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Glassbox Acquires Business Monitoring and Analytics Specialist Anodot

Digital experience analytics company Glassbox has acquired anomaly detection and business monitoring firm Anodot. Terms of the deal were not available. Glassbox will integrate Anodot’s engine into its platform to help businesses monitor and better understand customer behavior. Founded in 2014 and headquartered in Virginia, Anodot made its Finovate debut at FinovateEurope 2022 in London. Digital experience analytics provider Glassbox announced its acquisition of Anodot, a provider of real-time anomaly detection and business monitoring. Terms of the acquisition were not disclosed. The integration of Anodot’s engine will enable Glassbox to detect more granular shifts in user behavior in order to spot patterns across digital experiences. This will help the firm identify a range of behaviors that could impact the business, providing early warning of potential customer friction, system underperformance, or conversion declines. These insights will help product, UX, DevOps, and analytics teams make informed decisions and provide them with the built-in workflow integrations they need to accelerate response times. “As enterprises increasingly rely on digital channels to engage customers, Glassbox has become essential for understanding and shaping customer behavior,” Glassbox CEO Guy Perry said. “By integrating Anodot’s advanced anomaly detection into our platform, we’re enabling customers to automatically uncover and proactively react to even the smallest shifts in user behavior. This acquisition reinforces our commitment to helping our customers deliver exceptional, frictionless digital experiences at scale.” Glassbox’s acquisition is the first big move for Perry, who joined the company as CEO last month. Perry was previously CEO and president of trade finance software company Surecomp and, before that, held senior leadership roles at NCR Global and Motorola Solutions. In his appointment announcement, Perry underscored Glassbox’s “world-class technology, deep expertise, and truly customer-centric culture” and the firm’s ability to “redefine how organizations turn digital insights into meaningful outcomes.” Headquartered in London and founded in 2010, Glassbox offers an AI-driven platform that captures, analyzes, and optimizes user interactions across digital channels. The company’s technology helps organizations enhance digital experiences for customers, boost brand loyalty, and improve revenue growth. Glassbox provides 100% user session capture, real-time alerts, and AI-powered insights to help companies detect and resolve customer pain points, ensure accessibility, and fight fraud. Anodot made its Finovate debut at FinovateEurope 2022 in London. At the conference, the Ashburn, Virginia-based company demonstrated its business monitoring platform that uses AI to continuously monitor and correlate payments activity and business performance. Helping identify revenue-critical issues—from processes that are creating an unacceptable level of customer friction to anomalous behavior that is potentially fraudulent—the platform provides real-time actionable alerts and forecasts to reduce detection time by as much as 80%. Earlier this year, Anodot announced that it had formed a new business unit, Umbrella, dedicated to the company’s cloud cost management platform. Designed to meet the needs of managed service providers (MSPs) and multi-divisional enterprises, the Umbrella Cloud Cost Management Platform leverages AI and business analytics to give companies visibility into their cloud and software-as-a-service (SaaS) spend. Photo by Daniel Watson The post Glassbox Acquires Business Monitoring and Analytics Specialist Anodot appeared first on Finovate.       

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Finovate Global Egypt: Investing in Digital Payments, Innovation, and Future Tech Talent

This week’s edition of Finovate Global features the latest fintech news from Egypt. Fawry and Wadi Degla Partner to Offer Integrated Digital Payments A strategic partnership between leading Egyptian fintech Fawry and real estate development company Wadi Degla Developments will bring integrated digital payment solutions to Wadi Degla customers. Wadi Degla will leverage Fawry’s online payment gateway and POS network, simplifying and accelerating payment processes, to enhance the customer experience and help drive digitization in the real estate sector. The alliance fortifies Fawry’s status as a trusted technology partner for the country’s real estate developers and underscores Wadi Degla’s determination to increase operational efficiency and boost customer satisfaction. The partnership will also feature new value-added solutions including the Fawry Business Corporate Card and digital loyalty programs. “This partnership marks a key milestone in our mission to drive digital transformation across Egypt’s vital real estate sector,” Fawry Chief Business Officer Heba El Awady said. “At Fawry, we aim to empower developers to provide modern, integrated payment services that cater to the growing demand for digitization. We continuously strive to develop innovative solutions tailored to the evolving needs of various sectors, and our collaboration with Wadi Degla Developments is a prime example of constructive partnerships between technology and real estate, enhancing operational efficiency and creating tangible value for customers.” Headquartered in Cairo, Egypt, and founded in 2008, Fawry offers a digital transformation and fintech platform that delivers more than 1,186 financial services to consumers and businesses. With more than 29 million customers across Egypt, Fawry is the country’s largest payment network, processing more than three million operations a day. Ashraf Sabry is founder and CEO. Egypt’s DisrupTech Ventures Makes Second Non-Egyptian Investment Our last look at fintech in Egypt highlighted the launch of a new $31.5 million fund from HSBC Egypt that is dedicated to supporting small and medium-sized businesses in the fintech sector. Today, there’s another Egypt-based fund making fintech headlines: Egypt’s DisrupTech Ventures, which just made its second investment outside of Egypt and its first for a Moroccan fintech with its funding of Chari. Founded by Ismael Belkhayat and Sophia Alj and backed by Y Combinator, Chari offers a fintech platform that transforms thousands of small neighborhood shops into access points for digital payments and other financial services. Chari’s payment institution license enables the company to empower small businesses to serve as financial hubs for their communities. Chari brings digitization to Morocco’s informal economy, helping businesses quickly access working capital, and embedding financial services including insurance and payment options into merchants’ daily operations. Launched in 2020, the company has onboarded more than 20,000 retailers to its platform. “Our investment in Chari is a milestone for DisrupTech,” Managing Partner at DisrupTech Ventures Mohamed Okasha said. “Chari is redefining how financial services are delivered at the grassroots level. By empowering small shops to act as financial gateways, Chari is creating the foundation for a new, inclusive fintech infrastructure in Morocco. This is exactly the kind of transformative model we seek to support across Africa.” The amount of the investment was not disclosed. The funding is part of Chari’s Series A extension round, which included raising $12 million and featured leadership from SPE Capital and Orange Ventures. Along with its investment, DisrupTech Ventures will also join Chari’s board of directors. DisrupTech Ventures is headquartered in Cairo, Egypt. Founded in 2021, the company is the country’s leading fintech venture capital firm with an emphasis on early stage fintech and fintech-enabled startups. Egypt’s Students Top Arab Fintech Talent Competition The Central Bank of Egypt (CBE)’s FinYology initiative introduced the third edition of its FinTech Got Talent 2025 competition this year. In partnership with the Federation of Egyptian Banks (FEB) and the Egyptian Banking Institute (EBI), the fintech talent competition seeks to identify and support fintech innovation among university students. This year’s competition was won by ESLSCA University for its mobile app, Tapay, that transforms an ordinary smartphone into a contactless payment terminal. Taking second place was the team from the British University in Egypt (BUE), which offered a financial literacy app called Money Adventure, that leverages gamification to help children learn about the importance of learning how to manage their money. Coming in third was the team from Cairo University, which presented AgriDawar, a digital platform that uses e-payment technology and e-wallets to connect farmers to buyers of agricultural surplus residues. All three teams represented Egypt at the Arab FinTech Challenge 2025 last month, with the ESLSCA University and BUE teams again taking first and second, respectively, topping teams from universities from the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and Morocco. FinTech Got Talent was initially launched in 2024 as part of the FinYology initiative. This effort is designed to integrate academic learning with hands-on fintech applications. FinYology includes more than 30 Egyptian universities, has supported more than 900 student-led projects, and featured the participation of 19,000 students. Eighteen partner banks have also provided continuing backing to the FinYology initiative. Here is our look at fintech innovation around the world. Latin America and the Caribbean Brazilian fintech Kanastra secured $30 million in Series B funding for its capital markets infrastructure and services offering. Binance launched QR code payments in Argentina. Brazil’s central bank announced new capital and compliance rules for fintechs. Asia-Pacific Japan’s JCB International partnered with Agoda to enhance digital travel payments throughout Asia. Hong Kong’s ZA Bank launched its StockBack x ZA Card, the first Visa card in Hong Kong to offer shares of stock as a purchase reward. ISH acquired Sydney, Australia-based spend management software company ProSpend. Sub-Saharan Africa Financial services platform Mukuru teamed up with AI-powered banking technology provider JUMO to launch new fast loan solution. UAE-based fintech Optasia raised $345 million in its IPO on the Johannesburg Stock Exchange (JSE) in South Africa. Kenya’s mobile money market reached 91% penetration this year according to the Communications Authority of Kenya, a jump from 77% penetration last year. Central and Eastern Europe Hamburg, Germany-based fintech Atrya locked in €1.5 million in funding for its stablecoin payment network. Estonian fintech Creem raised €1.8 million in pre-seed funding for its “programmable finance layer” the helps startups manage payments, taxes, compliance, and more. Embedded financing platform YouLend and business management platform Tide take their partnership to the German market. Middle East and Northern Africa Saudi Arabia-based fintech Stream raised $4 million in seed funding in a round led by Outliers VC. Kuwait Finance House partnered with NCR Atleos Corporation to deploy hyper-realistic conversational AI-powered avatars. QNB announced a strategic partnership with embedded B2B payments infrastructure provider TransferMate. Central and Southern Asia Indian fintech Pine Labs launched its $439 million IPO. Zynk, a cross-border payments startup headquartered in Hyderabad, India, secured $5 million in seed funding in a round led by Hivemind Capital. Kazakhstan announced plans to create a national cruptocurrency reserve fund worth between $500 million and $1 billion. Photo by David McEachan The post Finovate Global Egypt: Investing in Digital Payments, Innovation, and Future Tech Talent appeared first on Finovate.       

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Modernizing Financial Systems: A Strategic Approach to Legacy Transformation and Fraud Prevention

For financial institutions deciding on their modernization strategy, what are the options? Does legacy technology need to be abandoned immediately or entirely? Or are there ways that financial institutions can leverage the infrastructure they have while embracing areas where digital and other modern solutions can bring real efficiency gains? In this interview, I talk with Casey Ferguson, VP of Marketing at Zoot Enterprises, about the company’s phased approach to modernizing financial systems, integrating legacy technology, and enhancing fraud prevention strategies. Ferguson explains why incremental progress, cross-functional collaboration, and layered fraud defenses are key to effective digital transformation. “At Zoot we look at modernization this way: It’s not about tearing everything down. When you look at this kind of rip and replace mentality you’ve got to remember that it can be pretty risky, it can be very expensive, and it can be kind of slow, as well. When you think about the pace of change, architecting the perfect environment, the world may have changed by the time you have a perfect picture of all this. So working on things incrementally and in phases can really make a difference.” Headquartered in Bozeman, Montana, and founded in 1990, Zoot Enterprises provides acquisition, origination, and decision management solutions that help financial institutions streamline processes, increase flexibility, and accelerate growth. Zoot offers comprehensive and flexible platforms for numerous specific business operations—from loan origination and data acquisition to fraud detection and prevention. Photo by Charles Moll on Unsplash The post Modernizing Financial Systems: A Strategic Approach to Legacy Transformation and Fraud Prevention appeared first on Finovate.       

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Ripple Raises $500 Million on $40 Billion Valuation

Financial infrastructure and blockchain technology company Ripple has secured $500 million in new funding at a valuation of $40 billion. The funding comes at time of great activity for the San Francisco, California-based fintech, which has announced six acquisitions in the past two years and whose stablecoin, RLUSD, topped the $1 billion market capitalization mark this month. As OpenCoin, Ripple made its Finovate debut at FinovateSpring 2013. We shared this news in yesterday’s Finovate weekly LinkedIn newsletter (subscribe if you haven’t). But we’re happy to share it with Finovate blog readers today. Financial infrastructure and blockchain technology company Ripple has raised $500 million in new funding, boosting the firm’s valuation to $40 billion. The funding follows the company’s recent $1 billion tender offer at the same valuation, and comes at a time of renewed interest in digital assets such as stablecoins and the growing importance of crypto services such as custody and trading. “This investment reflects both Ripple’s incredible momentum and further validation of the market opportunity we’re aggressively pursuing by some of the most trusted financial institutions in the world,” Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse said. “We started in 2012 with one use case—payments—and have expanded that success into custody, stablecoins, prime brokerage, and corporate treasury, leveraging digital assets like XRP. Today, Ripple stands as the partner for institutions looking to access crypto and blockchain.” The investment was led by funds managed by affiliates of Fortress Investment Group, affiliates of Citadel Securities, Pantera Capital, Galaxy Digital, Brevan Howard, and Marshall Wace. The fundraising comes as Ripple celebrates completing six acquisitions, including two valued at over $1 billion, in the past two years. The company, which first introduced itself to Finovate audiences at FinovateSpring 2013 as OpenCoin, has also expanded into new markets in prime brokerage and treasury management, adding to its existing footprint across payment, custody, and stablecoins. This year, Ripple acquired stablecoin infrastructure company Rail to enhance its Ripple Payments offering as a full-service cross-border platform that leverages Ripple’s stablecoin RLUSD and XRP to make international fund transfers faster and more efficient for businesses. The acquisition of multi-asset prime brokerage firm Hidden Road in October—now integrated into Ripple’s Ripple Prime platform—enables Ripple to offer its institutional clients a range of financial services including trading, custody, and derivatives for both traditional and digital assets. The company’s purchase of Palisade, a digital asset wallet and custody firm, will bolster Ripple’s Ripple Custody offering. Ripple Custody provides banks and other financial institutions with safe and secure ways to store digital assets, stablecoins, and Real World Assets (RWA). Just this month, RLUSD surpassed $1 billion in market capitalization. Reaching this milestone in less than a year after it was launched, RLUSD is now the 10th largest, US dollar-backed stablecoin. RLUSD is the primary stablecoin used by Ripple for payment flows, Ripple President Monica Long noted in an interview with CoinDesk, adding that Ripple has processed “nearly $100 billion in payments volume to date.” Also this month, Ripple announced that its digital asset spot prime brokerage capabilities were now available to customers in the US. “The launch of OTC spot execution capabilities complements our existing suite of OTC and cleared derivatives services in digital assets and positions us to provide US institutions with a comprehensive offering to suit their trading strategies and needs,” Ripple Prime International CEO Michael Higgins said. Founded in 2012, Ripple is based in San Francisco, California. Photo by Mackenzie Marco on Unsplash The post Ripple Raises $500 Million on $40 Billion Valuation appeared first on Finovate.       

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New Canadian Budget Embraces AI, Stablecoins, Open Banking, and More

Just days after we featured Canada in our weekly Finovate Global column, we can now add to our understanding of what is driving fintech innovation in Canada with a look at the country’s recently unveiled federal budget. “Don’t tell me what you value. Show me your budget—and I’ll tell you what you value,” former US President Joe Biden liked to say. In this regard, Canada’s budget—with CAD $141 billion in new spending and CAD $51 billion in cuts and other savings—reflects a commitment to investing in the most transformative technologies of our time for the benefit of Canadian businesses and citizens, as well as for the wellbeing, defense, and even sovereignty of the country itself. “The world is undergoing a series of fundamental shifts at a speed, scale, and scope not seen since the fall of the Berlin Wall,” the budget document begins. “The rules-based international order and the trading system that powered Canada’s prosperity for decades are being reshaped—threatening our sovereignty, our prosperity, and our values.” “This is not a transition. It is a rupture—a generational shift taking place over a short period of time.” Against this backdrop, here are four takeaways for fintech and financial services from Canada’s newly released budget. Open Banking on Track for 2027 Implementation The Canadian government will commit to introducing the last remaining pieces of legislation needed to complete the Consumer-Driven Banking Framework, advancing the country’s open banking system. The budget indicates that process will take place in two phases: data sharing (“read access”) followed by transaction initiation (“write access”), with full implementation set for the middle of 2027. Oversight of open banking will remain with the Financial Consumer Agency of Canada (FCAC), which will ensure strong consumer protection and compliance. The country’s Department of Finance will continue coordinating the framework’s policy and legislative rollout. Meanwhile, the Bank of Canada, the country’s central bank, will oversee the broader payments ecosystem as new participants—from fintechs to non-bank Payment Service Providers (PSPs)—and new instruments such as stablecoins become a part of the country’s real-time payment infrastructure. Stablecoin Regulation Framework Unveiled Canada will introduce federal legislation to regulate fiat-backed stablecoins. Stablecoin issuers will be required to maintain asset reserves and meet consumer protection standards. These entities will also be mandated to establish and implement redemption policies and risk-management frameworks. The government also will amend its Retail Payment Activities Act, first passed in 2021, to enable payment service providers to use approved stablecoins for transactions. Per the new budget, the Bank of Canada will receive CAD$10 million over two years (2026-2027) to administer the new framework and receive funding of approximately CAD$5 million a year afterwards. This sum will be offset by fees collected from regulated stablecoin issuers. The move to embrace stablecoins is a major part of the country’s effort to modernize its payment systems and create new efficiencies. But, as with efforts in Europe and elsewhere, the initiative is also designed to avoid what some Canadian observers worry could be excessive and undue use of foreign-issued stablecoins, including those from the country’s larger neighbor to the south. Real-Time Payment Rail Infrastructure on Track The new budget also confirms that Canada’s Real-Time Rail (RTR) system will be operational in 2026. RTR will provide instant, cheaper payments for a broad range of transactions including payroll, expense reimbursements, and other business-related fund transfers. There will also be further updates to the Retail Payment Activities Act to enable new entities, such as non-bank PSPs, to apply for membership in Payments Canada and participate directly in national payment systems including RTR. Payments Canada is the public, non-profit entity that owns and operates Canada’s national payment clearing and settlement infrastructure. Canada’s RTR project is very much intertwined with other fintech-based initiatives in the budget, such as open banking and stablecoins. For example, the budget notes that the combination of write access and RTR by mid-2027 will help usher in the “next phase of consumer-driven banking” characterized by safer, faster payments and greater choice for Canadian businesses and consumers. A Billion-Plus Investment in AI and Quantum Computing The budget allocates CAD $1.26 billion for AI and quantum computing technologies. The inclusion of quantum computing technology is especially interesting, affirming Canada’s determination that investment in quantum computing is key to ensuring the country remains on the cutting edge in terms of innovation-enabling technologies. The allocation for AI represents the lion’s share of the sum at just over CAD $925 million. The funding will support the construction of a large-scale, publicly-accessible AI infrastructure. It also provides for investments in data center infrastructure and domestic compute capacity. The budget endorses a “Sovereign Canadian Cloud” to help ensure sufficient compute capacity as well as data sovereignty. Notably, there is also funding specifically focused on tracking AI technology adoption, a major concern for many decision-makers when it comes to investing in AI. Over six years, CAD $25 million will be allocated for a Statistics Canada program to implement the Artificial Intelligence and Technology Measurement Program, also known as TechStat. With regard to quantum computing, the budget earmarks more than CAD $334 million over the next five years to bolster the country’s quantum ecosystem via the Defense Industrial Strategy introduced in the budget. The budget places quantum computing technology alongside AI in Canada’s broader innovation plan, describing it as “similarly transformative,” with promising use cases in finance and cybersecurity. Photo by Guillaume Jaillet on Unsplash The post New Canadian Budget Embraces AI, Stablecoins, Open Banking, and More appeared first on Finovate.       

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HSBC Teams Up with ValidiFi to Enhance Payment Security

HSBC has partnered with bank account and payment intelligence specialist ValidiFi. ValidiFi will help ensure the integrity of bank accounts used to pay credit card balances. Headquartered in Florida, ValidiFi made its Finovate debut at FinovateFall 2019. Banking and financial services company HSBC has selected ValidiFi to power its bank account validation and fraud monitoring operations. A leader in predictive bank account and payment intelligence, ValidiFi will help bolster the integrity of bank accounts used to pay credit card balances. The company’s technology will validate account ownership, spot fraudulent payment attempts, and detect suspicious behavioral patterns across all bank accounts. HSBC will also benefit from real-time validation of newly enrolled accounts, as well as ongoing monitoring to defend against emerging fraud threats. “Providing customers with efficient and secure ways of making credit card payments is essential,” HSBC US Head of Retail Product and Lending John Phelan said. “Our innovation and transformation efforts in personal banking require advanced fraud services, such as those offered by ValidiFi, that protect our clients.” ValidiFi’s technology was sought out in large part to help deal with threats like synthetic identities, mule accounts, and payment scams. The company’s comprehensive data network and advanced data intelligence analyze a wide range of behavioral and transaction data to detect anomalies before they affect customers. HSBC will leverage a number of key capabilities via the partnership with ValidiFi. These include account ownership verification, pre-transaction risk detection to spot high-risk activity before funds begin moving, behavioral analytics to spot patterns associated with scams and fraud, and ongoing monitoring to keep pace with evolving fraud tactics and security threats. “HSBC is setting a new standard in payment security by proactively adopting technologies that go beyond traditional fraud prevention,” ValidiFi CEO John Gordon said. “Its decision to implement our intelligence platform demonstrates a clear commitment to safeguarding customer transactions and staying ahead of increasingly complex payment schemes.” Headquartered in Sunrise, Florida, and founded in 2015, ValidiFi made its Finovate debut at FinovateFall 2019. At the conference, the company demonstrated its Payment Risk Optimizer (PRO), a platform-as-a-service (PaaS) solution that scrubs payment files for ACH and card payments to assess the likelihood of a successful payment. Photo by Kelly The post HSBC Teams Up with ValidiFi to Enhance Payment Security appeared first on Finovate.       

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Ripple Acquires Palisade to Bolster Crypto Custody Capabilities

Crypto solutions provider for businesses Ripple has announced its acquisition of digital asset wallet and custody company, Palisade. The move is designed to enhance Ripple’s custody capabilities—specifically, the company’s Ripple Custody offering—to better serve the needs of fintechs, corporates, and crypto-native companies. Terms of the transaction have not been disclosed. Ripple Custody supports banks and other financial institutions looking for safe, secure ways to store digital assets, stablecoins, and Real World Assets (RWA). Palisade’s secure, fast, and scalable “wallet-as-a-service” technology will enable Ripple to serve a broader range of customers and use cases, especially those high-speed use cases for customers that require an out-of-the-box solution built for high-frequency transactions, on- and off-ramps, and payments. Ripple Custody is currently being used by a number of tier-1 global institutions such as BBVA, DBS, and Societe Generale. The solution serves as a “vault” for institutional cryptocurrency holdings, supporting the management of multiple vaults and a complete view across assets and venues. Ripple Custody provides a tamper-proof audit trail and cryptographic approval process to ensure compliance. “Secure digital asset custody unlocks the crypto economy and is the foundation that every blockchain-powered business stands on—that’s why it’s central to Ripple’s product strategy,” Ripple President Monica Long said. “Corporates are poised to drive the next massive wave of crypto adoption. Just as we’ve seen major banks go from observing to actively building in crypto, corporates are now entering the market, and they need trusted, licensed partners with out-of-the-box capabilities. The combination of Ripple’s bank-grade vault and Palisade’s fast, lightweight wallet makes Ripple Custody the end-to-end provider for every institutional need, from long-term storage to real-time global payments and treasury management.” Palisade’s technology offers fast wallet provisioning, multi-chain support, and DeFi integration. The solution also features strong governance and security features, such as Multi-Party Computation (MPC) that divides wallet keys into key fractions or “shards,” and zero-trust architecture which mandates strict verification for all users and devices that are attempting to access the network. Per the acquisition, Palisade’s technology will also integrate directly into Ripple Payments, supporting use cases that require faster, more efficient responses. It will also provide the core infrastructure for subscription payments and collection capabilities. “Joining Ripple marks a new chapter for Palisade,” the company noted on its LinkedIn page. “Our technology will become a cornerstone of Ripple’s next-generation wallet infrastructure, accelerating their Payments and Custody products while expanding market reach globally. This partnership combines our technology with Ripple’s enterprise network and scale, regulatory expertise, and established market presence.” A Finovate alum since its debut at FinovateSpring 2013 (as OpenCoin), Ripple today boasts a global payments network with more than 300 customers across 40+ countries and six continents. The company’s payments, custody, and stablecoin solutions enable banks and financial institutions to simply and securely integrate blockchain and digital assets into their operations while remaining compliant. With payments settlement in three to five seconds, and more than a million custody wallets in circulation, Ripple provides 90% international FX market coverage. Ripple’s acquisition announcement comes just days after the fintech reported the launch of digital asset spot prime brokerage capabilities for US customers via its Ripple Prime offering. The launch was made possible by Ripple’s acquisition of multi-asset prime brokerage, Hidden Road, earlier this year, and will enable Ripple’s US-based institutional clients to execute over-the-counter (OTC) spot transactions across a wide range of digital assets including XRP and RLUSD. “The launch of OTC spot execution capabilities complements our existing suite of OTC and cleared derivatives services in digital assets and positions us to provide US institutions with a comprehensive offering to suit their trading strategies and needs,” Ripple Prime International CEO Michael Higgins said. Founded in 2012, Ripple is headquartered in San Francisco, California. Brad Garlinghouse is CEO. Photo by Pixabay The post Ripple Acquires Palisade to Bolster Crypto Custody Capabilities appeared first on Finovate.       

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Ping Identity Acquires Best of Show Winner Keyless

Digital identity company Ping Identity has agreed to acquire UK-based biometric authentication firm Keyless. Terms of the acquisition were not disclosed. Ping Identity will integrate Keyless’ Zero-Knowledge Biometrics technology into its platform to enable business to enhance their fraud prevention and user verification processes. Ping Identity has been a Finovate alum since its appearance at FinovateEurope 2012. Keyless won Best of Show in its Finovate debut at FinovateEurope 2025. Digital identity company Ping Identity has agreed to acquire UK-based biometric authentication specialist—and FinovateEurope 2025 Best of Show winner—Keyless. Terms of the acquisition have not been disclosed, and the transaction remains subject to customary closing conditions and regulatory approvals. “In an era where trust is continuously tested, organizations must deliver digital experiences that are more secure, private, and effortless,” Ping Identity CEO and Founder Andre Durand said. “By joining forces with Keyless, we aim to make privacy-preserving authentication as simple as a glance—building greater confidence into every digital interaction.” With its Zero-Knowledge Biometrics technology, Keyless separates itself from traditional biometric authentication solutions in a number of ways. Requiring a only single glance at the camera, Keyless’ technology verifies the user’s face and device against enrollment data, leveraging cryptographic techniques that prevent biometric data from being stored in a retrievable form. This prevents the data from being reconstructed and potentially linked back to the original image—whether on the device or in the cloud. Additionally, Keyless does not require a dedicated device, which makes the technology easier to deploy across a range of different environments and user groups. The technology helps defend users against fraud techniques such as account takeover, providing instant biometric authentication and deepfake detection for frontline and mobile workers with sub-300ms performance benchmarks. Keyless also supports employees with passwordless multi-factor authentication and seamless single sign-on (SSO) for easier, stronger access. The technology is also designed to enhance readiness for a variety of international regulatory compliance standards for privacy including GDPR, CCPA, and PSD3. “Trust lies at the heart of every digital relationship,” Keyless CEO and Co-Founder Andrea Carmignani said. “This acquisition will help to embed trust throughout the identity journey—from verification to authentication to authorization—and reflects our shared commitment to a more secure, seamless, and private world.” Per the acquisition, Ping Identity will integrate Keyless’ privacy-preserving biometric authentication into its platform to enable businesses to enhance their fraud prevention and user verification processes without adding friction to the user experience. The acquisition also helps Ping Identity manifest its One Platform vision of providing verified trust across all identities, including customer identity and access management (CIAM) workforce, and B2B use cases. This vision also means delivering secure, passwordless access for frontline, shared terminal, and manufacturing environments. Headquartered in Denver, Colorado and founded in 2003, Ping Identity first demonstrated its technology at FinovateEurope 2012. Today, the identity verification innovator boasts 99.99% uptime and more than three billion identities under management. The company’s acquisition announcement comes in the wake of a survey it conducted that indicated that while AI use is climbing rapidly, its impact on customer trust has been increasingly problematic. “AI and the rise of agents is compounding the attack on trust, making threats more persuasive and harder to detect, which raises the stakes for identity verification and protection,” Ping Identity VP of Consumer Segment Strategy Darryl Jones said. Winning Best of Show in its FinovateEurope 2025, Keyless was founded in 2019 and is based in London. The company’s privacy-preserving biometric authentication technology has helped banks, fintechs, crypto platforms, and more reduce account takeover incidents, secure high-risk transactions, and boost operational efficiency. Keyless’ Zero-Knowledge Biometrics solution provides multi-factor authentication with a single glance at the camera, delivering results in 300 milliseconds without storing valuable biometric information. Last month, Keyless announced that it had been named a “Luminary” in Acuity Market Intelligence’s Biometric Digital Identity Privacy and Compliance Prism Report. In September, Keyless was featured in Gartner’s Emerging Tech Impact Radar: Disinformation Security for its innovations in biometric continuous identity assurance. Photo by cottonbro studio The post Ping Identity Acquires Best of Show Winner Keyless appeared first on Finovate.       

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Fintech Rundown: A Rapid Review of Weekly News

Tomorrow is Election Day in the US, and there are a number of high-profile contests in places like New York, New Jersey, and Virginia—the results of which are likely to dominate headlines over the next several days. For now, here in the fintech world, we’re seeing plenty of news in the fraud prevention and mortgagetech fronts, with new products and new partnerships on offer. We are also noticing an uptick in activity in the insurtech space, where AI-powered solutions to continue to make inroads. Be sure to follow Finovate’s Fintech Rundown all week long for the latest updates in fintech news! Fraud prevention and digital identity AI transaction monitoring platform Flagright to power real-time transaction monitoring for online investment platform Webull. TrustFinance announces global expansion of its financial company verification platform Insurtech AI automation firm Unitary launches its Virtual Agents for Insurance. Digital solutions provider for the life insurance and financial services industry iPipeline introduces CHARLi, an AI foundation to enable L&A carriers and distributors to optimize workflows. Crypto and Defi Crypto tax compliance and accounting technology provider CoinTracker unveils Crypto Broker Tax Compliance Suite. Payments Saudi Arabian ATM provider Alhamrani Universal deploys Atombeam’s Neurpac SaaS solution to accelerate transmission of electronic payment transaction data. Investing and wealth management Prospero.ai renews its partnership with Finimize to provide retail investors with institutional-grade AI insights. Mortgagetech Intelligent payout solutions company Verituity teams up with mortgage servicing modernization firm Sagent. AI-powered mortgage loan provider Better.com launches a Wholesale HELOC and CES Platform to enable mortgage brokers to access their technology for the first time. Loyalty and rewards Digital banking experience platform Plumery launches its Cashback Management capability. Photo by Tara Winstead The post Fintech Rundown: A Rapid Review of Weekly News appeared first on Finovate.       

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Finovate Global Canada: Wealthsimple’s $10 Billion Valuation and a Look at Investment Trends

This week’s edition of Finovate Global features recent fintech news from Canada. Wealthsimple secures $750 million at valuation of $10 billion Canadian fintech Wealthsimple has raised CAD $750 million at a post-money valuation of CAD $10 billion. The funding round includes both a CAD $550 million primary offering and a secondary offering of up to CAD $200 million. Dragoneer Investment Group and GIC led the round, which also featured participation from new investor Canada Pension Plan Investment Board (CPP Investments) as well as existing investors Power Corporation of Canada, IGM Financial Inc. ICONIQ, Greylock, and Meritech. “This raise reflects deep confidence from new and returning investors in our mission and our role as a defining Canadian company,” Wealthsimple Co-Founder and CEO Michael Katchen said. “We were intentional in choosing partners committed to the long-term future of Wealthsimple. These are well-respected, global leaders with a proven track record (of) scaling category leaders, and who believe in our vision for the future of financial services.” Founded in 2014 and headquartered in Toronto, Ontario, Wealthsimple offers a suite of low-cost financial solutions to help Canadians build wealth. The company’s platform features self-directed investing, managed portfolios, digital asset investing, tax filing, advisor services, and more in a single, integrated experience. Wealthsimple serves three million Canadians and has $100 billion in assets under administration. “Few companies have achieved what Wealthsimple has in the last few years,” Dragoneer Investment Group Partner Christian Jensen said. “The Wealthsimple team has built an expansive financial platform that millions of Canadians trust. They’re not just participating in Canada’s financial services industry; they’re redefining it.” Earlier this year, Wealthsimple unveiled a waitlist for its first credit card, which topped 300,000 Canadians in the first six months. The company’s fundraising news follows a profitable 2024 and current profitability in 2025, as well. The capital infusion will help Wealthsimple accelerate its product roadmap in investing, spending, and credit, as well as support the company’s efforts to expand its platform. Fintech investment slows in H1 ahead of potential rebound in H2 Speaking of investment and Canadian fintech, KPMG’s Canada Fintech Investment Report is a great way to get up to speed on the investment trends that are supporting fintech innovation in Canada. The report was published in August, and focuses on investment trends from the first half of 2025. While the report indicates that Canadian fintech investment fell significantly compared to international trends, the report authors suggest that the first half of 2025 represented a normalization in the wake of record high levels of investment in 2024. Areas of investor interest include AI, especially agentic AI, and digital assets, which represent a continuation of trends from 2024. A more positive regulatory tone toward cryptocurrencies—especially stablecoins—in the US has been credited for this rebound in interest in digital assets. The report also noted some interest in quantum computing among insurers. “Last year was exceptionally strong for fintech investment, thanks to two major take-private deals,” Dubie Cunningham, a Partner in KPMG in Canada’s Banking and Capital Markets Practice, explained. “Since then, investment activity has dropped to more stable levels. In fact, when you consider the economic shifts such as tariffs affecting global trade, investment in the first half was quite robust compared to historical levels. There’s still a lot of dry powder ready to be deployed by investors, but they are demonstrating more selective behavior than in previous years. They’re looking for quality companies and we’re seeing longer tails for maturing mid-to-large stage private equity deals.” Read the full report. Coming to Canada: Atlanta’s Rainforest and Lebanon’s Whish Money This week reminds us of how attractive Canada is to a growing number of fintechs around the world. Rainforest, a embedded payments company based in Atlanta, Georgia, announced recently that it is looking to expand to Canada. The company, founded in 2022, secured $29 million in funding in September, taking its total capital raised to $57.5 million. The idea of expanding to Canada, as Rainforest Founder and CEO Joshua Silver explained to Global Atlanta, represents more than a regional expansion for the company itself. The move would also help Rainforest’s platform client expand their offerings in a new market. Rainforest specializes in payments partnerships with software providers that target businesses in underserved industry sectors. These software providers themselves are an underserved segment of the industry—processing $50 million to $2 billion in annual payments. Rainforest offers an embedded payments solution that enables software platforms to provide a robust payments experience for their end merchants without having to register as a payment facilitator with card networks. Hailing from even farther away than the Peach State where Rainforest resides is Whish Money. Headquartered in Beirut, Lebanon, and regulated by the country’s central bank, Whish Money announced this week that it had secured financial services licenses in Canada. The regulatory approvals are the first for the company outside of the MENA region, and is part of a global expansion that includes entering markets in the US, the UK, the EU, and Australia. “Securing our Canadian license is a monumental step that validates our compliant, customer-focused model and sets the foundation for our international expansion,” Whish Money board chairman Toufic Koussa said. “This move is about more than just entering a new market; it’s about strategically connecting high-diaspora communities with reliable financial infrastructure, beginning with North America. We are committed to building a regulated, transparent global ecosystem that truly serves our users.” Whish Money offers a range of digital financial services including payroll, fund transfers, and billpay. Founded in 2019, the company’s e-wallet, money remittance, and e-distribution platform has a user base of more than 1.5 million. The company’s global expansion is being supported by partnerships with companies such as Visa, Mastercard, Ria, and Terrapay. Here is our look at fintech innovation around the world. Central and Southern Asia Pakistan-based fintech startup ZAR raised $13 million for its technology that enables consumer to convert cash into stablecoins. Indian fintech infrastructure company Falcon announced a partnership with technology consulting firm Tech Mahindra. Alipay+ and HUMO, Uzebekistan’s national payment system, teamed up to facilitate cross-border payments. Latin America and the Caribbean Blockchain infrastructure and cryptocurrency provider Binance unveiled QR code payments in Argentina Kueski and dLocal team up to bring Buy Now Pay Later (BNPL) services to merchants in Mexico. Nubank and OpenAI partnered to launch ChatGPR Go in Brazil to give individuals greater access to ChatGPT’s advanced capabilties at a lower cost. Asia-Pacific Remittance provider Viamericas partnered with Dong Phuong Money Transfer to expand access to remittance services throughout Vietnam. Japanese fintech JPYC launched the country’s first yen-denominated stablecoin. Malaysian fintech Instapay earned a spot on CB Insights’ Global Fintech 100. Sub-Saharan Africa South African fintech SME Snapshot launched updated version of its business management dashboard. Nigeria’s Flutterwave partnered with Polygon to launch a stablecoin payment network across 34 African countries. Kenya’s Choice Bank teamed up with Safaricom to power cross-border money transfers. Central and Eastern Europe Coinbase and Tink teamed up to bring Pay by Bank crypto payments to customers in Germany. Lithuanian regtech IDenfy partnered with Australian remittance service provider J Forex Money Transfer. Finlayer and Salt Edge annnounced a partnership to bring open banking to small and medium-sized businesses in Romania. Middle East and Northern Africa Saudi Arabian Buy Now Pay Later firm Tabby boosted its valuation to more than $4.5 billion in the wake of a secondary share sale. Israel-based Viola Credit closed its third credit fund at $2 billion, topping its original target of $1.5 billion. Lebanon-based fintech Whish Money secured financial services licenses in Canada. Photo by Harrison Haines The post Finovate Global Canada: Wealthsimple’s $10 Billion Valuation and a Look at Investment Trends appeared first on Finovate.       

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Breaking Through the Verification Barrier: How Middesk Simplifies Risk & Identity

Digital businesses in the modern era span geography, product types, and regulatory regimes, making the process of verifying identities and assessing risk difficult. Today, we’re highlighting a conversation that digs into how platforms can assess risk at scale by embedding identity and risk intelligence into a single workflow. At FinovateFall earlier this year, I spoke with Kate Young, Marketing Manager at Middesk, a company specializing in identity verification and onboarding automation. During our conversation, Kate discussed identity and onboarding challenges, how platforms distinguish legitimate enterprises from fraudulent ones, and the importance of embedding risk intelligence and KYB tools into the onboarding and lending processes. The interview touches on real-world use cases, ROI metrics, and what it takes to move from spreadsheets to APIs. “There’s still this… trust gap between all of the businesses and the changes that they make both legitimately and illegitimately and the understanding of those financial institutions of those businesses. So there’s a wide gap between that business identity data and financial institutions being able to trust it…. We can actually bring that [gap] much closer and financial institutions can get much closer to trusting those businesses and saying yes to them more confidently and honestly growing their portfolio with those businesses once they truly trust who they are.” Founded in 2018, Middesk’s identity and business verification platform provides APIs for verifying B2B customers, reducing fraud risk, and automating underwriting. With features such as entity resolution, beneficial-owner monitoring, and embedded data flows, Middesk enables platforms to streamline onboarding, reduce fraud, and scale reliably by offering up-to-date, verified data about their business users and clients. Photo by Lisa from Pexels The post Breaking Through the Verification Barrier: How Middesk Simplifies Risk & Identity appeared first on Finovate.       

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Walmart’s OnePay Selects DriveWealth to Power Embedded Investing

Walmart’s OnePay digital banking platform is partnering with DriveWealth to launch OnePay Invest, giving users access to stock and ETF trading within their existing app. Since acquiring fintechs Even and ONE, Walmart has built OnePay into a full-service app offering savings, credit-building, BNPL, and now investing. Integrating DriveWealth’s brokerage-as-a-service APIs, OnePay lowers the barrier to entry for first-time investors and strengthens Walmart’s bid to become a one-stop financial hub for everyday consumers. Digital trading and brokerage company DriveWealth scored a partnership this week with Walmart’s digital banking platform OnePay, which will leverage DriveWealth’s brokerage-as-a-service offering to launch OnePay Invest. Walmart launched OnePay in January 2021 through a partnership with Ribbit Capital. In January 2022, Walmart expanded OnePay’s capabilities by acquiring two fintech platforms, Even and ONE, which helped Walmart create a more comprehensive financial services app. Since then, Walmart has been actively building up OnePay to compete with top fintech startups by adding features such as a high-yield savings account, credit-building tools, and BNPL capabilities. DriveWealth will give OnePay users a new way to invest in stocks and ETFs. OnePay Invest will offer users access to trading tools within the same mobile app they already use to save, spend, and borrow. “OnePay puts everyday money decisions in one place. By embedding DriveWealth’s investing technology directly into that experience, we are giving millions of Americans simple, reliable access to invest where they already save and spend,” said DriveWealth CEO Naureen Hassan. “This partnership moves our shared mission forward: make investing available to anyone, anywhere.” Many OnePay customers may be new to investing, and embedding DriveWealth’s tools directly into the OnePay app lowers the barrier to entry. By enabling users to explore stock and ETF investing within the same platform they already use to manage savings, spending, and borrowing, OnePay creates a simple on-ramp to wealth building. The move also helps OnePay differentiate itself from competitors such as Chime and Dave, which both cater to similar underbanked populations but have yet to integrate investing capabilities. In combining everyday money management with access to the markets, OnePay is positioning itself as an all-in-one financial hub for the mass-market consumer. Today’s partnership isn’t Walmart’s first attempt this month to bolster the capabilities of OnePay. On October 3, the company announced plans to offer crypto trading and custody in its mobile app, allowing users to buy, hold, and trade Bitcoin and Ether.  DriveWealth was founded in 2012 to allow third parties to enable access to US equities, fixed income, and other asset classes through scalable, compliant solutions via its suite of APIs. Earlier this year, the New York-based company teamed up with Moment Technology to make fixed-income investing more accessible to a broader range of investors. The post Walmart’s OnePay Selects DriveWealth to Power Embedded Investing appeared first on Finovate.       

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Devexperts Unveils New AI-Powered Data Analysis Tool Acomotrade

Capital markets software developer Devexperts launched its latest AI-powered data analysis solution, Acomotrade, this week. The new offering is designed to help online trading platforms better engage new users, most of whom rarely become the kind of active traders these platforms rely on. Headquartered in Dublin, Ireland, and founded in 2002, Devexperts demonstrated its technology at our developers conference, FinDEVr Silicon Valley 2016. For all the excitement experienced when markets are soaring toward new highs, life for brokerage companies can actually be more complicated. While trading volumes are climbing, the fact of the matter is that many of the new traders and investors who decide to start participating in the market often don’t end up sticking around very long at all. The average new user lifetime on a trading platform is less than six months—to say nothing of those traders who abandon the platform shortly after registering, never even placing their first trade. New traders rarely become the kind of active traders that online trading platforms crave, which complicates the acquisition cost equation and makes it hard for platforms to recoup their investment in new users. The new offering from capital markets software developer Devexperts, Acomotrade, is designed to help online trading platforms better manage these challenges. An AI-powered data analysis solution, Acomotrade leverages insights into user behavior to help brokers improve the return on acquisition via better engagement and lower early user churn. Acomotrade features personal instrument recommendations, analyzing trader activity and behavioral patterns to suggest tools like watchlists that match the individual trader’s habits and preferences. The solution also includes disengagement detection, leveraging large-scale behavioral data to detect signs of user disengagement. At this point, brokers can intervene with personalized communications or incentives before the user leaves the platform entirely. Acomotrade also relies on user representation to group traders together based on characteristics such as risk appetite, trading style, and engagement duration. This helps brokers personalize their engagement with different user groups. All of these features are designed to help platforms better understand, communicate with, and support their newest users when they are most vulnerable to becoming disenchanted with the online trading experience. “Acomotrade gives brokers a practical way to strengthen user engagement and retention, directly improving profitability without additional acquisition spend,” Devexperts Data Science Team Lead Ivan Kunyankin said. “It will initially be offered as an opt-in feature within the DXtrade platform and we look forward to seeing our clients benefit from the advanced insights and functionalities Acomotrade has to offer, as well as working with our clients to develop these further over time.” Dublin, Ireland-based Devexperts participated in our developers conference, FinDEVr Silicon Valley 2016. The company specializes in providing trading platforms and brokerage automation, complex software development products, and market data products. The company also provides consulting services for financial institutions, particularly in the areas of real-time transaction monitoring, trading automation, and risk management. Devexperts’ DXtrade platform is a multi-asset, broker-agnostic trading platform for brokers and prop firms that offer trading in stocks, derivatives, FX, CFDs, spread bets, and blockchain-based currencies. More than 20 million users rely on Devexperts’ technology every day. Nikolaj Mosejev is CEO. Photo by Sophie Popplewell on Unsplash The post Devexperts Unveils New AI-Powered Data Analysis Tool Acomotrade appeared first on Finovate.       

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Finovate Podcast Interviews the Six FinovateFall Best of Show Winners

This week we’re sharing six interviews from the Finovate Podcast featuring the companies that won Best of Show at FinovateFall last month. From the latest innovations in the fight against fraud to leveraging AI to make it easier for small businesses to secure the financing they need to grow, FinovateFall 2025’s Best of Show winners help us see exactly where fintech is making the most impact for companies and communities. In his most recent podcast interview, Greg Palmer talks with LemonadeLXP CEO John Findlay. Findlay explains how the company evolved into a comprehensive all-in-one learning and knowledge platform for financial institutions. Findlay and Palmer discuss the shortcomings of traditional learning management systems that focus on compliance training rather than skill development that leads to business growth and more effective customer service. EP 277: John Findlay, LemonadeLXP Finovate Podcast host Greg Palmer catches up with Shivangi Khanna (CEO) and Sophie Jewsbury (COO) of Krida. The three talk about how Krida leverages AI and workflow automation to transform the commercial lending process. Khanna and Jewsbury discuss the universal pain point of document collection and processing and explain how Krida’s technology automates the feedback loops between borrowers and loan officers to shorten the time between lead generation and a completed loan application. EP 276: Shivangi Khanna and Sophie Jewsbury, Krida Greg Palmer interviews Mart Vos, CEO of Eko Investments. Palmer and Vos discuss how Eko makes it possible for early-stage investors to get started building their wealth through the credit union or bank they already know and trust. Vos explains how enabling financial institutions—especially smaller ones—to offer investment services can help them compete with third-party investing apps, many of which are embarking upon offering banking services of their own. EP 275: Mart Vos, Eko Investments Mitch Rutledge, CEO of Vertice AI, joins Greg Palmer on the Finovate Podcast. In this conversation, Palmer and Rutledge talk about how Vertice AI enables smaller financial institutions to “punch above their weight” with AI-powered solutions that help them transform institutional data into actionable insights. Vertice AI helps community FIs deliver personalized customer engagement and measurable growth outcomes. EP 274: Mitch Rutledge, Vertice AI Greg Palmer chats with Tim Li, Co-founder and CEO of LendAPI. Li explains how LendAPI serves as a “super orchestration platform” that enables users to build their own financial products via an intuitive browser interface. The platform includes a product studio in which FIs can build personal loans, mortgages, and other products with integrated rule studios, models studios, pricing engines, and third-party plugins. EP 273: Tim Li, LendAPI Finovate Podcast host Greg Palmer interviews Casap Co-founder and CEO Shanthi Shanmugam. Palmer and Shanmugam talk about the challenges of first-party fraud and how this form of fraud—in which customers falsely claim they did not make purchases they actually did make—has become the leading fraud attack vector around the world, even more than account takeovers and scams. Shanmugam explains how Casap leverages AI agents that function like expert investigators to determine when disputes are legitimate. EP 272: Shanthi Shanmugam, Casap Photo by Will Francis on Unsplash The post Finovate Podcast Interviews the Six FinovateFall Best of Show Winners appeared first on Finovate.       

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Morgan Stanley Acquires Private Company Trading Platform EquityZen

Morgan Stanley has agreed to acquire private company trading platform EquityZen. Terms of the transaction were not immediately available. The acquisition will help Morgan Stanley offer a full suite of solutions for its private company and wealth management clients, including cap table solutions, tender and liquidity programs, direct and co-investment opportunities, and secondary trading. EquityZen made its Finovate debut at FinovateSpring 2016. The company is headquartered in New York. One of the biggest challenges in the world of private company investing is dealing with the liquidity gap that can arise between private companies and their stakeholders when stakeholders seek access to cash before companies are ready to officially exit via public offering or acquisition. As more and more companies stay private longer, an opportunity has developed for innovators that can not only democratize access to private market investments, but can also serve the interests of employees seeking liquidity, companies requiring control over secondary transactions, and investors wanting access to high-growth private startups. Tackling this challenge is EquityZen, a New York-based fintech founded in 2013 that made its Finovate debut at FinovateSpring 2016 in San Francisco. This week, we learned Morgan Stanley has announced its acquisition of the company, which offers a proprietary platform that facilitates secondary transactions in private firms, and works directly with shareholders and issuers to provide a seamless experience for buyers, sellers, and companies alike. “This announcement comes at a critical time in the development of the private markets ecosystem,” Jed Finn, Head of Morgan Stanley Wealth Management, said. “The combination of EquityZen with Morgan Stanley will uniquely address client needs as companies stay private much longer, such as delivering liquidity solutions for their employees and early investors in a seamless yet controlled process of their own design. With EquityZen, we combine our cap table management solutions with a private shares marketplace to deliver end-to-end solutions to our private market company clients.” EquityZen enables accredited investors to explore investment offerings on its platform, review offering documents, and conduct research before reserving investments in live offerings, or indicating their interest in upcoming offerings. Investors can execute documents and provide payment information in order to complete the investment via ACH or wire, and actively manage their investments and receive personalized updates on their companies in their portfolio. Investors receive investment proceeds in the form of cash or shares if the company exits successfully or simply if the investor requires liquidity. The acquisition follows news of Morgan Stanley’s expanded partnership with private capital software platform Carta. Morgan Stanley noted that its acquisition of EquityZen will enhance its private markets ecosystem, and enable the firm to offer a range of services to private companies and their shareholders including cap table solutions, tender and liquidity programs, direct and co-investment opportunities, and secondary trading. Morgan Stanley will benefit from EquityZen’s issuer-aligned model, which will help it enhance its relationship with private companies and offer its wealth management customers greater access to private shares. “Our entire mission has been to bring ‘private markets to the public’ and by integrating into Morgan Stanley, we will reach more investors and shareholders than ever before,” EquityZen CEO Atish Davda said. “When our category-leading technology and welcoming marketplace are matched with Morgan Stanley’s comprehensive suite of products, services, and offerings focused on the private markets, we can create a value proposition together for issuers, shareholders, and investors that is unrivaled in our space.” EquityZen has 800,000 registered users. To date, the company has processed more than 49,000 transactions across 450+ private companies. Photo by Pixabay The post Morgan Stanley Acquires Private Company Trading Platform EquityZen appeared first on Finovate.       

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Barclays to Acquire Lending Company Best Egg

Barclays’ US consumer banking subsidiary, Barclays Bank Delaware, is acquiring Best Egg for $800 million. Barclays aims to use the purchase to diversify its US consumer business and strengthen its presence in unsecured lending. The transaction is expected to close in the second quarter of 2026. Barclays‘ US consumer banking subsidiary, Barclays Bank Delaware, unveiled plans this week to expand its US footprint, acquiring personal loan origination company Best Egg. The transaction is expected to close in the second quarter of 2026 for $800 million. Best Egg offers a direct-to-consumer personal loan origination platform that specializes in lending to prime borrowers. Since it was founded in 2013, the Delaware-based company has facilitated over $40 billion in personal loans to more than two million customers. By the end of this year, Best Egg will have facilitated more than $7 billion in personal loan originations. Best Egg currently services approximately $11 billion in personal loans which are funded through structures such as securitization programs and forward flow arrangements provided by a range of alternative asset managers. The company generates fee-based income from its loan origination and servicing activities. Best Egg CEO Paul Ricci said the acquisition marks a major milestone in the company’s mission to help consumers achieve financial confidence through modern lending products. “At Best Egg, we are driven by a mission to empower people with financial confidence and flexibility through our suite of lending products and financial health tools,” said Ricci. “Joining forces with Barclays marks a pivotal moment in our journey—one that amplifies our ability to reach even more people through innovative lending solutions that truly make a difference. This transaction is a testament to the strength of the incredible business we’ve built over the past 12 years, our talented team, and the trust we’ve earned from our customers. Together with Barclays, we’re excited to accelerate our growth and continue shaping the future of consumer finance in ways that are both meaningful and impactful.” Barclays’ US Consumer Bank will leverage Best Egg’s digital and risk capabilities to enhance its credit card business that provides unsecured personal lending to customers by partnering with co-brand card partner programs. Buying Best Egg provides the bank an on-ramp into a well-established lending platform with proven underwriting and distribution capabilities. It also signals Barclays’ intent to diversify beyond credit cards and move into unsecured lending. Barclays Group Chief Executive C.S. Venkatakrishnan described the acquisition as a key growth opportunity within the bank’s long-term US strategy. “The deep and sophisticated US consumer finance market offers rich prospects for growth at Barclays,” said Venkatakrishnan. “The transaction will strengthen our US Consumer Bank and offers an exciting opportunity to significantly bolster our capabilities in personal lending.” Once the acquisition is complete, Barclays plans to leverage this same model while retaining a small portion of Best Egg’s new lending flow on its balance sheet. Denny Nealon, CEO of Barclays US Consumer Bank, said the move supports the company’s broader goal of diversification and scale in US retail banking. “This acquisition represents a significant step forward in our strategy to grow and diversify our US consumer banking business,” said Nealon. “As a leader in the personal loans market, Best Egg gives us the ability to reach more US consumers through a proven platform that has been successful for over a decade. We look forward to welcoming Best Egg’s customers as well as its talented and experienced management team and colleagues upon closing in 2026.” Photo by YUSUF ARSLAN The post Barclays to Acquire Lending Company Best Egg appeared first on Finovate.       

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Thredd Taps LoanPro for New Credit Offering

Digital payment solutions company Thredd has teamed up with lending and credit platform LoanPro this week. The UK-based company will leverage LoanPro’s credit platform to underpin its new suite of credit solutions, which will allow it to deliver full-stack embedded issuing and processing capabilities. Thredd was founded in 2007 and offers real-time card issuing and processing capabilities to help clients personalize and differentiate their credit offerings. Integrating LoanPro’s composable credit infrastructure into its offerings will help Thredd expand further into the credit and lending space, enabling clients to launch and manage credit programs with greater flexibility and speed. Commenting on the partnership, Thredd CEO Jim McCarthy emphasized the growing importance of credit-led innovation in embedded finance. “Credit-based value propositions drive not only more opportunities for both B2B and B2C verticals, but also generate more revenue for issuers, fintechs, and enterprises,” said McCarthy. “LoanPro’s platform solves much of the inherent complexity in providing truly differentiated credit, allowing us to offer our clients the tools to build sticky, profitable credit products, while maintaining compliance and operational efficiency.” Founded in 2016, LoanPro has helped 600+ lenders launch 2,000 unique credit programs, upgrading their borrower, agent, and back-office operations. The Utah-based company’s composable architecture, built on a modern lending core, allows lenders to enhance their origination, servicing, payments, and collections operations. LoanPro Co-Founder and CEO Rhett Roberts said that the partnership combines the strengths of both companies to accelerate how credit products are designed and deployed. “There is a massive opportunity to launch credit products in the U.S. and globally in a way that truly meets consumers and businesses where they are,” Roberts said. “The future of finance is personalized. Thredd brings together the entire ecosystem needed to launch revolving credit products, and with LoanPro’s modern, composable platform, clients can personalize and differentiate their offerings at scale in a way that drives share of wallet. We’re proud to support Thredd’s vision for global credit innovation.” The partnership highlights how embedded finance providers are converging around full-stack, credit-enabled platforms. As banks, non-banks, and fintechs continue to embed lending and credit capabilities into their platforms, partnerships like this one blur the lines between payment processing, issuing, and credit management. Teaming up with LoanPro will place Thredd at the intersection of modern card issuing and next-generation credit infrastructure. LoanPro has participated in our developers conference, FinDEVr 2021, and demoed its loan management system at FinovateSpring 2021. Photo by Monstera Production The post Thredd Taps LoanPro for New Credit Offering appeared first on Finovate.       

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GoodData Brings Data Intelligence and Agentic AI to Financial Services

Data intelligence platform GoodData has unveiled a suite of finance-focused applications for its recently launched composable AI platform. The company’s new offering combines its AI Lake, AI Hub, and AI Apps into a single platform that will give financial institutions the tools they need in order to build and deploy AI agents. Founded in 2007 and headquartered in San Francisco, California, GoodData most recently demoed its technology at FinovateFall 2017 in New York. The challenge of managing unstructured and unorganized data across multiple platforms—let alone turning that data into actionable insights—is a difficult one for financial institutions. And for those firms looking to take advantage of AI to add personalization, greater efficiency, and agility to their operations, these data management challenges are all the more acute. Add to this the unique regulatory and data governance demands in financial services, including transparency and auditability, and it is clear to see why a growing number of fintechs are working to create solutions that enable firms to deploy trusted AI technologies at scale that feature built-in governance, including semantic grounding and compliance controls. One such innovator is full-stack data intelligence platform GoodData, which has just launched a set of new finance-focused applications for its recently unveiled composable AI platform. The new offering combines GoodData’s AI Lake, AI Hub, and AI Apps into a single platform for enterprise data intelligence, giving financial institutions the tools they need to build and deploy AI agents. GoodData’s platform will bring trusted automation to banks, insurers, and other financial institutions via embeddable, compliant, and auditable AI agents. The agents detect and investigate fraud in seconds, providing the kind of audit trails that regulators can rely on and keeping portfolios compliant in real-time. This makes the compiling, checking, and disclosure submission processes of regulatory reporting easier, while still maintaining the high standards for compliance, governance, and security that are required in financial services. “Financial institutions face some of the world’s strictest data governance rules, and our goal is to make compliance simpler,” GoodData CEO Roman Stanek said. “This platform lets them innovate with AI while ensuring transparency, trust, and regulatory alignment, modernizing client experiences and improving risk management without compromise.” GoodData’s layered platform features AI Lake, which transforms structured and unstructured financial data into a governed semantic layer, ensuring AI agents are grounded in accurate, compliant, and context-aware data to enhance decision-making. The platform also includes AI Hub, which delivers orchestration and governance with built-in guardrails, escalation paths, and compliance workflows; and AI Apps, embeddable agents, copilots, and automations that add personalization to client-facing applications and enhance back-office operations, including regulatory reporting and fraud detection. Headquartered in San Francisco, California and founded in 2007, GoodData last demoed its technology at FinovateFall 2017. The company’s composable platform empowers businesses to turn data into insights and insights into action, and integrates into any data environment across public, private, on-premises, or hybrid cloud. GoodData leverages no-code interfaces, SDKs, and APIs to support the full data analytics lifecycle from data modeling to AI-powered insights. Today, more than 140,000 organizations and 3+ million users including Visa, Travelodge, and Twilio rely on GoodData’s technology. Photo by Tae Fuller The post GoodData Brings Data Intelligence and Agentic AI to Financial Services appeared first on Finovate.       

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FinovateEurope 2026: AI, Cybersecurity, Stablecoins, Quantum Computing and More!

The initial agenda for FinovateEurope 2026—February 10 and February 11 at the Intercontinental O2 in London—has just been released. And while there are still plenty of elements to be added to the two-day event, we are already seeing the contours of a conference that will help attendees better understand the opportunities in emerging technologies like quantum computing, learn the latest strategies for fighting fraud and financial crime, and find the most effective use cases for both AI and digital assets like stablecoins. There’s plenty to share in the weeks to come. For now, here are six of the early highlights from Days One and Two. Day One: All About AI Boom, bubble, or something else entirely, the AI revolution in technology continues to be one of the defining characteristics of innovation in our times. To this end, the first day of FinovateEurope 2026 will feature a number of sessions dedicated to the AI phenomenon and how banks and other financial institutions are putting this new technology to use to offer new products and services faster and better serve their corporate and retail customers. On the afternoon of Day One, FinovateEurope will host an Executive Briefing titled The AI Competitive Imperative & Ten Solutions You Need to Know About Today. This session will discuss how firms can successfully integrate AI into core financial services operations. The briefing will cover strategies to deploy AI safely and compliantly, ensure that AI initiatives are aligned with the company’s business and change management strategy, and successfully scale their AI projects from pilot to production. Later that afternoon, FinovateEurope will feature a Keynote Address: Agentic AI—A New Frontier in Banking, How Can FIs Harness it to Reimagine Enterprise Processes. Agentic AI is one of the most exciting developments in AI, with applications from cybersecurity to e-commerce. What needs to happen to ensure that Agentic AI delivers real value for both customers and banks? And what about the issues of trust and identity? How should banks operate in a brave new world in which bots are customers? Our keynote address on Agentic AI will cover all this and more. FinovateEurope 2026 wraps up Day One with a Power Panel: AI, Everything, Everywhere, All at Once, Beyond the Hype—How Financial Institutions Can Use AI to Make Money or Save Money. This panel will showcase a variety of viewpoints on where we are in terms of AI, fintech, and financial services. Where are the greatest opportunities: product innovation or customer journeys? What are the best use cases for financial institutions and do we have the right KPIs to measure success? And what does it mean for financial institutions to “lean into” the opportunities in AI—where do the potential rewards most clearly outweigh the potential risks? Day Two: Cyber Security, Quantum Computing, and Stablecoins If Day One is dedicated to all things AI, Day Two offers a tour of many of the other enabling technologies and top challenges in fintech and financial services. Wednesday morning, FinovateEurope will feature a Power Panel: Financial Crime & Cyber Security—How Banks & Fintechs Can Work Together to Meet the Challenges of the Digital Era. This session will look at some of the new tools and technologies that are available to help combat financial crime. The conversation will cover the role of digital identity and biometric authentication—as well as AI and machine learning—in the current fight against the fraudsters. The panel will also examine ways that fintechs and banks can partner to better defend customers from both contemporary and evolving threats. AI is not the only advanced technology that fintechs and banks are exploring. Quantum computing, with processing power that dwarfs that of supercomputers, could have a major impact on industries from technology to communications to defense. FinovateEurope’s Quick Fire Keynote: How Quantum Computing Could Transform Banking—What Are the Use Cases for Banks? will provide insightful commentary on what bankers—and their technology partners—need to know about the promise and risks of quantum computing. There are many areas where the UK and Europe are ahead of the US—sustainability, open banking and open finance, for example. But has the new clarity in stablecoins in the US courtesy of the Genius Act given the States an edge vis-à-vis the UK and Europe when it comes to these digital assets? FinovateEurope’s Fireside Chat: Stablecoins and Tokenized Deposits in the Real World—Hype vs Reality will look at the current regulatory status of digital assets like stablecoins in the EU and discuss what to look for in the next phase of cryptocurrency adoption in the region. There’s plenty more conversation coming—from discussions about bank modernization and the power of platform banking partnerships to the growth of open banking, open data, and open finance. Be sure to check out our FinovateEurope 2026 hub—as well as our coverage here on the Finovate blog—for the latest updates. The post FinovateEurope 2026: AI, Cybersecurity, Stablecoins, Quantum Computing and More! appeared first on Finovate.       

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Prove’s New Verified Agent Solution Brings Trust and Verification for Autonomous Agents

As AI agents begin transacting on behalf of users, traditional payment and identity models fall short of providing the trust these systems require. Prove is introducing its Verified Agent solution that links verified identity, intent, payment credentials, and consent through a cryptographically backed chain of custody for every autonomous transaction. By replacing weak verification methods with multi-factor authentication and cryptographic proof, Prove aims to make agentic commerce safe enough to scale globally. There has been plenty of hype around agentic commerce this fall, but many of the announcements surrounding agentic shopping and payments have leap-frogged an important issue: agent identity verification. Digital identity company Prove is helping to solve this issue today with its new launch, the Prove Verified Agent, which aims to provide a trust and verification layer for autonomous agents acting on behalf of consumers and businesses. The new Verified Agent tool works by creating an end-to-end chain of custody that links verified identity, intent, payment credentials, and consent backed by cryptographic proof. Agentic commerce, which could add more than $1 trillion in annual economic value, is different from the traditional four-party payment model that leverages legacy rails and identity verification. These models were not designed to allow AI agents to act on behalf of users, and agentic commerce can’t scale on traditional identity rails. Recognizing that agentic commerce depends on verified trust between humans and machines, Prove’s leadership emphasized how identity must sit at the heart of this new ecosystem. “The vision and benefits of agentic commerce cannot be realized without trust,” said Prove CEO Rodger Desai. “Our foundational principle has always been to enable secure transactions by verifying identity and consent without friction. That approach positions Prove to lead in the agentic economy. Our platform is purpose-built for a future where bots act on our behalf, with identity that is native to every transaction and built on frontier identity principles.” Prove’s Verified Agent offers a new trust framework that is built on the Prove Identity Graph, creating a cryptographically backed “chain of custody” for every autonomous transaction. The system begins by anchoring a verified digital identity to real-world attributes—such as phone numbers, national IDs, and payment credentials—tying each agent’s actions to a legitimate individual or business. After tying the verified person or entity to an attribute, Prove issues signed digital credentials to authorized agents. These credentials enable agents to transact on behalf of their users, while counterparties can instantly verify their authenticity using cryptographic checks. Every identity and transaction is cross-referenced against a live registry of agent publishers, relying parties, merchants, payment networks, and CDNs to filter out unverified automation. Once verified, agents are authorized to act on behalf of a verified individual or entity, and Prove maintains the link between verified identity, intent, payment credentials, and consent. To further protect users, Prove’s Verified Agent replaces text-based verification and one-time passwords with multi-factor authentication and session-level authorization limits, reducing phishing attempts and ensuring that each agent operates strictly within a user’s explicit consent. Additionally, every interaction is completely auditable. The interactions among agents, merchants, and users are co-signed by both user and merchant keys to provide cryptographic evidence for dispute resolution, chargeback protection, and regulatory reporting. By creating this trust, Prove anticipates that it will enable global ecosystems to participate in the agentic economy without fear of identity violations. Photo by Brett Jordan on Unsplash The post Prove’s New Verified Agent Solution Brings Trust and Verification for Autonomous Agents appeared first on Finovate.       

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