Japanese Fintech Leader Smartpay Launches Smartpay Bank Direct To Build A Network Of 67 Partner Banks Across Japan

Asia Pacific
8 min readJan 5, 2023

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The logo of Smartpay

Source: Smartpay

Jan.05.2022, Shanghai — — — Japan-based fintech Smartpay has launched Smartpay Bank Direct, the country’s first digital consumer finance service that allows customers to pay for online installment purchases straight from their bank accounts. Smartpay Bank Direct emphasizes user security while delivering convenience for the consumer, through a network of 67 partner banks across Japan[1]. Smartpay is Japan’s first digital consumer finance company to utilize Japan’s open banking system.

​Smartpay was founded in June 2021 by seasoned industry professionals who had previously held leadership roles in Instagram, Standard Chartered Bank, Facebook, Stripe, Adyen and Mastercard across the Asia Pacific, and Middle East, and North Africa (MENA) regions. The founding team has worked in digital payments, banking, and fintech which gives the company the right talent to transform the digital consumer landscape for users seeking reliable financial products and payment solutions. They also have experience of working with regulators and central banks which is crucial when building a financial ecosystem.

While Japan remains the third wealthiest country in the world, it has one of the highest credit card penetration rates in Asia, with over 60% of transactions completed in cash[2].

Smartpay’s application has received wide acceptance from consumers and merchants that prefer beautifully uncomplicated digital payments, which supports the transformation of a cash-based society into a digital one. The company’s strategy was built in two phases. The first phase was focused on financial inclusion, and helping those that don’t have access to credit, to join the digital BNPL economy. It also solved the issue of cash usage and created a platform and an ecosystem to move towards a paperless payment system that would be more efficient.

Smartpay is moving into the next phase of its digital consumer finance journey, which is focused on targeting middle and high-income users and offering them smart financial solutions that are safe, convenient, fast and create real value for the entire ecosystem.

Smartpay’s founder and CEO Sam Ahmed said, “We believe we are driving digital consumer finance to the next phase of its maturity. ‘Buy now, pay later’ has had to grow up from the prospective of a business model, profitability, and consumer value proposition.”

The company’s adaptive UX, accessible technology, eKYC (electronic know your customer), dependable security features and sound business model is built for users that have a need for efficient digital finance solutions, which will transform markets with similar conditions, high inflationary pressures on consumer psychographics, and demographics.

High-income consumers who want to extend their monthly cash flow with smart, digital point-of-purchase, cash flow management tools, and who want to have a better control over their month spending, have been most receptive to Smartpay’s digital solutions.

Its aspirational feel and product features appeal to the high-income segment who have disposable incomes and want to align with smart digital UX brands. The UX has been put together after much consideration, and its design features make consumers feel trusted and accepted for their unique individual traits, instead of being thrown into a mass-made product that does not distinguish between customers. By targeting this segment of society, Smartpay’s unit economics works well as these are low-risk and high-value customers with average transaction value of USD200, non-performing loan (NPL) rates of less than 1%, and who want to avoid a bad credit rating and nonpayment on debt obligations. The monthly repeat rate of these consumers has already reached approximately 20%.

​[1] As of Dec. 27, 2022
[2] Japan’s Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry, June 1, 2022, from:
https://www.meti.go.jp/press/2022/06/20220601002/20220601002.html

Sam Ahmed, Co-Founder and CEO, Smartpay

This combination of high-income users and high-value design makes Smartpay a premium fintech company. Smartpay’s founder and CEO Sam Ahmed said, “We knew we were on the right track when our key merchant, CEO of TRiCERA Tai Iguchi, had feedback stating: ‘You are the Apple of digital consumer finance, your UX is beautifully designed and makes the consumer feel like you trust them, and respect who they are. This is in a market where other consumer finance companies have made customers feel they are not trusted and undervalued.’”

​While currently the focus is on Japan, KSA and UAE markets, in the medium term Smartpay will look towards Singapore, South Korea, Taiwan, and other markets in Southeast Asia and MENA. These markets all have the five common factors which are central to Smartpay’s business model:

  • Specific consumer psychographics which include a tech savvy population, smartphone and internet access, high disposable income, increased consumption, and high rates of tech adaption
  • An economy that is undergoing a digital transformation
  • Merchants that need help to accelerate a successful digital transformation
  • Legacy banks that have been disrupted by digital first solutions which have taken away their relevance and limited access to key consumer data
  • Governments and regulators that want to work with established digital financial solutions that have existing global partnerships (proof of quality and security) and credible local partners (proof of local interests)
An image from Smartpay

What differentiates Smartpay from other fintech companies is that it works with the existing legacy banks rather than against them. Established banks have been disrupted by financial digital transformation companies that have taken their customers’ relevant details and data. These banks need help in recapturing these consumers with payment innovation and high-quality, digital UX. In the past decade, the legacy banks fell behind the innovation curve with respect to payments, and often focused on wealth management and insurance products targeted almost solely towards high-net-worth individuals. However, payments represent the fundamental basis of a bank’s daily relationship with their consumer.

When fintechs took over payments, they not only took away the transaction values, but also the critical data that had guided the customer acquisition strategy of banks for decades. Without these insights, the legacy banks had to rely on high acquisition cost for insurance and wealth management, which affected their profitability because they were missing the key relevant data to offer the right products and services at the right time. Smartpay is able to address this imbalance and seamlessly integrates with legacy banks to re-establish their relationship with the right customer through a beautifully designed digital UX.

The third side of this stable pyramid is the merchant. In high-growth e-commerce markets, merchants need help to drive e-commerce revenue. Generally speaking, merchants have struggled with high drop off rates at the checkout point due to clunky and slow point-of-purchase checkout, which does not help consumers with cash flow optionality. At a time when merchants have to increase their website revenue to survive financially, seeing large drop-off rates is potentially disastrous, particularly when considering high-value consumers with large average order values.

Finally, there are the governments and regulators that are looking to help banks and merchants accelerate their digital transformation but need high-quality tech companies that have existing global partnerships and global benchmark security to protect their consumers. Regulators want the legacy banking industry to also benefit from the digital transformation and move towards a cashless society.

Smartpay has spent three years analyzing the success of “buy now, pay later” in homogenous markets and building systems that will be scalable and commercially sustainable. Its engineering and product teams have built the elements that are required for the sustained success of consumer finance. These insights include homing in on the right consumer and linking them to the most suitable merchant. It has also focused on the legacy banks that needed help regaining payment and consumer data of high-income consumers and wanted assistance with digital transformation at in a much quicker time window than the four-year-period they could deliver at. Finally, the right governments and regulators have been identified. These are the ones which need the technology, UX, and value propositions that will help the ecosystem succeed in a profitable, controlled system, in contrast to the boom-and-bust cycles that have negatively affected the industry.

There are clear signs that governments need help fulfilling their agenda for a cashless society and want to help their legacy banks regain some of their power and undergo digitally transformation. However, these governments would only want to work with companies that have designed, built, and executed high-quality technology solutions, with global recognition from the key players in the ecosystem like Adyen, Stripe, and Shopify.

Smartpay has realized that the ideal customer is a high-income consumer that wants control of their monthly budgeting and wants to extend the monthly cash flow without paying fees and interest. These customers want to engage with a brand that is custom built for their usage instead of a one-size-fits-all approach that is for consumers who actually want to borrow money. Instead, Smartpay a brand that is designed for their income group, and designed for smart money management, versus “non-savings” money management.

From its inception, Smartpay has attracted globally renowned strategic investors that include Global Founders Capital (Europe), Matrix Partners (Silicon Valley) and SMBC VC (Japan) .

The plan is to build on these strong foundations, and with the right technology and back-office support, each market brings a better overall ROI due to shared costs and higher overall returns, a high-tech, low-asset operations business. Smartpay’s founder and CEO Sam Ahmed added, “We have begun discussions with potential banking partners in other similar markets, such as KSA and Korea, to roll out our learnings and robust business model.”

Regarding his company’s business strategy and future plans, Smartpay’s founder and CEO Sam Ahmed said, “We are delighted to be the first in Japan to provide digital consumer finance services which supports both credit cards and direct debit through a fully automated, single-click UX at the point of purchase. Our passion is helping consumers manage their cash flow in a smarter way, in a fast, safe and secure click. There are no additional fees or interest for the consumers. Since the launch of Smartpay just over a year ago, as Japan’s first BNPL solution payable by credit card, we have continued to expand our partner ecosystem with new retailers and an expanding customer base with revenue growth over 200% in the last three months. It’s interesting that we have lifted merchant average order value more than 30% in four different merchant categories. We attract higher value consumers for the merchant through our eKYC process.

An image from Smartpay

About Smartpay

Smartpay is a technology company that aims to improve monthly budget control and the financial well-being of people through smart solutions. We empower people with the right tools for their financial growth and freedom, by providing the first all-in-one payment experience and interest free BNPL solution built to solve Japanese consumer payment issues and improve merchant conversion rates.

​For more information, please visit https://smartpay.co/about/

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