Create a free account, or log in

SocietyOne banks $15 million and gears up for a possible in IPO in 2020

Australian fintech SocietyOne has secured $15 million, and established a $100 million funding warehouse facility, as it gears up for a potential IPO.
SocietyOne
SocietyOne chief Mark Jones. Source: supplied.

Aussie peer-to-peer lending stalwart SocietyOne has secured $15 million in funding, and established a $100 million funding warehouse facility, as it rides the wave of a successful pivot and gears up for a potential initial public offering.

The funding comes from existing investors, and comes hand-in-hand with the warehouse facility, provided by NAB.

This news follows a period of growth for the fintech, after a slight change of strategy: in late 2018, the team โ€˜resetโ€™ the business, SocietyOne chief Mark Jones tells SmartCompany.

The ‘reset’ involved installing a new credit scorecard, giving the business the ability to assess potential customers more efficiently, and to offer better pricing to good existing customers.

The business also put in a new front-end system, improving customer experience, and launched a new broker distribution channel.

Before this, SocietyOne was processing $6 million to $7 million of loan originations each month. Now, itโ€™s tripled its volumes, says Jones.

Loan originations in 2019 reached more than $230 million, up 50% on the previous year. That equated to about $17 million in revenue for SocietyOne, an increase of 44% on 2018.

The business has just passed the milestone of $800 million in total loan originations.

โ€œWhen you grow quickly in a peer-to-peer business, you have to find the funds to lend to borrowers,โ€ Jones explains.

It means the business has moved away from what Jones calls fractionalised lending, โ€œwhere we would break the loan up into 100 partsโ€, and towards bigger investors who can commit more, making it easier for the team to manage funding.

โ€œWeโ€™re more concentrated on funding from people like insurance companies and super funds and investment vehicles, rather than mums and dads,โ€ he says.

However, this didnโ€™t go down too well with the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA), which demanded more scrutiny as to where these institutionsโ€™ money was going.

Hence, the warehouse solution, set up by NAB, which holds the investments of large institutions to the tune $100 million, and scalable to $200 million.

The $15 million capital raise, Jones says, provides the โ€œmost riskyโ€ tranche of the warehouse funding, as well a mechanism to drive growth in the business more generally.

โ€œThe institutions like it when we do some ourselves, because it means weโ€™re all aligned in our objectives,โ€ he explains.

All grown up?

For a peer-to-peer lending fintech, this is all starting to sound very institutional, and Jones admits the startup has grown up and evolved since its scrappy startup beginnings.

โ€œWe are certainly the biggest peer-to-peer lender in Australia on the consumer side,โ€ he says.

โ€œWhen our investors look at us, weโ€™re high-quality now and we know what weโ€™re doing.โ€

However, he maintains the business is still a fintech; itโ€™s data-driven and still relies on digital processes.

And, regardless of where the funds come from, itโ€™s still all about matching money with borrowers.

โ€œThatโ€™s still a core part of our business,โ€ Jones adds.

However, there’s no escaping the fact itโ€™s a bigger beast now, he says. And, if itโ€™s going to do all it set out to do, itโ€™s going to need even more cash.

โ€œThe whole idea was that we were going to disrupt the banks and provide customers with a better experience,โ€ he says.

โ€œWeโ€™ve now got to a point where weโ€™ve got personal loans going, but if we would like to grow products and services, we will probably need some investment capital.โ€

So in the current market, at a time when everyone seems to be talking about fintech, Jones is considering an initial public offering before the end of the year.

โ€œThe business is tracking really well and in the marketplace generally fintechs are seen as disrupting the banks,โ€ he explains.

โ€œIf weโ€™re going to go, 2020 would be a good time to do it.โ€

NOW READ:ย โ€œHere for the long termโ€: Why Brighte is using its latest $15.5 million raise to make an unexpected pivot

NOW READ:ย โ€˜One billion per annumโ€™: Why Australiaโ€™s cannabis companies are listing on the ASX