Vanquis was set up by Provident Financial and licensed for Consumer Credit by the OFT in 2002. It received authorisation from the Financial Services Authority the following year. Initially conceived as a pilot scheme from Provident, it received approval from the parent group to expand in 2004 and relocated to the current Head Office location in London in 2005. Following extensive marketing and advertising, increased business volumes resulted in the customer services department moving to larger premises at Chatham in 2008, in part of what used to be the Chatham Naval Dockyards. In 2009 Vanquis rebranded, launched new credit cards and won the Credit Provider of the Year at the Credit Today Awards, something it would repeat in 2010, 2011 and 2012. In 2011, a further call centre was opened in Bradford, and a High Yield Bond product was authorised by the FSA. Vanquis also received a Passport banking license to operate in Poland in 2012.
The head office of Vanquis is at 20 Fenchurch Street in London. Previous to this, the company was based in 12 Arthur Street. Originally called Minster House, it was redeveloped in 2004 by HKR Architects and Shieldpoint Ltd. The site around Arthur Street has uncovered historical artifacts dating from Roman waterfront development from around the 1st - 3rd century AD. Vanquis also operate a call centre in Chatham, Kent, making it one of the larger employers in the Thames Gateway area. In 2011, Vanquis opened an office in the new Southgate Complex development at 1 Godwin street in Bradford.
Products
Vanquis Bank offer two main credit building cards, the Vanquis Card, which has a representative APR varying from 39.9% to 59.9%, depending on the credit circumstances of the applicant, and the Aquis card, which has a representative APR of 29.8%. Both are licensed under Visa.
Company results
Provident invested £6.7m in the Vanquis business and reached the break-even point in 2007. Vanquis provided above-estimated results in 2010, posting revenue of £162m which helped Provident to strong end-of-year figures. Many have attributed the gains made by Vanquis and Provident to the continued UK recession and the difficulty of obtaining credit from mainstream lenders with existing adverse credit, however Vanquis cite that despite an increase in applications, acceptance rates are not significantly higher. In 2018, Vanquis was fined £2m for failing to properly disclose charges on one of its popular repayment plans. Vanquis was also forced to pay £169m back in compensation to its customers.
Charity
Vanquis Bank engage in a number of charitable causes, including Hatua, a charity created to educate children in the poorest parts of Kenya and provide books, computer equipment, learning resources and motivational guidance to talented pupils.