
Whereas funding could also be scarce for some, Europe’s fastest-growing startups nonetheless have their decide.
The newest beneficiary of that investor urge for food is Finom, a five-year-old, Amsterdam-based challenger financial institution that targets small and medium-size companies throughout Europe. The corporate, which claims to have doubled its income in 2024, simply closed a €115 million Sequence C fairness spherical (round $133 million), TechCrunch realized completely. This comes only some weeks after it landed $105 million in development funding from Common Catalyst, its backer since 2021.
Finom’s enterprise mannequin facilities on offering European SMBs with a monetary platform that mixes banking, invoicing, and a rising vary of options, together with AI-enabled accounting. “As a result of theoretically, entrepreneurs don’t have to have an accountant in any respect,” mentioned CEO Andrey Petrov (on the far left within the image).
The startup’s formidable development targets replicate this imaginative and prescient. Whereas Petrov says Finom’s purpose of getting a million enterprise clients by the top of 2026 is motivational and never set in stone, its new funding makes that focus on barely extra attainable.
This perception that Finom may serve a justifiable share of Europe’s 26 million SMBs can be mirrored in its Sequence C. The spherical was led by AVP (previously AXA Enterprise Companions), with participation from new investor Headline (previously e.ventures) by way of Headline Development. Present traders Cogito Capital, Common Catalyst, and Northzone additionally joined the spherical.
Regardless of this momentum, the startup could discover it simpler to win purchasers over from legacy banks — its present plan — than from different fintechs.
Even after its Sequence C introduced its complete funding to roughly $346 million, Finom has far much less exterior capital than Monzo, N26, Revolut, or Sensible, which all raised greater than $1 billion. Its funding so far is extra similar to the roughly $700 million raised by Finom’s closest peer, French unicorn Qonto — although the comparability isn’t excellent.
What makes Finom’s funding construction significantly fascinating is its non-traditional part. In contrast to typical VCs, Common Catalyst took no fairness in Finom with its non-traditional spherical; the capital from its Buyer Worth Fund (CVF) can solely be used for development, which is the way it plans to get its a refund.
Mixed with the Sequence B, this non-traditional funding spherical would have been sufficient for the Dutch firm to succeed in profitability, based on chairman and co-founder Kos Stiskin (on the far proper within the image). However Finom was additionally hoping to lift fairness by the top of the yr, and get a “good and good” new valuation within the course of. What it didn’t anticipate was closing each offers so shut to one another.
“One took longer than anticipated, and one was a lot sooner than anticipated,” Stiskin instructed TechCrunch. He declined to reveal the up to date valuation, stating solely that it’s twice the (additionally undisclosed) valuation related to its 2024 $54 million Sequence B.
The timing could have labored in Finom’s favor. Because the firm doesn’t publicize its unit economics — aside from its consumer base of 125,000 — the truth that Common Catalyst took a glance below the hood seemingly helped enhance curiosity and pace up the funding. That vote of confidence — and its direct curiosity in recouping its cash — could have been the sign that received traders to rush up and write checks.
Past the signaling results, getting the Buyer Worth Fund to finance Finom’s advertising and marketing efforts with out giving up fairness could appear to be a superb deal for its Sequence C backers — which embody Common Catalyst itself.
Nonetheless, the Sequence C will even fund riskier efforts than buyer acquisition by way of advertising and marketing.
In accordance with Petrov, one among its makes use of might be strategic, opportunistic acquisitions that may enable it to increase both its buyer base or its product portfolio. That represents a shift in technique, provided that Finom has solely acquired one firm thus far — in 2022, when it bought Kapaga, a British cross-border fee service when Finom was contemplating increasing into the U.Okay.
Since then, Finom has shifted its focus to a few of Europe’s largest markets, the place it sees higher alternative than within the U.Okay. The corporate believes these markets have fewer challenger banks competing for SMBs and that conventional banks are doing a poor job serving small companies.
Like many neobanks, nevertheless, it solely operates with an digital cash establishment (EMI) license in most of its important markets: the Netherlands, France, Italy, and Spain (although not Germany, the place it partnered with Solaris, which has a full banking license).
Regardless of these licensing limitations, it was in a position so as to add lending within the Netherlands, which it sees as a testing floor for its credit score providing — one thing Petrov sees as a must have for any fintech and for enterprise clients.
This lending initiative can be according to Finom’s efforts to increase its product line each horizontally — with deposits and loans — and vertically, “ranging from a banking account and ending in paying taxes, stories, and every little thing.” AI is concerned as properly, and never simply on the product facet.
The corporate can be leveraging AI internally. With a crew of 500, it expects to make some business- and tech-related hires, although not a lot to scale its operations. “We’re including some folks, however principally we’re including new sorts of AI brokers to work with internally,” Petrov mentioned. “So we’re hiring lower than we’d like, and we see good output by way of utilizing AI and AI brokers to automate a part of [our] routine duties.”
Finom’s management construction has additionally developed. The cut up of duties between Finom’s 4 co-founders has gone by way of some adjustments through the years, with Petrov now the only CEO — a task he as soon as shared with Yakov Novikov, who’s now an advisor alongside Oleg Laguta.
The three of them beforehand created Russian digital financial institution Modulbank. However this time, Finom’s focus is on Europe and its entrepreneurs who’re, in Stiskin’s phrases, “the spine of the European Union financial system.”