The Front Page of Fintech

The largest fintech community in the world. Subscribe to our newsletter to stay up to date on the latest in news opinions, and all things financial technology.

Image Description

The Front Page of Fintech

The largest fintech community in the world. Subscribe to our newsletter to stay up to date on the latest in news opinions, and all things financial technology.

Image Description

A rush to the exit (TWIF 6/29)

A rush to the exit (TWIF 6/29)
Amagansett, Thomas Lagrega

Hello Fintech Friends,

Today’s newsletter is brought to you by our friends at Spinwheel.

Do you use a premium credit card? Help us by filling in this survey for a story we're writing:

TWIF Premium Credit Cards Survey
We’re writing a story at This Week in Fintech about premium credit cards and their polarizing refreshes. By filling out this five minute survey, we’ll be able to integrate the opinions of you (the reader!) in this upcoming story. This self-response survey will be used exclusively for the purpose of composing the story for This Week in Fintech and will not be used in marketing considerations. We have also disabled the need to attach your personal email to replies to increase transparency in responses.

Please find another week of fintech exits and deep reads below.

(👍👎 Have feedback for us? Let us know. Find me at @nikmilanovic, @twifintech, and @ndm)


💡
A Message From Our Partner

Meet the API That's Modernizing Consumer Credit

Credit is overdue for a reinvention, and Spinwheel might just be the spark we've been waiting for. Their Debt APIs streamline the consumer debt lifecycle, slashing inefficiencies and unlocking real-time, verified credit data, all from just a phone number and birthdate. Yes, that’s it. A phone number, birthdate, and voilà – it’s magic (...or smart tech)!

Want to sponsor a newsletter? See our sponsorship information here.


📖 Reads of the Week
Road to a $3.7 Trillion Stablecoin Market Is Full of Obstacles
The passage of stablecoin legislation in the US Senate marks a huge leap forward for the potential mainstreaming of cryptocurrencies that track the US dollar one-to-one.
How Stablecoins Are Cementing US Dollar Hegemony for Decades to Come
Or why America will never reindustrialise

☯️ Exits
💻 IPOs & SPACs
  • Wealthfront confidentially filed for a U.S. IPO on June 23, signaling renewed investor interest in fintech firms. It submitted draft S‑1 forms without disclosing share count or price range, after growing assets to $85 billion and expanding services like direct stock purchases and bond ladders.
  • Navan, the corporate travel and expense platform formerly known as TripActions, confidentially filed for a U.S. IPO on June 20. It took advantage of growing investor optimism but did not disclose deal terms.
  • Jefferson Capital, backed by J.C. Flowers, raised $150 million in its Nasdaq IPO by selling 10 million shares at $15 each—at the low end of its range—while J.C. Flowers retained approximately 69% ownership. The shares debuted strong, valuing the firm near $1 billion.
  • Pine Labs, a PayPal‑backed Indian fintech unicorn, filed draft IPO papers with SEBI on June 26 to raise up to ₹2,600 crore (~$304 million). The deal combines a fresh issue and offer for sale (OFS), with Peak XV, PayPal, and Mastercard offloading about 147.8 million shares.
  • PhonePe, backed by Walmart, prepared to file preliminary IPO documents in late June targeting up to $1.5 billion in India. The transaction would value the payments giant around $15 billion, and it planned to file by August with Kotak Mahindra, JPMorgan, Citi, and Morgan Stanley managing.
  • CSLM Digital Asset Acquisition III, a blank‐check SPAC targeting digital finance infrastructure, filed on June 18 to raise $200 million by offering 20 million shares at $10 each
  • ProCap BTC raised over $750 million through a SPAC merger and announced a plan to purchase 3,724 BTC (~$386 million) immediately after closing the $1 billion Cyprus Circle Capital deal. The company aims to use Bitcoin as a treasury asset ahead of a planned public debut.

🤝 M&A - Fintech
  • NerdWallet acquired a $178 million NYC RIA to expand its wealth management business, building on its recent launch of a subscription‑based RIA service and advisor matchmaking platform.
  • Shift4 Payments agreed to acquire Smartpay (Australia & NZ) for NZ$296.4 million (~US$180 million), expanding its point‑of‑sale and unified commerce reach in the region; analysts viewed the valuation as a “steal.”
  • Envestnet sold its open finance and data analytics subsidiary Yodlee to private equity firm STG, executing a strategic divestiture after owning the platform since 2015. The deal, expected to close in Q3 2025, allows Envestnet to refocus on its core wealth management offerings.
  • Capchase acquired Vartana for its tech‑powered vendor financing capabilities. The deal aims to accelerate product development, integrate AI‑driven financing workflows, and position Capchase as a leader in the $1.3 trillion B2B vendor financing market.
  • Revolut acquired Banco Cetelem Argentina from BNP Paribas Personal Finance, marking its entry into Argentina and enabling it to offer multi‑currency accounts, no‑fee transfers, and forex services—pending regulatory approval.
  • Starling Bank is exploring U.S. expansion by planning to hire local bankers and potentially acquire a U.S. nationally chartered bank—on track with its Engine SaaS strategy.
  • Valsoft Corporation entered the RegTech compliance software space by acquiring Alessa, marking its first move into financial crime risk‑management solutions.
  • Chowdeck acquired Mira, a one-year-old African restaurant POS and management software startup.
  • Cube, a London‑based RegTech firm, acquired operational‑risk AI provider Acin. The undisclosed-value deal added Acin’s regulatory controls data network and traceability tools into Cube’s platform.
  • Fundbox acqui-hired the two founders of Vaya Technologies, Ankit Singh and Soham Sen.
  • Main Capital, a Dutch investor, made its largest-ever software acquisition—investing over €200 million to acquire auto payment platforms CarWise and AutoDisk.
  • Acorns acquired Zeta, a financial planning platform for couples and families. It added Zeta’s co‑founders to the team as part of its fifth strategic acquisition in under two years to accelerate its family‑finance strategy.
  • Xero acquired fintech Melio in a deal reportedly worth over $2.5 billion, aiming to enhance its small‑business bill payment capabilities.
🏦 M&A - Banks and Financial Institutions
  • Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria (BBVA) launched a hostile takeover of Banco de Sabadell, but the Spanish government blocked a legal merger for at least three—and up to five—years, requiring both banks to remain legally separate during that period.
  • Bank of New York Mellon (BNY) approached Northern Trust to explore a potential merger after at least one CEO-level conversation. No formal offer was made; Northern Trust emphasized its commitment to remaining independent.
  • First Financial Bancorp acquired Westfield Bancorp (parent of Westfield Bank) in a $325 million cash-and-stock deal—paying $260 million in cash and issuing 2.75 million of its shares. The acquisition added around 12% to earnings and offered a 2.9‑year tangible book value earn-back.
  • Bayview Asset Management acquired the remaining 92.7% of Guild Holdings, a mortgage lender, in a $1.3 billion all-cash deal valuing the company at $20 per share—marking a 56% premium and repositioning Guild as a private entity.
  • Santander agreed to sell seven retail branches in Allentown, Pennsylvania to Community Bank for a $48 million deposit premium. The deal included around $600 million in deposits and $33 million in loans, aligning with Santander’s shift toward a U.S. digital-first banking model.
  • Warburg Pincus entered talks to sell its ~10% stake in SBI General Insurance—potentially to Premji Invest or even SBI itself—in a deal that could value the insurer at $4.5 billion.
  • Penta Capital appointed advisers (including Rothschild & Co) to sell Amber River, its UK-based financial planning business, targeting a valuation north of £800 million ($1.07 billion), while potentially retaining a minority stake.
  • Nuveen acquired Brooklyn Investment Group (along with its parent, Brooklyn Artificial Intelligence), adding multi-asset direct indexing and AI-driven tax-management tools to its advisor product suite. Financial terms were not disclosed.

🌎 Fintech Around the World

Stablecoins become South Korea's new national endeavor: Why and what's at risk?

China may test yuan stablecoins in Hong Kong

Crypto coin for Russian shadow payments moves $9 billion

French authorities search SocGen's offices in tax fraud investigation

Stablecoins: Entering their untethered growth era

📚 Deeper Reads & Features

Stablecoins ‘perform poorly’ as money, central banks warn

The potential genius of GENIUS

Putting Stablecoins Into Practice

Symbiosis of Banks and Stablecoins

Visa: Stablecoins Represent Opportunities in Emerging Markets, Cross-Border Money Movement

Why Passing the Stablecoin GENIUS Act Might Not Be So Smart

A Backdoor Way to Merge Bank Regulators?

Coinbase is quietly taking on Visa and Mastercard

Global fintech growth challenged by macroeconomic risks - WEF report

Non-native grey squirrel on the loose in Guernsey