Revolut, the British-based banking and payments app, will on Thursday become the most valuable fintech company in British history when it unveils a fundraising that makes it worth $33bn.
Sky News has learnt that Revolut will announce that it has raised $800m (£577m) in a funding round led by SoftBank’s Vision Fund and Tiger Global Management, two of the world’s most prolific investors in fast-growing tech businesses.
The deal will transform Revolut into one of the most valuable fintech companies ever launched in Europe.
It will confirm a Sky News report earlier this month which a Revolut spokeswoman said was “not true” and “premature”.
SoftBank’s inaugural Vision Fund, which backed companies including Uber Technologies, owner of the ride-hailing platform, the buy-now-pay-later platform Klarna, had held discussions with Revolut in the past but failed to reach a deal.
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Revolut’s potential valuation is staggering given that shareholders had been primed to expect its next capital-raising to value it at somewhere between $10bn and $15bn as recently as three months ago.
Sky News reported the $10bn-$15bn aspiration in mid-April, while Bloomberg News reported last month that a deal could see Revolut valued at more than $20bn.
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Only last year, Revolut raised money from the US-based investors TCV and TSG Consumer Partners at a valuation of $5.5bn (£3.98bn).
The new talks would mean the digital bank is now worth six times more than it was a year ago – after seeing its losses double.
Klarna’s recent fundraising, which saw it valued at $45.6bn, is said to have been a factor in Revolut’s ability to target a far higher valuation.
The latest developments will fuel questions about the ability of loss-making technology companies to attract price tags in excess of all but the largest publicly listed companies.
Even at the lower end of its mooted $30bn-$40bn range, Revolut would be worth more than almost three-quarters of the companies in London’s FTSE-100 index.
A global wave of investor interest in public and private tech companies has propelled valuations to record highs – fuelled in part by the recent deluge of US-listed special purpose acquisition companies (SPACs).
Nik Storonsky, the company’s founder and chief executive, said recently that the company was in the early stage of talks about raising further funds while pointing out that it was not in need of additional capital.
In May, Revolut disclosed losses in 2020 of just over £200m as its rapid growth saw staff costs increase substantially.
It said it was profitable in the final two months of the year.
Mr Storonsky would become a paper billionaire several times over if the latest fundraising talks are successful.
Revolut, which now has a presence in 35 countries and more than 15 million customers, is in the process of applying for a UK banking licence that will allow it to take deposits in its home market.
It is chaired by the City veteran Martin Gilbert, while the former Goldman Sachs International co-chief executive Michael Sherwood also sits on its board.
The company recently introduced an equity participation plan for its 2200 employees, which would see their stakes worth substantial sums at the latest valuation.
It has struggled with significant compliance issues and wave of executive departures but is said to be confident that it has largely addressed historic flaws in its systems.
Mr Storonsky recently said he was working on expansion plans that included India, Latin America and South Korea.
The current fundraising talks are likely to spur speculation about when – and where – Revolut might eventually choose to become a public company.
Rishi Sunak, the chancellor, has backed a series of proposals to improve the UK’s listings regime for fast-growing tech companies.
A review by Ron Kalifa, the former Worldpay chief, recently recommended changes to UK listing rules and a new growth fund to help ensure Britain’s leadership in the global fintech industry.
The UK’s other highly valued fintechs include Wise, the payments service, which is about to list in London with a valuation of well over £5bn.
FT Partners, the US-based fintech-focused investment bank which recently advised the French insurer Mollie on an $800m fundraising valuing it at $6.5bn, is overseeing Revolut’s latest capital-raising.
Octopus Energy Group, Britain’s largest residential gas and electricity supplier, is plotting a £10bn demerger of its technology arm that would reinforce its status as one of the country’s most valuable private companies.
Sky News can exclusively reveal that Octopus Energy is close to hiring investment bankers to help formally separate Kraken Technologies from the rest of the group.
The demerger, which would be expected to take place in the next 12 months, would see Octopus Energy’s existing investors given shares in the newly independent Kraken business.
A minority stake in Kraken of up to 20% is expected to be sold to external shareholders in order to help validate the technology platform’s valuation, according to insiders.
One banking source said that Kraken could be valued at as much as $14bn (£10.25bn) in a forthcoming demerger.
Citi, Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan and Morgan Stanley are among the investment banks invited to pitch for the demerger mandate in recent weeks.
A deal will augment Octopus Energy chief executive Greg Jackson’s paper fortune, and underline his success at building a globally significant British-based company over the last decade.
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Octopus Energy now has 7.5m retail customers in Britain, following its 2022 rescue of the collapsed energy supplier Bulb, and the subsequent acquisition of Shell’s home energy business.
In January, it announced that it had become the country’s biggest supplier – surpassing Centrica-owned British Gas – with a 24% market share.
It also has a further 2.5m customers outside the UK.
Image: Kraken is an operating system licensed to other energy providers, water companies and telecoms suppliers. Pic: Octopus
Sources said a £10bn valuation of Kraken would now imply that the whole group, including the retail supply business, was worth in the region of £15bn or more.
That would be double its valuation of just over a year ago, when the company announced that it had secured new backing from funds Galvanize Climate Solutions and Lightrock.
Shortly before that, former US vice president Al Gore’s firm, Generation Investment Management, and the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board increased their stakes in Octopus Energy in a transaction valuing the company at $9bn (£7.2bn).
Kraken is an operating system which is licensed to other energy providers, water companies and telecoms suppliers.
It connects all parts of the energy system, including customer billing and the flexible management of renewable generation and energy devices such as heat pumps and electric vehicle batteries.
The business also unlocks smart grids which enable people to use more renewable energy when there is an abundant supply of it.
In the UK, its platform is licensed to Octopus Energy’s rivals EON and EDF Energy, as well as the water company Severn Trent and broadband provider Cuckoo.
Overseas, Kraken serves Origin Energy in Australia, Japan’s Tokyo Gas and Plentitude in countries including France and Greece.
Its biggest coup came recently, when it struck a deal with National Grid in the US to serve 6.5m customers in New York and Massachusetts.
Sources said other major licensing agreements in the US were expected to be struck in the coming months.
Kraken, which is chaired by Gavin Patterson, the former BT Group chief executive, is now contracted to more than 70m customer accounts globally – putting it easily on track to hit a target of 100m by 2027.
Earlier this year, Mr Jackson said that target now risked being seen as “embarrassingly unambitious”.
Last July, Kraken recruited Amir Orad, a former boss of NICE Actimize, a US-listed provider of enterprise software to global banks and Fortune 500 companies, as its first chief executive.
A demerger of Kraken will trigger speculation about an eventual public market listing of the business.
Its growth in the US, and the relative public market valuations of technology companies in New York and London, may put the UK at a disadvantage when Kraken eventually considers where to list.
One key advantage of demerging Kraken from the rest of Octopus Energy Group would be to remove the perception of a conflict of interest among potential customers of the technology platform.
A source said the unified corporate ownership of both businesses had acted as a deterrent to some energy suppliers.
Kraken has also diversified beyond the energy sector, and earlier this year joined a consortium which was exploring a takeover bid for stricken Thames Water.
The boss of Ryanair has told Sky News the president of the European Commission should “quit” if she can’t stop disruption caused by repeated French air traffic control strikes.
Michael O’Leary, the group chief executive of Europe’s largest airline by passenger numbers, said in an interview with Business Live that Ursula von der Leyen had failed to get to grips, at an EU level, with interruption to overflights following several recent disputes in France.
The latest action began on Thursday and is due to conclude later today, forcing thousands of flights to be delayed and cancelled through French airspace closures.
Mr O’Leary told presenter Darren McCaffrey that French domestic flights were given priority during ATC strikes and other nations, including Italy and Greece, had solved the problem through minimum service legislation.
He claimed that the vast majority of flights, cancelled over two days of action that began on Thursday, would have been able to operate under similar rules.
Mr O’Leary said of the EU’s role: “We continue to call on Ursula von der Leyen – why are you not protecting these overflights, why is the single market for air travel being disrupted by a tiny number of French air traffic controllers?
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Image: Ryanair has cancelled more than 400 flights over two days due to the action in France. File pic: PA
“All we get is a shrug of their shoulders and ‘there’s nothing we can do’. We point out, there is.”
He added: “We are calling on Ursula von der Leyen, who preaches about competitiveness and reforming Europe, if you’re not willing to protect or fix overflights then quit and let somebody more effective do the job.”
The strike is estimated, by the Airlines for Europe lobby group to have led to at least 1,500 cancelled flights, leaving 300,000 travellers unable to make their journeys.
Image: Michael O’Leary believes the EU can take action on competition grounds. Pic: PA
Ryanair itself had axed more than 400 flights so far, Mr O’Leary said. Rival easyJet said on Thursday that it had cancelled 274 services over the two days.
The beginning of July marks the start of the European summer holiday season.
The French civil aviation agency DGAC had already told airlines to cancel 40% of flights covering the three main Paris airports on Friday ahead of the walkout – a dispute over staffing levels and equipment quality.
Mr O’Leary described those safety issues as “nonsense” and said twhile the controllers had a right to strike, they did not have the right to close the sky.
DGAC has warned of delays and further severe disruption heading into the weekend.
Many planes and crews will be out of position.
Mr O’Leary is not alone in expressing his frustration.
The French transport minister Philippe Tabarot has denounced the action and the reasons for it.
“The idea is to disturb as many people as possible,” he said in an interview with CNews.
Passengers are being advised that if your flight is cancelled, the airline must either give you a refund or book you on an alternative flight.
If you have booked a return flight and the outbound leg is cancelled, you can claim the full cost of the return ticket back from your airline.
Ryanair and easyJet have cancelled hundreds of flights as a French air traffic controllers strike looms.
Ryanair, Europe’s largest airline by passenger numbers, said it had axed 170 services amid a plea by French authorities for airlines to reduce flights at Paris airports by 40% on Friday.
EasyJet said it was cancelling 274 flights during the action, which is due to begin later as part of a row over staffing numbers and ageing equipment.
The owner of British Airways, IAG, said it was planning to use larger aircraft to minimise disruption for its own passengers.
The industrial action is set to affect all flights using French airspace, leading to wider cancellations and delays across Europe and the wider world.
Ryanair said its cancellations, covering both days, would hit services to and from France, and also flights over the country to destinations such as the UK, Greece, Spain and Ireland.
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Group chief executive Michael O’Leary has campaigned for a European Union-led shake-up of air traffic control services in a bid to prevent such disruptive strikes, which have proved common in recent years.
He described the latest action as “recreational”.
Image: Michael O’Leary. Pic: Reuters
“Once again, European families are held to ransom by French air traffic controllers going on strike,” he said.
“It is not acceptable that overflights over French airspace en route to their destination are being cancelled/delayed as a result of yet another French ATC strike.
“It makes no sense and is abundantly unfair on EU passengers and families going on holidays.”
Ryanair is demanding the EU ensure that air traffic services are fully staffed for the first wave of daily departures, as well as to protect overflights during national strikes.
“These two splendid reforms would eliminate 90% of all ATC delays and cancellations, and protect EU passengers from these repeated and avoidable ATC disruptions due to yet another French ATC strike,” Mr O’Leary added.