Nubank Archives - Crunchbase News /tag/nubank/ Data-driven reporting on private markets, startups, founders, and investors Thu, 19 Dec 2019 18:05:03 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.5 /wp-content/uploads/cb_news_favicon-150x150.png Nubank Archives - Crunchbase News /tag/nubank/ 32 32 This Was A Big Year For Fintech, Real Estate, Insurance, And Automation /venture/this-was-a-big-year-for-fintech-real-estate-insurance-and-automation/ Mon, 16 Dec 2019 13:45:00 +0000 http://news.crunchbase.com/?p=23444 As 2019 enters its final weeks, it seems timely to start looking at what sectors are poised to close out the year with a bang.

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For this first installment, we’re concentrating on industries that attracted both high funding totals and a lot of individual funding rounds. The methodology, which we’ll detail more below, 1 focuses most heavily on North American startups and attempts to avoid the distortive effects of single supergiant rounds on funding totals.

We ended up focusing on four sectors that are attracting rising funding: Fintech, real estate, insurance and automation. All are seeing particular traction at the late stage, where checks are largest.

Below, we unpack the numbers and trendlines for each industry in more detail:

Fintech And Banking

This seems to be the year that every startup decided to become a bank. And every venture capitalist decided to write a check to one or more of those startups.

Much of the funding went to “neobanks,” a fancy term to describe upstart digital banks working on everything from savings and checking accounts to mobile debit cards. Many are focused on bringing banking services to both consumers and businesses that have previously been underserved by traditional banks.

Investors are apparently banking on some big returns. Companies focused on fintech, banking and mobile payments in North and South America brought in $11.7 billion in 2019, per Crunchbase (see ). That’s up from $9.2 billion in all of 2018, per Crunchbase.

It wasn’t just a handful of giant investments either. This year’s funding was spread across more than 700 known rounds for startups.

Still, supergiant rounds did help boost the totals. One of the best known upstart banking brands, , pulled in an astonishing $700 million across two mega-rounds this year, pushing its valuation to $5.8 billion. Brazil’s , meanwhile, raised a whopping $400 million in a single July round.

Real Estate And Property Management

The single biggest headline generator in the venture-backed real estate space for 2019 was undoubtedly the implosion of WeWork and its ill-fated IPO. But setting that debacle aside, other trendlines for the real estate startup sphere this year have been pretty positive.

As of early December, investors had into an assortment of U.S. startups. The largest funding recipients include , the furnished workspace rental provider, , the online home-selling platform, and , a tech-enabled real estate brokerage. Altogether, those three companies raised nearly $1.2 billion in funding rounds this year alone. Other potentially less capital-intensive areas of ‼DZٱ𳦳” also attracted investors’ favor, including a bevy of property management software providers.

Insurance

Insurance is a startup sector that’s been growing steadily for a few years now, and it hit its highest funding levels to date in 2019.

As of mid-December, U.S. companies in the insurance and insuretech categories secured just over $4.75 billion in seed through late stage funding (see ). That’s up from $3.4 billion in 2018.

A huge wave of seed-stage insurance startups launched three to five years ago, and that’s one of the reasons big financings and investment totals are rising so much. Hot companies in that cohort are rapidly maturing, and they’re seeking ever-larger later-stage rounds. Corporate venture arms of established insurance companies are also active in the space, contributing to rising valuations.

, a provider of health plans for Medicare recipients, closed the largest funding round, a $500 million Series E. , which offers car insurance with rates tied to driver behavior, raised $350 million, while , a home and renter’s insurance provider, pulled in $300 million.

Automation

Automation is essentially shorthand for getting technology to do something that used to require a human. In the dawn of the industrial age, this generally entailed huge, heavy machines voraciously sucking down fuel. Today, it’s likely a software program capable of running on a pocket-sized device.

To that end, automation software developers are securing rising sums of venture capital. In 2019, U.S. companies in the space pulled in $2.89 billion in known funding, per Crunchbase data. (See ), exceeding 2018 levels. This year’s total is expected to rise higher in coming months as more late-reported funding rounds get added to the database.

Familiar names topped the list of largest funding recipients. , which develops software to automate repetitive tasks for office workers, pulled in $568 million in Series D financing, bringing total funding to date to $1 billion. Rival , meanwhile, closed on a fresh $290 million last month.

It’s Not All Up

Overall, 2019 is shaping up as yet another really strong year for U.S. venture funding. The rise of supergiant funding rounds, a robust fundraising environment for well-regarded venture firms, and growing momentum across a host of hot sectors are all factors contributing to keeping the investments flowing.

But while this piece highlights standout sectors, it wasn’t all rosy in startup-land this year. That’s why, for the next installment in this end-of-year series, we’ll look at sectors that posted significant declines in 2019.

For now, though, we’ll end on an optimistic note, observing that while everything was up, automation, real estate, fintech and insurance all posted pretty impressive venture funding tallies.

Illustration: .


  1. We use Crunchbase categories for the searches, sometimes standalone categories and sometimes combining several, potentially along with relevant keywords. We focused on U.S. data for all the categories but fintech, for which we also included Latin America. Also of note are year-over-year comparison for round counts. A high percentage of seed and early stage fundings are subject to late reporting, meaning they don’t get into the Crunchbase dataset until weeks or months after they officially close.

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Nubank’s $400M Round Underscores Global Investor Interest In Latin America /venture/nubanks-400m-round-underscores-global-investor-interest-in-latin-america/ Mon, 29 Jul 2019 14:24:00 +0000 http://news.crunchbase.com/?p=19712 Silicon Valley venture firm TCV has confirmed it led a $400 million round for Brazilian fintech startup Nubank, marking the firm’s first “significant” investment in Latin America.

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Crunchbase News reported on Friday that the deal was reportedly in the works. Nu Pagamentos SA, , raised the money at a valuation of $10 billion, according to the . , a California-based growth fund with 340 reported investments under its belt, , was not the only participant. Existing investors Tencent, DST Global, Sequoia Capital, Dragoneer, Ribbit Capital, and Thrive Capital also participated in the round.

With the new capital Nubank has raised $820 million across a total of seven investment rounds since its inception in 2013, according to TCV.


Nubank’s customer base has more than doubled since its last funding in 2018, crossing the 12 million mark in Brazil and making the company Brazil’s sixth-largest financial institution by number of clients, according to TCV. (That’s saying a lot considering the sheer size of Brazil’s population and economy). Nubank’s product portfolio has evolved beyond its original app-controlled credit card and rewards products to now include personal loans, a digital savings account with debit cards for consumers and SMEs (small-to-medium enterprises). Via email, the company unusually (in a good way) transparently told me its revenue more than doubled in 2018 to R$1,223.2 million (about US $323.4 million) – 2.2 times higher than the R$567.3 million (about US$150 million) in 2017.

This year, the company began looking outside its home base. In May, Nubank kicked off its global expansion, opening offices in Mexico and Argentina.

In a written statement, Nubank founder and CEO said his company remains firm in its mission “to fight complexity and give back to people the control of their finances.” Brazil is known for its exorbitant interest rates on loans, something Vélez acknowledges.

“Even though the technological change has been transformational for most industries across the globe, most banked consumers continue to pay absurd interest rates and fees to receive very poor financial services in return,” he said. “Additionally, over two billion people still do not have access to basic financial services. With this new investment by TCV and our existing investors, we expect to contribute to meaningfully change this situation by accelerating our growth in Brazil and supporting the launch of our new Latin American markets.”

In a statement, TCV General Partner Woody Marshall said his firm has been impressed by Nubank’s “market position, product-centric DNA and unrelenting focus on the consumer experience.”

Today, Nubank has more than 1,800 employees in Brazil, Germany, Argentina, and Mexico. The company said it expects “to significantly grow” its employee base over the next few years. Specifically, it told me via email today that it plans to hire more than 1,000 employees over the next 12 months alone globally.

Meanwhile, as we’ve reported extensively, Latin America is a region of growing interest for global investors. VC funding into the region nearly doubled in 2018 to a record $1.98 billion compared to $1.14 billion over 2017, according to , the Association for Private Capital Investment in Latin America.

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