Sunday World (South Africa)

Tymebank joins race for SME players

- By Kabelo Khumalo kabelo@sundayworl­d.co.za

Competitio­n in small business lending is heating up, with Patrice Motsepe-backed Tymebank the latest to enter the fray with the acquisitio­n of fintech SME funder Retail Capital.

Tymebank CEO Coen Jonker said the acquisitio­n will enable Tymebank to expand its offering to entreprene­urs to include working capital finance.

“Retail Capital has acquired significan­t risk management experience over the past decade. They have an experience­d team in place and their risk models and operationa­l processes have been battle-tested and optimised to a significan­t degree for small business funding.

“Together, we look forward to providing access to innovative solutions to ensure business owners can fuel their growth, drive job creation and contribute to the broader economy,” he said.

Tymebank is one of the fastest-growing banks in SA, adding about 130000 new customers a month. However, the bank is struggling to add customers with active accounts.

Jonker said in the last 10 years Retail Capital has provided more than 43000 business owners in South Africa with more than R5.5-billion in working capital.

News of Tymebank’s takeover of Retail Capital was quickly followed by an announceme­nt from Old Mutual that it had bought a minority stake in Preference Capital, a specialist provider of funding solutions to the SME market.

African Bank in May also entered the business banking sector with the acquisitio­n of Grindrod Bank. African Bank said at the time Grindrod Bank will provide an entry into the business banking market, which will be grown off African Bank’s strong capital levels.

Capitec is also playing in the busi

ness banking space after it purchased Mercantile three years ago in a deal worth R3.5-billion.

Jonker said Retail Capital will launch new products for SMES in the coming months. This will include TYMEPOS, a mobile point-of-sale app that turns an Nfc-enabled cellphone into a tap-andgo payment device.

“Retail Capital already powers many industry-leading partners in the acquiring, retail and payments space to support their SME customers, and the tie-up with Tymebank will further enhance this offering to our partners’ customers,” said Retail Capital CEO Karl Westvig.

In South Africa the SME funding gap is estimated at more than R335-billion, according to a report by the Internatio­nal Finance Corporatio­n, a division of the World Bank.

 ?? ?? A Tymebank kiosk. The bank, a relatively new player in the South African financial market, is expanding its offering to entreprene­urs to include working capital finance.
A Tymebank kiosk. The bank, a relatively new player in the South African financial market, is expanding its offering to entreprene­urs to include working capital finance.
 ?? ?? Patrice Motsepe
Patrice Motsepe
 ?? ?? Coen Jonker
Coen Jonker

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