Loanboox in the media

Loanboox in the media

With a new CEO and strengthened management, Loanboox takes a step into the next growth phase. Here is an excerpt of current press reports. 

Bloomberg: BayernLB-Beteiligung in Schweiz bekommen neuen CEO von Unicorn

Der Neue Kämmerer: Finanzplattform Loanboox stellt sich personell neu auf

Handelszeitung: Kredit-Plattform Loanboox ernennt einen neuen Chef, Gründer geht in den VR

Börsenzeitung: Philippe Cayrol führt Loanboox

Finanzbusiness: Loanboox ernennt neuen CEO und CRO

Finews: Loanboox: Neuer Chef kommt von französischem Einhorn

Finews: Loanboox Hires CEO From French Unicorn

gj Geldinstitute: Loanboox verstärkt Geschäftsleitung

L’Agefi: Un ancien dirigeant de Blablacar nommé CEO de la fintech Loanboox

Institutional Money: Loanboox strukturiert Geschäftsleitung um

Kreditwesen: Loanboox: Umbau der Geschäftsführung

Agefi: Nomination Philippe Cayrol

Cash: Mühlemann gibt CEO-Rolle bei Loanboox ab

Finextra: Loanbox appoints new CEO and CRO

Finanz-szene.de: DKB, Hamburger Volksbank, Volkswagen Bank, Mastercard

Fintech Switzerland: Swiss Fintech Loanboox Appoints new CEO and CRO

MoneytodayDas FinTech Loanboox bekommt einen neuen CEO

Payment & Banking:  DAILY: Hickhack um Wirecard & weitere News

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Press release: 40bn milestone and strengthened executive team

  • BlaBlaCar manager Philippe Cayrol new CEO
  • Founder Stefan Muehlemann focuses on his position as Executive Chairman

Zurich, June 17th, 2020. The debt capital market platform Loanboox is broadening its executive team: Philippe Cayrol joins the Fintech as its new CEO. The experienced start-up manager takes over from founder Stefan Muehlemann who will focus on his role as Executive Chairman.

Philippe Cayrol, new CEO

unicorn BlaBlaCar. As Head of Corporate & Business Development, Cayrol developed the start-up into the world’s largest carpooling marketplace. Previously, Cayrol co-founded an investment fund in London that focused on growth capital for early stage companies.
The digitalisation of the large debt markets is only getting started, so I am very excited to join an exceptional team who is passionate about bringing more efficiency, accessibility and transparency to the debt capital markets. I am impressed by the innovative features and the traction of the platform and look forward to contributing to the future success of all our users,
says Cayrol.

Strengthened executive team to support new growth phase

With over CHF 40 billion of financing requests handled through the platform since the start and 2’500 organisations in six countries, I am incredibly proud of what we have achieved. As we now scale up our activities to the next level, including new products and target groups, it felt natural to strengthen the team. Whilst I was the right CEO for Loanboox’ inception and first years, it is now time to hand over operational responsibility to experts with relevant experiences. With Philippe, we have found a talented executive with the right mix of entrepreneurial spirit and execution capabilities,

says Muehlemann.

In addition to Cayrol, the two previous members Dario Zogg (Co-Founder & CTO) and Dominique Huegli (COO) complete Loanboox’ executive board. Co-Founder Andi Burri will continue his responsibilities as Country Head Switzerland and member of the Board of Directors, and will additionally focus on key customer relationships. Stefan Muehlemann, who founded Loanboox in 2015 and was CEO since then, will concentrate on his position as Executive Chairman.

About Loanboox:

Loanboox is the leading European debt capital market platform for large corporations, public-sector entities, institutional investors and banks. To date, Loanboox has processed financing requests of EUR 40 bn and is active in six countries.

Here you can download the press release and a picture of Philippe Cayrol and Stefan Muehlemann.

Press release: Loanboox receives BaFin approval under §32 KWG

Cologne, 22 April 2020. The debt capital market platform Loanboox has received its financial services licence from the financial supervisory authority BaFin in accordance with section 32 of the German Banking Act (KWG). As a regulated financial services institution, Loanboox is now qualified and authorised to provide investment brokerage services.

With the notice of approval from the supervisory authority, the fintech is pushing ahead with the expansion of its range of services in Germany:

The successful licensing by BaFin is an important building block on our strategic growth path. Thanks to the licence, we can now offer our clients a very broadly diversified product portfolio,

says Stefan Mühlemann, founder and CEO of Loanboox.

So far, Loanboox has mainly arranged financing for municipalities, districts and public utilities in Germany. The company will continue to pursue this course. In the future, however, the business is to be significantly intensified with new customer segments. For example, large and medium-sized companies could soon also issue registered and bearer bonds completely digitally via the platform.

We are currently in in-depth discussions with potential strategic partners to explore possibilities for cooperation. Here we have also included institutes from other European countries from the very beginning,

says Mühlemann.

Due to the EU-wide freedom to provide services, Loanboox can also use the authorisation obtained in Germany in other member states of the European Economic Area (EEA) by means of a notification procedure (passporting). In addition to Germany, the Swiss fintech is already active in Austria, France and the Netherlands. Further market entries are planned. In total, more than 2000 borrowers and 500 capital providers have access to the platform.
About Loanboox
Loanboox is the independent debt capital market platform. It connects companies and public sector institutions seeking capital with investors. Participating parties can negotiate on the platform without intermediaries and conclude loan transactions completely digitally. Since the launch of Loanboox in Germany in October 2017, financing of more than 7.5 billion euros has been requested via the platform. Around 600 borrowers and 150 capital providers from Germany are now connected to the platform.

Here you can download the press release and a picture of Stefan Mühlemann.

Online direct loan supports municipalities

Online direct loan supports municipalities

Online direct loan supports municipalities

Aktuelle Neuigkeiten zu Loanboox

DKB and loan platform Loanboox provide liquidity loans proactively with immediate effect

Loanboox and Deutsche Kreditbank AG (DKB) have jointly developed a fundamentally new solution for taking out and granting municipal liquidity loans: an online loan comparison with direct loans. The service is available immediately for all municipalities throughout Germany.

Compare and conclude liquidity loans online much faster

Currently, taking out loans is a lengthy process for municipalities: several offers have to be obtained and compared. Communication with lenders usually takes place in writing, by telephone or by fax.

With the online direct loan, this process is reversed, digitalised and thus considerably simplified for municipalities, especially in the current situation. Via the digital loan platform Loanboox, local authorities receive daily updated offers for short-term loans. Lenders such as DKB provide their offers, i.e. credit limits with different terms and corresponding interest conditions, proactively and not only upon request. The borrower can compare the offers directly online. After selecting the desired volumes and terms, the loan is bindingly concluded on the platform. Thus, the demand market is transformed into a supply market.

“Online lending for municipalities is a logical step in a digitalised world and will become an important instrument for municipal financing on the way to efficient e-government in the future. The new service also pays into our current growth and digitalisation strategy,” says Thomas Jebsen, Market Board Member of DKB. The direct bank is a financial partner for more than 4,000 municipalities, districts and municipal associations and focuses on proximity to its business customers at 26 locations nationwide.

Tender not applicable in future

For the future, the connection of further lenders is planned. In the future, this will eliminate the need for a call for tenders, as several offers will be available for comparison at the click of a button. “We are currently in talks with various financial institutions that want to use direct loans in the future to actively place surplus liquidity. We also plan to gradually roll out the service in other countries,” says Stefan Mühlemann, founder and CEO of Loanboox.

Direct loans available immediately

The direct loan is now available to all municipalities throughout Germany. Previously, the service had been tested and optimised in a six-month test phase with 50 selected municipalities. During this test phase, 40 loans with a total volume of around 400 million euros have already been brokered.

 

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Institutional investors rely on digital platforms for capital investment

Institutional investors rely on digital platforms for capital investment

Study on capital investment by institutional investors

Institutional investors are increasingly relying on digital platforms for their capital investments: Almost half of them use platforms for their acquisition. More than one in five investors extends loans online. This is the result of a study conducted by the FinTech Loanboox in cooperation with the TUM School of Management at the University of Munich.

Around 50 insurance companies, statutory health insurance funds, pension funds and asset managers from Germany, Austria and Switzerland took part in the study. More than half of the respondents manage assets of more than 3 billion euros.
One focus of the study was the question of the respective investment strategy. Among other things, the study examined which asset classes are invested in, which influencing factors underlie the investment decisions and to what extent digital applications play a role in capital investment.

Corporate is most important asset class for institutional investors

When asked about the importance of various asset classes, corporates stand out as the most important form. 84 percent of all study participants rate them as (rather) important. With regard to the asset classes near public sector (NPS), real estate and infrastructure, no tendency can be observed with regard to a uniform rating of relevance. If one compares the response behaviour of investors from the regions of Switzerland and Germany/Austria, however, it is noticeable that Swiss investors have a different attitude towards the NPS area. Thus, 71 percent of the Swiss consider the asset class NPS to be (rather) important, whereas only 36 percent of the two countries from the Eurozone do.

When making investment decisions, investors are primarily guided by the criteria of return (82%), rating (77%), maturity (74%) and liquidity (72%). On the other hand, the criteria of intended use and experience with customers generally play a subordinate role. Only pension funds consider the latter criterion to be more relevant.

Platform competence is higher in Switzerland than in Germany

In acquisition activities, analogue “channels” are now increasingly being replaced by digital ones. The majority of respondents (70%) prefer emails. The second most frequently mentioned channel is the telephone (65%). This is already followed by digital platforms, which are used as an acquisition channel by 43% of the participants. Personal conversations as well as contacting financial advisors play a subordinate role with 19 percent, as does the fax, which is only used by one study participant.

Digital applications are also increasingly being used for lending. Two out of ten investors already grant loans via digital platforms. However, there are strong country-specific differences here. While two-thirds of all investors surveyed in Switzerland use platforms to grant loans, in Germany/Austria this figure is only around 11 percent. One possible reason could be a lack of familiarity with the use of such platforms. In Germany/Austria, 45 percent of respondents are (rather) unfamiliar with the use of digital platforms, in Switzerland it is only 29 percent.

In contrast, the question as to which features of digital platforms are considered most relevant is answered uniformly across all countries. Market transparency is seen as a (rather) important aspect by 77 percent of all respondents. None of them rated this point as (rather) unimportant. The possibility of saving time is described as a (rather) important feature by 66 percent of the participants. Only just under 6 percent of the participants rate the time saving as a less relevant factor.

Here you can download a PDF der Pressemitteilung of the press release.

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Series B: Loanboox collects 20 million euros

Series B: Loanboox collects 20 million euros

Series B: Loanboox collects 20 million euros

Press release

The Fintech company Loanboox, the leading money and capital market platform, collects 20 million euros (CHF 22 million) in the Series B financing round. Investors include the Deutsche Kreditbank AG, the LGT Group and other well-known investors from Europe and overseas. The company’s valuation rises to 110 million euros (CHF 122 million).

Loanboox was launched in Switzerland at the end of 2016. The winner of last year’s Swiss Fintech Award now employs 40 people in Switzerland, Germany, France and Austria. Loanboox offers an online platform for big ticket loans, which makes financing and investing simpler, more transparent, more secure and reduces costs. Its clients are public-sector authorities, banks, large corporations and institutional investors. In Switzerland, private placements and bonds can also be issued through Loanboox. Since Go-Live at the end of 2016, a financing volume of 17.5 billion euros (CHF 20 billion) has been requested through Loanboox and over 1000 customers are active on the platform.

Round was oversubscribed

In order to secure further growth, Loanboox carried out a Series B financing round. Founder and CEO Stefan Muehlemann is very pleased with the great response from international investors: In fact, we had the opportunity to select the new investors who could offer the most added value to Loanboox, as we were significantly oversubscribed. In addition, all previous shareholders have again invested in this round, a special sign of trust. We take those results as a great compliment, but also as an incentive for our further expansion in Europe and the expansion of our product range, for which we are now ideally equipped. Even after the Series B financing round, the majority of the shares will remain in the hands of the founders and employees. The current valuation of 110 million euros (CHF 122 million) is an impressive illustration of Loanboox’ success to date, but also of its enormous potential. The aim is to achieve profitability by the end of 2021.

DKB’s first Fintech investment

With the Deutsche Kreditbank and the LGT Group as further institution in the financial sector, Loanboox has gained two renowned investors who, like the other investors, also contribute expertise. Muehlemann: «This is a clear sign of our openness towards traditional market participants. We are proud to have gained the DKB, a digital pioneer in the banking environment, and the LGT Group, a globally active financial group, as investors». Since the investments of both companies are in the low single-digit percentage range, Loanboox’ independence is still fully guaranteed. Thomas Jebsen, executive board member of DKB: In the future, the platform economy will also change the traditional financing business of the public sector in Europe and we want to participate in this at an early stage Also Prince Max von und zu Liechtenstein, CEO of the LGT Group, is pleased about the investment: Loanboox is trend-setting in the area of big ticket debt. We are convinced of that.

Several other well-known business angels

In addition to these two well-known addresses, numerous family offices and very well networked business angels have invested. Amongst others Emmanuel Roth (Co-Managing Partner at Five Arrows Principal Investments), Luzius Meisser (Co-Founder Bitcoin Association Switzerland and Board of Director at different Swiss Start-ups), Gerd Häusler (Member of the supervisory board of different German companies), Mutschler Ventures (with successful multi-investor Sylvie Mutschler), Delphen SARL (with ex-BCG Europe Chairman and now Loanboox France President René Abate) and Prof. Roland Berger (Founder, Partner and Honorary Chairman of Supervisory Board of the international strategy consultancy Roland Berger), who comments on Loanboox as follows: For me, Loanboox is an important catalyst for increasing transparency, efficiency and security in the financing sector by creating significant and sustainable benefits for all market participants. The further applications of the technology and the platform are enormous.

Contact for questions

Loanboox
Mr. Stefan Muehlemann, Founder & CEO
Mr. Fabian Haag, Marketing Communications Manager
Burgmauer 10, 50667 Cologne
0049 221 9865420
press@loanboox.de

Here you can find the press release as PDF and a picture of Stefan Muehlemann.

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