Connect with us

Published

on

Founded in 2022, ElevenLabs is an AI voice generation startup based in London. It competes with the likes of Speechmatics and Hume AI.

Sopa Images | Lightrocket | Getty Images

Artificial intelligence companies are the hottest ticket items in today’s startup ecosystem but the pace of change is dominated by developments at OpenAI and Anthropic. For startups building on top of their models, it’s sink or swim. 

With the U.S. currently surging ahead in the large language model (LLM) race, which demands huge checks, Europe’s opportunity lies in building tools that make AI useful, which is known as the application layer.

“That’s also where we think most of the profit will be made in the future,” Robert Lacher, a founding partner of Visionaries Club, told CNBC’s “Squawk Box Europe” earlier this year

Generative AI companies clinched $49.2 billion in venture capital (VC) investment in the first half of 2025, surpassing 2024’s $44.2 billion across the whole year, according to consultancy EY. The U.S. is responsible for the majority of that, accounting for 97% of deal value and 62% of volume; Europe represented just 2% of value, but 23% of volume. 

Risk appetite among VC investors on the continent is typically lower than in the U.S., while market fragmentation has long caused challenges for startups looking to scale quickly. Hungover from the 2021 tech boom and amid an economic downturn, steady growth and sound business metrics have also come back into focus in Europe. AI is still drawing eyeballs but it pales in comparison to the U.S. 

Europe has 'huge opportunity' to focus on AI application layer, says European early-stage VC firm

Now, frequent updates of AI models like OpenAI’s ChatGPT and Anthropic’s Claude are pushing companies built on top of them to iterate faster or risk falling behind.

Europe does have its own LLM company – Mistral, the French startup that has raised 1.7 billion euros ($2 billion) in capital so far, including from Dutch chipmaker ASML – that is positioned as an open-source competitor to OpenAI, but there’s still a lot of ground to cover.

“The speed of innovation, speed of product velocity, speed of distribution, actually ends up winning over everything else,” Bryan Kim, a partner at VC firm Andreessen Horowitz, told CNBC’s “Squawk Box Europe” on Thursday from Italian Tech Week.

Sweden’s Lovable, a “vibe-coding” platform that enables others to build apps and websites with AI, and AI agent startup Sana are examples of such companies putting AI to use. Meanwhile, London’s AI video generation startup Synthesia and synthetic audio company ElevenLabs, also have specific AI applications. The latter did, however, later build its own LLM

Lovable CEO: Not entertaining any investments right now

But “what does it mean when the product and technology you’re actually relying on changes every month. How do you move any slower than that and expect to win the game?” Kim said.

“What I came around with is, actually, momentum is the moat at this current juncture of AI development. Maybe we’ll get to a point where the model layer stabilizes it a little bit, and then we could talk about other things, but, right now, momentum is the only moat that I see,” he added.

Building the next Spotify

Momentum – and the ability to constantly iterate – often comes down to bagging cash to scale.

“If you look at the Europeans, we are revolutionary, we are romantics, we are resourceful,” Jean La Rochebrochard, managing director at Kima Ventures, told “Squawk Box Europe” on Thursday. However, “it’s hard to compete with a country where the appetite for risk is way higher, where the amount of capital is way higher as well, and the talent,” he said, referring to the US and speaking about AI generally.

La Rochebrochard is still optimistic that Europe can be home to the next big winner. For him, founders who have built outside of Europe and return to start up another venture are ones to watch. 

“We do all hope that Mistral will become one of these behemoths, one of these $100 billion companies in Europe, just like Revolut did in the UK. If Revolut, Mistral and Spotify are doing it, why not another 10, 20, 50 others?” the investor added.

Indeed, British AI cloud company Nscale just nabbed $433 million in new funding, hot on the heels of a $1.1 billion Series B – the largest in Europe – announced just days ago. However, like Mistral, Nscale is an AI infrastructure play rather than application layer – a timely development as AI sovereignty continues to grab political and investor attention. 

For Lovable CEO Anton Osika, it’s much more simple. “The only thing we need to do in Europe is change our mindset that it is possible,” he told “Squawk Box Europe” on Tuesday.

“Traditionally it has been more of a constraint with access to the amount of technical talent, of access to capital, that is not the bottleneck anymore,” he argued. 

Osika’s own company, for example, can act as a CEO’s technical cofounder if they need one. Meanwhile, Lovable is also luring top talent from the U.S. to Sweden to work at the startup, Osika said. 

He added: “It’s much faster for us to hire in Europe than it is to do so for U.S. counterparts, where there’s 1,000 more companies like Lovable, so it is a competitive advantage to be building from Europe.”

Continue Reading

Technology

We’re looking to further trim this drug stock and exit this entertainment giant

Published

on

By

We're looking to further trim this drug stock and exit this entertainment giant

Continue Reading

Technology

JPMorgan Chase wins fight with fintech firms over fees to access customer data

Published

on

By

JPMorgan Chase wins fight with fintech firms over fees to access customer data

An exterior view of the new JPMorgan Chase global headquarters building at 270 Park Avenue on Nov. 13, 2025 in New York City.

Angela Weiss | AFP | Getty Images

JPMorgan Chase has secured deals ensuring it will get paid by the fintech firms responsible for nearly all the data requests made by third-party apps connected to customer bank accounts, CNBC has learned.

The bank has signed updated contracts with fintech middlemen that make up more than 95% of the data pulls on its systems, including Plaid, Yodlee, Morningstar and Akoya, according to JPMorgan spokesman Drew Pusateri.

“We’ve come to agreements that will make the open banking ecosystem safer and more sustainable and allow customers to continue reliably and securely accessing their favorite financial products,” Pusateri said in a statement. “The free market worked.”

The milestone is the latest twist in a long-running dispute between traditional banks and the fintech industry over access to customer accounts. For years, middlemen like Plaid paid nothing to tap bank systems when a customer wanted to use a fintech app like Robinhood to draw funds or check balances.

That dynamic appeared to be enshrined in law in late 2024 when the Biden-era Consumer Financial Protection Bureau finalized what is known as the “open-banking rule” requiring banks to share customer data with other financial firms at no cost.

But banks sued to prevent the CFPB rule from taking hold and seemed to gain the upper hand in May after the Trump administration asked a federal court to vacate the rule.

Soon after, JPMorgan — the largest U.S. bank by assets, deposits and branches — reportedly told the middlemen that it would start charging what amounts to hundreds of millions of dollars for access to its customer data.

In response, fintech, crypto and venture capital executives argued that the bank was engaging in “anti-competitive, rent-seeking behavior” that would hurt innovation and consumers’ ability to use popular apps.

After weeks of negotiations between JPMorgan and the middlemen, the bank agreed to lower pricing than it originally proposed, while the fintech middlemen won concessions regarding the servicing of data requests, according to people with knowledge of the talks.

Fintech firms preferred the certainty of locking in data-sharing rates because it is unclear whether the current CFPB, which is in the process of revising the open-banking rule, will favor banks or fintechs, according to a venture capital investor who asked for anonymity to discuss his portfolio companies.

The bank and the fintech firms declined to disclose details about their contracts, including how much the middlemen agreed to pay and how long the deals were in force.

Wider impact

The deals mark a shift in the power dynamic between banks, middlemen and the fintech apps that are increasingly threatening incumbents. More banks are likely to begin charging fintechs for access to their systems, according to industry observers.  

“JPMorgan tends to be a trendsetter. They’re sort of the leader of the pack, so it’s fair to expect that the rest of the major banks will follow,” said Brian Shearer, director of competition and regulatory policy at the Vanderbilt Policy Accelerator.

Shearer, who worked at the CFPB under former director Rohit Chopra, said he was worried that the development would create a barrier of entry to nascent startups and ultimately result in higher costs for consumers.

Source: Robinhood

Proponents of the 2024 CFPB rule said it gave consumers control over their financial data and encouraged competition and innovation. Banks including JPMorgan said it exposed them to fraud and unfairly saddled them with the rising costs of maintaining systems increasingly tapped by the middlemen and their clients.  

When Plaid’s deal with JPMorgan was announced in September, the companies issued a dual press release emphasizing the continuity it provided for customers.

But the industry group that Plaid is a part of has harshly criticized the development, signaling that while JPMorgan has won a decisive battle, the ongoing skirmish may yet play out in courts and in the public.

“Introducing prohibitive tolls is anti-competitive, anti-innovation, and flies in the face of the plain reading of the law,” said Penny Lee, CEO of the Financial Technology Association, told CNBC in response to the JPMorgan milestone.

These agreements are not the free market at work, but rather big banks using their market position to capitalize on regulatory uncertainty,” Lee said. “We urge the Trump Administration to uphold the law by maintaining the existing prohibition on data access fees.”

Continue Reading

Technology

Founder Eric Gillespie fired from Govini board after child sex solicitation arrest

Published

on

By

Founder Eric Gillespie fired from Govini board after child sex solicitation arrest

Anton Petrus | Moment | Getty Images

Govini has fired Eric Gillespie from its board of directors after the founder was charged with attempting to solicit sexual contact with a minor online.

“The actions of one depraved individual should not in any way diminish the hard work of the broader team and their commitment to the security of the United States of America,” the defense software startup said in a release late Wednesday.

The company said the 57-year-old had no access to classified information since stepping down as CEO nearly ten years ago.

On Monday, the Pennsylvania Attorney General’s Office charged Gillespie with four felonies, including multiple counts of unlawful contact with a preteen.

A judge denied bail for Gillespie, who lived in Pittsburgh, citing flight risk and public safety concerns.

At the time, the Pentagon officials told CNBC that they were investigating the arrest and possible security risks.

Read more CNBC tech news

Last month, the Arlington, Virginia-based startup surpassed $100 million in annual recurring revenue and announced a $150 million growth investment from Bain Capital.

Govini has a more than $900-million contract with the U.S. government and deals with the Department of War.

Gillespie, who is viewed as an expert in government transparency, was named to the Freedom of Information Act Advisory Committee during the Obama administration in 2014.

He previously worked as an executive at business intelligence platform Onvia.

He is a graduate of Miami University and Harvard Business School.

Continue Reading

Trending