U.K. financial-technology startups are raising fresh investment cash at a fast clip, a boost for London as it tries to hold on to its role as a global financial center post-Brexit.
London-based Checkout Ltd., a behind-the-scenes processor of online payments for businesses, became Europe’s most valuable venture-backed company last month after raising $450 million from investors including New York-based Tiger Global Management and Singapore sovereign-wealth fund GIC, in a round that valued it at $15 billion.
British fintechs, including Revolut Ltd. and Monzo Bank Ltd., raised a combined $4.3 billion last year, second only to the nearly $22 billion raised in the U.S. That put the U.K. ahead of places like China and Germany, according to PitchBook data. London’s leadership as a fintech startup hub, however, hasn’t fed through to its public stock market. The London Stock Exchange lacks theThe benchmark FTSE 100 remains a bastion of old-economy companies in oil, mining and traditional financial services. As a result, returns in the U.K. have badly lagged behind those in the U.S., where tech giants such as Apple Inc. and Amazon.com Inc. —and in the fintech space, PayPal Holdings Inc. —have driven outsize gains.
London is ready 😂