Dublin start-up My Money Jar lands investment from Enterprise Ireland
The fintech has raised a total of $1.4 million.
The fintech has raised a total of $1.4 million.
These new sandboxes will be subject to lighter regulations.
House Democrats have drafted a bill which, if enacted, would create a ‘digital dollar’.
Xinja will receive the bulk of the investment over 24 months.
“The changes were already under consideration by the industry,” says UK Finance
Jumia will help various African governments distribute masks to hospitals.
Revolut dubs the claims “fake news”, and Monzo says it is “here to stay”.
Covid Credit uses open banking data to help the self-employed get income relief.
Asia’s mega funding rounds make Europe’s look like child play.
Trading technology firm signs first Middle East deal.
“Despite macroeconomic volatility, the company plans to continue its growth,” says CEO.
FinTech Futures’ weekly news round-up.
European merchants can integrate WeChat Pay “in just a few minutes”.
The cards have seen a CO2 reduction of roughly 30.8 million kg so far.
“We don’t think they were set up to do it properly,” says class action lawyer.
The 40-person challenger has opened early access to its private beta.
The challenger wants to be the ultimate “operating system” for lifestyle.
TransferWise customers just need the recipient’s name and Alipay ID.
Only the children of Premium and Metal account holders will have access.
David MacLean joined Revolut from Metro Bank last July.
The fundraising was closed last Friday, the same day Bitcoin experienced a multi-month low.
“The number of people choosing freelance work has grown rapidly,” says UnderPinned CEO.
The price on the US dollar liquidity swap arrangements will go down by 25 basis points.
For a time, Renz was Bezos’ first and only female adviser.
The collapse of Yes Bank is causing ripple effects for UPI partners.
“I think the pain points are quite similar across different income levels,” says co-founder.
The AI assistant can predict cashflow, spending patterns and forecast balances.
FinTech Futures’ weekly news round-up.
The neobank will apply a 0.25% markup, with no other fees.
“This is a crucial investment,” says co-CEO.
As of February 2020, year-over-year deal counts were down by 22%.
Also this week, Wirecard teamed with Southeast Asian ride-sharing firm Grab.
The sale is “understood to have seen Neyber’s assets sold for a meagre sum”.
The white-label service was incubated at SC Ventures.
“If our systems fail, a big part of the economy would fail,” says exec.
The partnership will begin in Malaysia, the Philippines and Singapore.
A banking offering will engage customers beyond just improving credit.
The banks are also deferring customers’ payments on loans and mortgages for up to three months.
Lagos-based Paga holds more than 14 million customers across Nigeria.
The neobank currently only has one banking licence in Lithuania.