From Brex exec to venture capitalist

Caraway, dtc, startups, venture capital

Image Credits: wenmei Zhou / Getty Images

Welcome to TechCrunch Fintech! This week, we’re looking at a Brex exec’s jump to join venture firm a16z, Klarna selling off its payments unit and some mega-raises.

To get a roundup of TechCrunch’s biggest and most important fintech stories delivered to your inbox every Tuesday at 7:00 a.m. PT, subscribe here.

The big story

Ali Rathod-Papier has stepped down from her role as global head of compliance at corporate card expense management startup Brex to join venture firm Andreessen Horowitz (a16z) as a partner and compliance officer, TechCrunch exclusively learned. The hiring comes at an interesting time for a16z, which had invested in Synapse, the banking-as-a-service startup that filed for bankruptcy in April and has since been under fire for an estimated $85 million worth of missing customer funds. Another Brex exec, Sam Blond (former chief revenue officer), also left the company to become a venture capitalist. But he ended up stepping down from his role at Founders Fund earlier this year, saying at the time “full-time investing / being a VC isn’t the right fit for me.” 

Analysis of the week

Gynger, a platform that lends capital to companies for technology purchases, has raised $20 million in a Series A round led by PayPal Ventures. There are plenty of companies out there to help startups fund technology purchases through a variety of methods. Gynger’s model stood out in that it works with both buyers and sellers of technology. The startup offers vendors that are selling technology a way to offer embedded financing through an accounts receivable platform that provides “flexible” payment terms. To date, Gynger has facilitated thousands of payments for its customers across hundreds of vendors, including AWS, Google Cloud, and Okta. 

Dollars and cents

Finbourne, which has built a platform to help financial companies organize and use more of their data in AI and other models, raised $70 million at a just over $356 million post-money valuation. 

Cadana, whose APIs and white-label products allow global workforces to integrate payments and payroll management into their existing systems, has emerged from stealth with a total of $7.4 million in funding.

Paris-based Hero, which is building an ambitious banking product for small companies, has raised a $12.2 million all-equity funding round led by Valar Ventures.

Materia, which integrates into a firm’s existing workflow software and applications to help break down the silos that exist in accounting firms’ troves of unstructured data, has emerged from stealth with $6.3 million in funding.

What else we’re writing

Four years after acquiring Shine, a French fintech startup that offers bank accounts to freelancers and very small companies, Société Générale has announced plans to sell Shine to Ageras. In 2020, TechCrunch reported that Société Générale spent around €100 million to acquire Shine. It wasn’t a huge acquisition but it attracted quite a bit of coverage at the time, as it was more than just a tech or talent deal. Romain Dillet gives us the scoop here.

High-interest headlines

Klarna to exit checkout business after finding conflict of interest with rivals Adyen and Stripe

Elon Musk’s X revenue has officially plummeted, new documents show 

Revolut seeks valuation of more than $40bn in employee share sale

Celcoin raises $120.5  million for new M&As

Mexican fintech unicorn Clip lands $100m investment

Amplify Life Insurance raises $20M in Series B funding

Klarna rival Zilch raises $125 million with aim to triple sales and accelerate path to IPO

Verituity raises $18.8M for payout verification

Want to reach out with a tip? Email me at [email protected] or send me a message on Signal at 408.204.3036. You can also send a note to the whole TechCrunch crew at [email protected]. For more secure communications, click here to contact us, which includes SecureDrop (instructions here) and links to encrypted messaging apps.

From Brex exec to venture capitalist

Caraway, dtc, startups, venture capital

Image Credits: wenmei Zhou / Getty Images

Welcome to TechCrunch Fintech! This week, we’re looking at a Brex exec’s jump to join venture firm a16z, Klarna selling off its payments unit and some mega-raises.

To get a roundup of TechCrunch’s biggest and most important fintech stories delivered to your inbox every Tuesday at 7:00 a.m. PT, subscribe here.

The big story

Ali Rathod-Papier has stepped down from her role as global head of compliance at corporate card expense management startup Brex to join venture firm Andreessen Horowitz (a16z) as a partner and compliance officer, TechCrunch exclusively learned. The hiring comes at an interesting time for a16z, which had invested in Synapse, the banking-as-a-service startup that filed for bankruptcy in April and has since been under fire for an estimated $85 million worth of missing customer funds. Another Brex exec, Sam Blond (former chief revenue officer), also left the company to become a venture capitalist. But he ended up stepping down from his role at Founders Fund earlier this year, saying at the time “full-time investing / being a VC isn’t the right fit for me.” 

Analysis of the week

Gynger, a platform that lends capital to companies for technology purchases, has raised $20 million in a Series A round led by PayPal Ventures. There are plenty of companies out there to help startups fund technology purchases through a variety of methods. Gynger’s model stood out in that it works with both buyers and sellers of technology. The startup offers vendors that are selling technology a way to offer embedded financing through an accounts receivable platform that provides “flexible” payment terms. To date, Gynger has facilitated thousands of payments for its customers across hundreds of vendors, including AWS, Google Cloud, and Okta. 

Dollars and cents

Finbourne, which has built a platform to help financial companies organize and use more of their data in AI and other models, raised $70 million at a just over $356 million post-money valuation. 

Cadana, whose APIs and white-label products allow global workforces to integrate payments and payroll management into their existing systems, has emerged from stealth with a total of $7.4 million in funding.

Paris-based Hero, which is building an ambitious banking product for small companies, has raised a $12.2 million all-equity funding round led by Valar Ventures.

Materia, which integrates into a firm’s existing workflow software and applications to help break down the silos that exist in accounting firms’ troves of unstructured data, has emerged from stealth with $6.3 million in funding.

What else we’re writing

Four years after acquiring Shine, a French fintech startup that offers bank accounts to freelancers and very small companies, Société Générale has announced plans to sell Shine to Ageras. In 2020, TechCrunch reported that Société Générale spent around €100 million to acquire Shine. It wasn’t a huge acquisition but it attracted quite a bit of coverage at the time, as it was more than just a tech or talent deal. Romain Dillet gives us the scoop here.

High-interest headlines

Klarna to exit checkout business after finding conflict of interest with rivals Adyen and Stripe

Elon Musk’s X revenue has officially plummeted, new documents show 

Revolut seeks valuation of more than $40bn in employee share sale

Celcoin raises $120.5  million for new M&As

Mexican fintech unicorn Clip lands $100m investment

Amplify Life Insurance raises $20M in Series B funding

Klarna rival Zilch raises $125 million with aim to triple sales and accelerate path to IPO

Verituity raises $18.8M for payout verification

Want to reach out with a tip? Email me at [email protected] or send me a message on Signal at 408.204.3036. You can also send a note to the whole TechCrunch crew at [email protected]. For more secure communications, click here to contact us, which includes SecureDrop (instructions here) and links to encrypted messaging apps.

concept drawing of CesiumAstro

CesiumAstro claims former exec spilled trade secrets to upstart competitor AnySignal

concept drawing of CesiumAstro

Image Credits: CesiumAstro (opens in a new window)

CesiumAstro alleges in a newly filed lawsuit that a former executive disclosed trade secrets and confidential information about sensitive tech, investors and customers to a competing startup.

Austin-based Cesium develops active-phased array and software-defined radio systems for spacecraft, missiles and drones. While phased-array antenna systems have been used on satellites for decades, Cesium has considerably advanced and productized the tech over its seven years in operation. The startup has landed more than $100 million in venture and government funding, which it has used to develop a suite of products for commercial and defense customers.

The technology is niche: Only a handful of companies work at the cutting edge of space-based radio technology, and Cesium no doubt pays close attention to any new entrant in this field. AnySignal, a startup that came out of stealth last October but was formally incorporated in 2022, certainly caught the company’s eye, not least because it allegedly edged out Cesium in a sales bid to a major customer and by attempting to solicit the interest of one of Cesium’s early investors — both examples stated in the lawsuit.

According to the suit, filed on March 25, these examples are directly related to former VP of Product Erik Luther’s misappropriation of trade secrets and confidential information on investors and customers, which Cesium alleges he subsequently disclosed to AnySignal. Notably, Luther did not leave Cesium to work for AnySignal, instead taking a role as head of marketing at a company that operates in a different sector entirely. But the suit says that Luther maintained “personal connections” with AnySignal’s co-founders, having worked with AnySignal CEO John Malsbury previously at a different company.

This resulted in AnySignal “recruiting and inducing Luther … to improperly disclose” the confidential and trade secret information, the suit says. CesiumAstro did not respond to TechCrunch’s request for comment; a lawyer representing Luther referred TechCrunch to the March 29 legal filings cited below.

Malsbury said in a statement provided to TechCrunch, “We at AnySignal were disappointed to learn of this filing. As indicated in Erik’s response, he is not, and has never been employed by AnySignal. We believe Cesium made these allegations in error. AnySignal is working with Cesium to resolve the dispute, and, if necessary, we will confidently defend our case in court. In the meantime, AnySignal will continue to prioritize mission success for our customers.”

Cesium is clear on its position in the lawsuit: It does not believe that AnySignal could have developed its complex radio technology on its timeline and with its existing resources — “absent CesiumAstro’s technical diagrams and specifications (to which Luther had access).”

“With only a few employees and $5 million in investor funding, [AnySignal] would not even be in the same orbit as CesiumAstro, which has spent tens of millions of dollars working with (now) 170 employees for seven years to develop its technologies,” the suit says. “But with Luther’s help, AnySignal has launched to directly compete with CesiumAstro in the specialized space for software-defined radios.”

Luther strongly denied all the allegations in two separate documents filed with the court on March 29; regarding the claim that he worked in concert with AnySignal, he says the allegation is “not only false…but invented out of whole cloth.” (The response also denies Cesium’s claim that it is an “industry leader.”)

Cesium “does not cite any facts or evidence whatsoever linking Luther and any of AnySignal’s business efforts and the alleged evidence that [Cesium] does cite do not support [its] contentions,” Luther’s lawyer claims in the filing. He goes on to say that Cesium takes a “Grand Canyon-sized leap from the paltry, easily explainable evidence it cites to the remarkable allegation that Luther has been secretly assisting AnySignal and feeding them [Cesium’s] trade secrets without citing any evidence whatsoever.”

El Segundo-based AnySignal was founded in May 2022 by Malsbury and COO Jeffrey Osborne, and emerged from stealth touting $5 million in seed funding last year. The company is developing a software-defined radio platform; Cesium’s lawsuit names it as a “direct competitor.” In February, a month before the suit was filed, AnySignal announced it had landed a partnership with private space station developer Vast for an advanced communication system for Vast’s flagship station, Haven-1.

The suit was filed in Western District of Texas under no. 1:24-cv-314.

The story has been updated to include Malsbury’s statement.