What's behind lending startup MoneyTap's exponential growth?
MoneyTap, a digital consumer lending startup, has seen immense growth by offering flexible credit options over the last five years. Can it maintain its pace?


What is more, lending is a ruthless business. Kacker explains the dynamics of the credit business by borrowing Al Pacino’s iconic life and football analogy from the blockbuster Any Given Sunday: “One half step too late or too early, you don"t quite make it. One half second too slow or too fast, and you don"t quite catch it. The inches we need are everywhere around us,” the actor, who played the role of a football coach, impressed upon his team in the 1999 flick.
Back in 2016, Kacker and his team began hunting for their inches across cafeterias of 100 companies—from factories and information technology companies to multinationals and startups. That’s where, and how, MoneyTap started to reach out to potential users in Bengaluru. ‘Please download the app if you ever need access to flexible and affordable money’ was the pitch. The catchment area was huge and the target group was the salaried looking for a quick loan towards the end of the month. MoneyTap, which tied up with RBL Bank as a financial partner (loans were offered by the bank) to begin with, had its task cut out.
The sweet spot was consumer lines of credit—a fixed amount that a credit card holder is entitled to access and spend. MoneyTap rolled out an innovative version of the credit line. Consumers were allowed instant access to approved unsecured funds—from Rs3,000 to Rs5 lakh they were required to pay interest only on the money they spent rather than the whole amount approved flexibility to pay back money in EMIs (from two to 36 months) was offered and interest rate options started from as low as 1.25 percent per month. Four years back, Kacker claims, MoneyTap was the first one to roll out such an innovative credit line. The proposition indeed was tempting given that personal loans offered by banks charge interest on the entire amount, have a fixed tenure, and take days for approval. Moreover, big and medium-sized banks don’t encourage small-ticket size borrowing. “We democratised consumer lending,” he says. The startup, he points out, has played true to the name of the parent company: MWYN Tech. “MWYN stands for Money When You Need,” he adds.
Covid-19 was one such disruption. The business for the startup dipped to 10 to 20 percent as the pandemic struck India. The biggest, and the most urgent, task was protecting the balance sheet. “You need to survive to tell the story,” quips Kacker. The survival part, he adds, was taken care of due to the funding round that happened in January, three months before the lockdown. “We were covered on that front,” he recalls. The next big task was to be extra cautious in lending. “Everybody wants money during such stressful times,” he adds.
What helped the most in tiding over the crisis was the existing set of consumers: Roughly 85 percent. “Fresh acquisition of customers is very tough in this market,” Kacker rues. The business now, he adds, is back to 80 percent of pre-Covid monthly disbursement levels. In February, MoneyTap disbursed Rs250 crore the amount for October stands at Rs210 crore. “I am not dependent on fresh customers. This is key for us,” he claims, explaining how old users are coming to his rescue. The ones with an approved loan over the last four years, and who have not exhausted their limit, are now dipping into their balance. What this means, he underlines, is that the guy who got a line of credit, say in September 2016, and has stayed with MoneyTap, is now transacting in September 2020. “So existing customers are taking out money and giving me disbursements, and revenue,” he says. Lending companies who depend on new customers every month, he points out, will find it more challenging during the present times. Kacker declined to share the amount disbursed and gross revenue from April to October.
The next challenge, though, will come from a new set of rivals. Fintech lending is getting excessively cluttered, with Big Boys like Paytm and Amazon hopping on the bandwagon. “Though they (MoneyTap) have done well, the fight is likely to intensify,” says Anil Joshi, founder of Unicorn India Ventures. With more players in the frame, and with almost similar offering, what would matter in the end is customer stickiness. But can there be loyalty in the credit business? Any company offering a tempting rate of interest would be able to attract consumers.
Parthasarathy differs. The game was never about getting as many as possible. In the early days, he recalls, MoneyTap used to reject over 80 percent of applications. Reason: Most of the people applying would already have multiple credit cards. “If you have five loans, I can’t give you the sixth one,” he explains, adding that he is not worried about the space getting crowded. There are three kinds of players in the segment: Banks and NBFCs, ecommerce companies and payments companies. While the first category will always exist, for the second and third category, it’s not the core business. Lending, he adds, is a specialised business. “Just because you have 200 million users transacting on your platform for other purposes doesn’t mean you can get into lending,” he says. “The math doesn’t work that way.”
First Published: Nov 05, 2020, 13:56
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