StepLadder, the collaborative deposit saving platform for first-time buyers, raises £1.5M

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
StepLadder, another London-based startup aiming to help so-called &generation rent& get onto the housing ladder, has raised £1.5 million in
seed funding. Backing the round is Spanish banking giant BBVA and fintech VC Anthemis via the London-based venture studio on which the pair
have partnered
Early investor Seedcamp also followed on, in addition to unnamed angel investors. StepLadder says it will use the new capital and support
provided by BBVA/Anthemis to further develop its &collaborative finance platform.& The startup is also eyeing international
expansion. Founded in 2015 by Matthew Addison and joined by Lucy Mullins and Mihir Bhushan, StepLadder collaborative deposit saving platform
is designed to motivate renters to save for a deposit so they can purchase their first home. Using a financial model known as a &Rotating
Credit and Savings Association& (ROSCA), StepLadder puts its members into &Circles,& whereby each individual member contributes an identical
amount on a monthly basis — ranging from £25 to £1,000
A random draw then takes place each month and the winner is provided with that month full pot to use toward their deposit. &For most
first-time buyers, it really difficult to get on the property ladder,& says Addison
&Home ownership rates amongst 25 to 34-years-olds have collapsed… [with around] 250,000 fewer first-time buyers every year, for over a
decade, in the U.K
alone
Raising the deposit is the biggest hurdle
At StepLadder we&re using something called a ROSCA, a form of collaborative finance where people work together in groups to help our members
raise their property deposits, on average, 45% faster.& As an example, StepLadder might match you to a £500 a month Circle for 20 months to
raise £10,000
This would see it find 19 other members to be in the same Circle
&Each month the £10,000 is randomly allocated and you could be drawn at any point in that 20 months,& explains StepLadder Lucy Mullins
&You have to keep making your £500 a month payment for the full 20 months, so at the end everybody has paid in £10,000 and everybody has
received £10,000.& To help protect the platform from being abused, Mullins says that while a member is still part of a Circle, the
startup will only release the pot to their solicitor for use as a property deposit
&So, if somebody stops paying after they have been drawn then we wouldn&t release their payout until they had made catch-up
payments.& StepLadder also supports members along the house-buying journey
The app lets members engage with a community of like-minded people and access group-buying discounts on services such as mortgages,
solicitor fess and surveyors
The latter forms part of the company revenue stream. &We introduce our members (at their request) to high-quality service providers, such as
mortgage brokers, lending banks, surveyors and insurance providers,& says Addison
&In return, these partners pay us fees or commissions
We offer discounts on these transaction services via the combined buying power of our members in their Circles.& In addition, there is a
small monthly fee (between 2-5%) to be part of a Circle, which Mullins says covers the cost of delivering the service. This includes holding
money securely in a client money account, a payment waiver if a member were to become sick or unemployed after buying a property with their
StepLadder deposit, credit bureau costs and the cost of a Circle host to support members on the journey. &We do not aim to profit from the
monthly administration fees we charge members and would usually be able to save our members much more in discounts than they pay in fees,&
says Mullins. Meanwhile, StepLadder has plans to expand the use cases for Circles and evolve the platform to also cover general savings
goals and targeted &big ticket items.& Explains Addison: &In Brazil, ROSCAs are used by nine million consumers for everything from
dishwashers to cars to homes
We have already begun to demonstrate this potential with both our First Step offering (smaller circles from £25 a month) and proposed
partnered launches.&