Neo Financial Technologies follows foray into wealth management with $1B valuation

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Peter Thiel’s Valar Ventures Management is leading a $185 million funding round for Canada’s Neo Financial Technologies, propelling it to a valuation of more than $1 billion as it plans expansion into mortgages.

It’s the third time New York-based Valar has led a fundraising for Neo, which offers a no-fee Mastercard, bank accounts and investments primarily through a mobile app. The company says it has gathered more than 1 million customers since it launched in 2019.

“The pace at which this team releases new products and grows its customer base is among the fastest we have seen in our careers,” Valar Founding Partner Andrew McCormack said in a statement. The firm has invested in more than a dozen challenger banks globally, including digital payments provider Wise.

New investors in Neo include San Francisco-based Tribe Capital Partners, Blank Ventures, Gaingels and Knollwood Investment Advisory. Existing investors Maple VC and Altos Ventures also participated in this round.

Since its last funding round in September, Neo has nearly doubled in size to 650 employees from 350, with plans to add another 100 this year, and increased the number of retailer partners on its rewards platform to 7,000 from 4,000.

By the end of this year, it plans to enter the mortgage market with loans done through partnerships with financial institutions including Home Trust and First National Financial, two non-bank lenders in Canada.

“The Canadian market is still entrenched with the big five banks,” Neo CEO Andrew Chau said in an interview. “When we think about challenges, we really see it more as an opportunity to bring new options and competition to the market.”

In April, Neo launched a low-fee wealth management product by partnering with OneVest Management, a Canadian firm that’s registered as a portfolio manager.

Several Canadian startups in the past two years have become unicorns, the term for new companies reaching a $1 billion valuation, including Freshbooks, Clio, Visier and Clearco.

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