Startups are offering B2B BNPL solutions to companies in an attempt to secure a slice of a $700 billion industry that gives short-term loans.

Fresh from their shake-up of Gen Z’s shopping habits, buy-now-pay-later (BNPL) firms are now targeting business payments. They see it as the next sector ripe for disruption. Startups such as BillieMonduTranch and Tillit are all offering B2B BNPL solutions to companies in an attempt to secure a slice of a $700 billion industry that gives companies short-term loans to help them manage their daily business. BNPL allows buyers to split their payments into instalments.

The use of short-term credit, most notably via supply chain finance, has become a lifeblood to companies dealing with a range of issues from COVID 19-related lockdowns to rising input costs in an inflationary environment. With few tech entrants into the sector — and the spectacular failure of Greensill Capital — the industry remains dominated by established lenders such as Barclays Plc and HSBC Holdings Plc in the United Kingdom and Deutsche Bank AG in Germany.

Pure-play BNPL firms have seen their valuations crash this year. This comes as rate rises across the world challenge the viability of their business models. But plenty say the ease of use such upstarts can bring to age-old credit products will prove a winning formula in this part of the market.

“These B2B BNPL companies can easily win over market share from slow-moving traditional banks,” said Lily Shaw, an early-stage investor at North American venture capital firm Omers Ventures, which is not currently invested in the sector but is actively looking at the space. “Banks’ risk profiles are set up in such a way that they can’t move fast enough.”

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Berlin base for B2B BNPL

Billie and Mondu are approaching the model through a B2B BNPL lens. They’re offering small businesspeople a similar experience when buying office equipment as a fashionista would when buying a Gucci handbag using Klarna or Afterpay.

“If a typical transaction on business-to-consumer BNPL is about 80-to-90 euros, our typical transactions are about 10 times that size,” said Aiga Senftleben, co-founder of Sequoia-backed Billie.

The Berlin-based firm works with banks as financing partners and operates currently in Germany, Austria and Sweden. It was valued at $640 million in its last funding round.

Mondu co-founder Malte Huffman said that it is hoping to make inroads into the trade finance space, especially given that more and more business transactions are being conducted online.

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“We believe there’s a $200 billion market opportunity for B2B BNPL just in Europe and the U.S.,” he said.

In Germany alone, for example, ecommerce business transactions surpassed 200 billion euros ($204 billion) in 2021.  That compares with 86.7 billion euros of business-to-consumer ecommerce, according to data by Statista, a research firm.

Growing pains

Despite their stark valuation declines, BNPL companies such as Klarna, Afterpay Ltd. and Affirm Holdings Inc. have shaken up the ecommerce sector. Their customer-friendly apps and popularity with 18-24-year-olds force many traditional banks such as Natwest Group Plc to launch competing offers.

The advantage these B2B BNPL startups have is that traditional banks may step back from this sector amid the deteriorating economic outlook. They will thereby reduce the competition, according to Jeff Tijssen, head of global fintech at consultancy Bain & Co.

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“It does solve some important cashflow issues for businesses, and you have some big investors such as Sequoia and Klarna involved,” he said. “The slowdown in the economy will give them opportunities but could also have a negative impact. It’s still early days.”

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