Comarch Forges Strategic Partnership with DSK Bank

Comarch Forges Strategic Partnership with DSK Bank
  • Polish IT solutions provider Comarch announced a strategic partnership with DSK Bank.
  • The partnership will help accelerate a strategic digitization program the bank launched in 2021.
  • Comarch has been a Finovate alum for more than a decade, making its Finovate debut at FinovateEurope 2013 in London.

Comarch, an IT solutions provider and systems integrator based in Poland, has forged a strategic partnership with DSK Bank. The partnership will accelerate the Bulgaria-based financial institution’s ongoing strategic digitalization efforts, which began in earnest in 2021.

“We are delighted to support DSK Bank in achieving its digitalization goals with our cutting-edge IT solutions,” Comarch Group CEE Director Piotr Kusek said. “This partnership underscores our mutual commitment to introducing innovative strategies that will transform the banking landscape and elevate financial services to a new level.”

An international IT business solution provider, Comarch employs 6,400 engineers, business consultants, marketing specialists, and other professionals who help optimize operations and business processes for companies in a wide variety of verticals including telecommunications and financial services. Comarch’s clients include BP Global, Telefónica Global, and Vodafone Germany.

Part of the OTP Banking Group, DSK Bank is Bulgaria’s largest bank. The institution was founded in 1951, and has total assets of more than $15.8 million (€14.74 million). In the spring of 2022, DSK Bank teamed up with another Finovate alum, Backbase, to support its digital transformation efforts.

Founded in 1993 and headquartered in Kraków, Poland, Comarch made its Finovate debut at FinovateEurope 2013. Within a few years, the company reported revenues in excess of PLN 1 billion, hired its 5,000th employee, and opened its 90th worldwide office. Comarch launched its modern financial platform for business, Apfino, in 2021, and unveiled Poland’s first commission-free shopping platform, Wszystko.pl, in 2023.

This year, the IT solutions provider has extended its partnership with Dutch telecommunications operator KPN, teamed up with insurance company P&V Group – which will adopt Comarch’s Employee Benefits solution – and announced a collaboration with UAE-based telecommunications company and ICT player du. Last month, Comarch joined the European Loyalty Association, partnered with charitable organization The Blind Loyalty Trust, and secured accreditation as a Peppol Service Provider in Malaysia.


Photo by Mat Kedzia

Monto Exits Stealth, Lands $9 Million to Rethink B2B Payments 

Monto Exits Stealth, Lands $9 Million to Rethink B2B Payments 
  • B2B payments facilitator Monto is exiting stealth with a $9 million funding round.
  • The Seed funding round was led by Scale Venture Partners.
  • The company plans to use the funds to scale its growth in the U.S.

There’s a new entrant in the B2B payments space. B2B payments facilitator Monto emerged from stealth this week, simultaneously announcing a $9 million Seed round.

Scale Venture Partners led the investment, while Verissimo Ventures, F2 Venture Capital, Firsthand Alliance, Room40 Ventures, and individual investors also participated. “Our investment in Monto is the result of years of work focusing on the CFO suite and the intersection with procurement. We are very well aware of the evolution of and pain points in this trillion-plus dollar market,” said Scale Venture Partners’ Alex Niehenke. “Monto is the only company that solves the one-off workflow problem for AR teams. It is the missing piece for any AP platform, without it, suppliers suffer.”

Monto will use today’s funds to further invest in technological improvements, as well as to fuel its U.S. expansion. As a starting point, the company is opening its first U.S. office in New York City.

Founded in Tel Aviv, with offices throughout the globe, Monto seeks to help make ACH and RTP B2B payments collection as easy as tapping a card. Business finance teams can use the company’s payments tool to receive payments from their customers’ third-party payment platforms, AP portal, or supplier portal, including Workday, QuickBooks, SAP, and Microsoft Dynamics. The payments simplification helps companies reduce Days Sales Outstanding (DSO) and eliminate manual work by consolidating financial data from numerous sources.

Monto’s clients include large enterprises from various industries, including Shutterstock, TechTarget, Miro, and G2. Since launch, the company has helped its customers facilitate nearly $1 billion to buyers in more than 300 portals.

Monto’s founders, Maya Cohen and Nitsan Yerushalmi, previously worked implementing ERP systems in finance departments. “Monto is a strategic decision for CFOs, future-proofing them against a landscape where most, if not all, customers will soon use portals,” said Cohen, who now serves as the company’s CEO. “With Monto, getting paid by customers will be fully automatic, a concept we call ‘zero-touch,’ and we succeed in achieving that by working with, not against, the portals, an important distinction.”


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Parlay Wins Spot in Mastercard Start Path Small Business Program

Parlay Wins Spot in Mastercard Start Path Small Business Program
  • Loan intelligence system company Parlay will join Mastercard’s Start Path Small Business program. Parlay is one of eight companies selected.
  • Parlay’s technology complements a bank’s or credit union’s loan origination system to streamline and enhance small business loan processing.
  • Parlay made its Finovate debut at FinovateSpring 2024 in May as part of our Sustainability & Inclusion Scholarship program.

Parlay, which offers an AI-powered Loan Intelligence System (LIS) to help community banks and credit unions boost small business loan volume, is one of eight startups selected to participate in Mastercard’s Start Path Small Business program.

The incoming cohort consists of startups that have shown “dedication to democratizing financial tools and providing cutting-edge services for SMEs,” Mastercard noted in a statement. The statement underscored specific functions – such as spend management, onboarding, risk monitoring, loan approvals, and embedded finance solutions – that innovative fintech startups are helping digitize for small businesses.

Joining Parlay in the upcoming cohort of the program are Ballerine, Boost, CredibleX, Digi, Merge, Prime Dash, and RedOwl. The four-month program will give these startups the opportunity to leverage Mastercard’s network and subject matter expertise to forge product partnerships that help small businesses digitize their operations.

Parlay’s embedded fintech software helps lenders achieve a 64% increase in approved loans and an 87% reduction in manual underwriting workload. A white-label solution that complements loan origination systems, Parlay’s technology enables lenders to generate high-quality loan packets and maximize the eligible applicant pool. The company’s LIS also offers readiness insights to help businesses improve their creditworthiness; pre-screening to identify prime, marginal, and ineligible candidate pools; and pipeline analytics to enable loan officers to monitor applicant progress and underwriting eligibility.

“After a decade of work in economic development, our team realized that 77% of small businesses still struggle to access affordable capital and lack the insights need to navigate the lending process,” Parlay founder and CEO Alex McLeod said in a statement announcing the final eight startups invited to join the program. “We envision a future where community lenders, powered by Parlay’s AI-driven loan intelligence system, can get millions more small businesses approved for loans using unique, personalized insights that help both lenders and borrowers.”

Parlay made its Finovate debut at FinovateSpring in May as part of our Sustainability & Inclusion Scholarship program. The program is designed to spotlight underrepresented founders, as well as startups that are tackling issues such as climate change, diversity, and financial inclusion. Scholarships provide startups with complimentary demo participation, as well as the ability to network with our 2,000+ senior-level fintech attendees, fellow demoing companies, and more.

Past scholarship winners include Best of Show winning companies like Debbie, which won Best of Show at FinovateFall 2023, as well as Kobalt Labs and Remynt, both of which won Best of Show at FinovateSpring 2024.

Founded in 2022, Parlay is headquartered in Alexandria, Virginia.


Photo by Tim Mossholder

equipifi Launches Pre-Purchase BNPL Solution

equipifi Launches Pre-Purchase BNPL Solution
  • equipfi is launching Plan Your Purchase, a BNPL solution that offers consumers financing for their purchase before they make the transaction.
  • Consumers can use Plan Your Purchase to take out loans ranging from $500 to $2,000.
  • Plan Your Purchase is integrated directly into a bank’s existing digital banking app, offering more control over the user experience.

BNPL-as-a-Service provider equipfi unveiled a new solution this week called Plan Your Purchase. The new tool empowers banks and credit unions to allow their account holders to take out pre-qualified installment loans from their bank before they make a purchase.

equipfi calls Plan Your Purchase a “pre-purchase BNPL solution,” meaning that the bank offers the consumer financing for their purchase before they make the transaction. Plan Your Purchase is integrated into a bank’s existing digital banking app to provide personalized BNPL offers directly to the customers. This makes it easy for users to get the financing they need to make a qualified purchase without a credit check, additional applications, new logins, upfront cost, or dependency on merchant integration.

Using Plan Your Purchase, pre-approved consumers can take out loans ranging from $500 to $2,000. The consumer can view and accept the loans immediately, and the funds are available within moments.

“There are many moments in an account holder’s lifetime when timely access to small loans make a big difference,” said Bryce Deeney, co-founder and CEO of equipifi. “By streamlining the loan acceptance process and positioning it in the digital banking experience, Plan Your Purchase helps financial institutions give account holders access to cash flow they already qualify for wherever and whenever they need it.”

By delivering the tool through banks, equipfi puts the bank in control, allowing them to leverage consumer data to provide more personalized offers. Putting the bank in the driver’s seat also allows the bank to control credit pre-approvals to suit their own risk tolerance and offers them more control over the user experience.

The integrated approach also can help banks maintain their top-of-wallet position by offering split payments using existing debit cards. This is different from traditional BNPL providers, which rely on a credit-focused approach. This integration can also help banks drive engagement and loyalty by leveraging transaction data to generate personalized offers and streamline the user experience within their familiar banking app​.

Arizona-based equipfi was founded in 2021 to bring the benefits of BNPL financing directly to banks and credit unions. Among the company’s clients are Kane County Teachers Credit Union in Illinois, SunWest Credit Union in Colorado, FedFinancial Federal Credit Union in Washington, D.C., and Eagle Community Credit Union, which is one of the first to go live with Plan Your Purchase.


Photo by Nataliya Vaitkevich

6 Ways Fintechs Can Foster the Next Generation of Wealth Management

6 Ways Fintechs Can Foster the Next Generation of Wealth Management

There was a time when robo-advisory represented the peak of fintech’s contribution to the wealth management industry. And these services continue to be popular options for a new generation of savers and investors. The Statista Market Forecast indicates that the robo-advisor market worldwide is expected to grow by more than 6% by 2028, with more than 34 million investors relying on robo-advisors.

At the same time, enabling technologies like machine learning and AI are generating new ways for fintechs to bring the benefits of technological innovation to the wealth management industry. But it is important for fintechs to avoid building solutions in search of problems. What are some of the real trends and true pain points in the industry that fintechs may be able to help solve?


Democratization

One major theme in wealth management is democratization. For generations, wealth management has been the province of, to put it bluntly, the wealthy. Services were often expensive and opaque for the growing number of upper-middle class and middle-class investors of the 1980s and 1990s.

There is still a healthy market for high net worth investors, of course. But we have seen a major trend toward leveraging technology to make some wealth management services that were previously available only to the elites accessible to investors of lesser means.

There is also another way of looking at democratization in wealth management. In the same way that technology is enabling average investors to access increasingly sophisticated wealth management services, so is technology making it possible for smaller providers to compete with larger wealth management rivals. Fintechs that can help smaller firms and family offices do more with less may find significant opportunities among the growing group of wealth management entrepreneurs.

Personalization

Personalization has increasingly been seen as table stakes in financial services, and with good reason. Whether you are involved in payments or lending or ecommerce, the ability to get relevant products and services in front of your customers is paramount. Not just knowing what customers might want but also being able to deliver is what separates those businesses that gain new customers and keep the ones they’ve got, from those who struggle to do so.

Fintechs can enhance the customer experience by, for example, ensuring that wealth managers can communicate with clients in their channels of choice – and are able to bring significant functionality to those interactions in those channels with video or co-browsing. Knowing which customers are more likely to respond positively to new or alternative investment strategies, for example, or to other complementary products or services can go a long way toward building better engagement and loyalty.

Operations

One of the less flashy areas where fintech technologies can help drive innovation in wealth management is in back-office operations. This is also where enabling technologies like artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning are delivering Automation 2.0 to intelligently streamline manual tasks and complex procedures. This trend, which has brought speed, accuracy, and cost-cutting to industries throughout financial services, is one that will benefit wealth management service providers significantly.

Moreover, many of the other trends in wealth management – such as the challenges of managing (and securing) ever-growing volumes of data, keeping up with evolving regulatory changes – are made possible by operations teams that have these powerful, enabling technologies at their disposal. For wealth management service providers who are not yet maximizing their teams or these technologies, fintechs can help them close the gap.

Decisioning

From buy-and-sell decisions to strategic portfolio allocations, wealth management is about making good, consistent decisions. Not only do wealth management service providers constantly seek to improve their investing strategies – one area where fintechs can provide specific expertise – but also these firms need to think about more than just maximizing returns. Keeping portfolio volatility at an acceptable level based on the risk tolerance and profile of the individual investor is just one example of another important function of the successful wealth manager.

Making good decisions is also about accountability. Having systems in place that ensure that processes are explainable and auditable is critical to accountability. It is also vital to an institution’s ability to learn, adapt, grow, and improve.

Compliance

Keeping up with the latest regulations is important for all financial service providers – and wealth management companies are no different.

As mentioned previously, one of the biggest benefits of enabling technologies like machine learning, AI, and Automation 2.0 is the ability for firms to track regulatory changes and ensure that their operations are able to meet new standards. An article earlier this year in Financial Planning listed 10 separate regulatory issues that wealth management firms are likely to face this year, from regulations on marketing language to rules governing digital assets. Moreover, many wealth management firms have internal rules and mandates based on the type of investments they offer and to whom. As such, remaining compliant with an institution’s own governing policies is also a challenge for which regtechs in our industry can provide assistance.

Growth

One of the most exciting ways that fintechs can bring innovation to wealth management services providers is to enable them to grow and expand their businesses by offering services that, while complementary, could be difficult to offer (much less integrate) without technology partners.

Whether through APIs or embedded finance, there are a range of complementary services that fintechs can provide to wealth managers. From insurance to estate planning to secure document digitization and storage, fintechs are able to provide services that wealth management customers often need, but are inclined to get elsewhere. By adding these solutions and services to their product mix, wealth managers can dramatically increase their capacity to grow.


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EarnUp Launches AI Advisor to Automate Financial Wellness

EarnUp Launches AI Advisor to Automate Financial Wellness
  • EarnUp is launching AI Advisor, an AI-powered chatbot to help banks promote financial wellness among their consumers.
  • AI Advisor accesses and instantly analyzes a user’s real-time banking and credit data to offer personalized, actionable answers to their financial questions.
  • By working with the consumer to help them improve their financial situation, AI Advisor can help banks build and maintain existing customer relationships.

Debt pay down platform EarnUp announced the launch of its AI-powered financial wellness tool, AI Advisor, today. The new solution will help financial institutions offer their consumers personalized financial guidance.

AI Advisor is a chatbot that offers users hyper-personalized insights and guidance to help them make informed financial decisions to ultimately achieve their goals. It does this by accessing and instantly analyzing the user’s real-time banking and credit data to offer personalized, actionable answers to their financial questions regarding HELOCs, cards, consolidation loans, and more. By combining a user’s current financial situation with their questions, AI Advisor is also able to offer tailored product recommendations.

Using an approachable chatbot as the communication engine, EarnUp seeks to ensure that every user, regardless of their financial background, benefits from its advice to power a more financially resilient future.

“In today’s competitive landscape, banks must leverage AI to deliver real value to customers,” said KeyBank Chief Financial Officer Clark Khayat. “EarnUp’s AI Advisor goes beyond traditional budget-tracking apps by analyzing financial accounts and providing personalized, actionable insights. This empowers financial institutions to engage in more meaningful interactions, ensuring customers receive the guidance they need to achieve their financial goals.”

Using AI Advisor, banks may be able to retain borrowers, cross-sell loans and other products, capture deposits, and close more loans. That’s because banks can use AI Advisor as a tool to advise consumers on how to improve their financial situation so that they are ready to take out a loan or apply for a credit card. By working with the consumer instead of rejecting them outright, banks will also build relationships with them.

“Our mission is to democratize access to actionable information that will improve financial wellness,” said EarnUp Co-Founder and CEO Nadim Homsany. “This is especially critical as interest rates remain high and borrower debt repayment capacity diminishes. In fact, a recent Bankrate survey found that over half of applicants have been denied for a loan or credit since the Fed began raising rates.”

Since it was founded in 2015, EarnUp has helped nearly three million borrowers reach financial freedom. The company views its AI Advisor tool as a next step to assist individuals in achieving their financial goals.


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ThetaRay Acquires Screena to Enhance its Financial Crime Detection Platform

ThetaRay Acquires Screena to Enhance its Financial Crime Detection Platform
  • Financial crime detection technology company, ThetaRay, has acquired screening specialist, Screena.
  • Terms of the acquisition were not disclosed, but the companies have been partners since the spring of 2022.
  • ThetaRay made its Finovate debut at FinovateFall 2015.

AI-powered financial crime detection technology company, ThetaRay, has acquired European screening company, Screena. Terms of the transaction were not disclosed.

Screena specializes in screening individuals, companies, and other entities against sanctioned party lists. The company’s APIs support syntactic, phonetic, and semantic matching, as well as multicultural recognition services. Each of these technologies is valuable at a time when more companies and financial institutions are taking advantage of opportunities in cross-border payments and trade.

From navigating spelling differences and out-of-order components to comprehending multiple alphabets including Arabic, Cyrillic, Chinese, and Thai, Screena has a near 100% true detection rate and screens 500+ transactions per second in live conditions. Founded in 2020 and headquartered in Luxembourg, Screena helps financial institutions identify bad actors who may be engaged in activities ranging from money laundering to drug trafficking to terrorist financing.

Screena CEO Cédric Iggiotti said that the integration with ThetaRay was a “game-changer” for the company. “For too long, screening was siloed from other critical financial crime detection tools,” Iggiotti said. “Our partnership with ThetaRay not only meets stringent regulatory demands but also significantly enhances our crime detection capabilities, as evidenced by our recent successes with major financial institutions.”

ThetaRay and Screena have been partners since the spring of 2022, when ThetaRay chose the startup as its screening solutions partner. In a statement on this week’s acquisition, ThetaRay CEO Peter Reynolds spoke of the company’s “mission to power the global fight against financial crime” through the use of AI-enabled technologies. He added that the acquisition “furthers our commitment to delivering an end-to-end platform that enables banks, fintechs, and regulators to effectively identify financial crime – vital capabilities to grow and operate a financial institution today.”

Israel-based ThetaRay made its Finovate debut at FinovateFall in 2015. Today, the company has more than one billion users, enables more than 11 billion in trusted transactions a year, and monitors more than $15 trillion in transactions annually. The company’s signature offerings include its transaction monitoring and screening solution, SONAR, as well as its Customer Risk Assessment (CRA) product unveiled earlier this year.

Reynolds was named CEO of the company last summer. He succeeds Mark Gazit, who had been ThetaRay’s CEO for more than 11 years.


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Vantage Bank Taps Cable for Embedded Banking Compliance

Vantage Bank Taps Cable for Embedded Banking Compliance

Texas-based Vantage Bank announced this week it has tapped financial risk control platform Cable to facilitate the bank’s compliance and risk management program.

This partnership comes as Vantage Bank seeks to grow its fintech program and partnerships in today’s tightened regulatory environment. In recent years, there have been multiple banks offering embedded banking that have faced regulatory action over their offerings.

Given this heightened oversight, Vantage Bank has enhanced its compliance program by engaging with embedded banking experts to ensure it meets current standards. The bank said that it chose Cable because it offered an all-in-one tool to help firms keep up with evolving regulatory requirements in the U.S.

“Embedded Banking is under intense scrutiny from regulators,” said Cable CEO Natasha Vernier. “Vantage Bank is incredibly smart to get ahead of that scrutiny by building a best-in-class compliance program right at the outset. We are delighted that they chose Cable as part of that program, and we are excited to work with them and learn from them over the coming years.”

U.K.-based Cable was founded in 2020 to offer a financial risk control platform with automated effectiveness testing and real-time alerts that help clients manage, track, and have full oversight of the controls. The company’s initial value proposition was to help firms manage financial crime. Since then, Cable has doubled down on helping partner banks, including Axiom Bank, Quaint Oak Bank, and Griffin, manage their fintech programs. Last November, Cable unveiled Transaction Assurance, a new tool to automate effectiveness testing and ensure that all transactions are monitored and tested for potential regulatory breaches or control failures.

“Vantage believes there is tremendous opportunity to grow and diversify our customer base by leveraging embedded banking,” said Vantage Bank President and CEO Jeff Sinnott. “This opportunity requires that we have a robust risk management program and strong controls to ensure regulatory compliance. Vantage Bank believes Cable is the best platform to help manage our risk and compliance for our embedded banking program.”

Vernier, along with Cable’s Sales Lead Julian Brophy, demoed the company’s technology at FinovateFall 2022 in New York. The company started the year by launching a new integration option with identity risk management platform Alloy. The move allows Cable to seamlessly retrieve essential data from Alloy that feeds into Cable’s effectiveness testing checks.


Photo by Markus Winkler

CrowdStrike, AT&T, and the Role of Resiliency in Banking

CrowdStrike, AT&T, and the Role of Resiliency in Banking

This morning CrowdStrike CEO George Kurtz reported that 97% of the Windows sensors knocked out during CrowdStrike’s botched software update a little over a week ago are back online. That’s great news for those companies still reeling from one of the biggest IT outages in history.

When it comes to cybersecurity companies, CrowdStrike is widely considered to be a belle of the ball. Here’s wealth manager Josh Brown, a shareholder in the company since 2020, bringing the roses less than a year ago:

You can talk as much about cloud and mobile and social and machine learning and distributed computing and generative AI as you’d like, if you can’t secure your data and provide safe access to users, you have nothing. Literally ….

Spending on top-of-the-line security solutions has now been enshrined into securities law, in addition to all the other reasons to take this stuff seriously, such as not getting sued into the stone age by your customers or forced to make Bitcoin ransom payments to international cyber terrorists ….

As a business manager, you would cut IT spending on literally anything else first. A small handful of publicly traded companies have what I consider to be a massive runway ahead of them. CrowdStrike is aiming to become the Salesforce of the industry.

To recap: Friday morning, July 19, a bug in a CrowdStrike software update resulted in major IT outages that grounded flights and brought chaos to banks and other businesses around the world.

“CrowdStrike is actively working with customers impacted by a defect found in a single content update for Windows hosts,” CrowdStrike’s Kurtz wrote on the social media platform X the morning afterward. “Mac and Linux hosts are not impacted. This is not a security incident or cyberattack. The issue has been identified, isolated, and a fix has been deployed.”

As we learn more about exactly what happened, is there a particular insight here for banks, fintechs and financial services companies? At a time of heightened concern over third-party risk in our industry, the CrowdStrike outage is yet another reminder of the importance of not only choosing technology partners carefully, but also of ensuring resiliency in the event of an issue with a partner.

The latter is especially pertinent here. Many of the challenges and controversies with regard to third-party risk management in financial services involve the latter, vetting issue, primarily. A signature example is the case of Synapse, the fintech whose allegedly improper handling of customer funds led to more than 200,000 users losing access to their money and numerous disputes with banking partners. CrowdStrike is being accused of no such malfeasance and will, in all likelihood, remain a major player in the cybersecurity industry, with its reputation scratched perhaps but probably not scarred.

That leaves us with resiliency. In banking, the definition of resiliency has expanded significantly in recent years. From the failures of the banking crisis to the strains of the COVID-19 pandemic and accompanying economic slowdown a little over a decade later, banks have dealt with major challenges to both financial and operational resiliency.

The CrowdStrike outage represented a different type of disruption, and one that may be less amenable to the solutions that have ensured bank resiliency in the past (i.e., leadership, talent, and technology). Given many of the common complaints when technology disappoints, it’s worth wondering if we should look at ourselves, not just our institutions, for greater “resiliency.”

To this end, compare the CrowdStrike outage to the AT&T breach this spring. Unlike with CrowdStrike, AT&T reported that “AT&T data-specific fields were contained in a data set released on the dark web.” The breach did not allegedly have “a material impact on AT&T operations.” But it did represent the kind of security challenge that cybersecurity companies are built to prevent, and that banks and financial services companies need to be prepared for. When I read “released on the dark web,” I thought of Finovate Best of Show winner SpyCloud, the Austin, Texas-based cybersecurity company that specializes in retrieving stolen credentials from the dark web.

And it appears as if more and more banks and financial institutions are getting the message. In the past few years, companies like Corsound AI (FinovateEurope 2024 Best of Show winner) to 1Kosmos (FinovateSpring 2023 Best of Show winner) have stood out among fellow fintechs for their innovations in everything from deepfake detection to passwordless authentication. As FinovateFall 2024 draws near, it will be interesting to see what innovations the current crop of cybersecurity specialists bring to the current challenges faced by banks and financial services companies alike.

For more insights on the CrowdStrike outage and its potential implications for financial services, check out 4 Implications of CrowdStrike’s Faulty Software Update by Finovate Senior Research Analyst Julie Muhn.


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Stripe Acquires Lemon Squeezy for Undisclosed Amount

Stripe Acquires Lemon Squeezy for Undisclosed Amount
  • Stripe is acquiring merchant of record service company Lemon Squeezy.
  • Financial terms of the deal were undisclosed.
  • Lemon Squeezy will help Stripe add merchant of record capabilities, which will help it differentiate itself and may help attract a more global client base.

Financial infrastructure company Stripe is adding to its expertise this week with the acquisition of merchant of record (MoR) service company Lemon Squeezy. Terms of the deal were not disclosed.

Lemon Squeezy was founded in 2020 to help companies selling digital products globally with its subscription billing plans, payments tools, online storefront builder, checkout overlays, and more. The fintech, which has been processing payments on Stripe since it was founded, serves as an MoR. This means that it takes on responsibilities pertaining to processing cross-border customer transactions. MoR responsibilities can include payment processing, risk management, legal and financial responsibility, tax compliance, customer service and support, and fraud prevention.

Today’s buy marks Stripe’s 16th acquisition since it was founded in 2010. Stripe’s payment products serve companies of varying sizes in a range of industries. The San Francisco-based company’s offerings include online and in-person payment acceptance tools, embedded payments tools such as virtual card issuance, and revenue and finance automation tools such as billing, invoicing, and tax automation.

“It’s no secret that we (like many) have always admired Stripe,” said Lemon Squeezy CEO and Co-founder JR Farr. “When we began discussions about a potential acquisition, it was immediately apparent that our values and mission were perfectly aligned. Lemon Squeezy and Stripe share a deep love for our customers and a commitment to making selling effortless. Now imagine combining everything you love about Lemon Squeezy and Stripe — we believe it’s a match made in heaven.”

Looking ahead, Lemon Squeezy will continue to serve its customer base with its existing MoR services. The only difference is that, going forward, it will do so having the backing of Stripe.

For Stripe, adding MoR services will help it provide a more comprehensive suite of financial solutions. This may attract businesses looking for an all-in-one platform to handle not just payment processing, but also compliance, tax, and customer support. The addition may also help Stripe differentiate it in the crowded market of payment processors, including Square, Adyen, and PayPal. That’s because the MoR capabilities will help businesses seeking global expansion overcome regulatory and tax hurdles by managing complexities including local tax collection and remittance, currency conversion, and regulatory compliance.


Photo by Gustavo Fring

10x Banking Unveils “Meta Core” Platform to Accelerate Digital Transformations for Bank

10x Banking Unveils “Meta Core” Platform to Accelerate Digital Transformations for Bank
  • Core banking platform 10x Banking released its first “meta core” platform for banks.
  • 10x Banking’s meta core will enable banks and financial services companies to accelerate their digital transformations.
  • 10x Banking won Best of Show in its Finovate debut at FinovateEurope 2023.

Cloud-native core banking platform 10x Banking launched a new category of core banking technology today. The company’s new “meta core” is designed to help banks and financial services companies accelerate their digital transformations.

“From my experience, running a bank is all about managing risks, and we’ve designed our meta core to specifically remove the key risks that banks face when upgrading their core,” 10x Banking Founder and CEO Antony Jenkins said. “10x Banking is the first company in the world to offer a ‘meta core,’ which for the first time gives banks a clear roadmap to full transformation.”

10x Banking’s meta core enables banks and system integrators to focus development efforts exclusively on high-value code. By abstracting away common product elements, including the core ledger, the new platform empowers banks to create and maintain as little as 2,000 lines of code for a single customized banking product. This represents a reduction of up to 10x in code base compared to neo-code platforms. The difference is even bigger compared to legacy cores, where the reduction in code base can be as high as 10,000x.

Key to these efficiency gains is the firm’s development tool ProductKit, which is built on 10x Banking’s SuperCore technology. ProductKit features a set of pre-built modules which abstract away the complexity that comes with building deposit and lending products for retail, SME, and corporate banking customers. The platform also puts a premium on the developer experience. Developers can fully customize all of the pre-built modules at every level using any coding language. This helps teams quickly create highly customized banking solutions and experiences without excessive costs or extensive development resources.

“The ‘meta core’ provides banks with the best of all worlds,” Jenkins added, “flexibility on the one hand and unlimited scalability on the other hand. The benefits are much faster speed to market, enterprise-grade security, the ability to unlock data for AI, and a lower cost base.”

London-based 10x Banking won Best of Show in its Finovate debut at FinovateEurope 2023. At the event, 10x Banking demoed its 10x SuperCore Cards solution, which enables banks to build a card proposition in minutes using its 10x Bank Manager interface. The technology empowers financial institutions to build and launch enterprise-grade, full stack functional card business solutions in as little as 12 weeks.

10x Banking began the year securing a $45 million investment in a round led by existing investors BlackRock and J.P. Morgan. The funding took the company’s total equity capital to $297 million, according to Crunchbase. Also in January, 10x Banking announced a partnership with mortgage origination platform Mast, enabling real-time connectivity between the two systems. 10x Banking includes challenger bank Chase UK, Westpac, and Old Mutual, the second largest financial services company in Africa, among its customers.


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Fintech Rundown: A Rapid Review of Weekly News

Fintech Rundown: A Rapid Review of Weekly News

As we enter into the last few days of July, there’s a lot to think about. The days are slowly getting shorter, but the list of tasks needed to complete 2024 objectives by the end of the year isn’t shrinking. Fintech news is set to pick up its pace as summer slows down, and we’ll be here to cover it. Stay tuned throughout the week to read the latest news this week as we post updates and evolutions.

Payments

Marqeta becomes certified to enable Visa flexible credential.

Billie integrates with Stripe, making the B2B BNPL solution available in Europe.

Spendbase partners with Thredd to shake up subscription management in the U.S.

AppBrilliance brings real-time payments to digital wallets with RTP and FedNow.

Crypto and DeFi

Ledger launches Ledger Flex, a mid-range hardware crypto wallet.

Metallicus, core developer of foundational Layer 0 blockchain, Metal Blockchain, welcomes KeyPoint Credit Union to its Banking Innovation Program.

Small business finance

Sage partners with Stripe to help SMBs control their cashflow.

Rillet raises $13.5 million to automate accounting.

Insurtech

iPipeline introduces former Microsoft executive Steve Cover as Chief Technology Officer.

Open banking

Salt Edge forges partnership with Lithuanian paytech SDK.finance.

Cybersecurity

AI-powered fraud prevention and AML platform Hawk announces a further extension of its Series B funding round.

Cybercrime analytics company and Finovate Best of Show winner SpyCloud adds Consumers’ Risk Module to its Check Your Exposure tool for banks and financial institutions.

Regtech and compliance

Intelligent automation and compliance solutions provider Kompliant announces strategic partnership with the Equifax Digital Solutions team.


Photo by Andrea Piacquadio