Showing posts with label banking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label banking. Show all posts

Friday, August 2, 2019

Starling Bank partners with SumUp to give customers faster payouts

Starling Bank has partnered with SumUp, Europe’s leading mobile point of sale company, to provide small merchants with access to faster settlements.

With its card terminals relied upon by over 1.5m users globally, SumUp is helping small business merchants by delivering access to affordable and easy-to-use payment devices. Their terminals can be used with an accompanying app and, crucially, without an app, via their standalone 3G Reader solution which comes with an integrated free data card.

Starling’s Banking Services business provides fintechs, such as SumUp, with access to key payment schemes and a full bank offering all through a simple API.

While SumUp enables merchants to accept card payments in seconds with just an easy-to-use device in hand, traditional banking providers and existing card rails means the process of settlement for small businesses currently requires a waiting time of two to four days for payments to clear through. By using Starling Banking Services, SumUp can now ensure their UK merchants will soon receive payments on the next business day and do not need to wait days to see the money their customers have paid them for their products and services.

Starling’s Banking Services continues to grow with this new partnership, serving disruptive and innovative payments businesses across the fintech ecosystem. Existing clients include the Department for Work and Pensions, the savings and investment marketplace Raisin UK and fintechs Currency Cloud, Pockit, PelicanPay and Vitesse.

Helen Bierton, Head of Banking at Starling Bank said, “Small businesses are the lifeblood of an innovative and entrepreneurial ecosystem, so making sure they can receive the rewards of their hard work is incredibly important. Our partnership with SumUp means that whether a small merchant is serving coffee or cutting hair, we are helping to ensure they get paid as quickly as possible so they can get on with growing their businesses.”

Dimitri Gugunava, VP Banking and Acquiring at SumUp said, “We always look for new ways to improve the services we offer our 1.5m merchants worldwide on a journey of empowering them to succeed while doing what they love. Quicker payouts is an important step which we were able to take through our partnership with Starling Bank.”

Starling was the first challenger bank to be a direct member of the Faster Payments Service and the only banking provider of real-time access to Faster Payments through APIs in the transaction banking world. Starling’s pioneering Banking Services platform enables businesses, including Payment Service Providers, retailers, corporations and fintechs to develop and scale new products and to move money in seconds.

Through their simple APIs, this can be done quickly and efficiently without the need for long development lead-times and complex legal arrangements. Starling customers can pick and choose individual components, or product features, to revolutionise how they make payments and innovate new products for their customers.


Noel Edmonds reaches £5M compensation deal with Lloyds over scam

Lloyds Banking Group has apologised to Noel Edmonds and agreed a compensation deal with him following a fraud case.

The TV star said a scam involving staff at the Reading branch of HBOS, which was subsequently bought by Lloyds, destroyed his business Unique Group.

Lloyds apologised for the “distress” suffered by Mr Edmonds but would not disclose details of the agreement.

But the Daily Mail reported he is thought to have received around £5m from the banking group.

A statement from Lloyds, on behalf of both parties, said: “Mr Edmonds and Lloyds Banking Group have reached an agreement in their dispute.”

It said the group will continue to assist the ongoing police investigation into matters relating to Unique Group and HBOS Reading.

Corrupt staff from the Reading branch were jailed in 2017 for a £245m loans scam between 2003 and 2007 which destroyed several businesses.

It was revealed they squandered the profits on high-end prostitutes and luxury holidays.

Mr Edmonds, 70, was one of the most high profile victims of the scam and took action against the bank, saying in 2018 they will “have to pay up”.

He initially sought a compensation claim of more than £60m.

He previously revealed he considered taking his own life as a result of his financial situation thanks to the scam.

Lloyds rescued HBOS at the height of the financial crisis and the Reading scandal has loomed large over the bank.

The group set aside £100m for victims of the fraud.

An independent inquiry chaired by Dame Linda Dobbs is investigating whether the fraud was properly investigated and reported to authorities by Lloyds following its acquisition of HBOS and whether any individuals sought to cover it up.

The statement from Lloyds added “both parties also agree to place their trust in the independent inquiry”.