Fintech
Former Square executive Jackie Reses bought the 100-year-old Lead Bank
Good morning, Broadsheet readers! Women are gaining board seats but continuing to lose top roles, Penguin Random House is letting go of two of its most prominent female publishers, and this founder solved her biggest fintech challenges by buying her own bank. Have a wonderful Wednesday.
– Count on it. Jackie Reses bought a bank. This news surprises many people who hear it, but not those who know the story of Reses.
Reses was an executive at Square (now Block), where she led the fintech company’s banking and lending products. While at Square, she encountered “extreme pain and frustration in working with banking partners,” she told Michal Lev-Ram on a recent episode of The Fortune Leadership Next podcast. Fintech startups’ credit cards, debit cards and other financial services all rely on underlying banking partners. Often, these traditional financial institutions operate very differently from Silicon Valley startups.
So Reses and his fellow Square alumni cofounders came up with the idea of ​​buying a bank and merging two distinct lines of business. He is now CEO of Lead Bank, a Kansas City, Missouri-based bank that serves both local banking customers and fast-growing fintech companies. Lead Bank’s fintech clients “all want to run highly compliant programs because they are very successful businesses, but they want someone who can operate at the same speed as them,” Reses says. At the same time he had to earn the trust of the customers and long-time employees of the century-old bank.
Buying a bank was an exercise in creativity within limits, he says. “How do you apply creativity to things that might be incredibly arcane, mundane, and legally restrictive?” she asks.
“It’s really strange to say that yes, I own a bank. I went and bought a bank,” she says. “But when you understand the story… it seems obvious.”
Listen to the full episode of Leadership Next on Spotify OR Apple Podcasts.
Emma Hinchliffe
emma.hinchliffe@fortune.com
The Broadsheet is Fortune’s newsletter for and about the world’s most powerful women. Today’s edition was edited by Joseph Abrams. subscribe Here.
EVEN IN THE TITLES
– New board, same game. So far in 2024, women account for 30% of board seats at Russell 3000 companies, continuing an upward trend from late 2022, according to company data from ISS. The number of women in S&P 500 executive roles, however, declined in 2023 for the first time since 2005, and only two of the 21 CEOs appointed in the first quarter of 2024 were women. Financial Times
– Written. Penguin Random House fired Reagan Arthur and Lisa Lucas, who led two of its biggest imprints. Arthur, publisher of the Alfred A. Knopf publishing house, oversaw the release of bestsellers such as Tomorrow, and tomorrow, and tomorrow. Lucas was Schocken’s editor and Pantheon’s first black editor. Their departures are reportedly part of ongoing cost-cutting efforts. New York Times
– Posed for rights. The New York State Senate passed the Fashion Workers Act on Monday. The bill aimed at giving models legal workplace protections will now move to the state assembly. Sara Ziff, executive director of the nonprofit Model Alliance, which co-sponsored the bill, says “there’s no excuse to keep sculpting [models] by the same rights and protections granted to other sectors”. Fashion business
– Sponsorship served. The Saudi Public Investment Fund will become the first naming partner of the Women’s Tennis Association. Critics accused the WTA of ignoring human rights abuses against women and the LGBTQ+ community when it announced that the Saudi capital would host the final stage of the tour for the next three years. Reuters
-Power play. WNBA rookie Angel Reese is now the owner of the DC Power Football Club, a women’s soccer team that will begin its first season this summer. Reese says she wants to “help grow women’s sports and elevate female athletes at all levels.” Atletico
MOVERS AND SHAKERS: Nominated Viome Sarah Dorsett to the president of the company’s consumer division. Name of health-Hades Jill McIntosh to its board of directors.
ON MY RADAR
How GSK CEO Emma Walmsley kept her job and turned a bellicose activist investor into an ally Fortune
After a heartbreaking bestseller, Chanel Miller takes on her dream project New York Times
Healthcare workforce challenges must be addressed to support Black mothers Fortune
WORDS OF PARTICIPATION
“Stigma is born and grows in darkness.”
— Julie Schott, the serial entrepreneur who founded Julie, an emergency contraceptive pill
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Fintech
Lloyds and Nationwide invest in Scottish fintech AI Aveni
Lloyds Banking Group and Nationwide have joined an ÂŁ11m Series A funding round in Scottish artificial intelligence fintech Aveni.
The investment is led by Puma Private Equity with additional participation from Par Equity.
Aveni creates AI products specifically designed to streamline workflows in the financial services industry by analyzing documents and meetings across a range of operational functions, with a focus on financial advisory services and consumer compliance.
The cash injection will help fund the development of a new product, FinLLM, a large-scale language model created specifically for the financial sector in partnership with Lloyds and Nationwide.
Joseph Twigg, CEO of Aveni, explains: “The financial services industry doesn’t need AI models that can quote Shakespeare, it needs AI models that offer transparency, trust and, most importantly, fairness. The way to achieve this is to develop small, highly tuned language models, trained on financial services data, vetted by financial services experts for specific financial services use cases.
“FinLLM’s goal is to set a new standard for the controlled, responsible and ethical adoption of generative AI, outperforming all other generic models in our selected financial services use cases.”
Robin Scher, head of fintech investment at Lloyds Banking Group, says the development programme offers a “massive opportunity” for the financial services industry by streamlining operations and improving customer experience.
“We look forward to supporting Aveni’s growth as we invest in their vision of developing FinLLM together with partners. Our collaboration aims to establish Aveni as a forerunner in AI adoption in the industry, while maintaining a focus on responsible use and customer centricity,” he said.
Fintech
Fairexpay: Risk consultancy White Matter Advisory acquires 90% stake in fintech Fairexpay
Treasury Risk Consulting Firm White Matter Alert On Monday he announced the acquisition of a 90% stake in the fintech startup Fair payment for an undisclosed amount. The acquisition will help White Matter Advisory expand its portfolio in the area of cross-border remittance and fundraising services, a statement said. White Matter Advisory, which operates under the name SaveDesk (White Matter Advisory India Pvt Ltd), is engaged in the treasury risk advisory business. It oversees funds under management (FUM) totaling $8 billion, offering advisory services to a wide range of clients.
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White Matter Advisory, based in Bangalore, helps companies navigate the complexities of treasury and risk management.
Fairexpay, authorised by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) under Cohort 2 of the Liberalised Remittance Scheme (LRS) Regulatory Sandbox, boasts features such as best-in-class exchange rates, 24-hour processing times and full security compliance.
“With this acquisition, White Matter Advisory will leverage Fairexpay’s advanced technology platform and regulatory approvals to enhance its services to its clients,” the release reads.
The integration of Fairexpay’s capabilities should provide White Matter Advisory with a competitive advantage in the cross-border remittance and fundraising market, he added.
The release also states that by integrating Fairexpay’s advanced technology, White Matter Advisory aims to offer seamless and convenient cross-border payment solutions, providing customers with secure options for international money transfers.
Fintech
Rakuten Delays FinTech Business Reorganization to 2025
Rakuten (Japan:4755) has released an update.
Rakuten Group, Inc. and Rakuten Bank, Ltd. announced a delay in the reorganization of Rakuten’s FinTech Business, moving the target date from October 2024 to January 2025. The delay is to allow for a more comprehensive review, taking into account regulatory, shareholder interests and the group’s optimal structure for growth. There are no anticipated changes to Rakuten Bank’s reorganization objectives, structure or listing status outside of the revised timeline.
For more insights on JP:4755 stock, check out TipRanks Stock Analysis Page.
Fintech
White Matter Advisory Acquires 90% Stake in Fintech Startup Fairexpay
You are reading Entrepreneur India, an international franchise of Entrepreneur Media.
White Matter Advisory, which operates under the name SaveDesk in India, has announced that it is acquiring a 90% stake in fintech startup Fairexpay for an undisclosed amount.
This strategic move aims to strengthen White Matter Advisory’s portfolio in cross-border remittance and fundraising services.
By integrating Fairexpay’s advanced technology, White Matter Advisory aims to offer seamless and convenient cross-border payment solutions, providing customers with secure options for international money transfers.
White Matter Advisory, known for its treasury risk advisory services, manages funds under management (FUM) totaling USD 8 billion.
Founded by Bhaskar Saravana, Saurabh Jain, Kranthi Reddy and Piuesh Daga, White Matter Advisory helps companies effectively manage the complexities of treasury and risk management.
The SaveDesk platform offering includes a SaaS-based FX market data platform with real-time feeds for over 100 currencies, bank cost optimization services, customized treasury risk management solutions, and compliance guidance for the Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA) and other trade regulations.
Fairexpay is a global aggregation platform offering competitive currency exchange rates from numerous exchange partners worldwide. Catering to both private and corporate customers, Fairexpay provides seamless money transfer solutions for education, travel and immigration, as well as simplifying cross-border payments via API and white-label solutions for businesses. Key features include competitive currency exchange rates, 24-hour processing times, extensive currency coverage of over 30 currencies in more than 200 countries, and secure, RBI-compliant transactions.
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