Santander expands fintech reach with stakes in three startups

Banco Santander, Spain's biggest lender, bought minority stakes in three financial-technology firms as Chairman Ana Botin makes machine learning a hallmark of her growth plan.

Santander InnoVentures is investing in Pixoneye and Curve, both based in the U.K., and Gridspace, located in the U.S., according to a statement Wednesday. Terms weren't disclosed. The acquisitions bring the number of fintech firms in the bank's portfolio to 15.

The $200 million fund is the most active bank-backed investment vehicle in fintech, according to CB Insights, a New York-based research firm. The latest crop shows how Santander InnoVentures is now hunting for fintech plays that utilize machine learning to better understand customer behavior.

Ana Botin, chairman of Banco Santander.
Ana Botin, chairman of Banco Santander SA, looks on during a news conference in Madrid, Spain, on Wednesday, June 7, 2017. Santander agreed to take over Banco Popular Espanol SA after European regulators determined that the troubled lender was likely to fail and ordered it to be sold. Photographer: Angel Navarrete/Bloomberg

Pixoneye's algorithms can build a profile of a consumer from photographs stored on his or her smartphone or other device, while Gridspace utilizes artificial intelligence to analyze the sentiments of people on phone calls with customer service representatives. It will be easier to automate call centers if machines can adjust on the fly to frustrated or pleased consumers, said Mariano Belinky, Santander InnoVentures' managing partner.

"This is the type of technology that can help us break the most costs out of customer services," said Belinky, a former McKinsey & Co. risk-management consultant who set up Santander InnoVentures with Botin's blessing three years ago. "We're looking for more specialized and focused solutions — AI with a purpose."

About five years into the current wave of fintech startups, banks are under mounting pressure to show that they can integrate innovative technologies into their existing operations. Beginning in January, new rules in the European Union will require banks to open their networks and databases to fintech startups to stimulate competition.

That means everything from payment-card providers to insurance apps will be able to access current accounts and challenge banks' long-protected relationships with their customers. Santander invested in Curve to help prepare for this change: that company combines a consumer's payment and credit cards onto one Mastercard, linked to a digital wallet.

Citigroup Inc., Barclays PLC and Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria SA have also been especially active in using accelerators and venture funds to find promising new business models. Corporate investments now account for more than a third of the funding for fintech startups worldwide, compared with 22 percent in March 2016, according to CB Insights.

At Santander, almost three-quarters of the companies in InnoVentures' portfolio are at various stages of making their offerings available to the bank's customers. Atlanta-based Kabbage, for example, originates loans for small-business borrowers in Santander's U.K. unit.

Bloomberg News
Fintech Bank technology Santander Women in Banking
MORE FROM AMERICAN BANKER