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LendingClub has been scooping up the technology of bankrupt AI fintech startups.
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These startups have promising AI technology, but suffered in the rapid interest rate rise since 2022.
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LendingClub is building a modern, digital AI-powered bank, and its stock is dirt cheap.
In the wake of all the economic and interest rate turmoil since the pandemic, some promising young AI fintech start-ups went bust. However, one of the older and established fintechs, LendingClub (NYSE: LC), has been scooping up several bankrupt start-ups’ intellectual property on the cheap.
LendingClub is using this IP in addition to its own investment to build a potentially powerful financial ecosystem with lots of growth potential in the years ahead. Investors should take note.
In recent months, LendingClub scooped up the intellectual property of two defunct AI start-ups: Cushion and Tally.
Tally’s technology enables customers to see all their debt and credit card payments in a single interface, along with associated interest rates and other data. Its intelligence tools give beneficial insights to customers, such as how long it would take someone to pay off their credit card loan if just making minimum payments.
In my recent conversation with CEO Scott Sanborn, he noted that many credit card balance holders actually don’t know their credit card interest rate, or how long it would actually take to pay off. By helping consumers calculate and automate their debts, LendingClub helps them become better stewards of their finances. Since LendingClub’s personal loan product’s main use is to consolidate credit card debt, it’s also a good marketing tool.
LendingClub followed the Tally acquisition with Cushion last quarter. Cushion’s AI tool intakes bank transactions and payment information to help customers get a 360-degree view of all their spending. And like Tally, it then applies intelligence to help consumers better manage their obligations.
In addition to IP, Cushion’s founder, Paul Kesserwani, also joined LendingClub as Senior Director of Product, Digital Engagement.
These two acquisitions will be plugged into LendingClub’s evolving DebtIQ tool. On the recent conference call, Sanborn noted that customers who use LendingClub’s new DebtIQ intelligence features have a 60% higher log-in rate and drive a 30% higher rate of loan issuance.
The more LendingClub attracts not just borrowers but full banking customers, the better its financials should become. Obviously, if a borrower signs up to become a depositor, that grows deposits and LendingClub’s ability to hold more loans on its balance sheet. That balance sheet was a great asset over the past couple of years, when both asset managers and banks paused buying LendingClub loans as interest rates shot up.