Natwest selected five startups to participate in its first “Fintech Growth” program.
Editorial
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British bank spear The program in December to help a startups in pre-series to rely on the resources, expertise and networks of a high street banking to help them increase and stimulate the bank’s innovation pipeline.
Following a rigorous high process of highs, presentations and interviews, Tunicpay, Assion Silp, MMOB, Aperidata and Sprive were selected to participate in the initiative.
The small cohort has opportunities to connect, learn and build networks with other fintech colleagues, coaches and the dedicated Natwest innovation function on a series of ten -week workshops.
Lee McNabb, responsible for the strategy and partnerships of payments at Natwest, comments: “Payments are a network company and the days when big banks do everything themselves. To succeed in meeting the needs of customers and keeping it safe in their payment experiences, we must adopt collaboration, partnership and learning through others. This is why I am a great supporter of the Fintech growth program. Working with a group of talented and stimulating entrepreneurs can only bring good things for the market and our customers. »»
Of the 5 successful fintechs
- The tunic remuneration builds a trust infrastructure to break the fate of the scams, providing payment information to banks, constituting fields of data specific to typology and adaptive information.
- MMOB provides tools so that any business imports or exports API services to any channel via its integrated financing tool box.
- Aperidata is a Challenger Credit Office operating open banks to improve financial inclusion by revolutionizing the credit rating and loan processes.
- Sprive helps owners to live with fewer debts by finding spare species to reduce their mortgage.
- Ask Silver protects people from the scams with a scam verifier, allowing anyone to send a screenshot of everything they are not sure, like an email or an SMS, and to receive an analysis in a few seconds.