The National - News

UAE FINTECH START-UP SECURES US INVESTMENT

▶ $700,000 backing for Now Money, which services low-income migrants

- ALICE HAINE

Now Money, a fintech startup servicing the UAE’s low-income migrant population, has secured US$700,000 of seed-funding from two USbased venture capital investors.

The Dubai-based payment services provider, which uses banking technology to provide accounts and remittance options for those that do not have access to traditiona­l bank accounts, gained the investment from Accion Venture Lab and Newid Capital. Both funds make investment­s that target the financiall­y underserve­d.

Now Money was founded in September 2015, and has since grown its user base to over 4,000.

“We’re incredibly pleased to have secured funding from the US,” said Katharine Budd, the company’s co-founder.

“Financial exclusion is a global problem, and we can’t wait to work alongside Accion Venture Lab and Newid Capital, who work tirelessly to eradicate the issue.”

According to Ian Dillon, the cofounder of Now Money, it is the first early stage investment from US venture capital firms into the Middle East.

“We hope this will be the first of many US venture capital investment­s in the region, and will help to grow the ecosystem further,” said Mr Dillon. The main reason for the lack of US investment­is the difficulty in understand­ing a different market, he added.

“We’ve spent almost two years building relationsh­ips with the investors and showing them what we’re doing ... We’ve got to know each other really well and have built up trust in the industry and region,” he said.

This latest investment comes a year after Now Money secured its initial seed funding of $500,000 from a private investor, which financed the team’s expansion and the developmen­t of the brand and its technology. The company was launched by Mr Dillon and Ms Budd with $200,000 of their own money.

Mr Dillon said the company plans to use the latest round of funding to expand its offering across the UAE and wider GCC.

Michael Schlein, the chief executive and president of Accion, whose Venture Lab invests and supports innovative start-ups that increase access to financial services to those traditiona­lly excluded, said: “Each year, migrant workers contribute more than $400 billion to their home economies, and the UAE is among the top remittance-sending countries in the world. Now Money’s innovative approach and digital platform provide a faster and safer option for these workers to support their families and communitie­s.”

Amee Parbhoo, director of investment­s at Accion Venture Lab, said the investment is the company’s first into the Middle East region and its first into “a wholly digital neobank”.

Now Money’s funding announceme­nt comes alongside initiative­s in Dubai and Abu Dhabi to develop fintech ecosystems as a means of attracting start-ups in the space. On Monday the Dubai Internatio­nal Financial Centre (DIFC) started its inaugural accelerato­r programme with 11 fintech start-ups from around the world, including two from the UAE. The programme, developed in partnershi­p with Accenture, was officially launched earlier this year.

According to Accenture, the global fintech sector has attracted more than $50bn in investment since 2010, while the Middle East and North Africa region has received around 1 per cent of this number – a figure the DIFC accelerato­r hopes to increase.

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