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Veteran Aussie fintech Capify set to ramp up operations with $135 million credit facility from Goldman Sachs

Alternative-lending startup Capify has secured a $135 million credit facility, to reach more SMEs and take its business to the next level.
Capify
Capify founder and chief David Goldin. Source: SUpplied.

Australian alternative-lending startup Capify has secured a $135 million credit facility from Goldman Sachs, to reach more SMEs and take its business to the next level.

Launched in 2008 as one of the first alternative-lending startups in Australia, Capify has since executed more than 7,500 business financing transactions for Aussie SMEs.

The startup has about 50 staff members in its Australian offices, plus about 70 in its sister business in the UK.

But US-based founder and chief David Goldin tells StartupSmart this batch of capital is pegged to kick-start Capifyโ€™s next stage of growth, allowing him to โ€œscale and grow the business to new highsโ€.

The partnership with Goldman Sachs came after Capifyโ€™s previous credit provider wound down its fund.

โ€œOur previous provider couldnโ€™t grow with us,โ€ Goldin says.

And with an average transaction size of $30,000 โ€” the majority of which are short-term loans โ€” thereโ€™s room for Capify to grow to meet the new credit facility.

โ€œMoney is our inventory,โ€ Goldin adds.

The funds will primarily be put towards initiatives to help โ€œincrease our partner and distribution network,โ€ he says.

The startup will be working with brokers and partners, and ramping up its vendor financing business, he adds, with a goal to deploy $100 million in capital over the next 12 months.

A shifting landscape

As one of the first alternative lending providers to enter the Australian market, launched over 10 years ago, Capify has seen the landscape change around it.

New competitors such as GetCapital, Timelio and the lately-troubled Prospa have sprung up, and last year Capify was among six fintechs to sign a code of practice, committing to a series of best practices when dealing with SME customers.

Back in 2008, โ€œnobody knew about alternative lending at all,โ€ Goldin says.

โ€œThe word โ€˜fintechโ€™ didnโ€™t really exist.โ€

However, he welcomes new entrants into the space, saying competition has its up-sides, bringing increased awareness of what theyโ€™re trying to do.

โ€œThe vast majority of SMEs still arenโ€™t aware that alternatives lenders or fintech exists,โ€ he says.

Having more players helps, as โ€œweโ€™re all promoting the product to get the word out collaborativelyโ€.

โ€œYour day of reckoning will comeโ€

Goldin hasnโ€™t been on the Aussie alternative lending scene for over a decade without learning a thing or two, but the most pertinent piece of advice he has for other fintech startups is to keep your eye on the prizeย โ€” and on profitability.

โ€œYou have to really focus,โ€ he says.

โ€œAt some point, your day of reckoning will come, and your company has to be profitable. Iโ€™ve seen too many fintechs go out of business because they run out of money,โ€ he adds.

At the end of the day, any business has to have people willing to pay for what theyโ€™re offering.

โ€œThereโ€™s always the exception to the rule, but most of the time you need paying customers, and enough of them to really support the overhead of the infrastructure,โ€ Goldin says.

Equally, and crucially, startups should not underestimate those estimates.

Rolling out new software can take longer than expected, he warns, and with technology changing so quickly, often โ€œjust when youโ€™ve spent a lot of money to roll it out, itโ€™s time to bring out the next version,โ€ he adds.

โ€œTechnology can get very expensive very quickly.โ€

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