By Max Penel, Investment Director & Co-Head of Global FinTech
FINTECH FUNDAMENTALS, PART 2 OF 2
In Part 1, we covered the operational fundamentals that distinguish durable fintech platforms from those that struggle under the weight of scale: data infrastructure, product focus, early-loss discipline, feedback-loop design, and fraud defense.
Part 2 addresses what comes next. Where most platforms that got the early fundamentals right still break down: risk control under expansion pressure, the temptation to broaden the product too early, and the capital decisions that determine whether a platform that is working at a small scale can actually get to a large scale.
Getting the early fundamentals right is necessary. It is not sufficient.
Understanding Risk Toggles and Trade-Offs
The strongest platforms have a precise understanding of their risk toggles early on, both at the credit modeling level and at the product and structural level. Strong teams know how relaxing or tightening a particular feature impacts approval rates and loss behavior. They design product features structurally to de-risk the book: embedded repayment mechanics, cash dominion, concentration limits, and tenor discipline are all forms of product-level risk management.
This kind of risk control is most achievable in smaller-ticket, high-velocity businesses where high origination frequency allows rapid feedback and iteration. A single adjustment rarely has a single effect. Loosening one input may increase acceptance rates and near-term revenue, but it may also shift loss timing, loss magnitude, and collections workload. Platforms that are in control can quantify these trade-offs before changes are made, not after losses appear.
This control enables deliberate decision-making. Management teams can consciously accept higher losses in exchange for faster learning or growth, or tighten risk to preserve capital and lender credibility. The distinction is intent and control. Controlled, understood losses that follow a predictable pattern are a normal part of early credit business development. Uncontrolled losses with no clear pattern signal a fundamental problem.
Platforms that lack this element of clarity confuse activity with progress – adjusting inputs in isolation, misinterpreting results, and allowing risk to accumulate quietly. Platforms that understand their risk toggles operate differently: they adjust with purpose, monitor feedback closely, and remain in control of the risks they take.
The distinction is intent and control. Not all losses are equal.
Product Expansion Is Where Many Platforms Break
Shortly after launch, platforms often face pressure to expand the product. The driver is frequently an origination challenge: either a weak distribution edge that limits volume at the existing product level, or entry into a competitive space where winning customers requires taking on greater risk. Customers ask for larger balances or longer tenors, and reported growth accelerates when those requests are met.
What looks like straightforward revenue expansion often introduces a materially different risk profile before the original product is fully understood. A simple extension can move the platform beyond its core competence – into complexity it is not yet equipped to manage, underwriting signals it cannot yet read, and loss patterns it cannot yet explain.
The consequences follow a consistent pattern. Incremental revenue is offset by higher losses and noisier underwriting signals. Collections and servicing come under strain. By the time performance deteriorates visibly, the platform is operating a product that sits outside its depth of understanding – and unwinding that position is rarely clean.
The platforms that endure resist this impulse. They focus on the unglamorous work: execution quality, product depth, operational resilience, and repeatability within their core competence. They extract more value from what already works rather than chasing incremental growth through undisciplined product stretch.
Customers will always want more capital for longer. That does not mean the lender should provide it. Durable platforms deepen where they add value, remain anchored to their core competence, and expand only when control is proven and understanding is complete.
Adjacency Matters More Than Ambition
New products should be evaluated through the lens of adjacency, not aspiration. The critical question is not whether a product increases addressable market or near-term revenue. It is whether it aligns with existing underwriting logic, distribution channels, and operational capabilities – or whether it requires new teams, new risk frameworks, and a fundamentally different go-to-market approach.
Adjacent products leverage what already works. They use the same data, the same decisioning logic, and the same operational muscle. As a result, they are cheaper, faster, and safer to execute – and when something goes wrong, the problem is legible because the system is familiar.
Large product jumps are different in kind, not just degree. They introduce new forms of risk and complexity at exactly the wrong moment – when the platform should be refining signals, tightening execution, and deepening control. The compounding effect is the real danger: a non-adjacent expansion doesn’t just add new risk, it dilutes management attention and operational capacity at the precise point they are most needed elsewhere.
Move Early and Focus on the Terms That Matter
In competitive markets, platforms that engage early with funding partners, distribution partners, and strategic counterparties create optionality before terms harden and negotiating leverage shifts. Speed at this stage is not about rushing – it is about being in the room early enough to shape the terms of engagement.
The mistake is attempting to negotiate every term with every counterparty. It slows execution, consumes management attention, and frequently results in missed opportunities. Not all commercial terms carry equal weight, especially in the early stages of a platform’s lifecycle.
The platforms that scale efficiently identify the few terms that materially drive outcomes and prioritize those. Advance rates, eligibility criteria, pricing mechanics, portfolio parameters, and covenants matter far more than marginal optimizations elsewhere. By focusing on what actually moves risk and economics, these platforms close faster and build momentum.
Equally important is finding a funding partner that can grow with you. A lender who can accommodate facility increases, adjust structures as the book seasons, and tolerate the normal volatility of a developing credit business is worth more than the lowest cost of funds from a rigid counterparty. A flexible funding partner at 2% higher cost of funds almost always creates more long-term value than a low-cost partner who constrains growth at the wrong moment.
Early execution compounds. Once performance data is established and distribution momentum is proven, negotiating leverage naturally improves. Trying to optimize everything at the outset typically backfires.
Capital Runway Dictates Growth Pace
New debt facilities take time to negotiate and structure. A platform that exhausts its facility cannot simply pause and restart growth once new funding arrives – the assumption that volume can be switched off and back on cleanly is one of the more costly mistakes early platforms make.
Distribution channels are slow to build and easy to disrupt. Brokers, merchants, and platform partners redirect volume quickly when originations slow or stop. Customer acquisition momentum decays, and restart costs are materially higher the second time – not just commercially, but reputationally. Partners who experienced an interruption negotiate differently on re-engagement.
Platforms that scale sustainably treat capital runway as an operational metric, not a finance function concern. They maintain sufficient origination headroom and begin facility expansion conversations well before capacity constraints emerge – typically when a facility is 60 to 70 percent utilized, not when it is nearly exhausted.
Running out of capital is not just a funding issue. It becomes a distribution problem, a credibility problem, and a negotiating problem – compounding at exactly the moment the platform can least afford it.
Platforms that scale sustainably treat capital runway as an operational metric, not a finance function concern.
What This Means in Practice
Across markets and cycles, the same dynamics tend to reappear. Platforms that struggle usually do so for familiar reasons: poor data infrastructure that prevents learning and limits capital access; diffused focus that dilutes execution quality; early losses that are uncontrolled and poorly understood rather than managed and intentional; and expansion that runs well ahead of operational and credit understanding.
The platforms that endure are not defined by how quickly they grow at launch. They are defined by how deliberately they build understanding, how tightly they control risk, and how consistently they remain focused on the problem they are best positioned to solve. When those elements are in place, growth is not forced. Scale emerges naturally from disciplined execution.
At PFG, we have spent 20+ years backing founders who build this way, across 15+ countries and multiple cycles, through both secured corporate debt and structured credit. What we look for is not perfection. It is control, intent, and operational clarity that allow you to know the difference between the two.
—
The views expressed are my own and do not necessarily reflect those of my employer.
This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute an offer to sell or a solicitation of an offer to buy any securities. Any such offer will be made only to qualified investors through confidential offering documents. All investments involve risk, including the possible loss of principal. Past performance is not indicative of future results.



