Zone, a Nigerian payment fintech startup that leverages the blockchain, recently raised $8.5 million in a seed funding round. An undisclosed portion of the funds will be allocated to cover costs associated with the trial of Zone’s cross-border payment capabilities in 2025. Zone to Expand Its Payment Infrastructure Zone, a blockchain-based Nigerian payments startup, has […]
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The Nigerian fintech startup, Chipper Cash, recently abolished the roles of 20 workers based in the U.S. and U.K. The CEO Ham Serunjogi said this decision aligns with its goal of maintaining high operational efficiency and moves the startup closer to profitability. Layoffs Set Chipper Cash on Course for Positive Cash Flow in the First […]
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This fintech startup is targeting a gap in lending as banks tighten credit
With banks facing higher interest rates that bite into economic activity, not to mention their need to stockpile money for bad debts or unpaid credit-card bills, it has been harder to get a loan in the past year or so.
At least one startup sees an opportunity.
The founders of financial-technology company Nectar told MarketWatch this year’s market conditions are fueling its growth at a time when banks remain more selective with their loans.
“It’s a good time to be in this business because access to capital has dried up,” said Derrick Barker, 36, who co-founded Nectar with his wife, Brittany Mosely, 35.
Also read: New York Community Bancorp led increase in loan-loss reserves by big regional banks as lenders brace for potential downturn
With 92 loan deals and counting since its launch in 2021, Nectar now employs 12 people as a lender to real-estate investors and owners who often build housing for Black Americans and other people of color.
It’s worked on more than $500 million in transactions including apartments, multi-family buildings, single-family rentals, hospitality properties, assisted living facilities and commercial real estate.
Nectar’s success thus far illustrates the alternative ways capital is being provided to individuals and businesses even as banks grow more conservative.
The growth of private credit has pivoted to meet some of this demand, but fintechs such as Nectar are also ramping up.
To be sure, others offer quicker routes to capital than many banks. Capchase Inc., for example, specializes in loans based on annual recurring revenue for software-as-a-service companies in the business-to-business space.
Pipe Technologies Inc. operates a trading platform to connect institutional investors and companies with recurring revenue streams to get financing for growth.
For its part, Nectar saw revenue growth of 750% between 2022 and 2023 by focusing on an underserved part of the market, namely people with $50 million to $500 million in assets, typically in real estate.
“The supply chain for capital is … old, outdated and broken, specifically for people who aren’t large institutions,” Barker told MarketWatch. “We want to fix that. We can provide to those people who are medium-size and smaller who are making an impact with the capital they need, so they can build the housing that needs to be built.”
Nectar’s mezzanine debt deals focus on transactions of less than $5 million, much smaller than the $20 million cutoff from many major banks. The company uses existing assets and cash flow generated by rent and other payments as collateral for the loan. This structure allows real-estate owners to retain more of the equity in their own property than other types of financing.
“We can come in and look at their stabilized cash flow and their properties so they can keep doing the important work that they’re doing, which is creating affordable housing … across the country,” Barker said.
Barker and Mosely met while studying at Harvard University, got married in 2015 and went into different careers. She headed for the retail sector, while Barker worked as a bond trader for Goldman Sachs Group Inc.
GS,
During and after his time at Goldman Sachs, Barker built up his own $450 million real-estate portfolio by buying abandoned apartments and rehabilitating them.
Barker started working to solve the challenge of coming up with working capital and liquidity for real-estate properties with low leverage and positive cash flow, which is the core business of Nectar.
For her part, Mosely had seen property owners giving up equity to investors — the limited partners, or LPs, in a real-estate private-equity fund — to get capital.
“For me, it was about really being on the front lines and doing all the work that it took to acquire the property and actually manage the construction or the rehab and when it came time to sell, the LPs would take most of the profit,” Mosely said. “I felt there had to be a better way to grow without property owners having to give up equity — that was my drive to co-found Nectar.”
Many of Nectar’s lending deals are sub-institutional, and many of them are for housing.
These so-called Class C properties — defined as 30 years old, in fair to poor condition, and in less-desirable locations compared with Class A or Class B buildings — often house a greater proportion of Black Americans and people of color.
“They’re still the places where Black people live. If you look at the Class C apartments, they’re the apartments that more people of color are more likely to live in,” Barker said. “They’re also more likely to be owned
by smaller institutions with less access to [loans]. By providing access to capital, it helps … people who are creating housing for this part of the population.”
Nectar remains well capitalized after lining up venture-capital backing from RareBreed Ventures, J4 Ventures and Asymmetry Ventures. Nectar is also raising a private-equity real-estate fund to generate capital for deals called Nectar Fund 2, which has a $100 million target.
Nectar is able to approve financing in as little as seven days, once all underwriting due diligence has been handed in.
Nowadays, Nectar’s portfolio has a combined leverage below 60%. The company maintains more than 2x coverage for every $1 that’s borrowed.
“We do some detailed and deep underwriting. We get to focus on the cream of the crop,” Barker said. “Just because the loans are smaller doesn’t mean they’re not good.”
Also read: Why small-business loans are a win-win for women-run startups and smaller banks
Nigerian Microfinance Bank Carbon Acquires Fintech Startup Vella Finance
Vella Finance, a Nigerian fintech startup, was recently bought by the microfinance bank Carbon. The acquisition of the fintech startup paves for Carbon to launch a new banking platform targeting Nigerian businesses. New Business to Leverage Artificial Intelligence The Nigerian microfinance bank, Carbon, has reportedly acquired the fintech firm Vella Finance for an undisclosed amount. […]
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This AI startup is backed by Jensen Huang, Joe Montana and Jefferey Katzenberg
The unlikely trio of Nvidia Corp. Chief Executive Jensen Huang, Super Bowl legend Joe Montana and former Walt Disney Co. Chairman Jeffrey Katzenberg do have something in common.
They’re all backing enterprise AI startup Alembic, fresh off $14 million in series A funding led by WndrCo, the venture-capital firm started by DreamWorks founder Katzenberg, and others including Liquid 2 Ventures, the venture-capital firm started by Montana.
“Alembic has a breakthrough solution for a problem I’ve seen throughout my career: Measuring results from marketing initiatives,” Katzenberg said in an interview. “I look at it as both the Holy Grail and Fountain of Youth” in determining what you’re spending and what you’re getting.
Alembic’s software predicts revenue and ROI from marketing and sales cycles by analyzing and evaluating unstructured data from TV, radio, social media and digital marketing that is anonymous and privacy-protected. Its customers include Nvidia Corp.
NVDA,
Texas A&M University and nautical company North Sails.
“Our technology is like a full-body MRI machine,” Tomás Puig, co-founder and chief executive of Alembic, said in an interview. “Our customers say, before Alembic, what they used to evaluate marketing was like an ultrasound that only looked at one part of the body.”
Company officials estimate the market is more than $1 trillion.
Added San Francisco 49ers great Montana, who is managing director of Liquid 2 Ventures: “In sports and in business, it’s difficult to predict outcomes, but Alembic enables enterprises to accurately predict revenue and ROI from all the components of their marketing mix.”
This Top AI Start-Up Stock Is Falling Again to Start 2024 — Why Most Investors Should Steer Clear
Generative AI training infrastructure remains white hot as an investment. Numerous start-ups have appeared to address the need. Given the end-to-end solution Nvidia created that spans chip design, algorithms, and software, this AI infrastructure consisting of data centers filled with accelerated computing systems (primary using Nvidia technology) is arguably easier to build than “traditional” cloud computing infrastructure. That has been rocket fuel for these specialized data center builder-operators in the last year.
One of those specialists is Applied Digital (APLD -1.42%), formerly Applied Blockchain. Applied Digital raced higher in 2023, fell hard, then started to rally again at the end of the year. But to kick off 2024, shares are falling again as the market comes to terms with the cadence of future profitability for the business. Here’s why most individual investors should steer clear.
Growth starts to moderate for AI infrastructure
We’re a long way from the “chip shortage” of 2021 when pandemic-disrupted supply chains paired with skyrocketing consumer demand for all things electronic wreaked havoc on the semiconductor industry. But new supply shortages struck last year, affecting the electrical components used to network GPUs (graphics processing units, chip systems used to accelerate computing work) and turn data centers into massive computing units that can train AI algorithms.
In its latest update, Q2 fiscal 2024 (the three months ended in November 2023), Applied said some of these component shortages have begun to improve. However, the shortage is still bad enough that it led management to significantly downgrade its full fiscal-year guidance from the outlook provided three months ago.
Applied Digital Financial Metric |
New Fiscal 2024 Guidance (as of Jan. 16, 2024) |
Old Fiscal 2024 Guidance (as of Oct. 9, 2023) |
---|---|---|
Revenue |
Exit fiscal 2024 with annualized revenue run rate of approximately $500 million |
$385 million to $405 million |
Adjusted EBITDA |
Exit fiscal 2024 with annualized adjusted EBITDA run rate of approximately $250 million |
$195 million to $205 million |
Data source: Applied Digital.
Component shortages happen, it’s something outside of Applied’s control. But there’s one annoying issue here: a switch from providing explicit guidance on what to expect for the current full-year period, to providing an annualized rate of revenue and adjusted EBITDA (earnings before interest, tax, depreciation, and amortization) at the end of the year. What does that mean?
Basically, in Q4 fiscal 2024, Applied is expecting revenue of $125 million ($500 million in “annualized revenue” divided by four). Adjusted EBITDA should now be about $62.5 million (the $250 million annualized figure divided by four). With Applied’s first-half fiscal 2024 revenue and adjusted EBITDA at a respective $78.5 million and $20.2 million after the latest update, suffice to say the original full-year guidance (again, see chart above) was an overestimate.
Focus on profitability, and how losses are paid for
I’ve been skeptical of this company since it first landed on investors’ radars as a “top AI start-up,” and the downward revision in guidance certainly doesn’t help.
But besides my issues with the way the business itself is structured, some investors may still be looking at the high rate of “adjusted EBITDA” as a reason for optimism. I think it best to look past this metric. On all other metrics — GAAP net income and loss, unadjusted EBITDA, free cash flow, etc. — Applied is still losing money.
- First-half fiscal 2024 GAAP net loss was $22 million.
- First-half fiscal 2024 EBITDA loss was $22.4 million.
- First-half fiscal 2024 free cash flow was negative $36.8 million.
Suffice to say this is still a high-risk start-up, with only a potential high reward.
Adding fuzziness to the long-term thesis is the fact that Applied is also borrowing money from one of its key shareholders, B. Riley Financial, and it’s also raising additional cash by selling new shares (which dilutes ownership of existing shareholders).
All of these issues added up to a big 20%-plus decline in share price immediately following the earnings release. The AI hype is moderating again, and for the average investor, there are far safer options to invest in AI right now.
OpenAI has opened applications for the second cohort of its six-week program for artificial intelligence (AI) startups, Converge 2, through which it will invest $1 million into each of the 15 successful participants selected.
The organization behind ChatGPT announced that the initiative, accessible worldwide, is aimed at individuals like engineers, designers, researchers, and product builders utilizing AI for innovative purposes. OpenAI founded the startup fund on the idea that robust AI systems will fuel a new era of groundbreaking startups.
The rapid proliferation of AI tools and solutions has ignited support from industry experts and investors alike. Generative AI startups have received considerable funding from various companies and organizations in 2023 alone.
the openai startup fund launches converge 2: https://t.co/KDzjboxzXa
— Sam Altman (@sama) December 14, 2023
In November 2022, OpenAI initiated the first phase of the startup fund to support aspiring founders and companies creating innovative AI products. It provided $1 million in investment to each of the 12 chosen startups from the pool of applicants.
Announcing the program via a statement shared by its CEO, Sam Altman, OpenAI explained the initiative’s background and its impact on AI. The company stated that the startup fund initiative is OpenAI doing its part to help push the boundaries of applied AI in essential domains.
The company said the initial and final weeks of the program will take place in San Francisco, with OpenAI covering travel expenses for participants.
The company also encourages founders from diverse backgrounds to apply, regardless of their location outside the United States or experience level. It highlights that prior experience with AI systems is not a requirement.
Related: Is OpenAI about to drop a new ChatGPT upgrade? Sam Altman says ‘nah’
The application period runs from Dec. 13, 2023, to Jan. 26, 2024.
Kasikornbank, a private bank in Thailand, also introduced a primary fund of $100 million, KXVC, to invest in AI, Web3, and deep tech startups, specifically concentrating on the Asia-Pacific region.
Meanwhile, French AI startup Mistral AI disclosed fundraising of $415 million in its recent funding round, which concluded on Dec. 1. The funding round was spearheaded by Andreessen Horowitz, along with support from the startup’s original backers, Lightspeed Ventures.
Magazine: Real AI use cases in crypto: Crypto-based AI markets, and AI financial analysis
Howard Schultz returns to his coffee roots with investment in startup Cumulus Coffee
Howard Schultz is returning to his coffee roots with an investment in Cumulus Coffee, a New York City startup that plans to sell machines for making cold brew at home.
The company said Thursday it has raised $20.3 million in seed funding from investors, who also include Valor Equity Partners, venture-capital firm Maveron, Linden Ventures, pop rock band OneRepublic, and Carter Reum, an author, entrepreneur and venture capitalist who is married to socialite Paris Hilton.
Schultz was chief executive of Starbucks Inc.
SBUX,
from 1986 to 2000 and again from 2008 to 2017, and he served as interim CEO of the company from 2022 to September 2023. He is currently chair emeritus of the coffee chain.
Cumulus did not disclose how much Schultz is investing.
The company is making a bet on the demand for cold brew-coffee.
“Coffee has experienced a significant shift over the past few years as consumers have overwhelmingly switched to cold versus hot coffee,” Schultz said in a statement. “Cumulus’ opportunity to bring premium cold coffee beverages to the home is simply enormous and will raise the bar for cold brew coffee everywhere.”
See: Starbucks’ stock soars 10% after earnings crush estimates as U.S. consumers opt for pricier drinks
Mesh Gelman, founder and CEO of Cumulus, worked in senior roles at Starbucks for more than six years. Gelman says the cold-coffee market is “enormous,” with about 75% of American coffee drinkers now preferring cold over hot beverages.
The company’s compact machine uses recyclable aluminum capsules to make a 10-ounce cold brew, a nitro cold brew and a cold-pressed espresso in under 45 seconds at the push of a button.
Read now: Why Starbucks union workers are walking out on Red Cup Day
Crypto index fund manager Bitwise Asset Management has stressed that it has no relationship with the failed technology startup Bitwise Industries, which is currently facing charges from the United States Securities and Exchange Commission.
Today we announced charges against Jake Soberal and Irma Olguin, Jr., the former co-CEOs of Fresno, California-based private technology services startup Bitwise Industries Inc., for misleading investors about the company’s finances.
— U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (@SECGov) November 9, 2023
On Nov. 9, Irma Olguin Jr. and Jake Soberal, the founders of Bitwise Industries, were charged with conspiring to commit wire fraud and taking $100 million from various investors despite their failing business model. The SEC has alleged that the pair falsified documents to deceive investors and raise funds.
The company’s name being identical to that of the crypto fund manager has caused some confusion, with some posts on social media using Bitwise Asset Management’s logo while talking about Bitwise Industries. However, the crypto index fund manager clarified that the two are unrelated.
Related: Ethereum price hits 6-month high amid BlackRock spot ETF buzz, but where’s the retail demand?
On Nov. 10, Bitwise Asset Management insisted in a statement that it has no affiliation with the company currently facing SEC charges. It wrote:
“San Francisco-based Bitwise Asset Management, Inc., the largest crypto index fund manager in America, has no relationship with, and has never had a relationship with, the now-defunct Bitwise Industries, a former technology company based in Fresno, California.”
Bitwise Asset Management offers various crypto-related products for investment, including Ether (ETH) futures exchange-traded funds (ETFs). In addition, the company is also one of the asset managers making an effort to get approval for a spot Bitcoin ETF. On the other hand, Bitwise Industries appears to be a defunct tech firm that has not worked with digital assets in any way.
Magazine: Bitcoin ETF optimist and Worldcoin skeptic Gracy Chen: Hall of Flame
The core concept of IYK revolves around the integration of NFC (near-field communication) chips into merchandise and apparel. Besides, the platform is also popular among musicians and artists.
IYK, a Web3 startup whose clientele includes Adidas, Billionaire Boys Club, and Atlantic Records, has successfully raised over $16.8 million in a seed round. Founder Ryan Ouyang announced this milestone on his official X (formerly Twitter) account, emphasizing that a16z Crypto, also known as Andreessen Horowitz, led the investment round.
Along with a16z, other VC firms contributing to the funding include Lattice Capital, Collab Currency, money, and 1kx. IYK, a Web3 startup abbreviated as “If You Know,” introduces a novel approach to verify the authenticity of fashion and other merchandise, musicians, artists, and creators thereby enhancing consumer interactions.
The core concept of IYK revolves around the integration of NFC (near-field communication) chips into merchandise and apparel. This technology enables consumers to easily authenticate items, such as T-shirts, by simply tapping their smartphones on them. In return, customers receive NFTs and gain access to exclusive offerings from brands.
IYK is currently providing support to 100 creators and brands, all of whom aim to establish deeper connections with their intended audiences.
Ryan Ouyang, the founder of IYK, emphasized the platform’s distinction from its competitors. He further highlighted IYK’s commitment to avoiding user confinement within an authentication system.
Looking further, Ouyang unveiled the Web3 startup’s plans to bolster its team by bringing on board its inaugural business development executive. This strategic step will also reinforce its presence in the dynamic and ever-evolving marketplace.
A16z Expanding Its Crypto Footprint
IYK’s recent fundraising achievement is particularly notable in the current challenging funding landscape for blockchain startups. The company successfully secured this round of funding after its participation in the A16z Crypto Startup School, a twelve-week accelerator program hosted by the venture capital firm a16z Crypto, dedicated to nurturing emerging startups in the blockchain sector.
IYK has been steadily attracting early-stage investors and previously obtained an undisclosed investment from Wave Digital Assets earlier this year. However, the recent investment from Andreessen Horowitz has thrust IYK into the spotlight, capturing the attention of numerous venture capital firms eager to incorporate this digitally enhanced experience platform into their portfolios.
Conversely, a16z Crypto has been strategically investing in a range of promising Web3 startups with strong growth potential. Through its accelerator program, which grants participating platforms access to $500,000 in exchange for a 7% equity stake in the company, this renowned blockchain-focused venture capital firm has positioned itself at the forefront of identifying top projects before they become widely recognized.
Among its impressive portfolio holdings are well-known Web3 brands such as the creators of Bored Ape Yacht Club, Yuga Labs, VeeFriends, Chia, Celo, and hundreds of others. The addition of IYK to its portfolio further enriches the firm’s already diverse and robust collection of investments, solidifying its strong position for the future.
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Bhushan is a FinTech enthusiast and holds a good flair in understanding financial markets. His interest in economics and finance draw his attention towards the new emerging Blockchain Technology and Cryptocurrency markets. He is continuously in a learning process and keeps himself motivated by sharing his acquired knowledge. In free time he reads thriller fictions novels and sometimes explore his culinary skills.
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