FairPlay, a “equity as a service” startup, is launching an index device in Q3 of this 12 months that reveals monetary establishments how their underwriting impacts customers.

Los Angeles-based Fairplay makes use of AI-powered information analytics software program to assist FIs assess the accuracy of their automated mortgage resolution fashions and offers them with metrics to assist determine potential biases, Kareem Saleh, founder and chief govt at FairPlay, tells Financial institution Automation Information on this episode of “The Buzz” podcast.
Saleh was named a BAN govt to observe in 2024.
“Essentially, what we do is assist monetary establishments stress check their AI, determine blind spots of their AI after which appropriate these blind spots,” Saleh says. “And what we discover is that one thing like 25% to 33% of the parents that monetary establishments declined most likely would have carried out in addition to the riskiest people they approve.”
Since being based in 2020, FairPlay has raised $14.5 million towards its tech, in response to Crunchbase.
Maintaining information in verify
However even AI-powered decisioning algorithms require cautious examination of the datasets they use, Saleh says.
“The standard knowledge is that AI stands for ‘synthetic intelligence,’ however it could possibly generally additionally stand for ‘by accident incorrect. In case you don’t have an actual clear-eyed view about this bias within the algorithms to overfit to the information, then you definately may miss the blind spots.” — Kareem Saleh, Founder & CEO, FairPlay
5 questions for compliance
The Client Monetary Safety Bureau in June 2024 authorised a rule requiring FIs that use algorithmic appraisal instruments to make sure compliance with nondiscrimination legal guidelines.
A number of lenders obtained fines from federal regulators for unfair lending practices up to now two years, together with $2.6 trillion Financial institution of America, $2.4 trillion Citi and $560.5 billion TD Financial institution.
FairPlay’s software program permits FIs to reply these questions to assist guarantee compliance:
- Is that this algorithm truthful?
- If not, why not?
- May the algorithm be fairer?
- How may being fairer economically have an effect on our enterprise?
- Did we double-check declined mortgage functions for undeserved denials?
Three of the ten largest U.S. banks are already utilizing FairPlay truthful lending evaluation software program, Saleh says, with out disclosing their names. Its latest accomplice, $7.6 billion Pathward Monetary, was added Feb. 18, he says.
“Banks that use our software program are sometimes capable of enhance their approval charges by 10%, enhance their take charges by 13% and enhance constructive outcomes by 20%,” he says.
Take heed to this episode of “The Buzz” podcast as Saleh discusses how banks can leverage AI to enhance mortgage approval charges.
Register right here for Financial institution Automation Summit 2025, going down March 3-4 in Nashville, Tenn. View the total occasion agenda right here.
Subscribe to The Buzz Podcast on iTunes or Spotify, or obtain the episode.
The next is a transcript generated by AI know-how that has been flippantly edited however nonetheless comprises errors.
Madeline Durrett 12:24:31
Howdy and welcome to The Buzz financial institution automation information podcast. My title is Madeline Durrett, Senior Affiliate Editor at Financial institution automation information at present. I’m joined by Karim Saleh, founder and CEO at equity as a service firm, truthful play. Kareem, thanks a lot for becoming a member of me at present.
Kareem Saleh 12:24:49
Thanks for having me delighted to be right here.
Madeline Durrett 12:24:53
FairPlay is a equity as a service firm that makes use of synthetic intelligence. Would you elaborate in your personal phrases for our listeners on what precisely you do and the way AI matches in? Yeah.
Kareem Saleh 12:25:05
In order you level out, truthful play is the world’s first equity as a service firm. We enable anyone utilizing an algorithm to make a excessive stakes resolution about somebody’s life to reply 5 questions, is my algorithm truthful? If not, why not? May or not it’s fairer? What’s the financial impression to our enterprise of being fairer? And at last, did we give our declines the parents we rejected a re-evaluation to ensure we didn’t deny any individual a chance they deserve. A few of the largest names in monetary companies use our instruments to automate the testing of their AI methods for blind spots and to determine alternatives to be fairer, inside their danger tolerance. That finally ends up being good for income, good for individuals, and good for progress.
Madeline Durrett 12:25:55
So it helps everybody, not simply clients, however banks as effectively.
Kareem Saleh 12:25:59
That’s proper, banks that use our software program are sometimes capable of enhance their approval charges by 10% enhance their take charges by 13% and enhance constructive outcomes by 20%
Madeline Durrett 12:26:14
and can you disclose or give us any hints on a number of the banks you’re employed with?
Kareem Saleh 12:26:18
Sure, in fact. So we work with 4 of the highest 20 banks. Essentially the most financial institution that we introduced as a good play accomplice is path phrase, previously meta financial institution. Path phrase is a pioneer within the banking as a service ecosystem. A few of the largest manufacturers who originate by means of sponsor banks like h and r block and opportune originate by means of pathword. And so we’re delighted to be working with the parents at pathword and with a number of different main monetary establishments to assist understand the advantages of AI investments
Madeline Durrett 12:26:55
and truthful play was based in 2020 How have the banks you’ve labored with how? How have their wants advanced in possibly the previous 4 or 5 years? Yeah,
Kareem Saleh 12:27:05
effectively, I feel once we got here to market 5 years in the past, in 2020 our focus was actually on the fintechs who had been utilizing advanced machine studying and AI strategies in credit score underwriting and for essentially the most half, originating by means of sponsor banks. They usually wanted to show to their sponsor banks and their sponsor banks regulators that the AI fashions they had been utilizing didn’t pose a menace both to the protection and soundness of these establishments or to the customers they served. However then, in fact, chatgpt comes alongside in 2023 and modifications the whole lot now, I feel because the introduction of huge language fashions just a few years in the past, we’ve now began to see banks really feel like they haven’t any selection however to get into the AI recreation and comparatively shortly. And so whereas we had been targeted totally on fintechs within the early years of our enterprise, the final a number of years, we have now been serving to main monetary establishments, large family names that you’d acknowledge, implement their AI underwriting methods in ways in which enable them to get the advantages of these investments whereas additionally sustaining compliance with legal guidelines just like the Equal Credit score Alternative Act, the Truthful Housing Act and different relevant laws,
Madeline Durrett 12:28:22
and to sort of construct on that, what are a few of The dangers related to AI powered decisioning, and the way is truthful play mitigating these dangers?
Kareem Saleh 12:28:31
Yeah, so the standard knowledge is that AI stands for synthetic intelligence, however it could possibly generally additionally stand for by accident incorrect machine machine studying methods are able to studying the flawed issues. Simply to offer you one instance, once we began doing this work over a decade in the past, we didn’t have we didn’t have our personal information set to get began, and so we went out and we purchased a knowledge set from a failed lender, and we educated up some AI fashions, and we had been very pleased with ourselves, and the AI fashions that we educated up got here again and mentioned, Hey, you need to make loans in Arkansas. And it simply so occurs that my co founder and chief know-how officer is from Arkansas, and he occurred to know that the regulatory regime in Arkansas was extraordinarily excessive. Hostile to those sorts of loans. And so we began asking ourselves, Properly, why does the aI assume we should always make loans in Arkansas? And we began digging into the information, and we discovered that the information set that we had bought didn’t embrace any loans in Arkansas, which meant that the information set didn’t embrace any defaults in Arkansas, which allowed the AI to return to the conclusion that loans by no means went dangerous in Arkansas. And so, you realize, these methods are solely as sensible as the information that you just prepare them on, and so they have a pure tendency to over match to the patterns which are within the information. And so for those who don’t have an actual clear eyed view about this bias within the algorithms to overfit to the information, then you definately may miss the blind spots in your algorithms. And in order that’s basically what we do is assist monetary establishments stress check their AI, determine blind spots of their AI after which appropriate for these blind spots. And what we discover is that one thing like 25 to 33% of the parents that monetary establishments declined most likely would have carried out in addition to the riskiest people they approve.
Madeline Durrett 12:30:42
It’s actually fascinating. And so, as you talked about, you realize some monetary establishments, they’re reluctant to deploy AI at scale, partly because of the value and in addition partly because of the dangers. Different banks are already establishing AI job forces and hiring AI specialists. So at a sure level, will AI integration at scale be a requirement for banks to stay aggressive. Sure,
Kareem Saleh 12:31:10
in case your rivals can see clients that you could’t and seize alternatives that you could’t, then, over time, they’re going to outperform you. So this is sort of a little bit, we’re in somewhat little bit of an AI arms race. You possibly can’t afford for the financial institution down the road to know one thing that you just don’t. And so I feel it’s solely a matter of time earlier than all of those establishments are utilizing AI throughout their companies. In case you have a look at, you realize, the well-known Jamie diamond annual letter from just a few years in the past the place he says, mainly, Silicon Valley is coming for banks. I feel that you realize, the premonitions that he set forth in that letter are largely coming true. These banks are reworking into know-how corporations. You see that the majority clearly at locations like Capital One, like JP Morgan, like Goldman, after they had been within the shopper enterprise, and now I feel the parents which are sort of in that center market and decrease center market at the moment are racing to meet up with a number of the their greater friends.
Madeline Durrett 12:32:16
So how a lot do you see AI utilization by banks and credit score unions growing by 12 months finish in comparison with final 12 months? Yeah,
Kareem Saleh 12:32:25
I feel that AI adoption in monetary companies goes to extend most likely on the order of 3x this 12 months. We’re seeing it. We’re seeing AI being utilized throughout the shopper journey, whether or not it’s in advertising and marketing or fraud detection or revenue verification or id verification or underwriting or pricing or line task, or, heaven forbid, account administration, collections, loss met, claims administration. I feel that it’s inevitable that AI goes to mainly contact the whole lot inside of those banks, whether or not it’s the entrance workplace, the center workplace, the again workplace,
Madeline Durrett 12:33:05
and also you sort of touched upon this already. However how are components equivalent to open banking shaping the AI panorama within the monetary companies sector?
Kareem Saleh 12:33:14
Yeah, AI, excuse me, open banking, which facilitates money circulate, underwriting, I feel, is quickly rising because the state-of-the-art in credit score analytics, as a result of money circulate and tends to be the truest measure of the customers steadiness sheet. one of many issues about money circulate underwriting is that there are such a lot of transactions that you must cope with, proper? Since you’re mainly taking a look at each credit score and debit to a shopper’s checking account. And I don’t find out about you, however I most likely use my debit card, you realize, 10 plus instances a day, whether or not it’s on the espresso store or the health club or no matter. And traditional underwriting strategies that the majority lenders use, like logistic regression, can solely devour about 20 to 50 variables. Outcomes. So for those who actually wish to get the advantages of money circulate underwriting, the place the variety of variables you must cope with may be many tons of, generally 1000s, you actually need a mathematical strategy like AI that may devour an infinite quantity of knowledge and that will also be resilient to information that’s messy, lacking or flawed. And so I feel open banking is has put the business on a trajectory in direction of sort of steady underwriting. Folks will probably be underwritten on a regular basis on the idea of knowledge that could be very, very present, and that on the idea of knowledge that represents a extra correct portrait, a finer portrait, if you’ll, of a borrower’s skill and willingness to repay a mortgage, then maybe standard underwriting strategies, which may solely devour a restricted quantity of knowledge and have a tendency To be based mostly on credit score stories which have essentially a reporting lag and which can not absolutely mirror the patron’s steadiness sheet,
Madeline Durrett 12:35:36
makes lots of sense. So I wish to pivot to some latest information. You had been chosen by MasterCard for its begin PATH program, which goals to drive ahead AI powered monetary companies. So how did Truthful Play find yourself on this program? And what are you most enthusiastic about in being part of it?
Kareem Saleh 12:35:56
Properly, as chances are you’ll know, MasterCard bought finicity A couple of years in the past to get into the money circulate underwriting attribute house, and so MasterCard is working very laborious when it’s with its many 1000s of financial institution companions to deliver the advantages of money circulate underwriting to the broader MasterCard ecosystem. And so we had been delighted to be chosen by MasterCard to take part in begin path to essentially commerce notes and determine areas of cooperation to speed up the adoption of money circulate underwriting within the banking sector, each within the US and globally. So it’s nonetheless early days, however the way in which we sometimes work with money circulate underwriting attribute and rating suppliers is to be sure that the information units are consultant, as a result of, once more, we’re making an attempt to keep away from blind spots. We’re making an attempt to be sure that the scores developed on the idea of these money circulate underwriting is predictive and consultant, and what we discover is usually because money circulate underwriting is in some sense, the truest measure of the patron’s steadiness sheet. The outcomes of money circulate underwriting are extraordinarily truthful, since you’re actually measuring individuals on the idea of their skill to pay again a mortgage. So we’re actually excited to be working with MasterCard and the 1000s of banks of their networks to attempt to understand a number of the potential good points which are available from money circulate underwriting and AI, thank
Madeline Durrett 12:37:34
you, and also you sort of answered this, however what? What are a number of the benefits of being a part of a consortium with different startups, and as you talked about, different banks, particularly when making an attempt to remain forward of the curve and determine business wants as they come up.
Kareem Saleh 12:37:50
Properly, the advantages of being in a consortium with MasterCard, with different startups, with 1000s of different banks, is the power to commerce finest practices as this ecosystem develops. So I feel we’re very early within the adoption of money circulate underwriting. That’s meant that there are sort of inconsistent requirements, for instance, with the with respect to the categorization of money circulate underwriting attributes and different questions associated to sort of the appropriateness of sure information factors and the way they is likely to be used to evaluate customers. And so the good good thing about begin path is being in a consortium with our friends, with our clients, with banks who’re additionally grappling with these similar points, in order that we will attempt to determine requirements and finest practices that’ll carry the entire ecosystem up.
Madeline Durrett 12:38:44
So what else is within the pipeline for truthful play this 12 months. What are a few of your 2025, Enterprise and Know-how targets?
Kareem Saleh 12:38:50
Yeah, so one of many areas the place we’re seeing lots of development is within the space of benchmarking. The lenders that we work with wish to perceive how the outcomes of their very own underwriting evaluate to the outcomes of a few of their friends, and to know if there are geographies or populations, maybe the place that they’re lacking or the place they may do higher. And so over the course of the subsequent 12 months, with one of many main credit score bureaus and a few of our main monetary establishment companions, we’re going to be launching the Truthful Play truthful ness index. Prices, which permits monetary establishments to benchmark their underwriting outcomes, not simply in mortgage, the place these sort of benchmarks exist at present, however in different non mortgage asset courses, like auto lending, installment lending, bank card lending, earned wage entry, purchase now, pay later, and so forth, in order that we will deliver extra visibility into what the underwriting outcomes are for sure populations, sure geographies and throughout the credit score spectrum.
Madeline Durrett 12:39:58
I actually sit up for receiving updates on that. Properly, this has been the excitement podcast. Thanks a lot. Karim Saleh, founder and CEO at equity as a service firm, truthful play for becoming a member of me at present, please be sure you observe us on LinkedIn, and as a reminder, you may fee this podcast in your platform of selection. Thanks on your time, and be sure you go to us at Financial institution automation information.com, for extra. Automation Information,
Kareem Saleh 12:40:30
thanks, Madeline.
Transcribed by https://otter.ai