South African Digital Lender Lulalend Raises $6.5 Million In New Funding
South African startup Lulalend has just raised a $6.5 million in its Series A round of funding to, among other things, grow its loan book.
“The biggest thing is strengthening our balance sheet so we can access traditional debt funding to grow our loan book,” CEO Trevor Gosling said.
The Funding At A Glance
- The funding was led by IFC and Quona Capital.
- As part of the $6.5 million Series A, investor Quona Capital (which is sponsored by fintech organization Accion) will join LulaLend’s board.
- LulaLend co-founder Trevor Gosling said the startup could consider expansion in the future but will remain focused on South Africa for now.
- Lulalend will use the round to build its tech and data team and improve its ability to reach more SMEs in South Africa, according to CEO Trevor Gosling — who co-founded the startup in 2014 with Neil Welman.
“What we’re trying to achieve is building a $100 million loan book as quickly as possible and that’s what this raise is assisting us with,” Gosling said.
“We believe if you build a quality business opportunities will present themselves, whether it’s through a strategic partnership or an IPO or whatever makes sense at that time.”
The Idea of Lulalend
Lulalend uses an online based application process and internal credit metrics to provide short-term loans to small and medium-sized businesses that are often unable to obtain working capital.
Lulalend’s loan sizes range from around $1500 (≈ 20,000 South African Rand) up to $70,000, for 6 to 12-month tenors, requiring monthly payments of one-sixth or one-twelfth the total loan with monthly costs of 2 to 6 percent.
The most common loan is around $10,000 (≈ 148,000 Rand) over a 6-month term for a cost over the principal of roughly $1700, according to Gosling.
SMEs can apply online and need a bank account to receive a loan disbursement. A high percentage of Lulalend’s approvals are processed automatically — without requiring manual due diligence — using the company’s proprietary credit scoring tech.
Loans by sector for the startup run pretty evenly across online commerce companies, manufacturing and distribution type businesses, and professional and business services firms.
“When we set up the company the biggest piece within the automation that we’ve had to solve for is the underwriting component and ability to score companies,” Gosling said.
The startup has an internal database, developer team, and operates on Microsoft’s Azure cloud services. Co-Founder Neil Welman is the company’s CTO and brings previous experience in financial credit risk analysis.
That internal ability to assess loan risk and process loan applications (largely) straight through is how Lulalend is able to serve an under-served SME market. For many big South African banks, that require traditional due diligence and collateral, booking small loans doesn’t make economic sense, according to Gosling.
“With a very manual credit process and little automation, it doesn’t make…it….profitable to do $5000 loans,” he said.
Why Invest In Lulalend?
On why the fund invested in the startup Quona Capital Partner Johan Bosini said:
“We believe Lulalend’s tech-enabled scoring, combined with their ability to provide funding in a quick and transparent way, has the potential to…catalyze SME growth in South Africa.”
Lulalend does not release info on revenue or loan portfolio size, but Gosling said the company has a loss-rate below 4 percent and has reached profitability — something confirmed in the round due diligence process.
On the market for Lulalend’s business, Gosling highlighted IFC numbers indicating a $23 billion financing gap for South Africa’s SME’s — which are estimated to contribute 34 percent of the GDP for the country of 56 million.
Charles Rapulu Udoh
Charles Rapulu Udoh is a Lagos-based Lawyer with special focus on Business Law, Intellectual Property Rights, Entertainment and Technology Law. He is also an award-winning writer. Working for notable organizations so far has exposed him to some of industry best practices in business, finance strategies, law, dispute resolution, and data analytics both in Nigeria and across the world.