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Birmingham Post
Birmingham Post
Business
Sion Barry

Digital bank Starling on track to move into profit in 2021

Starling Bank is confident of moving into profitability early next year as it looks to expand into Europe.

The digital bank, established in 2014 by its founder and chief executive Anne Boden, earlier this month announced it is creating 400 jobs this year with a new data science, fraud and customer service hub in the Cardiff.

Swansea-born M Boden, speaking to financial wesbsite LearnBonds, said the business will make its first monthly profit in “January or February” of next year.

This year will Starling expand into Germany, France and the Netherlands.

Ms Boden said: “Digital banks have experienced high growth. We are all putting on numbers. This has never happened before in the history of banking. But now we are moving into a period where these banks have to show they can make profits.”

The digital bank has opened 1.25 million customer accounts and holds more than £1.25bn in deposits since its launch.

The digital bank has forged a reputation for bringing quality products to market across business banking, travel money or overdraft facilities that have won it several bank of the year awards.

Starling’s UK rivals include Revolut which claims 10 million accounts and Monzo, which notched up four million accounts earlier this month.

Starling makes its cash from a mixture of charging fees on the cards it issues, its marketplace where it charges other financial service firms to sell products on its platform, as well as using its deposits to lend.

Ms Boden said:“The thing to remember is that our cost base is so small the cash we raise here is meaningful.”

The elephant in the room for all neo-banks is Big Tech firms such as Amazon or PayPal. These firms have deep pockets, large customer bases, and unlike high street banks, are platform companies themselves and so are comfortable with the business model.

The number of fintech deals by global tech giants – including Alibaba Group, Alphabet, Apple, Baidu, IBM, Microsoft and Tencent – increased for the fifth straight year, with $3.5bn invested across 46 deals in 2019, according to last month’s KPMG Pulse of Fintech bi-annual report.

Ms Boden said: “I think Big Tech will want to distribute banking services.

I don’t think they will want to get involved in the financial plumbing of moving money around. Or obtaining a license, that will mean more regulation, and they already face calls for more regulation as it is.”

Full interview

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