Friday , November 1, 2024

How Embedded Finance Programs Are Finding New Outlets

Talk of embedded finance, the marrying of financial services with unrelated applications for businesses, threaded through the Money 20/20 conference this week in Las Vegas, as fintechs and financial institutions devise initiatives that extend beyond simple credit and debit card acceptance.

Among the latest of these is Shopify Finance, a new service from Shopify Inc., the e-commerce and point-of-sale platform. Shopify Finance is a unified tool for various financial services, such as its credit card, working capital funding, bill payments, and tax assistance. It’s accessed via the administrative section of the Shopify portal. Shopify announced the service separate from Money 20/20.

“Unfortunately, a lot of our merchants are stuck with conventional banks and processors to use to manage their money,” Vikram Anreddy, Shopify head of product for financial services, tells Digital Transactions News. Anreddy says the consolidated access in Shopify Finance makes it easier for merchants to use financial products, calling traditional methods “fragmented. We think the entrepreneur deserves better.”

Sachdev: “We’ve taken a bank that’s on the Fiserv platform and taken a gig economy platform and brought them together.”

One piece of Shopify Finance offers enables eligible merchants to receive as much 4.43% in annual percentage yield on funds held in Shopify Balance and next-business-payouts.

“We want to help stretch their cash flows,” Anreddy says, “and help with have access to the money they need to grow their businesses.”

In related news, processor Fiserv Inc. announced last week it would build financial services into a digital platform for drivers affiliated with DoorDash, the delivery service. Dubbed the DoorDash Crimson Program, it offers drivers access to a debit card and rewards program. Bismarck, N.D.-based Starion Bank is the sponsor bank for the DoorDash Crimson accounts.

This program gives DoorDash drivers access to a formal banking product, Sunil Sachdev, Fiserv head of embedded finance, tells Digital Transactions News. “Historically they’ve only had access to prepaid cards,” Sachdev says.

In the program, users have the ability to move money in and out of their accounts, Sachdev says. “We’ve taken a bank that’s on the Fiserv platform and taken a gig-economy platform and brought them together. It’s something we hope we can accelerate for other institutions that works for us as well.”

Embedded finance is top of mind even for large payments companies affiliated with banks. “When I think about payments, it’s about how do I get it as fast as I can,” Ron Karpovich, J.P. Morgan Payments managing director, head of client solutioning for embedded finance and solutions, tells Digital Transactions News. “To me, embedded finance is how do I get them a stored value that is valuable to [merchants].”

Merchants need a reason to want to use an embedded finance service, Karpovich says. “That reason may be I can help with the sales tax or discount on a purchase. The stored value is useless if there isn’t a reason to use it.”

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