Fortunis capital invests £15m in UK fintech Karma
The voucher lending app was trialled in the UK with support from the Scottish government.
The voucher lending app was trialled in the UK with support from the Scottish government.
Fintechs can be exempt of regulations for up to four years.
FinTech Futures’ weekly news round-up.
A list of how some major banks are responding to COVID-19 remote working policies.
The account offering will land in the US later this year.
The card is made up of 82% bio-sourced renewable materials.
The fintech wants to help US retail banks offer personalisation.
Andreessen general partner, Anish Acharya, is joining the San Francisco-based company’s board.
Phased implementation will start in November 2020.
The firm is central to whistleblower claims that Wirecard fraudulently inflated sales & profits.
Clear Book’s bank feeds will refresh four times daily.
The money will be used to provide refunds to consumers who may have been harmed.
The bank hopes the test will pave the way for a more simplified market infrastructure.
This is the first of ECB’s “pandemic emergency longer-term refinancing operations” plan.
The insurance platform expands its global footprint.
US CEO TS Anil will also be the bank’s UK CEO.
A blueprint for consolidating, automating and driving efficiency across reconciliations – and beyond.
Visa will co-create data products with the cloud-based firm.
Onfido will automate WorldRemit’s KYC decision-making process.
The Nordic bank has 150,000 customers.
If successful, the project could be deployed to RBI’s CEE countries.
In March, Brex acquired three San Francico-based start-ups.
The total raised includes the start-up’s D1 raise last August.
The start-up’s funding round was led by San Francisco-based Class 5 Global.
CBILS grants have accounted for £7.25 billion in crisis cashflow for SMEs.
Son noted that Jesus was also misunderstood and criticised.
Prior to Santander, Patrick Flynn spent six years at Barclays as COO of its capital arm.
The fintech has also appointed a new CTO and CPO.
Edinburgh-based fintech prepares for next growth phase.
The services will help develop APIs alongside evolving regulations.
The consolidation is due to be completed in November 2021.
The fintech is due to launch sometime this summer.
The partnership includes an undisclosed investment from Anquan.
“We have to leverage the tech that’s there,” says Lykke’s CEO.
Wave Money has tapped more than 21 million people in Myanmar.
Safely onboard more customers, supercharge your operations team, address identity AML & KYC compliance.
Barclays, Deutsche, HSBC and Santander among lenders conducting internal reviews.
Austrian, Belgian, Greek, French, Italian and Spanish regulators took a joint decision to lift the restrictions.
The start-up says it will use its investment to help “reboot” the travel industry.
SoftBank reported an annual operating loss of JPY 1.36 trillion ($13bn).