“Don’t tokenise the card. Tokenise the customer experience”

Here’s my round-up from last week’s Merchant Payment Ecosystem conference in Berlin – the premier European event for merchant acquirers, their customers and suppliers. This is an expanded version of an earlier LinkedIn post. 

The payment industry is often accused of moving too slowly but it’s certainly covered a lot of ground in the last 12 months. Not long ago, keynote presentations at MPE featured long digressions on strong customer authentication (SCA) and cryptocurrencies. I assume that SCA is a problem largely solved because hardly anyone mentioned it. Asked about why crypto had vanished from the agenda, one Mastercard exec paused and said, “Life has changed significantly.”

Customer experience remains king. But with use cases demanding “invisible” payments, the technical infrastructure grows ever more complicated. Yet it’s vital to focus on the customer not the technology. Michel Rudolf von Roher from Nexi put it rather nicely: “Don’t tokenise the card. Tokenise the customer experience.” He was referring to Telepass, a service which originally paid tolls on Italian motorways but it’s just as relevant for any embedded payment application including the hot topic of virtual worlds.

Metaverse

The metaverse is still too nebulous a concept for the practical folk at MPE. Worldine was closest to showing a solution but is clearly still some distance away. What happens when you put a headset on and want to make a payment? Only a tokenised card can currently allow people to make a purchase without removing the headset, but Worldline is working on authenticating individuals based on their game play. It says it can establish a unique pattern of activity in just 20-30 seconds. 

More concretely, Worldine showcased a series of Live Shopping Events it had powered on behalf of a number of blue chip brands such as H&M and L’Oreal on the Livescaleplatform. Live Shopping improved conversion rates by 30% and  has been particularly popular in the Far East. Again, tokenised cards are behind the scenes. Ralf Gladis from Computop explained that most “alternative payments” are not fit for embedded applications. “They are not invisible,” he said.

Car Commerce

Tokenised cards are at the heart of the relaunched Mercedes Benz Pay. This service allows car owners to pay for upgrades – such as rear axle steering – with a fingerprint touch on their dashboard. Mercedes Pay will be opened to 3rd parties such as parking operators and gas stations soon. Starfish – a German specialist payment infrastructure developer – built the service. Adyen is the acquirer/processor.

Mercedes Pay is one of the first applications of delegated authentication – the car is recognised as a smart device and its biometric checks accepted by the card schemes – and it’s easy to see how the proposition makes sense to Mercedes. Automotive brands are desperate to cut out dealers and aftermarket partners to sell direct to consumers.

But wouldn’t Mercedes owners prefer to control their vehicle from their own iPhones? VW certainly seems to be taking a different approach from its German rival. VW is not proposing the car as a payment device. Instead, it has invested in the Elli app which can be used at 400K EV charging points.

The end of cards?

From a product perspective, all eyes are on artificial intelligence (AI), softpos, the metaverse and payment orchestration. But one topic that recurs every year is whether we can yet see the end of cards on the horizon. Cards may be expensive for merchants but Visa and Mastercard have proved remarkably durable. Tokenisation is the latest reason why this is so.

Dennis McNulty, from GetYourGuide, a marketplace, was clear that he wanted to steer customers to cheap payment instruments that don’t have chargeback guarantees. It’s possible that his customers may have other ideas. Surely, the customer is always right and should be able to choose to pay how he wants to? Not according to Dave Birch, chairing the conference. He pointed out that customers shouldn’t have the choice to pay with cheques. At least not unless they’re prepared to pay extra.

Open banking has been set to destroy cards for a while now and it does seem finally to be gaining a little traction in the UK. Elsewhere in Europe, there is much less excitement. Industry experts told me of poor-quality APIs, disengaged banks and consumers preferring more longstanding A2A payment types such as PBL’s in Poland or Sofort in Germany. Merchants are hostage to each bank’s user experience and some banks still have very clunky mobile apps. There are some niche use cases. If you want to buy a Mercedes Benz in the UK, it’s a Trust.ly open banking transaction behind the scenes.

Advocates are still promoting open banking as a cheap alternative to cards. However, asking informal questions of exhibitors, nothing changes my view that open banking will land on pricing close to debit in most market. Vendors should be selling this new payment type on enhanced customer experience not cheaper merchant fees.

Artificial intelligence

The main stage speakers were animated about AI in general and ChatGPT in particular. It’s clear that AI has the potential to solve many problems for merchants. For example, ChatGPT could dynamically devise and apply anti-fraud rules. And it could propose payment types that have the highest chance of success or lowest cost of processing. 

But within enterprises, people are finding it hard to make the switch from relying on humans to implementing processes designed by our robot overlords. Although it’s a black box, Dennis McNulty said “now it’s time to trust the AI.”

Dave Birch suggested that the consumer’s AI and the merchant’s AI might negotiate common ground before agreeing whether a transaction would be high-cost Platinum Amex or low-cost direct debit. This sounds overengineered for a simple transaction and under engineered for an important one like buying a car. And what could possibly go wrong?

We all need to be careful about making payments invisible. My view is that most transactions need a large “CONFIRM” button before money changes hands. Most shoppers don’t have the luxury of a large bank balance to cushion mistakes.

CBDCs

The consensus from the main stage was that cash will be eliminated within five years. “Payments follows commerce and commerce is going digital,” said Maria Parpou from Mastercard. This is a bold projection and fraught with political risk. One mitigation is Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs) which could be explained to the public as digital cash. They could equally be presented as a surveillance operation in which the Government tracks our every move. It would be a bold finance minister that would have that argument.

Yet the Bank of England is consulting on Britcoin and the ECB has also shown strong indications of being serious about issuing digital money. Nobody knows what this means (although Dave Birch’s Substack gives it a good go)  or even whether, in the words of Olof Wierfelt from Trustly, this is “a politically driven solution to a problem that does not exist.” 

One problem solved by CBDCs might be to “cut out the parasitic middlemen” of banks, acquirers, issuers and card schemes. That would not be a solution to excite the audience at MPE. Of course, digital currencies will still need gateways, anti-fraud vendors and foreign exchange converters. All would not be lost. 

Future of acquiring

With CBDCs long in the future, there was good discussion on the prospects for merchant acquiring. Francesco Burelli of Arkwright Consulting pointed out that the market is becoming increasingly consolidated. The top ten global acquirers process more than the next 140 combined according to his new report. But there is still room for regional and local players so long as national market buying behaviour and ecosystems continue to diverge from each other. 

Some good news for the minnows is that the smaller acquirers are growing faster. Burelli suggested this is because they are quicker to adapt to new merchant needs than the giants encumbered with legacy platforms. We’d need more data to substantiate this. I’ve met plenty of small acquirers running on antiquated technology.

Burelli thinks that large merchants will increasingly negotiate directly with schemes and issuers, leaving acquirers firmly in the background. Even when maintaining direct acquiring relationships, many retailers will be using payment orchestration to save money or increase conversion rates by routing transactions to multiple acquirers. 

In response, Diana Carrasco, from Lloyds talked plausibly about evolving from merchant acquirer to merchant service provider. Some of these services will be payments and some of the payments will be cards. But many will be payment-related financial services such as cash management, foreign exchange and lending. 

Softpos

Turning to merchant commerce, as channels converge, softpos looks like the technical bridge between the physical world (where more than 75% of transactions take place) and eCommerce. Ingenico, back in public after a troubled few years, announced the acquisition of Phos. This follows Worldine’s purchase of the well-regarded Softpos.eu and Marketpay buying Dejamobile. It’s not clear that softpos is a sufficiently well-defined product category for vendors to survive as independent businesses, at least not in today’s funding climate. 

Ingenico have chosen wisely. Phos is one of the leading softpos vendors and its product will form part of Ingenico’s new “Payment Platform as a Service” proposition. PPAS is a vendor agnostic management layer that includes a terminal management system, software provisioning and reporting covering both traditional Linux and new Android terminals – including Axion, Tetra, PAX and Verifone. 

PPAS could be very attractive to bank/acquirers managing large estates sourced from multiple hardware vendors. But Ingenico is not alone. I met the team from SHC Consulting, a German software company, whose VAS Cloud provides a similar platform. 

Referring to POS-based acquirers, the advice from Giulio Montemagno from Ingenico, which counts 1200 bank/acquirers as customers, is that continuing to offer just a terminal that takes money on cards and/or local debit schemes is asking for trouble. Merchant churn is reaching 25% at some legacy acquirers, he said, often because they are maintaining terminals from multiple vendors. This makes it hard to introduce new features and services that merchants would value. 

Although there are hundreds of possible value-added services acquirers could add to terminals, the number two profit source is still dynamic currency conversion (DCC). This is not normally a thing to shout about so it was good to see Fexco on stage. The Irish currency specialist showed a slide asserting that merchants and shoppers love dynamic currency conversion (DCC). I sense a campaign brewing in advance of the EU’s review of its cross-border payment regulations. 

In other terminal news, Newland has started supplying Nexi with Android terminalsfor the Italian market. Software is from Poynt. Ingenico has made little progress yet with Android but Newland may finally be giving PAX some competition in Europe.

Innovation showcase

Two of the three finalists in MPE’s start-up competition were from the Far East. Allink, from Korea, pitched an NFC-based tap-to-pay solution that bypasses Apple and Google Pay. It has already signed 7-11. Pi-xcels (pronounced pixels) demonstrated digital receipts via NFC. A single tap of the phone on a terminal provides the payment and returns a digital receipt to the handset at the same time. No app or email address required. This solution attracted a great deal of interest from delegates and a partnership there is talk of a partnership with Ingenico.

Both Allink and Pi-xcels have patentable intellectual property. But the winner of the innovation award was Hands In, a UK start-up making it easy for groups of people to buy holidays or other high value products. The service certainly meets a strong market need but is easily replicable.

Crypto corner

Crypto was less evident than in recent years but a couple of vendors caught my eye. Go Crypto from Slovenia offers a range of crypto acceptance at POS but has widened its portfolio to include cards (via Finaro). Tus, a local supermarket chain, is a customer. But despite Ljubljana’s reputation as crypto-central, less than 3% of Go Crypto’s transactions are actually crypto. 

Triple A, from Singapore, look like a viable alternative to Bitpay if you need a crypt/fiat gateway. It is regulated, charges per transaction and doesn’t take a spread.  

PXP revenues hit hard by Brexit & Wirecard fallout, UK & US operations show promise

Brexit and the Wirecard scandal have dealt a heavy blow to PXP Financial’s 2021 revenues, as the group lost a significant number of EEA clients. The firm, which provides acquiring, processing, and gateway services, experienced a 39% decrease in turnover, dropping to €30.8m according to full year accounts deposited at UK Companies House.

PXP Group has its roots in high-risk merchants, dating back to its inception as the in-house gateway at bWin, the Austrian gambling behemoth. With its acquisition of UK-based Servbase, PXP also has a solid point-of-sale (POS) capability in Europe, and North America. The company’s CEO, Kamran Hedjri, led the spin-out from bWin.

As a result of Brexit, PXP was no longer able to serve EEA merchants with its UK Payment Institution license. The company transferred its clients to a Lithuanian eMoney institution affiliated with its parent company, Senjo Group. However, Senjo Group was embroiled in the Wirecard scandal and is currently under investigation by Singaporean authorities. PXP’s Lithuanian partner was also shuttered by local officials after being accused of aiding Wirecard’s COO, Jan Marsalek, in siphoning off €100m from his employer just prior to its collapse.

Consequently, PXP has a new owner, the American investor Omar Chohan, and was obliged to relinquish its EEA customers. According to management, the firm has regained EEA access through a new partner in Austria, potentially Dimoco Payments.

Despite the loss of €20m in annual revenues, it seems that PXP’s lost customers were small and unprofitable. Payment volumes decreased by only 9% and gross profit actually increased by 3%, rising to €20m. Away from the EEA, the UK business had a strong year, with sales growing by 15% to €11m. Management also reported positive progress in PXP’s US operations, which now holds a Money Transmitter license in New Jersey.

Administrative expenses rose by 8% to €24m, but staff costs were kept under control, declining by 6% as the employee count decreased slightly to 185. Nevertheless, operating losses widened from €2.8m in 2020 to €3.5m in 2021, bringing accumulated losses to €57m.

PXP shows signs of exiting a very difficult period but it will take a long time to rebuild the European merchant base lost in the fallout from Brexit and Wirecard.

EPOS Now – robust growth driven by shift to subscription model and global expansion

UK-based provider of small business software and payment services, EPOS Now, has reported robust growth for the year to May 2022. Global turnover surged by 46% to £48m, as the number of customer locations increased by 24% to 55,844.

Founded in Norwich in 2012 by Jaycn Heavens, EPOS Now offers a comprehensive ePOS system for small businesses, specialising in retail and hospitality, providing stock control, employee scheduling and CRM. The company includes integrated payments in its package, taking a commission from merchant acquirers and ISO’s for recommending merchants.

EPOS Now successfully shifted its business model from upfront product sales to a multi-year recurring model, boosting annual revenue per location from £730 to £860. Service revenue, which includes the company’s new payments platform launched in 2022 and powered by Adyen, increased by 70% to £32.8m, accounting for 68% of revenues. Commission payments, likely comprising receipts from payment partners, increased from £4.9m to £7.8m.

All major markets saw sales growth, with Europe up 49% to £29.3m, the US up 32% to £14.1m, and the small Australian business up 79% to £4.65m.

Cost of sales fell 10% to £15.3m, resulting in gross profit more than doubling to £32.7m, with gross margins expanding from 48% to 68%. Administrative expenses rose 31% to £29.9m. Total payroll costs rose just 3% to £14.1m while staff numbers fell from 380 to 357.

However, trade debtors are a concern, with impairment charges, likely linked to customer defaults during the pandemic, increasing from £2.7m to £4m. R&D spending held steady at £0.7m, just 1% of revenues, which appears low for a technology business.

EPOS Now’s operating profit swung from a Covid-related loss of £6.6m to a profit of £3.0m in 2021/2, with an operating margin of 6%. Management expressed optimism, stating that “future trading is expected to be very positive.”

Reward Loyalty back in the black, confident about future

Reward Loyalty, the UK card-linked loyalty specialist, returned to the black in the year to April 2022 as it continued to win marquee customers on both the retail and banking sides of the business. Revenue and profits are both now running above pre-pandemic levels.

The business was originally founded by Gavin Dein in 2001 as a soccer loyalty card. Dein is still the CEO but Reward is now focused on syndicating and delivering card-linked loyalty offers. These are generally cash-back rewards sourced from leading retailers and published to the customers of banks and other financial institutions. Verisk Analytics, a large American data analytics business, took a 20% stake in 2020 at a valuation of $200m and has the option buy the remainder of the shares at that price.

The total value of card-linked rewards redeemed in 2021/2 rose 12% to £158m. A further £220m of rewards was held pending redemption at year end, 8% higher than 12 months previously.

Revenue more than doubled to £43m. Most of the higher turnover was from “retail revenue from loyalty programme transactions” which grew to £38m. 

Reward says its retailer platform includes 140 regular brands running offers almost every month. Customers include Intercontinental, Europcar and SpaceNK. Reward takes a cut of each offer.

78% of offers were syndicated via Reward’s full-service programmes with the balance distributed to third party programmes, such as those operated by American Express and Mastercard. Reward’s retail partnership team won a slew of awards including “Best use of data” with Sweaty Betty and “Best technology and telecoms” with Sky at the Performance Marketing Awards.

Platform fees charged to financial institutions were much lower at £1.8m. Reward launched new full-service programmes with Virgin Money and Barclaycard (in partnership with Visa) although neither was yet generating significant revenues in this period. Management has reengineered Reward’s enterprise customer engagement platform and believes this make it cheaper to onboard financial institutions. Platform fees are charged per card enrolled.

Data insights revenue grew to £1.9m. Reward’s consultants use anonymised data from its “data lake” to “decipher the competitive pressures in retail….and emerging consumer trends.” Although demand for insights is said to be strong, management concedes this division is “still at a relatively early stage.”  

Reward has a strategic objective of internationalising its capabilities but progress is slow. 96% of revenue came from the UK in 2021/2.

Cost of sales, which includes cashback returned to cardholders, was £27m, £9m higher than 2019/20 resulting in £16m gross profit compared to £11m before the pandemic. Gross profit was 24% of the value of offers redeemed.

Administrative expenses were £13.6m with higher spending accounted for mainly by increased staff numbers from 81 to 125.

Operating profit was £2.6m compared with a loss of £0.3m the previous year.

Undeterred by the choppy economic outlook, Reward has set itself the goal of driving £2b of value to cardholders by 2025. That’s double the cumulative amount of rewards it had issued by the end of April 2022. Management says that, despite the quasi-recession, both financial institutions and retailers are investing more in rewarding day to day consumer interactions and this bodes well for its future prospects..

Commentators often point to untapped opportunities for payment companies to build card-linked loyalty into their stack and to exploit payment data to help merchants better target their marketing. Reward is a well-managed business with great customer relationships and a leading position in Europe’s largest card payment market. Yet revenues remain small in comparison to other parts of the payment ecosystem. Maybe there’s not so much money in data after all. 

Saltpay reports heavy losses as it buys and builds a platform for growth

SaltPay’s 2021 accounts reveal spectacular growth matched by equally spectacular losses as its ambitious management spent heavily on acquisitions. The mastermind is Eduardo Pontes, a Brazilian entrepreneur with a track record in building payments businesses. He has raised $1.1b capital for SaltPay from Tiger Global and others to build a European SME-focused payment service provider.

Where Stripe, Adyen and Square have built a modern payment stack from scratch, London-based SaltPay is doing the same through buying the individual pieces as separate business acquisitions. We’ve listed 24 transactions at the bottom of this post and it’s a remarkable roll-call. This is a bold plan and one fraught with execution risk. But management says that if it succeeds, “the unit economics will provide strong financial returns.” 

The frantic pace of deal-making saw annual revenues growing from €74m in 2021 from €20m the previous year with merchant numbers rising to c.100,000. 

Payment acceptance generated €26m revenues in 2021. This division includes Salt Pay Iceland (formerly Borgun) which provides acquiring/processing as well as ISO’s in UK, Hungary, Slovakia, Portugal and Czech Republic. The report shows RMS Group, a large UK ISO bought by SaltPay for $267m at the end of the financial year, lost €3.3m in 2021. 

SaltPay was hit by the continued impact of Covid on acquiring revenues from the travel sector. It decided to “end the relationships with larger enterprise merchants… which represented complexity in the service model.” 

SaltPay wants to offer a full acceptance service with no third-party involvement and has even written its own software for the payment terminals. Acquiring payment volume was €14.1b giving a rather low take rate of 0.2% which suggests that little ISO volume had yet been moved across to SaltPay’s processing. This is likely to be a key focus in future plans.

Software revenue was €18m. SaltPay has several ePOS vendors –  Storyous (Czech), SalesCloud (Iceland) and Loyverse (Cyprus) as well as a Weasy, a webshop vendor (Portugal). It has also purchased businesses that bring capability in booking software, bill payments and tax-free shopping. €2m of hardware sales were related to the ePOS businesses. 

Issuer services revenue was also €18m. The largest components were Paymentology and Tutuka which have now merged and trade under the Paymentology brand. Management intends to use this capability to issue cards to its small business customers as an alternative to business bank accounts.

Lending revenue was €5m. This includes merchant cash advance and a consumer BNPL product.

Turnover came from a variety of businesses across Europe, Turkey and South Africa that span the whole payment value chain from processing to software.

Cost of sales was €32m resulting in gross profit of €42m.

Saltpay has taken on significant expenses related to the integrating its many platforms into a simple merchant proposition that delivers a consistent customer experience. This is proving harder than anticipated with management stating, “we realised more complexity than originally forecast in our plan.

Staff numbers grew to c.1,500 by the end of 2021 and total employee costs were €66m. The company reported difficulties in recruiting technology specialists and software developers.

Total expenses were €120m resulting in an operating loss of €78m which is slightly larger than total revenues. After impairment of €7m goodwill from the acquisition of Yoyo Wallet and losses from sales of assets, the final pre-tax loss was €97m.

During 2021, seven acquisitions added a total of €614m of goodwill onto the balance sheet. Even so, SaltPay still managed to exit the year with €524m of cash. Some of this would have been spent on a further 20 corporate transactions noted between the end of 2021 and March 2023.

The business is very much a work in progress. For SaltPay to succeed, it will need to join together its wide array of capabilities into a consistent and coherent merchant proposition. And it will need to master the art of cross-selling products from one service line and one country to the next. These are not trivial tasks. Fortunately, SaltPay is very well resourced for the challenge ahead.

List of businesses acquired or invested in by SaltPay since 2019

Acquirer/processor

Borgun, the Icelandic acquirer (renamed Saltpay IS) was purchased in 2020 from two local banks – Islandsbanki and Eignarhaldsfelagia. for an undisclosed sum. According to its 2021 report and accounts, pe-tax losses in were c.€10m but management now expects break-even in 2024 as the outlook for travel to Iceland improves. SaltPay has injected additional capital. Borgun serves clients in Iceland, UK, Hungary, Czech, Croatia and Slovakia.

ISOs & PSPs

B-Payment – a successful Hungarian ISO which has been working with Borgun as its acquirer for many years. B-payment services 10,000 clients generating c.6m transactions per month and has 50 staff. The business is now called Salt Hungary.

Merchant Payment Acquiring Services– a leading ISO in Slovakia, with 3,500 SME customers with 58K POS terminals. MPAS operated in both Slovakia and Czech Republic and was an early adopter of PAX Android in Europe. In 2021, the business lost €0.4m on €9.4m revenues.

Pagaqui Pagamentos – Portuguese ISO with 3,400 merchant customers. Its main service is a network of bill payment locations in convenience stores. In 2021, lost €3.8m on revenues of €2.5m.

Poscom – Slovakian ISO now trading as SaltPay Slovakia

Retail Merchant Services – one of the larger UK ISO, RMS uses Elavon and Global Payments as acquirers. RMS was acquired from its founder by TCV, a US investment fund, in 2017 and sold to SaltPay in 2022 for $267m. In 2021, RMS Group lost €3.3m on revenues of €41.2m.

Namastay – French payment gateway for hotels with integration to SABRE and Synxis online payment. SaltPay participated in a €2.1m seed round in April 2022.

Payment infrastructure

Mea Wallet – Oslo HQ’d tokenisation specialist which provides services to banks, issuers and merchants including Islandsbanki, former owner of Borgun. SaltPay invested €19m in July 2022 according to a local blog and reportedly took full control at the end of 2022. 

Paymentology – London based, cloud issuer processing platform with clients including Natwest, Islandsbanki and Quicko. Paymentology competes with GPS and FIS. SaltPay has merged Paymentology with Tutuka, an issuer processor headquartered in Mauritius. In 2021, the two companies lost €5.7m on revenues of €10.7m. 

Switch Payments – gateway and orchestration platform based in Portugal. It claims 300 merchant customers including TAP Air Portugal. In 2021, Switch lost €1.2m on revenues of €2m.

A-Heads Consulting, Latvia – helps financial institutions in the Baltics integrate and launch payment and banking solutions. Customers include Mea Wallet.  

Flexpay – South African issuer of pre-pay Mastercards to help companies pay wages to staff without bank accounts.

Small business software

Storyous – a Czech ePOS business focused on restaurants/cafes. It claims over 5,500 customers and offers integrated payment processing from SaltPay, ČSOB or Global Payments. In 2021, the business lost €1.3m on €3.1m revenue. 

Salescloud, – Icleandic ePOS with customers in Iceland, UK, Denmark, Sweden and Portugal. Saltpay led a $4m funding round to take a 12% stake. Salescloud processes via the Valitor gateway.

Weasy – based in Portugal, Weasy offers webshops to small businesses with 85,000 accounts created. Weasy offers a great many payment options including Multibanco, Stripe and Braintree.

Fanbase Technology – Edinburgh HQ’d software for lower league football and rugby clubs. SaltPay has a 20% stake but also formed a JV company with Bobby Skinstad, the ex-Springbok South African investor who is listed as an advisor to Fanbase.

Odeal Odeme Kulus – Saltpay paid $3.5m for a 10% stake in this leading Turkish POS terminal and ePOS provider. Odeal has 75,000 merchants and offers access to five banks processing through its integrated POS terminals. SaltPay subsequently raised its share to 25%.

Loyverse – Cypriot ePOS vendor operating in Europe, North and South American as well as Australia. Its website claims 1m merchants have registered although Salt Pay’s report gives a more modest customer number of 134,000. In 2021, Loyverse lost €0.3m on revenues of €2.3m.

Value added services

Stamp – Amsterdam based Tax Free Shopping start-up competing with the established players – Planet and Global Blue. Salt Pay has a minority stake.

Noona – booking software for appointment scheduling, Noona claims 600 customers and sells in Portugal, Czech and UK as well as its home market of Icleand. SaltPay invested $1.2m for a minority stake. Borgun is its processor.

Yoyo Wallet – a very high profile UK startup that span out of Imperial College, Yoyo provides loyalty solutions to quick service restaurants such Dunkin Donuts and KFC in the UK and South Africa. Yoyo claims 5m active monthly users spending at 18,000 stores. SaltPay controls 94% of the company. In 2021, Yoyo lost €6m on revenues of €10m. SaltPay’s parent company has taken a €66m impairment charge on this investment.

DineOut – a booking engine for Icleandic restaurants, SaltPay has invested in the business which claims to have processed 1.8m table bookings in Iceland and also offers automatic payments.

So Connect – based in Amsterdam, So Connect claims to have empowered more than 50,000 local businesses by improving their online visibility by boosting listings and reviews. The service is live in UK and Spain. 

Flow Money Automation – 10% investment in this Dutch openbanking money management tool which raised €3.5m total in April 2022. [Correction: Flow Money’s CEO got in touch to say the figure of 10% quoted in Teya’s accounts and reproduced here is not accurate].

Nexi – acquisition synergies kick in but growth slows

Italian pan-European acquirer/processor Nexi, reported slower growth but higher profits in Q4 2022 as it realised acquisition synergies quicker than expected. Despite a more challenging macro environment than anticipated, CEO Paolo Bertoluzzo declared 2022 a “year of strong progress for our company.”

Nexi’s total turnover grew 4% in Q4 to €879.5m.

Merchant solutions is the largest division and the one that interests us most at Business of Payments.

Payment volume grew 9% in Q4 to €204bn. Despite the fast pace of acquisitions, Italy still accounts for 57% of payment volume. 

Taking 2022 as a whole, Nexi’s SME merchants continue to outperform with volume up 25% and over 200,000 extra terminals placed. Large account volume rose 15% and management is looking forward to “a strong pipeline of commercial wins across markets with a specific focus omnichannel, grocery and retail and vertical solutions in petrol and EV charging.” 

2023 has started very well. Total volumes are reported up 17% to the end of February.

Merchant revenues grew 3.3% in Q4 22, although management points to an underlying increase of 7.9% excluding Ratepay and some phasing of scheme fees in Italy. Ratepay is a German BNPL business which Nexi inherited from Concardis. It takes risk on customer payments and doesn’t fit with Nexi’s business model. Ratepay has been up for sale for some months but no buyers have emerged, so the business has entered a “managed slowdown” that reduced revenue by €16m in Q4. 

The big news was the acquisition of Banco Sabadell’s merchant payment business which catapults Nexi into number two position in the Spanish market. Sabadell made clear that deal was not just about price. It wanted a partner. Bertoluzzo explained “We’ve been chosen especially for our capabilities and for our people and the work we’ve done with the bank over the last few months.”

Nexi is paying €280m for 80% of a portfolio which brings revenues of €48m and EBITDA of €30m from 380,000 merchants generating €48bn payment volume annually. Sabadell is injecting the merchant contracts into its Paycomet gateway unit which will be the entity purchased by Nexi. 

Sabadell will sign a long-term distribution agreement with 10 years exclusivity to send Nexi sales leads from its 1,200 bank branches. These arrangements can be gold dust but also can be less rock solid than they might appear. EVO Payments had a similar distribution agreement with Banco Popular. This bank was sold to Santander which started referring leads to its in-house product team instead. EVO went to court and lost.  

Nexi is paying an EBITDA multiple of 11.5 which is line with its recent deals in this sector as you can see from the table below. Management says that if the new business meets its earn-out targets, this multiple drops to 10.

Nexi acquisitions 2021-23

BPER & BdSISPAlphaSabadell
MarketItalyCroatiaGreece Spain
Payment volume (€b)135948
No of merchants           110,000         13,000  n/a        380,000 
Nof of POS           150,000  n/a        150,000 n/a
Rev (€m) n/a  n/a  €             93  €             48 
EBITDA (€m) €                 32  €            17  €             18  €             30 
Enterprise Value (€m) €               318  €          180  €           307  €           350 
EV/EBITDA                    10                11                 17                 12 
Source: company reports

Sabadell brings Nexi a strong position in a large payment market with “unique structural characteristics and significant growth potential.” Nexi is particularly attracted by Spain’s low card penetration and SME dominated merchant landscape. But most importantly, because the market is still dominated by banks, Spain lags “behind European markets in terms of product innovation, commercial innovation, channels and so on.” 

Nexi believes that most of the acquisition synergy will be on the revenue side. Pricing will be especially interesting. One analyst noted that the enterprise value was just 0.7% of payment volume. The take rate is just 10bps. Bertoluzzo explained that Spanish banks tend to cross-subsidise payment processing with other banking products. Nexi believes its presence in the market will enable “enable a more rational pricing approach.” 

Integration is expected to be “very simple and lean“, presumably because the merchants can continue to process on existing systems and that Paycomet will come with its own regulatory approvals.

Nexi’s issuer solutions division has been struggling for sales growth of late, in common with ACI and similar divisions of Worldline, FIS and Fiserv. It’s really not been a good time to be selling software and services to banks. Nexi issuer revenues grew 4% in Q4 22 helped by an extra 1.7m international debit cards supported in Italy. Management is very happy to have won Commerzbank in Germany. 

Nexi earns twice as much revenue per transaction in merchant solutions than issuer solutions.

Digital banking solutions is the smallest of the three divisions, accounting for 14% of total revenues. It grew sales 7% in Q4 and reports continued good performance in its Italian open banking access platform. 

Cost control was impressive with overall expenses falling 0.5% in Q4. A 3.3% increase in personnel expenses was offset by a similar fall in operating costs as Nexi overdelivered promised synergies from its recent string of large acquisitions. The technology teams have been busy. Bertoluzzo said that in 2022, “we did actually consolidate 5 data centres and a couple of processing platform. We expect in the new year to basically do it in reverse and therefore, consolidate another couple of data centres and about 5 to 7 processing platforms.“ 

Rising revenues and steady costs helped EBITDA grow 8.7% in Q4 to €451.6m with EBITDA margins ticking up 2% pts to 51%. Of recent acquisitions, BPER and ISP Croatia together contributed €52.5m revenues and €40.6m EBITDA in FY 22.

This positive financial leverage has allowed Nexi to continue to invest. Capex was 16% of FY 22 revenues although this is expected to fall to 7-9% longer term as a series of integration projects comes to an end.

Looking forward management is confident about 2023 and is guiding investors to 7% revenue growth and >10% EBITDA growth. 

Santander project >€300m EBITDA from PagoNxt by 2025

Santander’s strategy day revealed its thinking on payments. Here’s what we learned:

  • Payments is one of a set of strategic “network” business lines which the bank believes diversifies its risk away from lending. 
  • Payments – merchant services, cards and A2H – accounts for c.10% of group revenue today and will grow to 13% by 2025.
  • Santander showed one killer statistic that substantiates the economic rationale for SMB acquiring. In Spain, Santander banking customers that also take POS acquiring generate 2.1x the margin of those that don’t. The multiplier is 1.6 in Mexico and 2.9 in Brazil.
  • Global transaction volume is expected to rise and cost per transaction processed expected to fall. This virtuous circle results in significant projected profit increases. 
  • Total payments transactions processed are forecast to grow 15% CAGR 2022-25. Growth is a little faster in Europe (+12%) than Latin America (+8%).  Platform cost per transaction is projected to fall c.20% each year.
  • Within Santander’s payments portfolio, PagoNxt, the merchant facing division, should exceed 30% EBITDA margin by 2025 as volume grows and unit costs decline. On 2022 revenues of €953m this implies achievable EBITDA for PagoNxt of well over €300m, given current growth rates. If realised, this would show that Santander has created substantial value with the establishment of PagoNxt. 

Global Blue anticipates strong 2023 with imminent return of Chinese travellers

Global Blue anticipates a strong 2023, buoyed by its return to profitability and the projected return of Chinese travellers. The Swiss headquartered provider of Tax-Free Shopping and associated services reported total sales in store, equivalent to payment volume, of €5.8bn in Q4 2022, the company’s Q3. This was just 6% below 2019 levels. While tax-free volumes were impacted by the continued absence Chinese and Russian shoppers and the UK government’s decision to abolish tax-free shopping in 2020, volumes in Advanced Payment Products (mainly DCC) have returned to pre-pandemic levels.

Total group revenue more than doubled in Q4 to €86.7m compared to 2021, though it remained 21% below 2019 levels. The company has maintained strong cost control measures as its revenues recover, with operating expenses up 33% on the year but 22% lower than 2019.

Tax-Free Shopping is Global Blue’s largest business unit, with over 300,000 merchant stores offering its services. Continental European tax free volumes are trending ahead of 2019 with US and Gulf visitors spending particularly freely. Management is confident that volumes in Asia Pacific will soon exceed 2019 levels as mainland Chinese shoppers have already started reappear in Singapore and South Korea. Survey evidence suggests that many Chinese are eager to resume traveling in 2023 and spend some of the €2.1tn savings built up during Covid. However, air travel capacity is projected to be limited in 2023, reaching only 25% of 2019 levels by April and 75% by Christmas. This means a full recovery won’t happen until 2024.

Global Blue’s Advanced Payment Product division, mainly DCC, has fully recovered, recording €1.4bn in volume in Q4, 17% higher than in 2019. However, revenues were only 1% higher, indicating some issues with pricing pressure and/or the customer mix. 

The company’s newest division, Complementary Retail Solutions, is an investment portfolio of businesses that help merchants engage with shoppers. In 2022, Global Blue acquired ShipUp, a French business that helps retailers communicate with customers post-purchase, for €35m. ShipUp has an annualized revenue of €5.5m and losses of €4.8m. Global Blue also acquired a small stake in Reflaunt, a circular fashion commerce provider, for €2m. These acquisitions complement a minority investment made in Twig, a circular commerce finance provider earlier this year.

Global Blue’s strong balance sheet, following the €211m equity investment from Certares and Knighthead in June 2022, is expected to enable the company to pursue further acquisitions. 

Overall, group operating profit was €9,2m compared to a loss of €19,4m in the same quarter of 2021 and a profit of €11m in 2019. Adjusted EBITDA, the company’s preferred measure of profitability, was €24.1m with positive results from TFS and AVP. The new CRS division made an EBITDA loss of €2.2m on €6.1m sales.

Block Q4 2022: Strong on financial discipline, doesn’t mention Bitcoin

Announcing Blocks’s Q4 2022 results, Jack Dorsey wanted to look serious about making money. With a stock price down two thirds since its pandemic peak, Block’s founder and CEO didn’t mention Bitcoin once. Instead, he told investors that he was making financial discipline the cornerstone of the company’s strategy. Going into 2023, he explained “each of our ecosystems must show a believable path to gross profit retention of over 100% and Rule of 40 on adjusted operating income.”  

The profit retention target requires each cohort of customers to generate more profit than the previous year. Dorsey said: “In the simplest terms, it means that our customers find value in our offerings and want to stick with us.” Cashapp and Square both met this test in 2022 but the mere fact of measuring cohorts is something that other payment companies, especially the unicorns, could learn from.

The second new test, the rule of 40, is a common yardstick used by software businesses. It states that the sum of profit margin and revenue growth should be greater than 40% and is said to encourage a focus on growing profitable revenue. Profit, of course, is a matter of opinion, so it’s to Dorsey’s credit that he’s going to define this measure based on operating income not EBITDA. This is welcome recognition that employee stock compensation and depreciation/amortisation are costs to the stockholders even if they are not cash costs to the business. In 2022, this measure was 23% when excluding the one-off boost from the Afterpay acquisition. Management will now need to focus on growing both top and bottom lines..

Cost control will be getting close attention. Although it hasn’t made layoffs, Block has slowed the pace of hiring. It expects to increase headcount 10% in 2023 compared with 46% growth in 2022. Sales and marketing expense will moderate to 5%-10% growth compared to 25%. 

Square, Block’s original proposition is the area which most interests us at Business of Payments, and continues to outperform traditional payment processors. But the years of explosive growth are gone, not least because of Square’s focus on Main Street SMBs. As a result, Square seems to be making relatively slow progress in eCommerce. Square gross payment volume (GPV) was up 14% to $49bn in Q4 2022. Card present was up 17% and “card not present” grew just 9%. Management called out “moderation in the GPV growth rates for discretionary verticals in the U.S. beginning in November, primarily for food and drink and retail.”

Plans to verticalize Square seem to be progressing nicely. CFO Amrita Ahuja revealed that Square is in the early stages of building out a software-led-with-embedded-financial-services sales team” with a focus on restaurants, retail and services. Only a minority of merchants now use the simple Square card reader. Most adopt more sophisticated tools. Ahuja explained “software plus integrated payments have become the significant portion of the Square business, 75% of Square’s gross profit.”

44% of Square profit comes from merchants taking four or more products compared to 29% three years ago. Mid-market sellers (>$500K GPV) with four or more products have 15x greater retention than those with just one which also helps the cohort profit retention target that Block is now highlighting. Square sees $500K-$10m GPV as the sweet spot and makes up half of its US addressable market. 

In contrast to the steepling growth seen when the proposition launched in the USA, international expansion of Square has been a more modest affair. Non-US GPV grew 23% in Q4 (or 39% at constant currencies) with profits growing the same percentage to $83m, excluding BNPL. The international business is steady at 10% of total Square gross profits.

Square aims for product parity across its international markets and has introduced Square for Retail and Square Appointments in Australia, and Square Appointments in Ireland. During 2022, Square originated $400m of small business loans in its international markets and claims that loss rates are similar to the US.

Square’s other business is Cashapp and it’s turning into a monster. With 51m monthly active users, it now makes as much gross profit as Square and has no less than five revenue streams with more than $100m gross profit: Instant deposit, Cashapp card, business accounts, Cashapp Borrow and Bitcoin. 

It’s understandable that Dorsey doesn’t want to talk much about crypto. Block’s Bitcoin revenue was down 29% in 2022 although the business seems to have stablised. Q4 revenue was down just 7% at $1.8bn. Buying and selling Bitcoin is a low margin operation. That $1.8bn revenue line generated just $35m gross profit at 2% margins. The total value of Bitcoin held by Block on behalf of its customers fell from $1.1bn to $428m from Dec 21 to Dec 22.

Despite changing the name of the company from Square to Block in recognition of its high state of excitement about decentralised finance, management didn’t mention Bitcoin once the investor call and none of the analysts asked about it. The $220m Bitcoin that Block purchased “for investment purposes” has been written down to $102m. But Dorsey is not giving up. Block recently led an investment round in a Kenyan Bitcoin miner.  

Merchant Services power Worldline growth

Worldline has reported strong growth in revenue and profits for H2 2022 as its Merchant Services division wins new customers and delivers on acquisition synergies. 

Total group sales rose 15% in Q4 to €1.186bn. Excluding acquisitions and currency effects, revenue was up 11%. Worldline only releases profit numbers for half years. In H2 22, total OMDA (operating margin before depreciation and amortisation) rose 25% to €664m. 

Worldline’s future is quite clearly now tied to Merchant Services, which accounts for 70% of group sales and 78% of profits. Performance at the two smaller divisions has been much less exciting. Financial Services grew sales just 4% although management is very proud of a new multi-market issuer processing deal with ING Bank. Mobility services, including mass transit ticketing, saw revenue grow only +1%. 

In contrast, Merchant Services numbers all pointed in the right direction. Payment volume rose 16% to €173bn, revenue was up 20% to €835m and profits (OMDA) rose 42% to €517m. Margins expanded 5ppts to 31% “reflecting the widespread and rapid shift towards digital payments as well as the Group’s strong positioning following the acquisition of Ingenico.“ 

Bottom line performance has been helped by the impressive realisation of synergies from the Ingenico and SIX acquisitions. Worldline claims €60m annual savings already realised from Ingenico with a further €40m to come in 2023 from this and other acquisitions. The fourth and final year of the SIX integration plans has been completed with over €110m annual synergies delivered. 

Merchant count rose 7% year on year to 1.245m split between 1.06m POS merchants and 185,000 web shops. Excluding recent acquisitions, Worldline has gained 200,000 merchants since the end of December 2020. Annualised processed volume per merchant rose 8% to €277K and revenue per merchant was up 15% to €1,335.

Marc-Henri Desportes, deputy CEO, said: “We build the best comprehensive payment stack by combining progressively the best assets of all our acquisitions, connecting them and migrating our volumes to reach scale, efficiency and the best product features.”

Management provided some detail on its Merchant Services strategy which focuses on leveraging Worldline’s consolidated acceptance/acquiring platforms to win enterprise clients, continued geographical expansion, normally in alliance with local banks that have good SME distribution, and on adding additional product capability through acquisition.

Enterprise sales are reported very strong as potential clients warm to the unified set of capabilities presented by the Worldline brand as highlighted by this chart from the results deck. Desportes went on: “We have now the best and most competitive offer on the European market for demanding high-volume retailers…these customers need a simple, unified commerce solution… we could beat the best international players who were tendering against us.

Management is particularly pleased with wins at Lufthansa, for its travel hub solution which includes multi-acquiring, and a “full omni-channel offering” at Monoprix including self-checkout and online mobile payments. 

Moving to SMEs, roughly 50% of European merchant acquiring is still controlled by banks, many of whom do not have the scale or technological capacity to provide modern payment acceptance propositions. In the past year, Worldline has concluded several good bank partnerships:

Wordline has also concluded two product acquisitions. To gain access to marketplace/ platform capability, it purchased 40% of Online Payment Platform (OPP), a Dutch PSP. And to strengthen its micro-merchant proposition, Worldline took a majority stake in Softpos.eu, a leading Polish softpos vendor. This is the technology on which “Worldine Tap on Mobile” is based.

With FIS demerging Worldpay, analysts asked whether Worldine would participate in any mega-mergers. Gilles Grapinet, CEO, said he was focused on more manageable corporate activity. “We are more interested into the size of the distribution channel than the financial magnitude of the transaction.. We believe the best way … is to expand the size of the distribution for Worldline, much more than onboarding any sizable, new payment platform that would generate massive integration effort and costs for a few years’ time.”