Fintech firm Nium cuts valuation by 30% in new funding round, eyes 2025 IPO

Fintech firm Nium cuts valuation by 30% in new funding round, eyes 2025 IPO


Westend61 | Westend61 | Getty Images

AMSTERDAM, Netherlands — Financial technology startup Nium told CNBC Wednesday it raised $50 million in new funds from investors, and is targeting an initial public offering in the next 18 months.

The fundraising round was led by an undisclosed Southeast Asian sovereign wealth fund and backed by venture capital firms BOND, NewView Capital, and Tribe Capital.

It places Nium’s valuation at $1.4 billion. That marks a 30% discount to its previous valuation of $2 billion, which the firm notched in 2022 when it last raised external venture capital.

Prajit Nanu, Nium’s CEO and founder, said the firm would use the fresh capital to double down on mergers and acquisitions, targeting other growth-stage payment firms.

Nanu said his company’s down round was the result of a broader depression in public market valuations of fintech companies.

Fintechs have seen their stock prices slashed in recent years as a result of macroeconomic pressures, including high inflation and rising interest rates.

“Being realistic, when we raised in early 2022, public markets were killing it,” Nanu said. “The public markets have not been kind to fintech.”

IPO in 18 months

Nanu said that, despite the lower valuation, he is still bullish on the growth story for Nium and is confident the company will go public in the next 18 months, targeting a flotation in the third or fourth quarter of 2025.

He added that valuation isn’t a concern for him and that it won’t matter what value the company prices its shares as markets are volatile by nature.

“Whether you go public at $1 billion, $5 billion, it doesn’t matter. Because the valuation is only when you get bought, or when you go through an IPO,” he said.

He noted the example of Stripe, which raised a $95 billion valuation in the heady days of 2021 before slashing its value to $50 billion and then boosting its valuation to $65 billion in secondary share transactions.

Not interested in crypto

Nanu said he’s not interested in acquiring companies in the cryptocurrency space as he doesn’t yet see merchant demand for crypto as a payment method.

“It’s on the very early side of infrastructure,” Nanu said. “Nium in the end is a layer on top of a lot of banks in the world.”

“Banks have gone from, crypto is hot, to not crypto, to crypto,” he added. “It’s not one shoe fits all.”

That’s despite a huge rise in prices of cryptocurrencies like bitcoin, which have rallied off the back of renewed investor interest following the approval of spot bitcoin exchange-traded funds in the U.S.

Bitcoin has seen its price climb roughly 150% in the last 12 months.



Source

For car, phone, even tractor owners, a populist wave is rising to end the ‘captive’ repair economy
Technology

For car, phone, even tractor owners, a populist wave is rising to end the ‘captive’ repair economy

Ohio gubernatorial candidate Casey Putsch speaks with supporters at a campaign event in Toledo, Ohio, on Thursday, April 9, 2026. He is far behind in the polls, but Putsch is part of a nationwide message of economic populism and is promoting “right to repair” legislation. Sue Ogrocki | AP It used to be that if […]

Read More
Wall Street is getting bullish on neoclouds. These stocks hold more risk than other AI plays
Technology

Wall Street is getting bullish on neoclouds. These stocks hold more risk than other AI plays

There’s a lot of market buzz on the emerging crop of companies known as neoclouds, but these stocks are not for the faint of heart. Neoclouds are building AI-dedicated computing infrastructure and represent the risky edge of artificial intelligence investing. They stand in contrast to the hyperscalers, such as Amazon Web Services , Google Cloud […]

Read More
We tried out xAI’s Grok chatbot while driving a Tesla in NYC. Here’s what happened.
Technology

We tried out xAI’s Grok chatbot while driving a Tesla in NYC. Here’s what happened.

Tesla owner Mike Nelson has been using the AI chatbot Grok in his vehicle for several months now. He finds it is useful, nearly irresistible, and dangerous. Nelson, a lawyer with a background in auto insurance, showed CNBC how he uses Grok on a drive around the New York metro area. Nelson said that while […]

Read More