Tuesday, October 20, 2020

Can an A.I. algorithm help end unfair lending? This company says yes

Our mission to help you navigate the new normal is fueled by subscribers. To enjoy unlimited access to our journalism, subscribe today.

Jenny Vipperman, the chief lending officer at Vystar Credit Union, among the largest U.S. credit unions, wanted to lend more money to minorities and other disadvantaged groups that historically have struggled to obtain credit. But finding a way to lend more inclusively without taking on potentially dangerous amounts of risk was difficult using standard credit scoring and the tried-and-true lending rules of thumb that Vystar had been relying on.

“We had been approaching lending as an art not a science,” she says. “But it is 2020 now, and we have access to much better data and we should be able to leverage that data to make more scientific decisions.”

She heard about a Los Angeles-based startup called Zest AI that was using artificial intelligence to help banks and credit unions lend more inclusively and decided to give it a try. But she wasn’t expecting what happened after Zest trained its A.I. system on several years’ worth of Vystar’s lending records: The A.I. figured out how to increase Vystar’s approvals for credit cards by 22% while keeping Vystar’s risk constant.

“That is thousands of people who otherwise would not have had access to a credit card,” Vipperman says.

Results like this are helping Zest build a growing stable of customers among financial institutions both large and small. It says that on average it can increase loan approvals 20% with no additional risk and it can help banks reduce charge-offs—or debts that cannot be collected—by 50%.

Today the company announced that it has received $15 million in additional funding from Insight Partners, a New York-based venture capital firm. Zest’s valuation from the financing was not disclosed. The latest round brings the amount the company has raised since its founding in 2009 to more $230 million. As part of the fundraising, Lonne Jaffee, an Insight managing director, will be joining Zest’s board.

Zest’s previous backers have included Baidu, the Chinese search giant, as well as venture capital firms including Lightspeed Venture Partners, Matrix Partners, and Upfront Ventures. It also received $150 million in “venture debt” from investment management firm Fortress.

Deven Parekh, Insight’s managing partner, said the venture firm, which only invests in fast-growing software businesses aimed at serving large organizations, was drawn to Zest’s ability to help banks improve financial equality through A.I. and the way it could help banks manage A.I. systems over time.

This “model management” function—which involves not just creating an A.I. model, but running it on an on-going basis, monitoring it to make sure the data it is being fed is not deviating substantially from the data it was trained on, and periodically re-training it—has become increasingly important to companies as the number of A.I. systems they use has begun to proliferate.

Zest was founded as ZestCash by Douglas Merrill, a former chief information officer at Google. It began life as a financial technology company that would underwrite short-term loans directly to consumers. But, over time, the company switched to selling fairer credit modeling software to other financial institutions and rebranded itself as Zest Finance. In October last year, Merrill departed the company and it rebranded once again, to Zest AI.

Mike de Vere, who became Zest’s chief executive in December, says that the company is now solely focused on selling software to banks and credit unions to help them create and manage A.I. lending models. The company makes money by charging lenders a subscription to use its software.

The company is one of several startups using A.I. to improve lending. Others include Underwrite.ai and Upstart as well as efforts being tried inside banks themselves. Zest has found traction with some big banks, including Turkey’s Akbank, as well as work for Citigroup and France’s BNP Paribas.

One problem with using A.I. software, particularly in a highly-regulated area like lending, is that some powerful A.I. models are also opaque. It can be difficult even for the data scientists who helped create them to understand exactly how they have arrived at any particular decision.

De Vere says Zest’s A.I. systems are far more transparent. “We have broken the black box and fully explain the machine-learning model,” he says. He says that Zest has gone through regulatory audits of its systems, including an audit of the model it helped build for a large U.S. private bank by the U.S. Treasury Department’s Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, and has been able to satisfy them that the correct reasons are being given for any adverse action—such a credit denial.

Vipperman says this transparency was critical for Vystar being comfortable with handing lending decisions to Zest’s models. “We have the ability to review those factors it is weighting most heavily in its decisions and make sure it is not learning something that we don’t want it to be learning,” she says.

Zest’s fairness and de-biasing system is based on a type of machine learning technique called a generative adversarial network, or GAN, which is the same technology that makes deepfakes—highly believable photos and videos created by A.I. software—possible. GANs work by yoking two different neural networks—a kind of machine-learning software loosely based on how the human brain works—together: One network generates a model and the second network acts as a “critic” that pushes the first network to improve.

In Zest’s case, the first network creates a lending model without having access to data about the applicants’ race or any information, such as post code or a person’s name, that can often serve as proxy for race. The second network does have access to the applicant’s race and computes how far away from perfect fairness the first network’s lending model is. It then feeds that difference back to the first model, prodding it to adjust how it weighs various pieces of data in order to create a fairer model.

Sean Kamkar, Zest’s head of data science, says the company’s GAN-based system can almost always find a way to improve fairness while keeping risk levels constant by making small adjustments in how different pieces of data are weighed. And some of Zest’s customers are willing to go further, sacrificing tiny amounts of potential profit, for huge gains in inclusivity and fairness. DeVere says one auto lender it worked with found that by giving up just $2 in profit, or 0.125% of a loan with an average profit of $1,600, it was able to increase the number of auto loans it was offering to Black customers by 4%.

De Vere says Zest’s technique for improving the fairness of a lending model is far superior to the existing industry standard in banking, which is a technique called “drop one.” In this method, a financial institution takes its lending model and then simply eliminates—or drops—one of the variables from consideration completely and sees how the model performs on both risk and fairness. It then repeats this in turn for each of the variables in the model. Kamkar compares this to “taking a hammer” to the model, and not surprisingly, most models perform much worse when one variables is completely eliminated.

The problem. De Vere says, is that banks will often cynically use “drop one” analysis as an excuse to avoid altering their lending practices to be more inclusive. Most regulators will allow the “drop one” analysis as evidence that the bank has a valid business rationale for sticking with the existing model. De Vere says he has been trying to persuade lawmakers and regulators to compel financial institutions to move beyond “drop one.”

More must-read tech coverage from Fortune:





* This article was originally published here

Sunday, September 13, 2020

America’s $20 trillion debt is getting cheaper as it grows

Our mission to help you navigate the new normal is fueled by subscribers. To enjoy unlimited access to our journalism, subscribe today.

The U.S. government is paying less as it borrows more, one reason investors appear more comfortable than Congress about funding another leg of stimulus.

Interest payments in the federal budget declined about 10% in the first 11 months of this fiscal year, when America was running up its biggest deficit since World War II. Over the next few years, servicing the national debt will be cheaper than any time in the past half-century when measured against the size of the economy, according to the Congressional Budget Office.

That’s because yields in the $20 trillion U.S. Treasury market plunged to record lows early in the pandemic — and they’ve risen only slightly since then, even though the supply of debt has surged to a record.

Borrowing probably won’t always be this cheap, but for now the U.S. government is far from running up against any financial limits, as it seeks to shore up the economy after a wave of shutdowns and layoffs. Concerns that the country can’t afford much more spending have been voiced by officials from both political parties in recent weeks, as stimulus efforts ground to a halt.

“While there’s been a lot of concern about the mounting debt, it hasn’t caused the problems that were anticipated by the doomsters,” says Ed Yardeni, founder of Yardeni Research Inc. “It’s not just a question of how much debt is outstanding, but what is the cost to service that debt.”

The CBO predicts a deficit of about $3.7 trillion this year, or 16% of GDP, more than triple the year-earlier figures. Bonds issued to fund the shortfall have pushed the U.S. public debt past $20 trillion –- more than the economy’s annual output.

‘Not stretched’

Yet the average yield on the debt has dropped to 1.7%, from 2.4% in December, and it’s set to fall further.

Even after a few auctions that saw signs of faltering demand, the government can borrow for 30 years at below 1.5%. And the Treasury has tilted sales toward such longer-term securities, helping lock in historically low rates. The latest long-bond auction on Thursday drew a solid bid.

“The U.S.’s debt affordability is quite OK, not stretched by any means,” says Felipe Villarroel, a portfolio manager at TwentyFour Asset Management in London. “We also look at what is the perceived use of the money a government is borrowing, which is now widely accepted as necessary.”

The idea that governments need financial-market approval for their budget policies has in any case been called into question.

Anti-vigilante

Yardeni coined the term “bond vigilantes” in the early 1980s. It described investors who were supposed to exert power over governments by selling their bonds, or merely threatening to, and thus making deficit-spending more expensive.

But now the dominant presence in markets is a kind of anti-vigilante, which does the opposite of all those things: the Federal Reserve.

Fed purchases have siphoned about $1.8 trillion of government debt out of the market since March, while the Treasury was issuing some $3 trillion of new bonds. The central bank is currently adding about $80 billion of Treasuries a month. It’s also promised to keep short-term rates at zero for the foreseeable future and tolerate above-target inflation, while urging the government not to ease up on fiscal stimulus.

Stanley Fischer, former vice chair of the Federal Reserve, said Friday in a Bloomberg Television interview that a low interest-rate burden means the Fed can do more to bolster the economy.

“It means that the Fed can keep going with very cheap money, that it can go on for a much longer time at this rate,” he said.

There’s a broad consensus among bond investors that if rates on longer-term government debt start to creep up, as they’ve occasionally threatened to, then the Fed can and will step in.

‘Still out there’

“If there were some bond vigilantes still out there to push the bond yields higher,” is how Yardeni puts it, “then the Fed will target the bond yields.”

In an Aug. 31 speech, Fed Vice Chair Richard Clarida left the door open to a policy of capping Treasury yields at some point, though he indicated it’s not imminent.

Even the potential for such a move is helping to keep the government’s borrowing costs down, investors say.

The 10-year Treasury note has been trading around 0.7% for weeks, and it’s forecast to end the year within a few basis points of that level, according to Bloomberg surveys.

‘Look different’

In the financial world there are plenty who argue that the low interest bills America currently pays on its growing debt are just a short-term respite –- like a teaser rate on a jumbo mortgage.

“The Fed is greasing the system to make sure the financial markets are functioning well,” says Gary Pollack, head of fixed-income for private wealth management at Deutsche Bank. “But at some point in time the world will look different, and all of a sudden we are going to be stuck with a huge bill.”

That view still carries some weight in Congress too, even if deficit hawks –- Washington’s version of bond vigilantes –- aren’t the force they once were.

President Donald Trump’s Republican Party has used its Senate majority to push for scaled-back measures in the next pandemic bill. Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden has promised more spending if he beats Trump in November’s election, but a senior aide told the Wall Street Journal last month that it’s not clear what America can afford because “the pantry is going to be bare.”

‘Not worth anything’

Taking the opposite view is the emerging school of Modern Monetary Theory. It argues that countries like America, which borrow in their own currency, can set the interest rates on their debt as a policy variable –- and don’t really need to sell bonds anyway. The risk is overheating the economy rather than running out of market funds.

Also cited by the dovish camp is Japan, which has a national debt about two-and-a-half times bigger than America’s (by comparison with their economies). After more than two decades of low interest rates, its debt-servicing cost is approximately zero.

David Levy, chairman of Jerome Levy Forecasting Center LLC, says that ultimately there are limits to government debt –- but the U.S. is nowhere near hitting them, and has room for more borrowing to pull its economy out of the coronavirus slump.

“It would take a long time to get to the type of inflationary scenario where people thought the dollar was not worth anything,” he says. “You can keep this process growing without it breaking down.”

More must-read finance coverage from Fortune:



* This article was originally published here

Wednesday, September 9, 2020

JPMorgan flags potentially ‘illegal’ actions of employees and PPP loan recipients

Our mission to help you navigate the new normal is fueled by subscribers. To enjoy unlimited access to our journalism, subscribe today.

The embattled Paycheck Protection Program, rolled out in April to help keep small businesses alive during shutdowns, has long been flagged for possible fraud. Now, the program’s biggest lender is investigating some of its own employees for aiding misuse of funds by customers.

In a memo sent from senior staff Tuesday, first reported by Bloomberg and also viewed by Fortune, the bank found “instances of customers misusing Paycheck Protection Program Loans, unemployment benefits and other government programs,” adding that some of JPMorgan’s own “employees have fallen short, too,” per the memo.

JPMorgan was the PPP’s biggest lender, dolling out some $29.4 billion in funds across over 280,000 loans before the program ended on Aug. 8. The firm said in the memo Tuesday it had found “conduct that does not live up to our business and ethical principles” that “may even be illegal.”

Trish Wexler, a spokesperson for JPMorgan, declined to comment further to Fortune.

The risk of illegal actions and misuse of the government funds has been top of mind for government watchdogs, government officials, and the media since the program’s rollout in early April. The Federal Bureau of Investigation and Department of Justice have already levied cases against possible fraudsters, and as of a June 9 report, nearly 100 cases had been initiated since the program’s rollout, some already leading to convictions. Shortly after the program began, there was also general outcry over large, publicly-traded companies receiving loans while smaller businesses struggled to access the funds.

Meanwhile, House Democrats released a preliminary report last week that found over $1 billion in funds went to companies with multiple loans, writing the program had a “high risk for fraud, waste, and abuse.” Additionally, the analysis found that roughly $3 billion was “flagged” by the federal government’s System for Award Management (SAM) database and PPP loan-level data, the Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Crisis wrote in the report—building on earlier claims that “there is a significant risk that some fraudulent or inflated applications were approved,” per a June report by the Government Accountability Office (GAO).

All told, loans from the government program went to over 5 million small businesses, but left over $130 billion in unused funds, per the latest Small Business Administration report.

Now, JPMorgan said Tuesday “we are doing all we can to identify those instances, and cooperate with law enforcement where appropriate,” per the firm’s memo, telling employees “We need everyone to be vigilant.”

After all, Maria Earley, a financial services regulatory and enforcement partner at international law firm Reed Smith, told Fortune back in April that “There will be fake companies, and there will be people doing fraudulent things, and no bank wants to be the one that approved that [application].”

More must-read finance coverage from Fortune:



* This article was originally published here

Wednesday, September 2, 2020

Tesla bulls dig in their hooves after company’s $5 billion capital raise announcement

Tesla certainly knows how to strike when the iron is hot.

The Elon Musk-led electric vehicle behemoth saw a 13% surge from bullish investors and traders on Monday following its 5-for-1 stock split— building on roaring momentum that’s seen the stock skyrocket 479% this year.

But Tesla isn’t stopping there: early Tuesday, the company announced a capital raise of up to $5 billion worth of shares via 10 top banks including Goldman Sachs and Citigroup, selling them “from time to time, through an ‘at-the-market’ offering program,” the company said in an SEC filing.

And Tesla bulls are seemingly digging their hooves in deeper.

“I think this was purely a golden opportunity to shore up its balance sheet and just given the massive momentum in shares, it was the right move at the right time because now they’re no longer in a negative debt situation relative to its balance sheet,” Wedbush’s ever-bullish Dan Ives tells Fortune.

Currently Tesla holds about $14.1 billion in total debt and finance leases and roughly $8.6 billion in cash (as of its latest 2nd quarter report).

Although the stock was trading down roughly 2% in midday trading Tuesday, for investors, “this just puts further credence in the longer-term bullish thesis for Tesla,” Ives argues. “I think it really takes the lingering bear thesis around the balance sheet and debt situation and throws it out the window.”

Naturally, Tesla bulls haven’t been shy on Twitter.

This latest capital raise comes six months after the EV maker raised some $2 billion in a stock offering—moves that “initially took the doomsday scenario off the table that Tesla was facing at the time and ultimately helped them navigate the build out of the linchpin Giga 3 factory in China and enough time for the model to hit sustained profitability,” Ives wrote in a note Tuesday.

The ‘champagne on ice for S&P 500 inclusion’

Meanwhile, inclusion in the S&P 500 index has been an increasingly hot topic for Tesla investors, and according to some bulls, this latest one-two punch of the stock split and capital raise “basically puts the champagne on ice for S&P inclusion,” Wedbush’s Ives believes. Inclusion would be “important institutionally-speaking,” Ives says, as he notes institutional interest in the stock has grown in recent months, and he believes inclusion is now a “matter of when, not if.”

Yet less bullish voices on the Street view Tesla’s hype as a bit overdone.

“Tesla will have growing pains, recessions to fight through before reaching mass-market volume, more competition, and needs to pay off debt,” Morningstar’s David Whiston wrote in an August 25 note. “It is important to keep the hype about Tesla in perspective relative to the firm’s limited, though now growing, production capacity.”

That debt, at least, may be tended to via the company’s newest capital raise, but Morningstar’s Whiston believes there are some bigger issues: “We do not see [Tesla] having mass-market volume this decade. Tesla’s product plans for now do not mean an electric vehicle for every consumer who wants one, because the prices are too high,” he writes.

Meanwhile, the question of if Tesla deserves its sky-high valuation is increasingly at the fore—And according to longtime short-seller Jim Chanos of Kynikos Associates, “Tesla’s not a market leader. The product at Tesla that’s always been first-rate is the narrative,” he recently told Fortune.

Yet following the company’s stock split on Monday, analysts like Morningstar’s Whiston have updated their tune somewhat: he believes Tesla’s “ability to make desirable vehicles while generating free cash flow and net profit is far better than it’s ever been, in our opinion,” Whiston wrote Monday, and notes that “for a young company like Tesla, we think long-term potential is the more important question and value driver than how many Model 3 or Model Ys get delivered in a quarter.”

Ives is willing to go even further: His bull-case-scenario sees Tesla popping over 40% higher from Monday’s close.

More must-read finance coverage from Fortune:



* This article was originally published here

Saturday, August 29, 2020

‘Things will become more difficult:’ Merkel tries to sell debt-averse Germany on her ambitious COVID spending plan

Chancellor Angela Merkel warned the coronavirus crisis will get worse before it gets better and that the fallout will test Germany’s finances for months if not years to come.

The long-time leader of Europe’s biggest economy was short on comforting words, saying that beating the disease hangs on the uncertain pace of developing and disseminating a vaccine—a process that could take 12 months or more. As the summer draws to a close and people are forced indoors, the situation is likely to get worse, she said during her annual summer address.

“I am firmly convinced that it is a good decision to take on a high degree of debt because anything else would mean we would be in the grip of the pandemic for a lot longer,” Merkel said Friday in Berlin. “In retrospect, I’m happy we didn’t succumb to the sweet poison of borrowing in good times,” giving Germany more resources to fight the crisis now.

The wide-ranging briefing was one of her last summer press conferences before she steps down after 16 years in power following elections next fall. She made it clear that the Covid-19 crisis will dominate the remainder of her political career, opening the event with a personal appeal to Germans in which she thanked them for their sacrifices but warned that more would be needed.

“There are indications that things will become more difficult in coming months,” she said. “It’s serious, unchanged serious. Continue to take it seriously.”

‘Extraordinary’ Times

While Merkel has been praised for her handling of the pandemic, cracks have started to appear. She struggled to get state leaders aligned on response measures as infection rates rising again. On Thursday, the chancellor urged Germans to avoid travel to virus-hit areas like the U.S., and warned that restrictions on family gatherings may still come.

Merkel’s crisis management has been accompanied by her government’s historic decision to abandon its balanced-budget policy, suspending constitutional debt limits as part of a massive stimulus push. She was also a driving force behind the European Union’s recovery fund, which allows the bloc to pool borrowing for the first time.

“If extraordinary circumstances don’t make it possible to act in an extraordinary way, then you’re doing something wrong politically,” she said, adding that the pandemic will challenge Germany’s financial capacity because of the uncertainty over when it will end.

While she defended Germany’s borrowing binge, Merkel showed that her government aims to maintain as much budget discipline as possible. The country will get around 22 billion euros ($26 billion) from the European Union’s recovery fund, which she helped to create. Rather than use the funds for new initiatives, most of the money will be spent on existing programs under its stimulus plan.

‘Back in Gear’

The country has to work hard to “maintain our economy as much as possible or get it back in gear again,” she said, adding that Germany also needs to focus on issues such as climate change and digitalization that will impact its future competitiveness.

While the pandemic dominated Friday’s press conference, Merkel is also battling geopolitical tensions. Germany’s relations with Russia have taken a hit after the alleged poisoning of opposition leader Alexey Navalny, who is being treated at a Berlin clinic close to where the news conference is being held.

She voiced concern about the possibility of Russia sending troops into Belarus after President Vladimir Putin said the Kremlin has prepared a cadre of police officers to assist the country if necessary. She said that tensions will continue to accompany German-Russian relations in the coming months but there’s no need to harden her stance.

Merkel’s Other Main Points
Won’t change policy on Russia; goal is to maintain good relationship
Rejects U.S. attempts to halt Nord Stream 2 pipeline, wants project completed
Will seek EU-wide response if tests prove Navalny was poisoned
Regrets resignation of Japan Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who always defended multi-lateralism
Defends decisions on immigration, would mostly do same again

On the domestic front, Merkel has tried to sidestep discussions about her successor, but has been drawn into the jockeying by appearing in recent weeks with potential contenders from her conservative Christian Democratic-led bloc: North Rhine-Westphalia’s premier Armin Laschet and Bavaria’s Markus Soeder.

Meanwhile, Finance Minister Olaf Scholz has already been declared the chancellor candidate for the Social Democrats, and campaigning has seeped into her fraught coalition.

Merkel, who was in quarantine earlier this year after contact with a doctor who later tested positive, usually takes a walking holiday in the mountains of Italy’s South Tyrol, but Covid-19 quashed those plans, so Merkel kept it local and vague, saying only that she would spend her summer vacation this summer in Germany.

Asked on Friday what she regrets about the containment restrictions, she said: “Mostly I miss the spontaneity in contact with other people.”

More must-read international coverage from Fortune:



* This article was originally published here

Tuesday, August 25, 2020

In an ominous turn, U.S. debt is on track to soar past World War II levels

In 1946, President Harry Truman confronted an economic downturn and a whopping bill for the Second World War. The country’s debt level stood at 119% of GDP—meaning the U.S. owed more than its total annual economic output.

This year, as a result of massive federal spending and the economic toll of the coronavirus, the ratio of debt to GDP is even higher. According to research from The Balance, that ratio will reach 136% by the end of the third quarter.

The figure is a source of concern because interest payments on that debt could eventually crowd out other national priorities such as health or defense.

The new 136% figure reflects an acceleration of a trend that has been taking place since 1979 when the U.S. debt-to-GDP stood at 31%. While debt levels dipped between 1995 and 2005, figures from the St. Louis Federal Reserve show the overall trend has been steadily upwards:

US debt-to-GDP levels since 1966

The current fiscal situation raises the question of whether the U.S. economy will be able to replicate its performance of the years following World War II when debt levels shrunk rapidly thanks to rapid growth.

Unfortunately, that scenario is unlikely since most economists believe 1950s style growth rates, which averaged over 4%, are not achievable, in part because of the country’s changed demographics. Compared to the post-war era, the U.S. population is significantly older, meaning there is a smaller share of younger workers to help drive the economy.

In the absence of strong growth, the U.S. will likely to have to rely on cutting spending in order to prevent its debt levels from becoming unmanageable.

In the short term, though, spending cuts are unlikely as the U.S. seeks to protect the country and the economy from the ravages of the coronavirus. In an interview with the Wall Street Journal, one expert likened the fight against COVID to what the U.S. faced during World War II.

“The war analogy is exactly the right one. We were and are fighting a war. It’s a virus, not a foreign power, but the level of spending isn’t the problem,” Glenn Hubbard, a former chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers, told the Journal.

More must-read finance coverage from Fortune:



* This article was originally published here

Monday, August 24, 2020

Saving money on life insurance

In our latest article, we look at some of the best ways you can save money on your life insurance.

1. Get it while you’re young

  1. The best way to get cheap life insurance is to get it while you’re young, the older you get the
    more expensive policies will become. Life insurance might not be at the top of your agenda, but
    trust us, the older you will be thankful for your foresight!

2. Get the right policy

There are a variety of policies to choose from when it comes to life insurance, but primarily they fall into two camps; Term and Whole of Life.

Term insurance

Term insurance is a policy which has a set length of time, for example, 20, 25 or 30 years and is typically aligned with major commitments such as a mortgage. If you die during the policy’s duration, your family will receive a lump sum pay-out. There are two types of term life insurance policies, level and decreasing. Level pays out a fixed amount regardless of when you die, so if you take out £150,000 of cover today, your benefices will receive that amount if you were to die in 20 years. Decreasing term is different in that the amount it pays out will reduce every year, so £150,000 of cover in 20 years would be significantly less. Decreasing term life insurance is one of the cheapest options and is usually used alongside a big debt such as a mortgage, so the debt and the payout reduce alongside each other.

Whole of life insurance

Whole of life insurance, as the name implies, will cover you for your whole life, assuming you keep up with the monthly payments. Seeing that it is guaranteed to payout, it will be more expensive than level or decreasing term policies.

Finding the right policy

Life insurance can be complicated which is why we always recommend speaking to an independent broker such as myTribe Insurance who can give you free advice on based on your circumstances and help you compare the UK’s providers.

3. Set the term correctly

When you set your life insurance policy up, you need to make sure you think carefully about how long it should run for. Ask yourself why you’re getting the policy and when those reasons may not be relevant. For example, you may wish to have the policy for the length of your mortgage so that should you die your family can stay in the family home. Equally, you may only want cover while your children and young. Just bear in mind that the longer you have a policy the more expensive it will be.

4. Compare policies

As we’ve already alluded to when we mentioned you should speak to a life insurance broker, comparing policies is one of the best ways to bring the cost down. If you’re not keen on speaking to someone there are also plenty of online tools you can use that will give you the comparison you’re looking for but won’t be able to provide you with personalised advice.

5. Don’t over-insure

When you’re taking out your policy it’s very tempting to get as much cover as you can, but it needs to be affordable, not just today but in years to come too. We always recommend only insuring yourself for what you need, if your family could just as well survive with £200,000 there isn’t a need to cover yourself for £500,000.

6. Give up smoking

Finally, and at the risk of sounding like a parent, giving up smoking is another excellent way to reduce your health insurance costs.



* This article was originally published here

Tuesday, August 18, 2020

American Express just bought most of online upstart Kabbage

American Express is acquiring the teams and technology behind the online lender Kabbage as the credit-card giant seeks to provide more loans and other services to small-business owners.

Details of the acquisition talks emerged last week, and AmEx said Monday in a statement that the deal won’t include Kabbage’s pre-existing loan portfolio. Those loans, including ones tied to the federal government’s Paycheck Protection Program, will be managed and retained by a dedicated entity when the deal is completed, AmEx said. It didn’t disclose other terms of the transaction.

AmEx has been encouraging its credit-card customers to borrow more on its products, and is now bringing that strategy to its small-business unit. Already the largest credit-card issuer in that sector, AmEx will use the deal to offer more cash-flow management tools and working-capital products to mom and pop operations.

“The current crisis has been hard on small businesses — in many ways they’re at the epicenter of this Covid crisis,” Anna Marrs, president of global commercial services at AmEx, said in an interview. “We believe that, over the long term, providing small businesses what they need to help them manage their cash flow and payments will continue to be an important growth area.”

Small businesses have been hit hard by the coronavirus pandemic, which has prompted widespread shutdowns across the country. Even before the crisis, the Federal Reserve classified just 35% of U.S. small businesses as “healthy” — meaning they are profitable, have higher credit scores and use retained business earnings to fund their operations.

Bloomberg reported last week that AmEx was seeking to acquire Kabbage in an all-cash deal that would value the lender at as much as $850 million, according to a person familiar with the matter. Kabbage, which is backed by investors including SoftBank Group Corp.’s Vision Fund and Reverence Capital Partners, was most recently valued at more than $1 billion after SoftBank plowed $250 million into the lender in 2017.

Kabbage Chief Executive Officer Rob Frohwein said AmEx’s “card dominance provides a phenomenal base” to build strong customer relationships. “So we sort of feed off each other in a way that’s helping small businesses focus on their business and allowing us to help them with all things financial,” he said in an interview.

More must-read finance coverage from Fortune:



* This article was originally published here

Friday, August 14, 2020

Have a federal student loan? Your forbearance was extended to 2021

Our mission to help you navigate the new normal is fueled by subscribers. To enjoy unlimited access to our journalism, subscribe today.

Given recent news of Democratic VP nominee Kamala Harris and revised unemployment benefits and mail-in voting changes for the upcoming election—phew!—federal student-loan holders may have missed some welcome news: They won’t have to pay them until 2021.

On Aug. 8 President Trump issued a memo ordering the Secretary of Education to extend the administrative forbearance of federal student loans through Dec. 31, 2020. That temporary measure, made in late March when the novel coronavirus pandemic was just settling in, was originally set to expire Sept. 30—about a month before Election Day.

“The 2019 novel coronavirus known as SARS-CoV-2, the virus causing outbreaks of the disease COVID‑19, has significantly disrupted the lives of Americans,” the memo reads. While the first measure of student-loan relief helped, “many Americans remain unemployed due to the COVID-19 pandemic, and many more have accepted lower wages and reduced hours while States and localities continue to impose social distancing measures. It is therefore appropriate to extend this policy until such time that the economy has stabilized, schools have re-opened, and the crisis brought on by the COVID-19 pandemic has subsided.”

Forbearance means the interest rates on the loans goes to 0% and payments aren’t required during the period. (If you’re interested in continuing to pay them—after all, you are fiscally responsible—you may.) Loan servicers will automatically place federal loans into forbearance without any additional action, but it’s best to check your account to ensure it happens. (If you’ve set up automatic, recurring payments from your bank account to your federal student-loan lender, those will be suspended, too.)

The most popular servicers for federal student loans are FedLoan Servicing, Great Lakes, Navient, Nelnet, Cornerstone, Granite State, HESC, MOHELA, and OSLA.

It’s worth noting that the latest reprieve applies only to federally held student loans—meaning your private student loans aren’t covered by the temporary forbearance, let alone the extension, and you’ll have to continue paying them.

But that still includes several types of loans, such as “Direct” loans and Parent Plus loans. Federal Family Education Loans, or FFELs, and Perkins loans are eligible only if they’re “federally held”—and most are not. (If you’re not sure, call your servicer or 1-800-4-FED-AID to find out if your loans qualify.)

More must-read careers coverage from Fortune:



* This article was originally published here

Thursday, August 6, 2020

Great Tips to Save Money During the Pandemic

There are two ways to view challenges like the current pandemic.

You can either focus on the other side when things get back to some degree of normalcy, hoping that will happen. On the other hand, you can seize the moment and improve your financial health by saving money with things you can do now.

Let’s explore some creative ways you can make the most of the situation.

Polish Up on Your Cooking Skills

The chances are that you’re getting tired of takeaway meals. They’re also expensive. That makes cooking at home an ideal way to save some money on delivery fees. Add a bottle of wine, and you can have a proper dinner without the high cost by the glass. Do yourself a favour. Make an extra portion to put in the freezer for a quick lunch some other time.

Sell Your Old Smart Gadgets

One of the hardest-hit industries during the pandemic is smartphones with sales plummeting 38 per cent. That means it’s an excellent time to trade your old gadgets to some cash and upgrade to a new one. You’ll probably find lots of deals from which to choose. The time to buy probably won’t get any better than it is now.

Start a Garden

Starting a garden makes good sense, especially during this pandemic. Not only will you save money on produce, but it can reduce the times you have to visit the shops to help you stay safe. You don’t need a lot of space. You can get a lot of tomatoes from a single container plant. Herbs are another excellent choice for saving money on the fresh stuff.

Get Published

If you find you have a lot of free time on your hands, try writing and put your knowledge to work. Sites like Amazon’s Kindle Direct Publishing will walk you through the formatting process. The best thing about this option is that you’ll make passive income. Once you’ve published it, all you need to do is market it and wait for the royalties.

Save Your Pocket Change

If you’re still paying with cash, keep that spare change. Set aside a jar or other suitable container. Make it a point to check your wallet or pockets for extra coins. You’ll be surprised how much you can save. Also, check with your bank to see if they have a program to round up your change into a savings account. It’s an excellent way to start an emergency fund or money for something special.

Automate Your Savings

The easiest way to save money is when you don’t have to think about it. It just happens. Set up an automated savings deposit with your bank to take care of the task for you. Even £5 a week will add up over time. The most important thing is to start. Then, make it more difficult to withdraw the cash so that you’re not tempted to use it. For example, don’t link it to your bank card.

Sleep on It

Before you purchase something online, wait a day before you hit that “Buy Now” button. Then, see if you still think it’s necessary to get. You may find that many items weren’t such a great deal, after all. Many e-commerce sites will save the products you’ve added so that you can buy them later if you still want them.

Final Thoughts

The pandemic has hit all of us hard and in many unexpected ways. However, that doesn’t mean we can’t make the best out of the situation and save some money. You may find that you’re better off without some of the things you used to do before. Set the cash aside for a treat for yourself in the future. Instead of getting down about the pandemic, see it as an opportunity for a financially secure tomorrow.



* This article was originally published here

Can an A.I. algorithm help end unfair lending? This company says yes

Our mission to help you navigate the new normal is fueled by subscribers. To enjoy unlimited access to our journalism,  subscribe today . ...