At 30 September 2020, VEF’s portfolio consisted of 12 equity investments with a fair value of US$248m and US$20m in cash (this includes US$18m designated as ‘liquidity management’). There is no debt and less than US$1m in liabilities for a company NAV of US$268m. The total amount invested on the current assets is US$196m.
Companies can be split geographically or by sub sector. Of the 12 companies, 10 can be grouped into three areas of primary activity:
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Payments and remittances companies: Juspay, Jumo, Revo, TransferGO and Finja operate in this segment, which naturally lends itself to the global digitalisation trend.
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Digital lending: Creditas (which is an asset light company) and Konfio produce and sell their own lending products in this segment.
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Finance management and marketplace: in this segment, the money is made by selling commissions rather than underwriting risk. FinanZero is a loan marketplace that tries to find the best deal for customers from its many partners. Guiabolso offers personal finance management tools and wider products for sale. Magnetis brings wealth management services to more people at lower cost by using robo-advisers.
Although the core of each company is its technology, they have different value drivers and competitive challenges. So, even though there is some country concentration in Brazil, the catalysts for performance are not always the same. Some companies may be more exposed to the credit cycles, others to the financial markets and others such as Nibo are more resistant to the economic cycle.
Exhibit 2: VEF investment portfolio
US$000s |
|
|
Net investedQ220 |
FV FY19 |
Invest. change ytd Q320 |
FV Q220 |
FV Q320 |
Q-o-q (%) FV Q320 |
Ytd (%) FV Q320 |
Portfolio weights (%) Q220 |
Valuation method* |
Company |
Creditas |
Brazil |
Dec-17 |
48,500 |
73,246 |
0 |
80,713 |
102,078 |
26% |
39% |
38% |
M |
Konfío |
Mexico |
Jun-18 |
27,500 |
41,579 |
0 |
28,081 |
40,279 |
43% |
-3% |
15% |
C |
TransferGO |
EMEA |
Jun-16 |
11,037 |
12,555 |
2,111 |
21,428 |
25,167 |
17% |
100% |
9% |
M |
Juspay |
India |
Mar-20 |
13,000 |
0 |
13,000 |
13,000 |
13,066 |
1% |
|
5% |
R |
Nibo |
Brazil |
Apr-17 |
6,500 |
10,619 |
1,200 |
11,290 |
13,000 |
15% |
22% |
5% |
M |
Revo Group |
Russia |
Sep-15 |
8,789 |
16,244 |
0 |
10,222 |
11,585 |
13% |
-29% |
4% |
M |
Guiabolso |
Brazil |
Oct-17 |
30,000 |
11,545 |
0 |
9,601 |
8,956 |
-7% |
-22% |
3% |
M |
FinanZero |
Brazil |
Mar-16 |
2,671 |
7,728 |
0 |
7,576 |
8,747 |
15% |
13% |
3% |
M |
JUMO |
Africa |
Oct-15 |
14,614 |
16,875 |
0 |
7,497 |
8,551 |
14% |
-49% |
3% |
M |
Magnetis |
Brazil |
Sep-17 |
5,668 |
8,108 |
0 |
6,616 |
7,695 |
16% |
-5% |
3% |
C |
Xerpa |
Brazil |
Sep-19 |
8,500 |
8,500 |
0 |
4,544 |
4,931 |
9% |
-42% |
2% |
C |
Finja |
Pakistan |
Jul-16 |
2,425 |
3,389 |
425 |
2,457 |
4,181 |
70% |
23% |
2% |
M |
Liquidity management |
16,965 |
34,521 |
(16,500) |
18,047 |
18,033 |
0% |
-48% |
7% |
|
Investment portfolio |
196,169 |
244,908 |
236 |
221,073 |
266,269 |
20% |
9% |
99% |
|
Cash and cash equivalents |
5,562 |
|
2,545 |
2,141 |
-16% |
-62% |
1% |
|
Total investment portfolio |
250,470 |
|
223,618 |
268,410 |
20% |
7% |
100% |
|
Other net liabilities |
|
|
|
(1,031) |
|
(382) |
(236) |
-38% |
-77% |
0% |
|
Total Net Asset Value |
|
249,439 |
|
223,236 |
268,174 |
20% |
8% |
100.0 |
|
Source: VEF. Note: *M = marked to model, R = recent transaction, C = calibration method.
Exhibit 3: Portfolio geographic breakdown (ex-cash) Q320
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|
|
Brazil is an exciting opportunity
VEF’s relatively high weight in Brazil reflects the level of opportunities in the market that VEF management has identified.
The opportunities can be summed up as:
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Large single-country scaling: Brazil fits VEF’s preference for markets with large single-country scaling ability. Brazil has a population over 200 million people and a US$1.6tn economy. It is a typically favourable emerging market with a relatively young population.
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Concentrated, expensive financing services: in Brazil, the top five banks (three private, two state controlled) have close to 85% of lending market share. Furthermore, they tend to have a strong presence in many of the key financial services including asset management and insurance as well. Also, until the legislation was changed in 2018, banks were allowed to do deals with companies that would lock in the employee payroll with the bank. This has contributed to the high margins in most financial products and made these large banks less interested in innovation. They also have large and costly branch networks. Brazilian banks traditionally have had inefficient cost structures, but these have been covered up by the wide interest margins that allowed them to maintain good cost to income ratios. This creates a greater window of opportunity for better service with lower prices facilitated by technology.
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Online and connected population: Brazil shows a good degree of engagement and adoption with online platforms and mobile apps. Fintech adoption compares well with other countries; according to Ernst & Young’s 2019 Global FinTech Adoption Index, 64% of Brazilians have adopted some consumer fintech. It ranked 16th out of 27 countries in the survey even though it was among the lowest in terms of GDP per capita. It also ranked above countries such as the US, France, Canada, Italy and Japan and had the same adoption rate as Germany, Sweden and Switzerland.
■
Regulatory support: the Brazilian central bank and the government have been supportive of fintech with positive regulatory steps to encourage its development. Making financial services easier and cheaper has been a priority for the authorities. We expect further action in future, including the introduction of Pix and Open Banking in 2021 by the Brazilian central bank. Pix is an instant transaction platform that replaces the previous national payment system (TED). It will work 24 hours, seven days a week and allow instant payments including on mobile phones. Open Banking will have a phased introduction and will allow the sharing of data, products and services by financial institutions through opening and integration of platforms and infrastructure of information systems. A key aspect is that it will be at the customer’s discretion how one financial institution can process data held by another institution. Although these changes will be a challenge for some fintechs, the introduction of Pix and Open Banking show that the regulator is looking to digitalisation as the way forward for better financial services in Brazil.
Furthermore, VEF’s ability to complete deals in Brazil has been helped by the busy activity in the fintech space and finding its partners, especially with regards to venture capital specialists.
Exhibit 4: Bank branches per 100k inhabitants (2018)
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|
Source: World Bank https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/FB.CBK.BRCH.P5
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Creditas is a Brazilian online platform offering secured loans. Its initial and main focus is home and auto-backed loans. The business opportunity arises from the fact that unsecured consumer loans are quite expensive in Brazil and there is considerable unlocked equity value in Brazilian housing. According to the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics (IBGE), 70% of homes are owned debt free yet many homeowners will take on consumer loans at these elevated rates. While the home equity loans from Creditas can be as low as close to 10% (typically indexed to inflation), the average unsecured loan rate in Brazil is close to 80%. This is in the context of 2% inflation per year and a 2% central bank policy rate (SELIC).
Mortgage market underpenetrated
Brazil has traditionally had a problem with inflation, which has resulted in a government yield curve and high interest rates that have not been conducive to long-term borrowing. This has contributed to the mortgage market being undersized and key retail lending products being very high interest rate, short-term, small-ticket unsecured lending. There has been a subsidised lending system for targeted areas of the economy. In the retail side of the economy, this has usually been mostly mortgages and rural credit.
This special regime mortgage market (SFH) has had its limitations and, along with some other regulatory and judiciary issues in the past, has led to a significant amount of untapped equity in Brazil. Things have been changing on all fronts in Brazil, but mortgages still account for only 7% of GDP and consumer credit rates remain high. Brazil is a very aspirational culture and often consumers will take a loan even on usurious terms, as long as the monthly instalments are within their budget.
The introduction of payroll-deducted loans was a very important development in broadening access to credit to Brazilian retail customers. These loans were introduced in 2003 and were a viable alternative form of credit with relatively lower interest rates as they were secured by deductions at the source of monthly wages, initially for public sector employees and retirees/pensioners.
Unsecured loan rates more than 80%
By July 2020, about 25% of household debt was in unsecured loans including credit cards, according to Brazilian central bank data (see Exhibit 6). This amounted to BRL508bn in July 2020. Creditas’s loan book was BRL1bn in July. Although not all unsecured lending in the banking system is readily substitutable, a majority is so it is a target for home equity loans. The debt reduction burden is significant; the average unsecured personal loan rate is still more than 80% (Exhibit 5). In addition to allowing people to borrow at much lower interest rates, easing their credit burden, Creditas makes it easier to borrow by providing its services digitally.
Exhibit 5: Brazil average lending rates (%)
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Exhibit 6: Brazil household debt breakdown (July 2020)
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|
|
Source: Brazilian Central Bank
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Source: Brazilian Central Bank
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Exhibit 7: Brazil payroll deducted lending rates (%)
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Exhibit 8: Brazil SELIC rate, 10-year gov’t bond (%)
|
|
|
Source: Brazilian Central Bank
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Source: Brazilian Central Bank
|
Exhibit 5: Brazil average lending rates (%)
|
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Source: Brazilian Central Bank
|
Exhibit 7: Brazil payroll deducted lending rates (%)
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Source: Brazilian Central Bank
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Exhibit 6: Brazil household debt breakdown (July 2020)
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|
Source: Brazilian Central Bank
|
Exhibit 8: Brazil SELIC rate, 10-year gov’t bond (%)
|
|
Source: Brazilian Central Bank
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Creditas offers auto loans where its interest rates (16–18%) are competitive with peers, including banks. Creditas now offers direct auto loans for purchase in addition to its original offering of auto-backed loans.
The third key product for Creditas is the payroll-deducted lending segment. When introduced, rates were initially 6–7% a month compounded (so close to 100% a year) and clearly showed how close competition sometimes could be between the larger banks in Brazil. This has since come down but, as Exhibit 7 shows, the rates are still attractive. In July 2020, the public sector average interest rate for payroll deducted loans was 18% and the average for retirees and pensioners was 21%. The private sector borrowing rate is higher at about 30% due to the higher risk profile. These are attractive lending rates given the risks and it makes sense for Creditas to target this market.
Creditas also augments its product offering by providing loans around its core products with a view to further increase client retention. For example, it offers home renovation loans or advances on house sales in addition to its home equity loans. And it offers vehicle storage solutions and car repair loans to complement its auto equity loans.
The average ticket sizes for Creditas in home equity, vehicle-backed loans and payroll deducted loans are BRL200,000, BRL18,000 and BRL6,000, respectively. Creditas is looking to add further products (such as advanced salary loans), while its Mexican operations, which began this year, have already contributed 3% of loan originations in Q320 from a standing start.
Creditas operates an asset-light model using securitisations to fund its loans more efficiently and with lower cost. The typical funding is made through various securitisation vehicles supported by fixed income investors while Creditas earns the spread. So, while the bank uses capital to acquire clients, it uses little to originate the loans themselves, which is an advantage. Creditas is investing in technology to further increase automatization and bring down the customer acquisition cost even more.
Exhibit 9: Mortgages as a % of GDP (2018)
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Exhibit 10: Household debt as a % of GDP (2018)
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|
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Source: Central banks, Housing Finance Info Network
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Source: Eurostat (https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat), World Bank
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Exhibit 9: Mortgages as a % of GDP (2018)
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Source: Central banks, Housing Finance Info Network
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Exhibit 10: Household debt as a % of GDP (2018)
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Source: Eurostat (https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat), World Bank
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Revenue growth back to more than 100% pa
In August 2020 Creditas announced revenue of BRL260m in the 12 months to July 2020 and a loan book of BRL1bn. It is targeting a BRL1.6bn loan book by the end of 2020 (compared with loans of BRL600m at the end of 2019). According to the CEO in an article in O Globo in August 2020, Creditas was growing loans 8% per month before the pandemic, which initially slowed to 3%. He states that month-on-month growth then recovered to 5% in July and 6% in August, and he expected it to be back to 8% in September.
According to VEF, Creditas broke even in Q220. However, it is now back in faster growth mode and in loss.
In terms of competition, alongside bigger banks that are increasingly focused on digital banking, there are smaller, more-focused institutions such as Geru, Banco Bari and Banco Inter and personal credit specialists such as Crefisa. There are several players that have spotted the business opportunity and are pursuing it with a digital approach.
So far Creditas has raised US$300m in funding, of which US$55m was from VEF in December 2017 and was followed by US$231m from Japan’s Softbank in July 2019 (31% stake on a US$750m valuation). This is a significant level of funding for growth. The entry of Softbank into the capital was an important boost because it provided Creditas with significant funds that allow it to scale up, which can be an important advantage in fintech. Creditas now has more than 1,600 employees. It ranks in the top three fintech firms in Brazil in terms of capital raised along with two digital banks: Nubank (backed by TCV, a US venture capital fund) and Banco Inter. We note that Softbank also invested heavily in Banco Inter. Because this bank competes with Creditas in some business lending lines, this could potentially raise some conflicts of interest.
The Brazilian corporate tax system is complex and intricate. There are three levels of tax authorities (federal, state and municipal) and the state and municipal rules vary by region. Traditional tax forms are not unified or homogenised. There are several different taxes levied (for example, federal authorities traditionally have two on revenue alone) and the cost of compliance is high. It is time consuming, the penalties are stiff and considerable effort can be spent on litigation.
There are ongoing movements to simplify the tax system in Brazil and make compliance easier. Nevertheless, it remains a challenge especially for SMEs with smaller budgets. Nibo was founded in 2012 and is an accounting software-as-a-service (SaaS) provider, targeting SMEs in Brazil. It changes the way accountants and SMEs interact in a new faster, easier and more efficient way. It is estimated that 80% of these Brazilian SMEs do not use financial management software solutions and rely instead on physical paperwork.
Nibo has about 309,000 paying SME and 3,400 accountant clients. Nibo has a three-year CAGR of about 250% and 55% in the number of SME and accountant clients. There are 10m SME and 80,000 accounting firms in Brazil (according to the IBGE) with every SME obliged to have an accountant.
By the nature of its product, Nibo has accumulated and manages a unique pool of SME data, which allows it to offer a variety of additional financial services such as accounts, invoicing, cash flow projection tools, bill payments and so on to Brazil’s underserved SMEs as a natural extension of the core products. Nibo’s business model is similar to the likes of Xero, Quickbooks, Fortnox and Intuit, which have been successful in other countries. Conta Azul is a local competitor.
Nibo was breaking even when VEF invested. According to VEF, it backed Nibo to allow it to grow faster and burn some capital in doing so.
Guiabolso is an online personal finance manager that enables users to better manage their bank accounts and financial products in one place and keep track of their budgets. It also allows users to compare and calculate cost savings on interest rates and fees. It is available on both iOS and Android platforms.
Guiabolso works best if a client links their bank accounts because it is then able to make useful offers over a wide range of financial products as it can use proprietary bank data-aggregation technology to have a complete view of the user’s financial profile. By scrapping and aggregating data from all the accounts, their records and transactions, Guiabolso is able to have an edge on the individual banks themselves. Guiabolso is integrated with most significant Brazilian financial companies, including all five of Brazil’s big financial banking groups and it is the current leader in this niche.
Guiabolso has offered its own loans in the past, but due to disappointing results through credit losses it now just offers products from its various business partners. These products include loans, credit cards, investments, digital bank accounts and insurance. Guiabolso revenue comes chiefly from the selling fees.
It has 6.1 million customer app downloads, of which more than 3.9 million have linked their bank data to Guiabolso. It is the equivalent of Credit Karma and Intuit Mint (both US) and Tink (Sweden). It is the leader in Brazil in this segment and its competition includes local players such as Organizze, Mobils and Spendee. Compared to peers, Guiabolso seems to be more automated in its platform and better integrated with various banks and financial services providers.
As well as growing its B2C business, Guiabolso is now live with its B2B account aggregation service, where it is working with one of Brazil’s largest banks and insurers on a SaaS-based venture.
FinanZero is an online marketplace for consumer loans in Brazil that was launched in November 2015. It aggregates loans from its partners to find the best match for its users. Its partners include 45 banks and credit institutions. Full integration with the banks allows FinanZero to handle the whole lending process from start to finish. Besides unsecured personal loans, the platform also allows home and auto refinancing. It partners with Creditas, and is one of Creditas’s lead generation and customer acquisition avenues. There are other Brazilian companies with similar business models such as Bompracredito, Emprestimosim (Sim), Serasa and eCred and we believe this is still a fragmented niche at this stage.
Revenue comes from the selling fees paid by the lenders. The loan money is usually released (once approved) within 48 hours. Fees are often around 3% of the loan (paid by the borrower) and can be as high as 10%, depending on the interest rate of the loan.
The founding team has a successful track record and experience from a leading consumer loan broker in Sweden. The key shareholders are Swedish (Webrock Ventures and Zentro Founders). Webrock has several fintech ventures in Brazil. The business model is similar to Sweden’s Lendo and France’s Mon-taux.
Magnetis is a digital investment adviser that offers automated investment portfolios tailored to its clients’ requirements and was founded in 2012. It has a downloadable app compatible with iOS and Android platforms. By using proprietary robo-adviser technology, investment advice can be delivered in a cost-effective way. Magnetis has 5,000 clients and about BRL450m in assets under management.
Until a few years ago, prevailing high interest rates meant a substantial amount of money was left with a bank’s asset management division or as bank deposits and was paid a fixed percentage of money market rates. Savers could obtain attractive real yields with little risk and effort. However, the SELIC (the Brazilian policy rate), which was still above 10% in the fourth quarter of 2017, is now only 2%. The long end of the curve has also come down and the Brazilian government 10-year bond that yielded 11–16% for most of the last 10 years, and was still yielding 9% in Q319, is now yielding 7%. So the yield curve is not only much lower but also sloped. At the same time, the equity market was very strong until the pandemic. Consumers are now increasingly looking more carefully at their investment options.
Wealth management to the masses
Magnetis aims to meet the growing demand for wealth management services and bring it to more people in Brazil by making these services more accessible and cheaper through technology. Clients pay a single fee for the products purchased with no further fees for advice or consulting.
The management team has extensive experience in the asset management area, with experience of investing in Brazil and in-depth knowledge of regulatory architecture and requirements in a space with limited competition. Magnetis uses Easynvest, one of the larger Brazilian digital brokers (recently purchased by Nubank, a growing digital bank), to execute the orders.
Magnetis also has a strategic partnership agreement with GPS Investimentos, a Brazilian wealth management company that is part of the Julius Baer Group, a Swiss private bank. GPS is a minority shareholder in Magnetis.
Xerpa is an HR and payroll lending platform based in Sao Paulo, Brazil. Xerpa’s salary-on-demand product, Xerpay, allows employees to access their already earned wages, instantly and at any time, similar to Wagestream in the UK. Brazil has long suffered from some of the highest interest rates globally and poor financial inclusion, and 60% of workers struggle to make their paycheck last the month. Through Xerpay, employees gain instant financial security and thus can avoid the cumulative spiral of debt, defaults and penalties caused by overdraft and credit card revolvers commonly used when workers cannot access their earnings between pay cycles.
Konfio’s corporate objective is to build digital banking and software tools to boost SME growth and productivity in Mexico. It has a digital unsecured lending platform targeting Mexico’s small businesses. It was founded in 2014. Small businesses are often underserviced in Mexico. Mexico is Latin America’s biggest market after Brazil, with a population of 127 million and an estimated seven million SMEs (according to INEGI, the Mexican National Institute of Statistics and Geography). Of these, an estimated 10% have access to financing.
According to OECD data, the Mexican SME sector provides 74% of employment but only 32% of value added to GDP. This compares to Europe, for example, where the respective figures are 70% and 50%. A key reason for this is poor access to financing and consequent low capital intensity and productivity of the Mexican SMEs.
SME loan market potential
Konfio wants to be a participant in and agent for change. It estimates the Mexican SME loan market has the potential to increase from US$43bn (under 4% of GDP) in 2017 to over US$100bn (close to 9% of GDP) in the next few years. Of this uplift in loans, it sees US$32bn coming from a structural catch-up in lending and US$25bn through digitalisation.
Konfio’s loan approval time of 10 minutes contrasts with 15–20 working days in traditional banks. The loans are offered in real time with no humans involved. The average loan size is US$12,300 and the interest rates vary from 25% for medium-sized companies, 31% for smaller businesses and 39% for business professionals. The medium-sized lending is usually secured by real estate, the rest is unsecured. Terms are 40 months for the medium-sized companies, 16 months for smaller businesses and 12 months for professionals. Overall, the above interest rates are not particularly low, but for many customers the positives are that they are available and are convenient to use. Konfio also provides revolving credit for working capital needs; these loans have interest rates ranging from 25% to 40% and are unsecured.
Konfio leverages tech, big data and recent Mexican fiscal control to offer loans to creditworthy customers historically underserved by traditional banks. The mandatory electronic invoicing (CFDI) that exists in Mexico along with Konfio’s proprietary algorithm enable the company to analyse and evaluate SMEs much more quickly and efficiently than traditional banks. This algorithm looks at five broad areas: biographical data, social network data, potential, lending history and transactional data.
Konfio also offers tools though its cloud-based Kompás system to help businesses with their financial management. This includes income and expenses analysis, risk invoices alerts and billing summaries.
Another future revenue source is Konfio, through its Konfio Tech Services (KTS) division, making its open-ended technology platform available for use by other companies, including financial institutions and non-financial companies that are the centre of large supply chains and want to increase the knowledge and tracking capabilities of their relevant SME ecosystems.
It is backed by some of the strongest venture capital companies in Latin America including Softbank, which is important for future funding. We also note it has a US$100m credit facility secured by Goldman Sachs. According to Crunchbase, Konfio has raised US$403m since 2013. According to the FT, Konfio had revenue of US$12m in 2018.
Konfio is growing quickly and with strong momentum; its loan origination and revenue was 2.6–2.8x higher in Q419 than in Q418. The plan was to grow at a similarly fast pace in FY20 before the COVID-19 crisis; however, this is likely to slower.
Konfio’s competition in Mexico tends to be informal lending and credit cards and there is no direct fintech competitor.
Examples of online SME lending businesses peers include Ondeck, Prosper (in the US) and Capital Float (India).
Konfio was marked down significantly at the start of the COVID-19 crisis due to concerns over asset quality, especially because most lending is unsecured. Konfio provided interest rate holidays of about one to six months for up to 50% of its portfolio due to the pandemic. The window has now closed, and the company claims that it has been successful in mitigating asset quality fallout through this period due to these interest rate holidays. Konfio had an estimated non-performing loan ratio of 5% at the end of 2019 but this is likely to be higher now.
Founded in 2012, TransferGO is a digital low-cost, cross-border money transfer service. It is account to account (so no face-to-face interaction is required) and available for iOS and Android platforms. Money can be sent from 32 countries to 47.
TransferGO’s headquarters are in London and it is regulated by the FCA. Its key target market is transfers to Eastern Europe, often blue-collar workers sending remittances from Western Europe. Money can also be sent to several countries in Asia and Africa, including almost all larger countries. Money can also be transferred to the US and Canada, but there are no South American countries on the list.
TransferGO’s geographic strength and leading position is in eastern Europe. TransferGO is the number one provider in this region for digital send/receive services with its key markets being the Baltics, Poland, Ukraine and Romania.
TransferGO has proprietary technology and infrastructure that allow it to conduct same-day transfers at very low cost, in as quickly as 30 minutes to a couple of hours. Its operations are well integrated with a network of about 30 banks, which allows some of the fastest guaranteed settlement times among peers. TransferGO reached one million customers in 2019.
In 2019, the global remittance market transferred US$670bn (according to the World Bank) with an average cross-border remittance cost of 7%. Transfers are becoming increasingly digitalised; the percentage of remittances done digitally has increased from 10% in 2014 to 36% in 2019. VEF believes it will be over 50% by 2023.
TransferGO’s transaction volume grew 68% y-o-y in 2019 with a 69% increase in active users (90-day period). Revenue grew 33% y-o-y in 2019.
TransferGO charges a fixed transfer fee (starting at £0.99) plus a 0.6–1.5% charge for currency conversion. It has several transfer options including standard and express. This is a competitive industry. Competitors include large-scale, well-known operators such as Western Union and PayPal, as well as companies such as WorldRemit, TransferWise, Azimo and Venmo. Other significant players coming into this segment include Google (Google Play Send, only available in the US) and even Facebook (its Messenger app has some peer-to-peer payment functionality). We expect some banks to increase efforts in this segment. For example, Banco Santander launched PagoFX, a cross-border payments app, in the first half of 2020. The relatively low barriers to entry and the straightforward nature of the products lead us to feel payments could easily become commoditised in the long run and sustainable margins in the sector will possibly not be as high as in other areas.
Based in Bangalore, India, and founded in 2012, Juspay is a mobile payments platform. It provides customisable, end-to-end solutions for merchants to help them manage India’s various and complex web of electronic payment systems and infrastructure. It is the leading universal payment interface (UPI) for merchants in India. Its software development kit has been downloaded 200 million times, and it has a daily volume of four million transactions and US$10bn of annualised payment volume. Amazon, Uber, Ola and Flipkart are among its customers in India.
India’s e-commerce business is growing strongly. India has the second-largest population in the world, and smartphone penetration is high and rising. The UPI is an instant payment system established by the Central Bank of India and has been a key driver in the fast pace of growth in online transactions in India. COVID-19 has only accelerated this growth. UPI transaction volume was a record US$1.49bn in July 2020 with 822m transactions, according to the National Payments Corp of India, double that of 12 months ago.
As was the case with Nibo, Juspay was breaking even when VEF invested but was asked to grow faster to seize the market opportunity and to burn some capital to achieve this.
International peers include PayPal and Amazon Pay.
Revo was founded in 2012 and is a Russian fintech providing ‘buy now, pay later’ services to merchants and is the largest company in Russia in this niche. It is expanding into Poland and Romania. Revo uses Mokka as its brand. The loans are at low (typically zero) percent interest and subsidised by the merchant in what is basically the merchant’s promotional tool. This model is often seen in offline merchants in Brazil and Turkey; online examples include Affirm and Klarna in the US and Europe and Afterpay in Australia. The site also offers promotional discounts and ‘hot deals’. Mokka can be downloaded as an app in both iOS and Android platforms.
Revo merchant clients operate in a wide variety of segments including clothing, electronics, jewellery and furniture and household goods. They include new, upcoming merchants as well as established ones such as Detsky Mir (Child’s World), the largest children’s goods retailer in Russia founded in 1957, Ozon (one of the largest Russian e-commerce platforms) and well-known international names such as Adidas. Offline, Revo’s partners have a total of over 7,000 stores (and grew 31% year-on-year in FY19).
Revo also leverages its proprietary customer data to deliver personalised marketing services for merchants and works with the merchant to increase conversion and basket size. It claims that there is a 15% increase in sales conversion growth.
Its customer base is four million users. Its loan disbursements grew 56% in 2019. Revo is the only company in VEF’s portfolio that is still break even and it made a profit in FY19.
Founded in 2015, Jumo provides financial services to unbanked consumers and SMEs in Africa by partnering with banks and mobile network operators. Products include loans, savings and insurance. Its partners on the banking side include ABSA (South Africa) and Ecobank (headquartered in Togo, but it is pan-African, and with South Africa’s Nedbank, IFC and Qatar National Bank as core shareholders). Telecommunications partners include Airtel (India, with an African presence), MTN (South Africa), Telenor (Norway, but with a presence in Pakistan) and Tigo (Tanzania).
Africa has a severely underbanked population with poor access to traditional bank branches. However, there is a good penetration of mobile services (according to Pew Research Center smartphone penetration is 30–35% in Ghana, Kenya and Nigeria and is only 13% in Tanzania) and this is an easier and more cost-effective way for these clients to have access to financial services. Jumo is the largest and fastest-growing mobile financial services platform in Africa and is expanding into Asia in Pakistan and India. The operational headquarters are in Cape Town, South Africa, and the active markets are Ghana, Kenya, Pakistan, Tanzania, Uganda and Zambia. Côte d'Ivoire and Nigeria are the next planned countries for expansion.
Jumo uses automation, artificial intelligence and machine learning to build credit scores and targeted financial products for people without a financial footprint. It has over 16.7 million unique customers to date and has provided over US$2bn in credit. It has 53 million interactions with customers a month. It is the first interaction with a formal financial services company for 80% of its customers. The fact that it underwrites its own risk and is unsecured places Jumo on the risker side of the spectrum among VEF’s companies, along with Konfio. However, Jumo mitigates its risk by only underwriting the first five loans to build the credit profile of the customer. After that the loan is passed on to one of the financial services partners on the platform. So effectively Jumo is a marketplace with an increasing share of the loan book off the balance sheet. About 80% of its loan book sits on partner banks’ balance sheets and the remaining 20% with JUMO and gradually falling over time.
Finja is a digital lending platform in Pakistan with an integrated payments ecosystem focused on the financial wellbeing of businesses and their employees. Pakistan is still in a very early stage of digitalisation with a cash-based economy. Pakistan has 170 million people and 130 million mobile users, but only 15% of adults have bank accounts. Thus, growth prospects for digital banking services are enticing.
Finja operates a payment freemium mode where basic accounts and payments are free. It uses credit, payroll and other financial add-ons to generate revenue and added value.
It has quality partners in FINCA Microfinance Bank and Descon Group, which are key to local success. The founding team has extensive experience in mobile wallets, online marketplaces and financial products in Pakistan.
By default, VEF values its investments using a marked to model approach. It usually values companies on latest transaction value during the first 12 months then moves to marked to model. This is based on an enterprise value (equity value plus net debt outstanding) multiple of revenue, benchmarked against relevant peers. VEF works with specialist valuation and generalist auditing teams at PwC to obtain the values that PwC signs off.
We are unable to publish the price to revenue multiples of the individual companies since these details are not disclosed due to competitive reasons. On an aggregate basis the VEF Q320 NAV is on a multiple of 17x 2019 revenue.
The range of multiples is quite wide among the companies and reflects varying levels of revenue growth. REVO, Konfio, Jumo and TransferGO have lower multiples, while Magnetis, Xerpa and Finja have the highest.
The Creditas revenue figure is publicly available and it was last valued on 30 September 2020 at c 23x the disclosed 12-month revenue figure to July 2020 (BRL260m, US$47m). The implied value for Creditas of US$1.05bn in VEF’s H120 accounts compares with the US$750m valuation at which Softbank invested money in 2019. The revenue multiple for the portfolio ex-Creditas is 13.8x for 2019.
If there has been a relatively recent round of funding or acquisition, VEF uses this valuation for the book value. There were six companies valued this way in the FY19 accounts, with Juspay included in Q220 (it was acquired in Q120). There are natural valuation uplifts when companies go through additional rounds of raising capital and this is a driver of NAV.
COVID-19 valuation impact
As a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, in the first quarter of 2020 VEF valued six of the companies under a new ‘calibration methodology’. These companies had more macro sensitivity and COVID-19 vulnerability. The new valuation reflected new risk-adjusted revenue forecasts, currency risk and lower revenue multiples. The six companies were Creditas, Konfio, TransferGO, Magnetis, FinanZero and Xerpa. With the exception of TransferGO, valuations were lower in Q120 than FY19. Exhibit 2 shows the valuation changes. Creditas was cut by 31%, Konfio by 22% and Jumo by almost 50%.
Although we do not have much insight on the valuation changes, we think it is encouraging for the company to proactively write-down these assets at the start of the crisis.
Back to usual methodology in Q320
Some companies proved relatively more resilient than initially anticipated during the lockdown. As a result, three (Creditas, TransferGO and FinanZero) were moved back to regular marking to model and their valuations increased in Q220.
In contrast, the other three companies – Konfio, Magnetis and Xerpa – all remain on a calibration methodology. We note that Konfio’s business model (mostly unsecured small business lending) is inevitably quite vulnerable to economic cycles and was in fact marked down further in Q220.
However, in Q320, these three companies were also moved back to the usual marking to model and so are all now valued as such except Juspay, which is valued as a recent transaction. The asset concerns in Konfio have now diminished and the investment was revalued by 43% after two consecutive quarters of downward adjustments. The valuations of Xerpa (+9%) and Magnetis (+16%) were also raised as they transitioned back to marking to model.
Exhibit 11: Company valuation methodology
Number of companies |
FY19 |
Q120 |
Q220 |
Q320 |
Marking to model (revenue multiple) |
5 |
5 |
8 |
11 |
Calibration methodology |
0 |
6 |
3 |
0 |
Recent/latest transaction |
6 |
1 |
1 |
1 |