TechCrunch News 21小时前
French B2B fintech Qonto reaches 600,000 customers, files for banking license
index_new5.html
../../../zaker_core/zaker_tpl_static/wap/tpl_guoji1.html

 

法国金融科技公司Qonto正在申请法国银行牌照,旨在为其欧洲自由职业者和中小企业客户提供更全面的金融服务。目前,Qonto持有支付机构牌照,已推出“先买后付”等服务。获得银行牌照后,Qonto将能提供更广泛的贷款、储蓄和投资选择,以实现到2030年拥有200万客户的目标。尽管面临来自Memo Bank、Finom和Revolut等竞争对手的挑战,Qonto已实现盈利,并积极拓展其综合金融管理解决方案,包括发票和簿记工具,从而推动其在欧洲B2B领域的增长。Qonto此举也反映了其对客户需求的深刻理解以及对未来发展的长远规划。

🏦 Qonto 是一家面向欧洲自由职业者和中小企业的金融科技公司,目前持有支付机构牌照,计划申请法国银行牌照以提供更全面的金融服务。

💡 获得银行牌照后,Qonto 可以提供更广泛的贷款、储蓄和投资选项,以满足客户需求并实现其增长目标,但这一过程面临挑战。

💰 Qonto 已实现盈利,并通过收购和构建综合金融管理解决方案来增强其市场地位,从而推动其在欧洲B2B领域的增长,并计划推出AI功能,提升客户体验。

🌍 Qonto 已经扩展到多个欧洲市场,德国是其最大的市场,但Qonto认为,成为一家信贷机构对吸引客户至关重要。

“Is Qonto a real bank?” is one of the top suggested questions in Google searches about the French fintech startup. The answer is no, but it could change: Qonto has filed for a banking license in France, CEO Alexandre Prot revealed.

Qonto, which targets European freelancers and SMBs, currently operates with a payment institution license it obtained in 2018, and which already enabled it to introduce a form of buy now, pay later (BNPL). But a credit institution license would let it offer broader lending, savings, and investment options to its target customers.

Since its current license is valid across the EU, Qonto has already been able to expand into several European markets, and recently reached the milestone of 600,000 customers. But lacking a credit license is a hindrance for its goal to reach 2 million customers by 2030.

While offering a more comprehensive solution seems like a natural move to compete with incumbent banks, obtaining a license and rolling out credit is not easy. That explains why Qonto’s SMB fintech competitors have approached this issue in different ways, and why Qonto isn’t exactly playing catch-up. 

Memo Bank was founded as a bank from the outset, and offers lending to SMBs, but that makes it an outlier. Finom operates with an electronic money institution (EMI) license, but it only just started testing the kind of lending that this regulatory middle ground allows. Revolut has a full Lithuanian license, but other than BNPL, it has yet to roll out credit options to businesses — although it plans to do so this year.

Still, the marketing power of well-funded competitors that operate both in B2C and B2B may have been a sign that Qonto needed to accelerate, especially as Revolut recently loudly announced plans to seek a French license and turn Paris into its Western Europe HQ

Not mentioning competitors, Prot said that Qonto’s timing was driven by “having achieved profitability ahead of schedule in 2023.” 

Techcrunch event

Boston, MA | July 15

REGISTER NOW

The son of former BNP Paribas President Baudouin Prot, Qonto’s CEO had obviously already thought about pursuing a credit license — and that’s not just a guess. During a press briefing, Prot confirmed that he and co-founder Steve Anavi seriously considered the idea at one point, but ultimately dismissed it because it would have required too much time and additional fundraising.

Having been profitable since 2023 means that this hurdle now won’t require Qonto to raise more funding than the $552 million it secured in 2022 at a $5 billion valuation. Prot recently said that “the main, or the only reason, why we could raise additional capital is if we do a large or very large M&A deal, paid mostly in cash.” 

In its eight years of existence, Qonto has made two acquisitions: It took over its German competitor Penta in 2022, and it bought accounting and financial automation platform Regate in 2024.

The latter is a reflection of Qonto’s positioning beyond banking and as an integrated finance management solution, with an offering that also includes tools for invoicing and bookkeeping.

This approach helped it grow in the B2B segment across Europe. Prot declined to give a full breakdown of its 600,000 customers, but he said that Germany is now Qonto’s largest market after France. In unspecified order, Spain and Italy come next, followed by the markets it entered in late 2024: Austria, Belgium, the Netherlands, and Portugal.

Still, Prot operates under the assumption that some customers won’t choose Qonto unless it is a credit institution. That’s because this would grant them additional guarantees on their deposits, and because they want credit to be an option if they ever need it, which some already do.

Qonto validated that demand for credit with its Pay Later service; launched in 2024, it has already facilitated €50 million in financing, according to the company (approximately $59 million). But the offer is limited by its current license — both for Qonto, which can only lend from its own equity, and for its customers, who can’t borrow for longer than 12 months.

To help its customers access other types of loans, Qonto also put together a “financing hub” with third-party fintech partners including Defacto, Karmen, Riverbank, and Silvr. Prot said Qonto plans to keep it for at least a few more years. And some of these offerings are more specific than what the company may want to get into.

Still, becoming a credit institution in its own right would unlock new revenue for Qonto, both from the margin on credits and more upside from deposits, which it would be able to use for lending. Prot declined to disclose revenue figures but said that revenue increased by 30% in the last year.

However, Prot said that this additional revenue wasn’t the main factor at play. Acquiring new customers aside, Qonto also sees this as an opportunity to depend less on others and launch new products faster. In the same vein, it recently built an in-house card processor to increase acceptance rates while reducing its reliance on third parties.

With a team of 1,600 people, Qonto now hopes that it will have the bandwidth to work on new product developments, such as the AI-enabled “Qonto Intelligence” layer, while also enhancing its banking infrastructure and risk management teams.

The latter is also aimed to demonstrate its readiness to France’s banking supervisor, with which it plans to work closely to obtain its license. The process may still take years, but it is also part of a broader “growing up” effort for Qonto, which recently added several senior profiles to its board of directors. These steps could also help lay the groundwork for a future IPO, though that remains a longer-term prospect.

Note: This story’s headline was changed to clarify that Qonto is not yet a bank.

Fish AI Reader

Fish AI Reader

AI辅助创作,多种专业模板,深度分析,高质量内容生成。从观点提取到深度思考,FishAI为您提供全方位的创作支持。新版本引入自定义参数,让您的创作更加个性化和精准。

FishAI

FishAI

鱼阅,AI 时代的下一个智能信息助手,助你摆脱信息焦虑

联系邮箱 441953276@qq.com

相关标签

Qonto 金融科技 银行牌照
相关文章