Tuesday, May 30, 2023

London fintech funding soars in first half of the year By Reuters

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© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: The City of London financial district is seen with office skyscrapers commonly known as ‘Cheesegrater’, ‘Gherkin’ and ‘Walkie Talkie’ seen in London, Britain, January 25, 2018. Picture taken January 25, 2018. REUTERS/Toby Melville/

By Anna Irrera

LONDON (Reuters) – Fintech companies based in London raised more funding from venture capital investors in the first six months of 2021 than in any other year, demonstrating the British capital’s resilience as a hub for digital financial services post-Brexit.

Investors poured $5.3 billion into London fintech startups in the first half of the year, compared to $2.1 billion in the same period in 2020, new research from Dealroom and agency London & Partners found.

London’s boom tracked soaring fintech investment levels globally as coronavirus lockdowns drove adoption of digital financial services, including payments and trading.

Fintech companies globally raised $54.1 billion between January and June, overtaking the total amount secured in the two previous years, the research showed.

London fintechs accounted for a large share of Europe’s growth, representing over a third of the region’s funding.

Globally, the city of London ranks second behind San Francisco and slightly ahead of New York, the research found.

Local entrepreneurs and investors said the figures showed the British capital could remain a leading fintech hub even after the country’s exit from the European Union and the economic damage caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.

“Today’s investment figures are a vote of confidence for the UK fintech sector,” Anne Boden, CEO of neobank Starling, said.

Starling was among the London fintechs to secure a major funding round this year, raising 322 million pounds ($444.88 million). Other large rounds included $478 million for payments firm SaltPay and $450 million for payments unicorn company Checkout.com.

Despite the growth, concerns remain about the impact of Brexit, particularly around access to talent and licences.

“The loss of passporting after Brexit means that licensing and international expansion is no longer easiest in London,” said Charles Delingpole, CEO of startup ComplyAdvantage. “London therefore has to move to a higher value added model focused on a global rather than European hub role.”

The new research emerges after a successful markets debut for Wise, one of London’s best known financial technology companies.

Wise shares opened at 800 pence on its London Stock Exchange debut on Wednesday, giving a market capitalisation of 7.95 billion pounds, well above market expectations from earlier this year.

($1 = 0.7238 pounds)

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