits they believe are essential for a successful founding team, and the distinctive challenges and opportunities they’ve encountered on their entrepreneurial paths. Join us as we explore the stories and experiences that have shaped these innovative leaders in the fintech industry.

Below, we feature insights from:

Reflections on our journey – key lessons learned since launching our company

The winning formula – essential traits for a successful founding team

Our company’s early challenges – overcoming obstacles on the path to success

Our fintech solution – recognising the need and maximising potential

From vision to reality – how it all began


Photo by Miguel Á. Padriñán

Expensify Travel Goes Head-to-Head with Navan

Expensify Travel Goes Head-to-Head with Navan
  • Expensify is teaming up with Spotana to launch Expensify Travel, a business travel booking platform based on Spotanas Travel-as-a-Service offering.
  • The new travel service will offer Expensify’s business users access to global travel inventory, lower fares, and servicing.
  • Expensify’s new launch makes it a direct competitor with California-based Navan, a corporate travel and expense management platform that launched in 2015.

Business expense management company Expensify announced the upcoming addition of a new set of capabilities today, which will make it a more robust platform to help businesses plan and manage their expenses. The company is launching Expensify Travel.

Expensify Travel will allow the company’s business users to access global travel inventory, lower fares, and servicing. Expensify Travel will be built on top of New York-based Spotana’s cloud-based Travel-as-a-Service platform, which will help clients manage flight changes, cancellations, and unused ticket credits, as well as offer comprehensive travel management capabilities.

“Book your trip in minutes, we’ll handle the rest. We’ve made it effortless for members to search and book flights, hotels, cars, and trains — all at the most competitive rates available,” said Expensify CEO David Barrett. “Our early release will let business travelers manage it all in one place, with real-time support, customizable rules, and the option to assign virtual travel cards to employees. We couldn’t be more excited for the future of Expensify Travel in partnership with Spotana.”

Expensify plans to have the early release of Expensify Travel next week, offering booking and management capabilities, as well as 24/7 Expensify support. In the future, the new travel offering will be directly integrated into New Expensify, the company’s new super app. When booking their travel in the new chat-based app, customers will be able to book and manage trips, manage travel expenses, chat with colleagues, and more. “Through our partnership, Expensify has created a one-stop shop for travel and expense management for their customers with a seamless user experience,” said Spotnana Founder and CEO Sarosh Waghmar.

Expensify’s new launch makes it a direct competitor with California-based Navan, a corporate travel and expense management platform. Formerly known as TripActions, Navan was founded in 2015 and offers expense management tools such as employee spending controls, automated expense management tools, reporting capabilities, and more.

There are key differences between Expensify’s and Navan’s expense management tools, however. While both companies allow clients to use their own existing corporate expense cards with their expense management tools, Expensify also offers users its own branded debit card. Also, Expensify’s interface is focused on being user friendly to serve small and medium sized businesses, while Navan offers features that are tailored to meet needs of a variety of sizes.

It is more difficult to assess the differences between the companies’ travel booking tools, given that Expensify’s tools have yet to launch. However, it appears that the two will differentiate themselves with tools that serve their individual target markets. For instance, Navan offers a high-touch, premium travel experience, the ability to book meetings and events, and consulting services aimed at larger, corporate clients. Expensify’s tools will likely root in the company’s user-friendly, simplified approach.


Photo by Pixabay

SumUp Secures $1.6 Billion in Private Credit Debt

SumUp Secures $1.6 Billion in Private Credit Debt
  • U.K.-based fintech SumUp has raised $1.6 billion (€1.5 billion) in a private credit debt transaction.
  • The deal was led by Goldman Sachs Asset Management, and will enable SumUp to refinance debt and pursue international growth opportunities.
  • SumUp won Best of Show at FinovateEurope 2013, a year after the company was founded.

In a deal led by Goldman Sachs Asset Management, U.K.-based fintech SumUp has secured $1.6 billion (€1.5 billion) in a private credit debt transaction. The financing will enable SumUp to refinance current debt as well as take advantage of growth opportunities around the world.

The deal gives SumUp a set of new investors: AllianceBernstein, Apollo Global Management, Arini, Deutsche Bank AG, Fortress Investment Group, SilverRock Financial Services, and Vista Credit Partners. It also comes six months after the company raised $307 million (€285 million) in equity and debt in a round led by Sixth Street Growth. Bain Capital Tech Opportunities, Fin Capital, and Liquidity Capital also participated in that financing.

In a statement SumUp CFO Hermoine McKee pointed to an evolution in the company’s “requirements from capital markets” in explaining SumUp’s most recent fundraising effort. “Lenders understand and support our mission to create a world where everyone can build a thriving business, and recognize our successful methods of achieving, sustaining, and balancing profitability and growth,” McKee said. “This new financing will support us as we focus on providing best-in-class support experiences for our merchants and giving them the products and tools they need to succeed.”

To this end, SumUp noted in a statement that the company has generated positive EBITDA since December 2022, as well as achieving a “decade of sustained growth.” The company currently counts four million businesses among its partners, who rely on SumUp for services ranging from payments and order processing to customer acquisition and money management.

“SumUp has always enjoyed solid and steady support from the investor community, and it’s this continued backing which has enabled us to grow sustainably over the past 10+ years, serving millions of merchants of all sizes globally,” McKee said.

Founded in 2012, SumUp won Best of Show in its Finovate debut at FinovateEurope in 2013. The company began this year with its SumUp Beacon event which introduced merchants to a range of new SumUp solutions. These new offerings included SumUp Business Account, SumUp Invoices, SumUp Kiosk, and SumUp Online Store. SumUp also unveiled a pair of new Point of Sale (POS) solutions: POS Lite to enhance over-the-counter sales, and POS Pro to provide enhanced inventory management.


Photo by Markus Spiske on Unsplash

PNC and TCW Team Up to Deliver Private Credit Platform

PNC and TCW Team Up to Deliver Private Credit Platform
  • PNC and TCW have partnered to deliver a private credit solution.
  • The solution will leverage TCW’s loan origination, underwriting, and portfolio management expertise and will tap PNC’s extensive client relationships.
  • The two will offer directly originated, secured cash-flow and asset-based loans to middle market companies.

Financial services company PNC and TCW, a leading global asset manager have teamed up this week to deliver a private credit solution to middle market companies.

The two will leverage TCW’s loan origination, underwriting, and portfolio management expertise and will tap PNC’s extensive client relationships. “We are very excited to announce this new business strategy, which represents a natural extension of TCW’s existing Direct Lending and Rescue Fund strategies with an opportunity to offer investors access to a broader segment of the middle market,” said CIO of TCW Private Credit and chair of the new joint private credit partnership Rick Miller.

The two will offer directly originated, secured cash-flow and asset-based loans to middle market companies, whether or not they have private equity or venture capital backing. Together, PNC and TCW will manage the strategy’s investment activities, which range from origination to underwriting, and portfolio management.

“We are thrilled to partner with PNC to expand our direct lending capabilities and provide financing to a critical segment of U.S. companies, as well as offer a differentiated investment solution for clients,” said TCW President and CEO Katie Koch. “PNC and TCW have a long history of developing creative solutions across a number of joint financings, and this partnership represents an exciting opportunity to capture significant market share of the expanding private credit market by leveraging the strengths of both our firms.”

During their first year, PNC and TCW aim to have $2.5 billion in investor equity capital available to invest. Supporting this fund are investments from PNC and Nippon Life, one of TCW’s strategic partners and shareholders.

Since interest rates have risen and credit has become more expensive, small businesses have become particularly vulnerable to the credit crunch. This vulnerability stems from traditional banks tightening their lending standards to mitigate risk and reduce losses. Delivering a new private credit solution should help address this gap in financing options for small businesses, providing them with much-needed access to capital to support their growth and operations.


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The Themes of FinovateSpring: AI, Human-Centricity, and Winning the Battle for the Banks

The Themes of FinovateSpring: AI, Human-Centricity, and Winning the Battle for the Banks

FinovateSpring 2024 is only a few weeks away! If you haven’t picked up your ticket, there’s still time to take advantage of early-bird savings if you register by this Friday, May 10.

This year’s FinovateSpring arrives at an interesting time for fintech and financial services. For the first time in decades, a new emerging technology – AI – promises to accelerate technological innovation in our space in a way that is truly generational. At the same time, governments and regulators are struggling to keep up with an ever-shifting, ever-growing landscape of financial products and services. Add to this the sudden shift from an easy money, ZIRP-oriented world to one that is preoccupied with geopolitics and inflationary threats not seen since the 1970s.

Our spring conference – May 21 through May 23 – will tackle many of these issues and more that are driving decision-making in fintech and financial services this year. Here is a brief survey of the kinds of conversations, keynotes, and commentaries we have in store.


It’s (Still) All About AI

It may have been an underwhelming first quarter for fintech funding. But for those fintechs who have effectively embraced AI – especially generative AI – investors have remained eager to engage.

FinovateSpring will feature multiple sessions on AI and financial services starting on Day One. These include our Out of the Box Keynote Address from author Brian Solis who will explain how to determine which emerging technologies really matter to financial services providers and why. Day One will also feature a special address from Intelygenz USA President Chris Brown on practical examples of how applied AI and hyper-automation can turn cumbersome, error-prone manual processes into fully-digitized operations in weeks rather than months or years.

Later in the day, we will feature more instances of AI at work in financial services – particularly the role of AI agents and the importance of ethical AI. And we’ll finish the day with a rousing Hot or Not Expert Debate specifically on GenAI and how banks and financial services companies can move beyond the hype to learn where the technology can be most effectively deployed.


Behavior, Financial Inclusion, and Human-centricity

One of the ironies of the “AI Era” in fintech and financial services is the way it has encouraged us to look more closely at the human behaviors, biases, and beliefs that drive financial decision-making. This development connects a number of key trends in financial services – from behavioral economics to financial inclusion to the importance of human-centricity when using technology to solve problems.

This year at FinovateSpring, we will address these ideas through sessions such as our Executive Briefing on Financial Inclusion. This discussion on “the new customer base” focuses on areas of innovation – such as investing, credit building and repair, and savings – that underserved populations often struggle to access. A keynote address later in the day looks at the psychology of financial decision-making directly as a way to help financial services companies better design and market their products to customers.

On Day Two, Danielle Shamos, Chief Revenue Officer with Revive Media, will give a Special Address on maximizing brand impact and the strategic use of tools like Amazon Ads to help financial services brands boost visibility and increase demand. We will also have a session on what banks and fintechs need to know about the worldview of Gen Z.

Our Women in Fintech Briefing is back, looking at how technology, the pandemic, and new ways of working have changed the way that companies large and small attract and retain female talent. The session will also examine what is necessary to continue to drive change and to support development for women at different stages of their lives.


Deposits, Lending, and More: Winning the Battle for Banks

In some ways, FinovateSpring saves some of its most potent conversation for the final day of the conference. For all the promise of AI and the opportunities of financial inclusion, the financial services space remains a hotly contested arena in which more businesses are competing for the dollars – and the deposits – of what often feels like a shrinking number of business and retail customers.

What can banks and fintechs do to attract and engage customers at a time of unprecedented competition – from Big Tech, Big Retail, and their own rivals in the space?

Day 3 of FinovateSpring takes this question head on in a series of keynotes and power panels first thing in the morning. Cornerstone Advisors’ Managing Director Sam Kilmer will lead a keynote address on how banks can innovate to drive revenue in a challenging economic environment. The morning also features a power panel on deposit generation growth strategies for banks, and keynote on why the secret to digital growth may have less to do with technology and tactics and more to do with a “future mindset” that is shared throughout the organization.


As always we will also present our All Star Analyst panel and Investor’s Where the Smart Money is Investing Now sessions on Day Two of FinovateSpring. Another big feature of FinovateSpring is our Credit Union Spotlight. This session is designed to give credit unions a special opportunity to meet, network, and foster greater collaboration between credit unions and fintechs. We’ll share more information about the spotlight here on the Finovate blog in the days to come.


Photo by Scott Webb

Beem Credit Union Teams Up with VeriPark To Become the Most “Digital First CU in the Province”

Beem Credit Union Teams Up with VeriPark To Become the Most “Digital First CU in the Province”
  • Canada-based Beem Credit Union has partnered with VeriPark to become the most “digital-first, people-first” credit union in the province of Vancouver.
  • VeriPark offers an Intelligence Customer Experience Suite that provides tools to enhance branch automation, lending, and customer engagement.
  • Headquartered in London, VeriPark made its Finovate debut at FinovateMiddleEast 2019 in Dubai.

The latest fintech news from Canada involves a May-December relationship between a credit union that’s less than a year old and a fintech that’s been around since the dot.com days.

British Columbia, Vancouver-based Beem Credit Union has announced a partnership with VeriPark, a software developer based in the U.K. The goal of the partnership is to help the credit union, which was founded earlier this year, become the most “people-first, digital-first credit union in the province.”

Founded in 1998, VeriPark offers an Intelligence Customer Experience Suite that has enabled its customers to achieve 98.5% reduction in cost-to-serve, 55% more sales, 20% greater satisfaction, and 45% more profits. The suite includes VeriChannel, the company’s omni-channel delivery offering, VeriTouch, a customer engagement/CRM solution; branch automation courtesy of VeriPark’s VeriBranch offering; and loan origination and servicing technology via the company’s VeriLoan solution. Institutions in retail banking, corporate/SME banking, private banking/wealth management, and insurance are among those taking advantage of VeriPark’s technology to enhance their operations.

With more than 160,000 members, Beem CU was formed late last year via a merger between Interior Savings and Gulf & Fraser. The merger went into effect on the first of January and the combined institution will boast a network of 55 branches and 14 insurance locations in the region. Beem CU has $10 billion in total assets; Brian Harris, who was CEO of Interior Savings, will take on the role of Chief Executive with Beem CU.

VeriPark made its Finovate debut at FinovateMiddleEast in 2019 in Dubai. At the conference, the company demoed its cloud-based, SaaS service Customer Insights that enables organizations to gather data from a variety of sources to better understand the preferences of their customers.

Earlier this year, the National Bank of Kuwait (NBK) announced that it was going live with a new corporate banking CRM solution built by VeriPark. NBK now benefits from customer profile, sales, and prospect management tools, a 360 degree single view of corporate customers, as well as customer retention solutions. The bank is the largest financial institution in Kuwait with 68 branches in the country and a total of 143 branches around the globe.

VeriPark is headquartered in London. Ozkan Erener is CEO.


Photo by Lee Robinson on Unsplash

FinovateSpring 2024 Sneak Peek Series: Part 9

A look at the companies demoing at FinovateSpring in San Francisco on May 21 and 22. Register today using this link and save 20%.

Cascading AI

Cascading AI has created an AI Loan Assistant, called Sarah. Sarah is capable of doing the work of a 30-person lending team, guiding hundreds of small business owners through loan application processes.

Features

Game-Changer Alert: Sarah increases banker productivity by 10x and applicant conversion rates by 3x (to 67%). Put the two together for a 30x step change for the industry.

Who’s it for?

Banks, community banks, credit unions, and non-bank lenders.

CoreChain Technologies

CoreChain is like “Venmo for business.” Its solution CoreChain Pay delivers an easy-to-use digital AP payments solution enabling mid-market businesses to easily pay vendors securely and efficiently.

Features

  • Eliminate fraud risk in AP payments
  • Lower cost accounts payables
  • Simplify and digitize vendor payments

Who’s it for?

Mid-market companies with $50M to $1B revenue and a complex supply chain (500+ vendors).

Kobalt Labs

Kobalt Labs is an AI copilot, automating and strengthening third-party diligence for fintechs and financial institutions. It surfaces regulatory gaps in internal policies and third-party docs within minutes.

Features

  • Automate third-party diligence at 10x speed
  • Surface issues that become difficult to resolve when missed
  • Track each risk along with severity
  • Store vendor comms for easy future audits

Who’s it for?

Credit unions, community banks, partner banks (particularly on the fintech partner diligence side), and fintechs looking to accelerate their compliance operations.

Quinn

Quinn solves the problem of wealth advisory scalability so that all individuals and families can access a financial advisor without minimum income and asset requirements.

Features

  • Delivers a financial plan in five minutes, not five weeks
  • Offers a holistic plan that encompasses savings, retirement, debt, and investing
  • Puts the plan in action

Who’s it for?

Financial institutions, wealth advisory firms, and financial planning institutions.

TRIYO

TRIYO extracts and structures work data for end-to-end visibility, reducing operational risk and empowering AI and predictive analytics to fuel automation and drive informed decision making.

Features

  • Offers real-time monitoring, analytics, and 360° view
  • Collects work data from different systems, forms, and off-platform activity with API-first approach
  • Provides data for training internal AILLM tools

Who’s it for?

Banks, credit unions, wealth management firms, and non-banking financial institutions.

Robinhood Crypto Receives Warning about Securities Violations

Robinhood Crypto Receives Warning about Securities Violations
  • Robinhood has received a Wells Notice from the U.S. SEC.
  • In the Wells Notice, the SEC staff alleged Robinhood violated Sections 15(a) and 17A of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.
  • Robinhood Markets Chief Legal, Compliance, and Corporate Affairs Officer Dan Gallagher said that he is “disappointed” with the Wells Notice. “We firmly believe that the assets listed on our platform are not securities,” he said.

Stock brokerage app Robinhood is feeling the heat from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) today. The California-based company revealed in a blog post over the weekend that it received a Wells Notice from the SEC.

In the Wells Notice, staff at the SEC filed an enforcement action against Robinhood, alleging the company violated Sections 15(a) and 17A of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. The former section requires broker-dealers to register with the SEC and become a member of a self-regulatory organization (SRO), such as FINRA. The section aims to ensure that broker-dealers adhere to standards and practices to protect investors. The latter, 17A, establishes the framework for the National Securities Clearing Corporation (NSCC). This section also requires transfer agents to register with the SEC and sets standards to ensure securities transactions are efficiently processed.

According to Robinhood’s 8-K filing, “The potential action may involve a civil injunctive action, public administrative proceeding, and/or a cease-and-desist proceeding and may seek remedies that include an injunction, a cease-and-desist order, disgorgement, pre-judgment interest, civil money penalties, and censure, revocation, and limitations on activities.”

Robinhood has made it clear that it is making efforts to comply with the SEC to resolve the issue. The company originally launched Robinhood Crypto, its crypto trading arm, in early 2018. Robinhood Crypto currently allows customers in 48 states and Washington D.C. to buy, sell, store, and in many cases transfer up to 18 cryptocurrencies.

Robinhood Markets Chief Legal, Compliance, and Corporate Affairs Officer Dan Gallagher said that the company uses a “rigorous review process designed to ensure that it does not list digital asset securities.” The company said it has always been careful not to list certain tokens that the SEC has deemed securities in public actions against other platforms. Robinhood has also steered clear of products, including lending and staking, that may be considered securities.

“After years of good faith attempts to work with the SEC for regulatory clarity including our well-known attempt to ‘come in and register,’ we are disappointed that the agency has decided to issue a Wells Notice related to our U.S. crypto business,” said Gallagher. “We firmly believe that the assets listed on our platform are not securities and we look forward to engaging with the SEC to make clear just how weak any case against Robinhood Crypto would be on both the facts and the law.”

Robinhood has not disclosed any specific actions it plans to take to respond to the SEC’s notice. The company can take action to respond to the allegations before the SEC makes a move to sue or settle with Robinhood to resolve the issue. The company said that the development will impact neither the services it provides nor its end customers’ accounts.


Photo by Divakar Meganathan

Why the U.S. Regulators’ New Resource on BaaS Relationships is Disappointing

Why the U.S. Regulators’ New Resource on BaaS Relationships is Disappointing

BaaS-enabled banks have been operating in a regulatory minefield recently. Since late 2023, the U.S. FDIC and CFPB have issued multiple consent orders to banks, citing their BaaS relationships as the cause. From the perspective of an onlooker, it appeared that regulators were issuing the consent orders to make examples out of certain players in the industry, foregoing formal BaaS regulation.

This has been particularly troubling for community banks, which often rely on BaaS to adapt to modern consumer preferences by layering the newest fintech tools on top of their legacy core systems, without the need to build technology in-house or update old technology.

In response to this new stress placed on the country’s smallest financial institutions, three U.S. regulators– the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, the FDIC, and the OCC– have published a new third party risk management guide for community banks. The guide is intended to supplement the Interagency Guidance on Third-Party Relationships: Risk Management document the agencies published in June of last year.

The agencies’ newly published document may disappoint, however. That’s because the new document does not provide formal Baas regulation by laying out rules by which community banks can abide in order to avoid consent orders. Instead, the new document lays out “potential considerations, potential sources of information, and examples” for risk management, due diligence, contract negotiation, ongoing monitoring, termination, and governance with third parties.

“This guide is intended to assist community banks when developing and implementing their third-party risk-management practices,” the new document states. “This guide is not a substitute for the TPRM Guidance. Rather, it is intended to be a resource for community banks to consider when managing the risk of third-party relationships. This guide is not a checklist and does not prescribe specific risk-management practices or establish any safe harbors for compliance with laws or regulations.”

Baas-enabled banks seeking to navigate third-party relationships may find the new resource frustrating, however. While some of the advice in the document is helpful, the agencies have built a lot of wiggle room for themselves into the document. Ultimately, however, the guidance is better than nothing.

Regardless of what it lacks, both community banks and even larger financial institutions will likely find it useful to compare the guide’s “potential considerations” to their current internal processes. And in the end, the guidance may help deter another tidal wave of consent orders.


Photo by Joshua Hoehne on Unsplash

Alloy Partners with Coris To Automate Risk and Fraud Intelligence for SMBs

Alloy Partners with Coris To Automate Risk and Fraud Intelligence for SMBs
  • Identity decisioning platform Alloy teamed up with SME data intelligence innovator Coris.
  • Courtesy of the partnership, Alloy customers will be able to access Coris’ Merchant Profiler and Corshield solutions directly from within the Alloy platform.
  • Alloy introduced itself to Finovate audiences at FinDEVr Silicon Valley in 2016.

Alloy, the identity decisioning platform, announced a new partnership with SMB data intelligence company Coris. Via the partnership, Alloy customers will be able to access Coris’ solutions to automate SMB onboarding, underwriting, and fraud prevention.

“We’re excited to partner with Coris on improving the SMB risk management process for builders of financial products,” Alloy GM of Partner Solutions Brian Bender said. “Having a wide array of data at their disposal is critical for banks and fintechs to manage identity risk across the customer lifecycle.”

Alloy’s 500+ customers will be able to access a pair of Coris’ solutions directly from within the Alloy platform: MerchantProfiler, Coris’ KYB and small business intelligence product; and Corshield, Coris’ SMB-specific fraud model. Merchant Profiler enables fintechs and software companies to onboard, underwrite, and monitor their SMB customers via GPT-4 powered SMB industry classification. The solution also provides automated analysis of SMB websites, third party consumer reviews, and more; as well as real-time KYB, including Secretary of State business verification, sanctions screening, and TIN matching. Merchant Profiler also offers adverse media insights to see if there is significant negative news or information about a business or its beneficial owners.

CorShield fights business impersonation fraud and first party fraud at the point of sign-up. The solution automatically triangulates known data on SMBs and cross-references applicant data against the known information. CorShield then generates a fraud score to assess the likelihood of fraud and shares the primary reasons for the fraud score with the user.

One firm using CorShield claimed that the solution helped them instantly approve 90% of business applications. The company also said that Coris’ SMB intelligence data has lowered the firm’s application review time by more than 75%.

Founded in 2022 and headquartered in Palo Alto, California, Coris has helped its business customers verify more than 150,000 SMBs and provided data on more than 330 million global SMBs. The company secured $3.7 million in funding earlier this year in a round co-led by Lux Capital and Exponent Founders Capital. Y Combinator, Blank Ventures, WePay Co-Founder Bill Clerico, and Mercury CEO and Co-Founder Immad Akhund also participated.

Alloy introduced itself to Finovate audiences at FinDEVr Silicon Valley in 2016. The company returned to the Finovate stage in 2022 to demo its open payment hub, CHUCK, and its gifting platform Social Money, launched in partnership with Prizeout. Earlier this year, Alloy announced a partnership with embedded finance platform Liberis. The partnership will enable Liberis to integrate automated compliance verifications from Alloy directly into the funding application process.

Headquartered in New York, Alloy was founded in 2002. The company has raised more than $207 million in funding, according to Crunchbase. Alloy includes Lightspeed Ventures, Avenir Growth Capital, and Canapi Ventures among its investors.


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