Late-stage tech backer Liquidity raises $775M for its fintech platform from Apollo and MUFG

Europe

The credit-oriented fintech platform Liquidity Group, which funds later-stage technology companies, has announced a new raise of $775 million from private equity house in Apollo and MUFG Bank.

In a statement Ron Daniel, Co-Founder and CEO of Liquidity Group said: “The new capital partnership with Apollo and the continued and successful partnership with MUFG is a validation of our founding vision to use artificial intelligence to transform the capital markets.”

The round was led by funds and entities managed by affiliates of Apollo (NYSE: APO). The commitments include $425 million from Apollo Funds for a credit facility to help Liquidity scale its lending activity for late-stage technology companies. It also includes $300 million from MUFG Bank (NYSE: MUFG), for a debt fund joint venture named Mars Growth Capital. This will now invest in late-stage tech companies. Finally, there is also a $50 million SAFE note investment by Apollo Funds, MUFG Innovation Partners and Spark Capital.

Founded in 2018, Liquidity employs machine learning and real-time data to automate the full credit investment lifecycle, committing more than $1 billion in capital. Investments to date include Etoro, Zetwerk and Homer.

Apollo Partner, Joshua Black, will also join Liquidity’s Board of Directors.

Bret Leas, Apollo Partner and Global Head of Structured Corporate Credit & ABS said: “Ron and his team at Liquidity are connecting technology borrowers and credit investors via an innovative, data-driven ecosystem, and we look forward to working with them as they scale the business.”

Products You May Like

Articles You May Like

Teleo wants to help the robotics industry reach its ‘ChatGPT moment’
Nuclear startups face new competition as energy giant Enel enters the ring
Itching to write a book? AI publisher Spines wants to make a deal
Battery unicorn Northvolt files for bankruptcy, upending Europe’s industrial plan
Venture funding in Europe in 2024 fell to $45 billion, says Atomico

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *