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worldremit raises $100m to take on western union in money transfers

worldremit, a uk-based startup that is going after the western unions and moneygrams of the world with a commission-beating online and mobile remittance service, has raised another $100 million funding that it will use to continue building out its service globally, and specifically in the u.s., where it has laid down roots in denver.the funding comes from new investor technology crossover ventures the firmbehindmammoth investments in vice, spotify, minted, swagbucks and in earlier days facebook, exacttarget and many more and existing investor accel. this is only the second time that worldremit, founded in 2010, has raised money: the first time was in march 2014, when accel put $40 million into the company.
“agood chunk of that money still in the bank,” ismail ahmed, co-founder and ceo of world remit who once worked for the un, tells me. he describes this recent raise as “opportunistic.”this latest round values worldremitnorth of $500 million.worldremit is still relatively small: it processes 250,000 transactions per month, and has been steadily growing revenues, with $25 millionin sales in 2014, compared to $9.3 million in 2013. it says it’s on track to grow at the same rate this year.but on a wider scale, the remittance market is very big business. the world bank estimates that by 2016 there will be more than $700 billion sent overseasbetween family and friends, with $646 billion sent in 2015. (worldremit meanwhile estimates that the value today is closer to $550 billion.)interestingly, the u.s. is the biggest market for sending money today which is one reason why worldremit is doubling down on its presence there. some10% of global remittances originate in the u.s., working out to $50 million per year. saudi arabia comes in second place after that.
“remittances are now nearly three times the size of official development assistance and larger than private debt and portfolio equity flows to developing countries,” the world bank writes. “they exceed the foreign exchange reserves in at least 14 developing countries, and are equivalent to least half of the level of reserves in more than over 26 developing countries.”economics aside, remittances also havea very real value for average consumers.many people, especially in developing and poorer countries, rely on family and friends living and working in wealthier economiesto help them out by sending earnings.
worldremit positions itself as a disruptive force in this context: it lets users transfer money at far lower commissions than those charged by larger outfits like western union, and it does so using online and mobile technology. but it’sstill very early days in online money transfer: ahmed tells me that only about 5% of remittances are sent online today. and besides large incumbents, there are a lot of finance startups also swarming around the potential of leading the charge on overturning the remittancemarket. they include transferwise, which today (perhaps carefully timed to be announced with worldremit’s news) announced that it will open for business in the u.s. on the back of a big fundraise last month; azimo; and smaller but very innovative players like regalii,which focuses specifically on remittances that can be used forspecific purposes, such as paying bills for your friend or family member abroad.”we see a huge opportunityfor us in terms of the growth and what we have achieved so far, with the the rapid shift from offline to online,” he says. “remittancesis one of the last frontiersof the financial services industry.”today, worldremit lets users in 50 countries send money, and people in 117 countries receive it, giving sendersthe option to pay into bank accounts, cash pick-up points, or into mobile wallets that can be used for airtime top-ups. airtime top-ups are especially popular: they currently account for half of all of worldremit’s business in africa.the last of these mobile wallets looks like it will be worldremit’s growth engine in future years, through partnerships with telecoms carriers. carriersplay a role in offering mobile wallets to mobile phone users who may not have regular bank accounts. one recent deal, with african carrier mtn, covers 22.5 million users in 16 countriesacross the continent. in contrast, cash pickups, which were100% of worldremit’s business when it first started, now account for only 30% of its terminations.where ahmed would not be drawn out is aroundquestions aboutwhether worldremit might ever partner with other kinds of companies, such as messaging apps, to facilitate money transfers.the backstory to this is that facebook has been reportedly looking at offering a service to its users to send money to each other by way of its messaging platforms.ahmed concedes that messaging platforms like facebook, viber and skype are very complementary to worldremit after all, users communicate about sending the money, and then turn to worldremit’s apps to do it.but he wouldn’t comment on whether his company is in talks right now with any of them to enable more integrated services.still, you have to think that as worldremit looks to scale its business, integrating withmessaging apps and putting their service front and center with billions of users makes a lot of sense.
for investors, it’s not a matter of whether remittance is a good market to be in that is a no-brainer but that worldremit seems to have tapped into some interesting routes for cracking it open.”the $550 billion global remittance market is undergoing significant disruption with a clear shift to online and mobile solutions for international money transfer,” saidtcv general partner john rosenberg in a statement.”theworldremit team are at the forefront in offering convenient, low-cost solutions, backed by a market leading technology platform, compliance infrastructure, and geographic footprint”.

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