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Thursday, Mar 28, 2024

ZestFinance Software Takes Bias Out of Lending

Burbank-based ZestFinance Inc. is back on track.

The fintech is no longer lending to subprime borrowers. It exited that business more than two years ago after a messy scheme came to light involving payday lending.

Now the company focuses on developing credit underwriting standards and software to improve credit scoring for financial institutions that want to take the bias out of lending, a practice called de-biasing.

“The idea that one size fits all is over,” Mike de Vere, ZestFinance chief executive, said. “It’s really a new age where you have tailored models that are customized for a bank.”

Doing business as Zest AI, the company offers software that has the potential to reduce lending disparities with regard to race, religion, sex and marital status by processing enormous amounts of personal information.

Lenders have endorsed the company’s strategy.  

This summer, Zest AI received $18 million in investments from Jacksonville, Fla.-based VyStar Credit Union; Nebraska-based First National Bank of Omaha; and returning Bay Area investor Northgate Capital, an arm of London-based Capital Partnership.

The latest funding round gives Zest AI a total of $33 million in venture capital investment since it began its makeover in 2018.  

The catalyst for the company’s comeback came from de Vere, who arrived at Zest AI in May 2018 as chief operating officer but quietly succeeded Douglas Merrill as chief executive in December 2019.

Troubled past

Merrill, who previously worked as Google’s chief information officer, co-founded Zest AI in 2009 with ex-Sears executive Shawn Budde.

Merrill wanted to apply lessons learned from working on Google’s algorithms to credit underwriting. But he left the company after getting it caught up in payday lending, charging high interest rates through one of its partners, BlueChip Financial, a corporation founded by the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians in North Dakota.

Around the same time, the company began doing business as Zest AI to reflect its new direction, though it’s still registered as ZestFinance. In September 2020, ZestFinance settled all litigation involving its ties to BlueChip Financial.

“With no admission of fault, we settled with the plaintiffs and cut all ties to the client involved (BlueChip Financial), as well as to the payday loans industry,” the company said in a statement.

Currently, Zest AI is working with banks and credit unions on its new debiasing software.

“If I was going to ask your mom to describe you, she could easily describe you with 24 data points. Now if I asked someone to describe you with 1,000 data points, that would clearly present a better picture of who you are, and that’s kind of a proxy for who you are as a lender,” de Vere explained. “That’s only possible with machine learning.”

Jenny Vipperman, chief lending officer of VyStar Credit Union, which rolled out the software from Zest AI earlier this year, said her credit union is impressed with the results.

For credit card applications, VyStar is seeing 23 percent more protected groups of minorities getting approved who were denied before.

“We’re also improving for nonprotected classes, generally your white men who don’t have disabilities, by 19 percent,” Vipperman said. “So, credit approvals are being improved across the board, but even more so for protected classes, which demonstrates the fairness of closing the gap.”

Vipperman also said overdraft protection for checking accounts is approved for 35 percent more women and minorities and those with disabilities.

The timing might be right for Zest AI.

The federal government’s Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is drafting guidelines to serve as guideposts for lenders on how they should calculate credit scores designed to replace today’s FICO scores. Many observers have argued FICO scores, used by most banks, discriminate against minorities in credit applications.

When banks look more broadly at a person’s financials, as Zest AI does, they can make a better decision about who is likely to repay, de Vere said.

In April, nearly two dozen credit unions around the country banded together to form their own venture capital fund, called Curql Collective, which wants to invest in fintechs like Zest AI.

The Des Moines-based venture unveiled its $150 million fund in April. Southern California members include Torrance-based Unify Financial Credit Union and Santa Ana-based SchoolsFirst Federal Credit Union.

“We would definitely support an investment from Curql in Zest,” Gordon Howe, chief executive officer of Unify Financial, said. “Zest is why we participated in Curql, not just with an investment (of $3 million), but to have access to these companies that don’t get on the radar.”

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