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by ashurbanipal 3681 days ago
Tally appears to do no underwriting it simply offers you a lower rate than your current cards offer and allows you to pay all the bills at once? Or does Tally have a proprietary method to tell which borrowers are worthy of a lower rate, the story is not really clear on this point.
2 comments

Tally underwrites.

from https://www.meettally.com/how

   you will need to qualify for and get the Tally Credit Line. Depending on 
   your credit history, your APR (which is the same as your interest rate) will 
   be between 7.9% - 19.9% per year. And similar to credit card APRs, it will 
   vary with the market based on the Prime Rate.
This looks like it could be helpful, but those rates are no better than your local CU offers.

As mentioned elsewhere, this seems like a hard business -- smart people use their credit cards as charge cards and pif every month. You probably aren't carrying a balance at 20% plus if you have the cash elsewhere. But good luck to them; the more competition banks have the better.

Hey, this is Jason (Tally co-founder). Thanks for all the comments. Yes, you are correct, Tally underwrites. Here are some crazy stats.

A. For every 10 people who have a credit card, there are 16 late fees assessed every year. With Tally, you don't have to worry about missing payments.

B. 4 out of 10 households carry a balance ($15K average) for a total of $700B. 78% of those balances are held by people with good credit (Prime or Super Prime), yet their average retail APR is 18%. With Tally, you don't have to worry about being charged unfair APRs.

I hope that helps!

wow, the 500% stat you quoted below on the difference between 660 and 760 fico is pretty amazing.
If a credit card company can make money from me by charging the merchants I use the card with, and the credit card company gets its money for free through bank deposits and the credit card company has decades and hundreds of millions already invested in its underwriting model, how can Tally sustainably charge me less than the credit card company?
> and the credit card company has decades and hundreds of millions already invested in its underwriting model

lolol so many assumptions!

yeah they are overcharging. Credit card companies would be profitable lending at Fed Funds Rate + 2%

Instead they charge 14-22% no matter what. No matter what the macroeconomic environment is.

Hey, great question. This is Jason (Tally co-founder). Credit card APRs are massively inflated. Here are two points to consider:

A. There is a 500% difference in the likelihood of someone paying back a loan with a 760 FICO score vs someone with a 660 FICO score, but only an 8% difference in APR.

B. "the credit card business continues to be the most profitable bank lending business, with returns more than four times higher than the average return on assets." - Richard Cordray, Director of the CFPB (December 2015)

The bottom line is that banks are significantly overcharging consumers AND have high fixed costs. Because of the technology Tally has built, our cost structure is an order of magnitude lower than banks. This means we can save customers money and be profitable as a business.

Do you guys fear that if big banks start to feel threatened, they will start lobbying to keep the field uneven to their favor?

Leaves me wondering how much inroad is possible to make going against such big (and dirty-playing) actors.

I mean, obviously if you get to that point you must be doing something right, and shaking the big entrenched businesses can sometimes (most of the times? always?) bring good things, so good luck!

Big banks are powerful and we don't take that risk lightly. However, regulators like the relatively new CFPB, are generally on the side of consumers. So as long as we always do right by consumers and don't lend irresponsibly, we have a very good chance of being on the right side of history. That said, we'll take any and all luck you can send our way
500% sounds like a deliberate play with numbers, if the default rates were 2% and 10% respectively, I could choose to call that a 500% difference, or more reasonably, an 8% difference.
cherry picking
i think that's the only way it works
You can probably build a $100m - $1B business that way. You're not going to be cap1 (though cap1 serves lots of customers prime banks won't touch, so they have their own niche).

Also, there may be lots of people who foolishly don't use CUs. If Tally can reach lots of them they'll do well for themselves.

Most of these lending startups are relying on dumb money institutional investors who have been chasing yield in the low interest rate environment.
https://www.meettally.com/faq

   Currently Tally is limited to customers who get approved for a Tally Credit Line. The approval is based on typical criteria such as your FICO score, debt and income. As of April 2016, our minimum FICO score is 660.
They're playing a game of credit arbitrage.