Stripe Becomes a Digital Credit Card Issuer
August 8, 2018
Stripe has recently started offering a new API, or programming feature, that allows its merchants to offer physical or virtual credit cards to their employees. The product, called “Issuing,” is still being tested and is currently by invitation only, although it does appear as an offering on the company’s website. Merchants can request an invitation.
According to the website, creating a card is an easy three step process that involves providing identifying information about the cardholder, then literally creating the card (physical or virtual) and finally, activating it. Physical cards can be shipped either to the merchant or the cardholder, while virtual cards are available to use immediately.
The merchant can manage cards by creating restrictions, like maximum purchase amounts, charges can be disputed, and physical cards can have customizable designs, just like cards issued from a bank. However, Stripe is not a bank. Stripe did not respond in time for this story, but it is likely that the company has partnerships with companies that can underwrite and offer lines of credit to their customers. On the Stripe website, it indicates three of its financing partners: Funding Circle, Iwoca and Clearbanc.
Stripe is a payment platform that facilitates online payments. The company takes 2.9% plus 30 cents of every successful charge a merchant makes. Stripe customers are small business owners, but also include giant companies like Facebook and Target. Founded in 2011 by brothers John and Patrick Collison, Stripe is headquartered in San Francisco. It also has offices in Dublin, London, Paris, Singapore and Tokyo, and it employs more than 1,100 people.
LendItFintech In Photos and Sound Bites
April 10, 2018
when speaking about the increase in mortality rate for people who have faced major financial distress

when interviewed on stage by Bloomberg’s Selina Wang

when interviewed by Jo Ann Barefoot

When asked by Bloomberg Technology reporter Emily Chang if Goldman Sachs would be considered a competitor

when interviewed by Lendio’s Brock Blake

When asked who will win the race for marketshare
When asked if it’s harder to underwrite loans above $50,000

talks business at the company booth

Below: Ocrolus account executive John Lowenthal stands in front of the company booth





2017 Small Business Financing Leaderboard
March 14, 2018Thanks to several companies filing their annual earnings statements and Funding Circle disclosing their USA origination figures for 2017, we’ve been able to put together a leaderboard in the small business financing space. This list is not comprehensive and omits key players like PayPal Working Capital and Amazon Lending.
| Company Name | 2017 Originations | 2016 | 2015 | 2014 |
| OnDeck | $2,114,663,000 | $2,400,000,000 | $1,900,000,000 | $1,200,000,000 |
| Kabbage | $1,500,000,000 | $1,220,000,000 | $900,000,000 | $350,000,000 |
| Square Capital | $1,177,000,000 | $798,000,000 | $400,000,000 | $100,000,000 |
| Yellowstone Capital | $553,000,000 | $460,000,000 | $422,000,000 | $290,000,000 |
| Funding Circle (USA only) | $500,000,000 | |||
| BlueVine | $500,000,000* | $200,000,000* | ||
| National Funding | $427,000,000 | $350,000,000 | $293,000,000 | |
| Strategic Funding | $393,000,000 | $375,000,000 | $375,000,000 | $280,000,000 |
| BFS Capital | $300,000,000 | $300,000,000 | ||
| RapidAdvance | $260,000,000 | $280,000,000 | $195,000,000 | |
| Credibly | $180,000,000 | $150,000,000 | $95,000,000 | $55,000,000 |
| Shopify | $140,000,000 | |||
| Forward Financing | $125,000,000 | |||
| IOU Financial | $91,300,000 | $107,600,000 | $146,400,000 | $100,000,000 |
*Asterisks signify that the figure is the editor’s estimate
Fintech Was Back on Capitol Hill
February 1, 2018A House financial services subcommittee hearing this past Tuesday put fintech and online lending back in the spotlight. The most notable witness that testified was Nat Hoopes, Executive Director of the Marketplace Lending Association (MLA). The MLA represents companies like Lending Club, Prosper, Funding Circle, Avant, Marlette Funding, Affirm, CommonBond, Upstart, PeerStreet, and StreetShares.
Hoopes testified that “this industry is effectively serving the broad American ‘middle class’ that remains our engine for economic growth and prosperity.” He also cited data from dv01. “More than one million unsecured marketplace personal loans were issued last year – with an average loan balance of approximately $14,000 and a term of greater than 4 years – far from being a small dollar, short term loan,” he said. “[Marketplace Lending Platforms] offering consumer loans do so at an average of 14.7% APR and 100% of the loans are below the 36% APR threshold.”
Prof. Adam J. Levitin, a Georgetown University Law Professor, played the role of fintech skeptic and called for state and federal regulation to address what he believed were lingering issues.
“What is new about fintechs is that they are nonbank financial companies with ready ability to acquire consumers because of the Internet,” Levitin testified. “This means that despite the regular use of buzzwords like ‘transformative’ and ‘disruptive’ in discussions about fintechs, there really isn’t anything particularly transformative or disruptive about them.
You can watch a recording of the full hearing below:
Click the links to view the testimonies of the following witnesses
- Mr. Nathaniel Hoopes, Executive Director, Marketplace Lending Association (TTF)
- Mr. Brian Knight, Director, Program on Financial Regulation and Senior Research Fellow, Mercatus Center, George Mason University (TTF)
- Mr. Brian Peters, Executive Director, Financial Innovation Now (TTF)
- Mr. Andrew Smith, Partner, Covington and Burling, LLP (TTF)
- Prof. Adam J. Levitin, Professor of Law, Georgetown University Law Center (TTF)
Technology Drives Changes in CRE Lending Space
December 21, 2017
Online technology, which paved new paths for consumer and small business lending, is making similar inroads with the commercial real estate industry.
Over the last few years, several online marketplaces have been established to try and match commercial real estate borrowers with lenders quickly and efficiently using technology. In the past, commercial real estate lending depended heavily on having local connections, but online platforms are blurring these lines—making geographical borders less relevant and opening doors for new types of lenders to establish themselves.
While banks remain the largest source of commercial real estate mortgage financing, non–bank players—including credit unions, private capital lenders, accredited and non–accredited investors, hedge funds, insurance companies and lending arms of brokerage firms—have become more formidable opponents in recent years. Online platforms offer even more opportunity for these alternative players to gain a competitive edge.
At present, most of these commercial real estate marketplaces are purely intermediaries—they’re matching borrowers and investors, not actually doing the lending. Certainly, it’s an easier business model to develop than a direct lending one, but things could change over time, as borrowers become more comfortable with the online model and develop confidence that these platforms can perform, industry participants say.
“You have to be viewed as credible with a certainty of funding for borrowers to come to you. You can’t just put up a flag and say ‘Hey we’re making loans’ because borrowers won’t trust you and they won’t have the confidence that the loan is going to close,” says Evan Gentry, founder and chief executive of Money360, one of the few online direct lenders in this space. “However, once you develop a reputation of strong performance, the tide turns very quickly and that confidence is established,” he says.
For now, however, many of the marketplaces say they are content to remain intermediaries and offer business opportunities to lenders instead of competing with them. The sheer size of the market— commercial/multifamily debt outstanding rose to $3.01 trillion at the end of the first quarter, according to data from the Mortgage Bankers Association—and the fact that is an enormously diverse industry with no plain vanilla product makes it more likely that several platforms can co–exist without completely cannibalizing each other’s business, observers say.
Each of the online marketplaces has a different business and pricing model. Some marketplaces focus on small loans, while some have larger minimums; some focus on just debt; some focus on a mixture of equity and debt. Some sites cater to institutional lenders and accredited investors to help fund loans. Other sites invite non–accredited investors who meet certain criteria to participate in loans, opening doors to a segment of the population which previously had minimal access to commercial real estate deals. While the sites differ in their approach, the upshot is clear: banks—while still formidable competitors in commercial real estate lending—are no longer the only game in town for funding these deals.
The struggle for lenders is how to work most effectively with these marketplaces. “If you can acquire customers through only your own channels, then of course you’re going to do that,” says David Snitkof, chief analytics officer at Orchard Platform, which provides data, technology and software to the online lending industry. Otherwise, these marketplaces present a viable opportunity to expand distribution, he says.
GROWTH OPPORTUNITIES ABOUND
The surge of new companies acting as marketplaces between borrowers and lenders of all kinds comes as the commercial real estate industry is finally coming up to speed with respect to technology. The commercial real estate business has been static for decades in terms of how loans are processed and originated, according to industry participants.
“The use of technology is going to be an enormous disrupting force in that space,” says Mitch Ginsberg, co–founder and chief executive of CommLoan, one of the newer marketplaces for commercial real estate lending. Commercial real estate lending is “probably one of the last industries that hasn’t been touched by technology, and it’s ripe for massive disruption,” he says.
CommLoan of Scottsdale, Ariz., was founded in 2014, but the marketplace has only been fully operational since 2016. The platform targets borrowers seeking $1 million to $25 million of capital for all types of commercial real estate loans. It works with more than 440 lenders—including banks, credit unions, commercial mortgage companies, private money lenders and Wall Street firms. Altogether, CommLoan says it has processed more than $680 million in commercial transactions.
Online marketplaces can help make the commercial real estate industry more efficient and transparent, says Yulia Yaani, co-founder and chief executive of RealAtom of Arlington, Va., another new online commercial real estate marketplace. “People are tired of paying huge fees as a result of the market being so opaque,” she says.
RealAtom began operating in 2016 and targets borrowers who are seeking commercial real estate loans from $1 million to $70 million. The lenders on the platform include banks, alternative lenders, insurance companies, pension funds, hedge funds and hard money lenders. The company processed $468 million in commercial loans in its first 11 months of operating, according to Yaani.
Another benefit of online marketplaces is that they “create a liquid, national marketplace where lenders all across the U.S. can bid on a borrower’s business,” says Ely Razin, chief executive of commercial real estate data company CrediFi, which operates the upstart CredifX marketplace. Historically people who own commercial real estate have only been able to get financing through a local relationship with a bank or broker. “For borrowers, this means more certainty of obtaining a loan and optimized capital not limited by the relationship with the local lender,” he says.
CredifX started operating earlier this year to match commercial real estate borrowers, brokers and lenders including banks, finance companies, mortgage companies, hard money and bridge lenders. The platform is for loans of $1 million to $20 million across all major property types in the commercial space. It matches borrowers with appropriate lenders using the information that parent company CrediFi collects and analyzes. The company declined to disclose how much it has processed in commercial transactions.
To be sure, it’s hard to say how the marketplace model will evolve over time and which players will withstand the test of time. Certainly a similar model has faced challenges on the consumer and small business lending side.
“I think the pure marketplace will become more rare as time goes on,” says Peter Renton, founder of Lend Academy, an educational resource for the P2P lending industry. “There are examples of successful companies with a pure marketplace, but they are rare and difficult to scale. The only well-established company that seems completely wedded to the pure marketplace is Funding Circle; pretty much all other companies have switched to a hybrid model of some sort,” he says.
Commercial vs Residential
While much of the recent growth has been within commercial real estate, there are also some marketplaces that cater to residential borrowers or offer a mix of commercial and residential opportunities.
Magilla Loans, for instance, started out in 2016 as a solely commercial marketplace, but expanded outside this silo because customers were asking for residential and other types of loans, says Dean Sioukas, the company’s founder. The company now connects borrowers with lenders for a whole host of loan types—commercial, residential and others like franchise loans and equipment loans. Lenders on the platform include roughly 130 banks, mortgage loan originators, accredited investors, credit unions and online non-depository institutions. The average loan size is $1.4M for business loans and $500K for home loans. Nearly $4 billion in loans has been channeled through the platform since January 2016; of that 70 percent is tied to commercial real estate, according to the company.
While there are marketplaces that focus on residential mortgage lending, some industry participants say that side of the business isn’t as appealing to new online entrants in part because the cost to acquire customers is really high and there are more challenges to working on a national scale.

“It may not be that commercial is more attractive. It may just be easier. Going directly to borrowers in the residential space has proven harder than many companies expected,” says Brett Crosby, co-founder and chief operating officer of PeerStreet, a marketplace for accredited investors to invest in high-quality private real estate backed loans. Experience seems to suggest that for residential mortgage origination, “it’s much better to have a good ground game and know your local market,” he says.
To be sure, as the online market for real estate matures, it’s not so surprising that companies would shift business models to find their own sweet spot. RealtyMogul.com is one example of a company that has morphed over time. The online platform began operating in 2013 in both the residential and commercial space, but has since moved away from the residential business. Accredited investors, non-accredited investors and institutions can use the platform to find equity or debt-based commercial real estate investment opportunities, and borrowers can apply for private hard money loans, bridge loans and permanent loans.
Money360 is another example of a company that has shifted gears. It started out as a pure marketplace, but changed its business model to become a lending platform in 2014. Now the online direct lender in Ladera Ranch, Calif., provides small-to mid-balance commercial real estate loans ranging from $1 million to $20 million. It’s one of the only companies targeting the commercial real estate space in this way and has closed nearly $500 million in total loans since 2014.
Gentry, the company’s founder, says he would expect to see more industrywide changes as the online commercial real estate business continues to evolve. The key to success, he says, is executing well and “knowing when to pivot when you realize something’s not working just right.”
Ultimately, Gentry predicts more online lenders will target the commercial real estate space. He says technology-based alternative lenders have an advantage because they can operate more quickly and efficiently while still being very competitive from a pricing perspective.
“You put all those things together (speed, efficiency and competitive pricing) and that’s what borrowers are looking for,” Gentry says.
Originations Since Inception
December 8, 2017After several company announcements recently, we’ve compiled a milestone chart to plot where they rank. Originations may indicate business loans or MCAs funded on balance sheet, brokered, or placed through a marketplace. These rankings are a work in progress. This chart may not include companies for which public data is not available. If you’d like your figures to be listed here, e-mail sean@debanked.com.
| Company | Origination Volume Since Inception | Year Founded |
| OnDeck | $8 Billion | 2007 |
| Kabbage | $4 Billion | 2009 |
| Yellowstone Capital | $2 Billion | 2009 |
| BFS Capital | $1.7 Billion | 2002 |
| Funding Circle | $1 Billion (US only) | 2010 |
| IOU Financial | $500 Million | |
| Lending Club | $500 Million (SMB loans only) | 2006 |
| SmartBiz Loans | > $500 Million (SBA loans) | 2009 |
| Lendio | > $500 Milllion | |
| Forward Financing | $275 Million | 2012 |
| Blue Bridge Financial | $200 Million | 2009 |
The Top Small Business Funders By Revenue
October 23, 2017The below chart ranks several companies in the non-bank small business financing space by revenue over the last 5 years. The data is primarily drawn from reports submitted to the Inc. 5000 list, public earnings statements, or published media reports. It is not comprehensive. Companies for which no data is publicly available are excluded.
| Company | 2016 | 2015 | 2014 | 2013 | 2012 |
| Square1 | $1,708,721,000 | $1,267,118,000 | $850,192,000 | $552,433,000 | $203,449,000 |
| OnDeck2 | $291,300,000 | $254,700,000 | $158,100,000 | $65,200,000 | $25,600,000 |
| Kabbage3 | $171,784,000 | $97,461,712 | $40,193,000 | ||
| Swift Capital4 | $88,600,000 | $51,400,000 | $27,540,900 | $11,703,500 | |
| National Funding | $75,693,096 | $59,075,878 | $39,048,959 | $26,707,000 | $18,643,813 |
| Reliant Funding5 | $51,946,472 | $11,294,044 | $9,723,924 | $5,968,009 | $2,096,324 |
| Fora Financial6 | $41,590,720 | $33,974,000 | $26,932,581 | $18,418,300 | |
| Forward Financing | $28,305,078 | ||||
| Gibraltar Business Capital | $15,984,688 | ||||
| Tax Guard | $9,886,365 | $8,197,755 | $5,142,739 | $4,354,787 | |
| United Capital Source | $8,465,260 | $3,917,193 | |||
| Blue Bridge Financial | $6,569,714 | $5,470,564 | |||
| Lighter Capital | $6,364,417 | $4,364,907 | |||
| Fast Capital 360 | $6,264,924 | ||||
| US Business Funding | $5,794,936 | ||||
| Cashbloom | $5,404,123 | $4,804,112 | $3,941,819 | $3,823,893 | $2,555,140 |
| Fund&Grow | $4,082,130 | ||||
| Nav | $2,663,344 | ||||
| Priority Funding Solutions | $2,599,931 | ||||
| StreetShares | $647,119 | $239,593 | |||
| CAN Capital7 | $213,402,616 | $269,852,762 | $215,503,978 | $151,606,959 | |
| Bizfi8 | $79,886,000 | $51,475,000 | $38,715,312 | ||
| Quick Bridge Funding | $48,856,909 | $44,603,626 | |||
| Funding Circle Holdings9 | $39,411,279 | $20,100,000 | $8,100,000 | ||
| Capify10 | $37,860,596 | $41,119,291 | |||
| Credibly11 | $26,265,198 | $14,603,213 | $7,013,359 | ||
| Envision Capital Group | $21,034,113 | $19,432,205 | $12,071,976 | $11,173,853 | |
| Capital Advance Solutions | $4,856,377 | ||||
| Channel Partners Capital | $2,207,927 | $4,013,608 | $3,673,990 | $2,208,488 | |
| Bankers Healthcare Group | $93,825,129 | $61,332,289 | |||
| Strada Capital | $8,765,600 | ||||
| Direct Capital | $432,780,164 | $329,350,716 | |||
| Snap Advances | $21,946,000 | ||||
| American Finance Solutions12 | $5,871,832 | $6,359,078 | |||
| The Business Backer13 | $19,593,171 | $11,205,755 | $9,615,062 |
1Square (SQ) went public in 2015
2OnDeck (ONDK) went public in 2014
3Kabbage received a $1.25B+ private market valuation in August 2017
4Swift Capital was acquired by PayPal (PYPL) in August 2017
5Reliant Funding was acquired by a PE firm in 2014
6Fora Financial was acquired by a PE firm in 2015
7CAN Capital ceased funding operations in December 2016 but resumed in July 2017
8Bizfi wound down in 2017. Credibly secured the servicing rights of their portfolio
9Funding Circle’s primary market is the UK
10Capify’s US operations were wound down in early 2017 and their operations were integrated with Strategic Funding Source. Capify’s international companies are still operating
11Credibly received a significant equity investment from a PE firm in 2015
12American Finance Solutions was acquired by Rapid Capital Funding in 2014, who was then immediately acquired by North American Bancard
13The Business Backer was acquired by Enova (ENVA) in 2015
Catching Up With Marketplace Lending – A Timeline
August 13, 20175/17 – Funding Circle surpassed Zopa in cumulative lending to become the UK’s biggest marketplace lender
5/18 – Breakout Capital announced appointment of Douglas J. Lanzo as EVP and General Counsel
5/22 – The New York State legislature held a joint hearing on online lending
5/25
- OnDeck had the maturity date of its $100M credit facility extended
- China Rapid Finance reported Q1 net revenue of $10.5M
- Prosper Marketplace closed $495 securitization transaction
- SoFi co-founder Dan Macklin announced his departure from the company
5/31 – IOU Financial reported Q1 results, had $1M loss on $4.3M in revenue and lent (CAD) $22.1M
6/2 – Zopa began allowing investors to sell loans that have previously been in arrears
New York State legislators proposed the formation of an online lending task force
6/6 – AltFinanceDaily and Bryant Park Capital published their Q1 confidence index in which industry CEOs scored their confidence in the continued success of the MCA and small business lending industry at 73.8%, the lowest level since the survey started in Q4 2015. It peaked at 91.7% in Q1 2016.
6/8 – Amazon surpassed $3 billion in loans made to small businesses since their lending program launched
6/9 – RealtyMogul announced that they had exited the residential fix-and-flip market
6/12 – The US Treasury published a report that called for the repeal of Section 1071 of Dodd Frank
6/13
- SoFi applied for a bank charter, specifically an Industrial Loan Company charter
- Lendio announced a pilot agreement with Comcast business
6/14 – Patch of Land expanded its debt facility from $10M to $30M
6/19 – Goldman Sachs’ online lender Marcus surpassed $1 billion in loans made since inception
6/20 – Former Lending Club CFO Carrie Dolan joined Metromile, an insurance company, as CFO LendingTree acquired MagnifyMoney
6/21 – Pearl Capital secured $15M in financing from Chatham Capital Management
6/27
- Square Capital announced that it will pilot a consumer loan program
- Former RapidAdvance CFO Rajesh Rao became the CFO at Beyond Finance, Inc.
6/29
- Funding Circle hired Joanna Karger as US Head of Capital Markets and Richard Stephenson as US Chief Compliance Officer
- Pave suspended lending operations
- Ron Suber, president of Prosper Marketplace, announced that he was stepping down from the company
- The SEC announced that all companies will now be able to submit draft IPO registrations confidentially, a perk previously only reserved for businesses designated as “emerging growth companies” under the JOBS Act.
6/30
- PayPal Holdings Inc announced that it had invested in LendUp
- Yellowstone Capital announced that they had funded $47 million to small businesses in the month of June
7/3 – Funding Circle announced that Sean Glithero had joined the company as its new global CFO
7/5 – Lending Club appointed Ken Denman to its Board of Directors
7/6
- CAN Capital announced that they had been recapitalized and were resuming funding operations
- Orchard Platform and Experian announced a strategic collaboration on data
7/7
- CFPB announced that it was extending the deadline of its small business lending RFI from July 14th to September 14th
7/10
- China Rapid Finance announced that they had made 20 million cumulative loans since inception
- CFPB announced new arbitration rule that effectively bans class action waivers from consumer finance contracts
- Former OnDeck VP of External Affairs and Associate General Counsel Daniel Gorfine, was appointed by the Consumer Future Trading Commission to be Director of LabCFTC and Chief and Innovation Officer
7/11
- dv01 and Upgrade (Former Lending Club CEO Renaud Laplanche’s new company) announced a strategic reporting partnership
- PayPal hired former Amazon executive Mark Britto to lead its lending business
- Fora Financial expanded its credit facility led by AloStar
See previous timelines:
4/6/17 – 5/16/17
2/17/17 – 4/5/17
12/16/16 – 2/16/17
9/27/16 – 12/16/16





























