2019 Payments Year in Review | Part 1
Mega mergers in payments and every tech company tries to be a bank...except for banks, they want to be tech companies.
Editorial note: I originally published this 2019 Payments Year in Review series on the Finix blog. I’m republishing here (with permission) since some of these events are relevant to the dynamics of the payments industry today.
Payments MEGA Mergers
Kicking off the year with a bang was FIS with their acquisition of Worldpay–who just merged with Vantiv the year before–to the tune of $35B. By mid-summer, Fiserv’s $22B First Data merger was also complete. Not to be outdone, Global Payments then bought TSYS for $21.5B. But the drama didn’t stop.
Bank of America also gave notice to First Data, now Fiserv, that they would be ending their long-standing payments processing joint venture in June 2020. With Bank of America Merchant Services shutting down, BofA has free reign to pursue acquisition, partnership, or in-house development of their payments processing technology, which could make for interesting M&A activities in 2020. Elavon, another top-10 merchant acquirer, had two notable acquisitions this year, picking up CenPOS to move deeper into integrated payments and SagePay ($300M) to expand their European footprint.
Chase seemed relatively content with their current merchant services division, Chase Paymentech, yet still dropped $500M to buy InstaMed, a healthcare payments company. Chase also announced they're developing an e-wallet solution for tech companies such as Airbnb, Lyft, and Amazon in an attempt to use both their consumer banking and merchant services capabilities to create more value and revenue.
Payments are lucrative–global payments revenue totaled $1.9 trillion in 2018, according to McKinsey–which invites competition. Accenture estimates $280B in global payments revenue (~15%) could flow away from banks to non-bank entities, technology-infused payment companies, and other digital payment methods by 2025. As a result, incumbents are doing what they can to consolidate volume; integrate their issuing, core banking, and acquiring solutions; or find ways to distribute payments via software to stay competitive.
What you may have missed:
Nxgen, Payscape, BluePay Canada, and Payroc LLC merge into an ISO/payment facilitator/processor super company under the Payroc brand. Parthenon Capital sponsored the four-way deal.
Nuvei, Canada's largest private and non-bank payment processor, agrees to buy UK payments firm SafeCharge for $889M
T-Mobile launches GoPoint, a branded card reader with acquiring by TSYS to take on Square and Clover.
Every Tech Company Wants To Be a Bank
Except for banks...they want to be tech companies.
You get a card! And you get a card!
We finally did it! Every company in existence now offers their own debit or credit card:
Most notably, the Goldman-backed Apple Card launched this year and (despite claims of sexism in its underwriting process) provided over $10 billion in credit lines in just the first month.
Lyft launched a debit card, Uber launched a debit card, a credit card, and an in-app wallet as part of their Uber Money launch, and Square launched a debit card to give merchants instant access to their funds.
Stripe launched a corporate charge card to compete with Brex. Brex raised a $100M debt round. Then AMEX launched a charge card aimed at startups to compete with Brex and Stripe. Meanwhile, Utah-based Divvy quietly raised $200M to continue growing their expense management and corporate card services.
Robinhood, Betterment, and Transferwise all launched debit cards to go along with their core cash management services and Brex launched a cash management product to go along with their charge card.
Google launched a checking account powered by Citi and Stanford Federal Credit Union.
It’s almost as if companies with existing, large customer bases can make incremental revenue by launching new financial services to those same customers.
Here come the neobanks
But upstarts are making moves too. Scores of neobanks are raising TONS of capital to offer debit cards, depository accounts, and more to an ever-growing pool of customers. Chime, for example, announced they have 5M customers and raised $200M this year. N26, the millennial-focused, mobile-first challenger bank raised $170M at a $3.5B valuation, and UK-based Monzo raised $144m at a $2.5B valuation. It's honestly impossible to keep track of all the bank-like entities popping up these days, but based on these numbers, it seems safe to say challenger banks are here to stay.
Facebook
Sadly, Facebook didn’t launch a debit card this year. But they did jump headfirst into payments with the launch of Libra, their very own cryptocurrency, which promptly received scrutiny from the US government and began losing founding members like Stripe, eBay, Mastercard, and Visa. For their next act, newly rebranded FACEBOOK announced Facebook Payments, which allows FB users to send money to each other on their core app, WhatsApp, and Instagram. While this will help reduce some of the checkout friction on apps like Instagram, the potential of encouraging more informal commerce on Whatsapp and FB Marketplace is an even bigger opportunity. WhatsApp, for example, has been piloting payments in India for a while and announced plans this year to expand to Mexico, Brazil, and the UK. WhatsApp Business accounts also got access to product catalogs, and customer labels functionality this year, helping small merchants around the world sell more stuff.
What you may have missed
A lot of this card-issuing activity is made possible by the quiet rise of companies like Marqeta and Galileo over the past few years. While most people have no idea what these companies do (they provide modern card issuing and issuer processing platforms) they are absolutely vital to the boom in consumer fintech companies we're seeing*. This trend has actually been building for a while. Marqeta was founded in 2010 and Galileo has been in operation for 19 years. But don't worry. Marqeta and Galileo's good work isn't going unnoticed. They raised $260M and $77M, respectively this year just in time to fight off newer entrants like European payments powerhouse Adyen, which launched Adyen Issuing over the summer, and new card issuing platform, Deserve, which raised $50M from Goldman Sachs and others. So, for as much as it seems like we've reached peak debit card, there's no reason to think this trend will stop any time soon.
If you enjoyed this post, be sure to check out Part 2.