Uber, the driving service, has launched a debit card product in Latin America, in conjunction with innovative bank, Bankaool; the continent as a whole demonstrates 1.1 mobile phone connections per capita, yet only 14% of the overall population has a traditional savings account; it's difficult to obtain a debit or credit card without being able to link it to a bank account with savings; Bankaool claims to be the first Mexican-based bank where you can fully open a bank account or obtain a card via an online application; Uber acknowledged that a payment card was essential for riders using its service. Source
Zopa launched a pilot with provide Uber drivers with low credit scores car loans; however the partnership didn’t attract the amount of customers it had hoped; Zopa stated in the FT article, “The pilot was interesting, but demonstrated that the potential opportunity was limited for us, and we had other priorities.”; Bryan Zhang, co-founder of the Cambridge Centre for Alternative Finance discusses one of the problems in the industry today, attracting borrowers . Source
Go-Jek is an Uber competitor and is now looking to lead in the payments sector in Indonesia; the company purchased offline payments service Kartuku, payment gateway Midtrans and a saving and lending firm called Mapan. Source
American Banker takes a look at 6 ways payments has become a prominent theme during the Super Bowl; pizza chains...
A new report by the Financial Stability Board (FSB) says big tech firms could reach scale very quickly in financial...
Uber has announced it will partner with Moneyfarm to provide financial advice services for its employees in the UK; Moneyfarm and Uber will offer the robo advice to approximately 40,000 UK drivers; speculators believe the UK market will see more robo advisory partnerships as the services have yet to gain significant market traction in comparison to other countries. Source
New apps allow workers of Uber, McDonalds and Bloomin Brands to spend the money they have earned in close to real time; the Instant Financial App for example notifies users each morning is they want to deposit about half of their previous days earnings on a debit card; workers use the app for free while businesses are charged a fee; the app has seen benefits and drawbacks, accessing earnings quickly has increased productivity but it also has the potential to reduce the chances of saving money. Source.
Ant Financial is looking to raise a new $5bn round that would take the company’s value north of $100bn; the FT reports that the new round might begin later this month; if the valuation is as much the company would be worth more than Uber who right now is worth about $68bn; the biggest reason behind such a lofty valuation is the data collected on users according to Thomas Olsen, partner at Bain consultancy. Source.
As financial services continues to become more digital there are a number of lessons they can take from leading companies...
The world is on fire with talk about Uber going public. First, let's talk about who makes money and when. It is becoming a truism that companies are going public much later in their vintage, and as a result, the capital that fuels their growth is private rather than public. The public markets are full of compliance costs, cash-flow oriented hedge fund managers, and passive index manufacturers -- not an environment for an Elon Musk-type to do their best work. Private markets, on the other hand, are generally more long term oriented with fewer protections for investors. This has a distributional impact. Private markets in the US are legally structured for the wealthy by definition and carve-out. As a retail investor, your just desserts are Betterment's index-led asset allocation. As an accredited investor, you get AngelList, SharePost and the rest. I am yet to see Uber on Crowdcube. Therefore, tech companies are generating inequality both through their functions (monopoly concentration through power laws, unemployment through automation), and their funding.