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The Series B investment round for the power buyer comes at a time when all-cash purchases account for almost a quarter of the market.
October 22 -
Rather than add debt through a HELOC, the company’s product allows clients to get cash in exchange for a portion of the property's value.
September 14 -
The fintech projects the Series C capital will enable $10 billion in annual housing transactions through its system and expansion to half the U.S.
September 14 -
The digital provider of commercial mortgage closing documentation hired a Guaranteed Rate executive and announced plans to add staff and integrate more loan operating systems.
August 24 -
The lending technology provider currently has 37,741 decisioning steps or pivot points on its platform.
August 18 -
Lending startup Tomo Networks will eschew refinances to focus exclusively on purchases.
June 30 -
The financial services company will use its new capital to invest in artificial intelligence and machine learning to cut transaction times, as well as build its own servicing platform.
June 23 -
The digital title insurance, closing, escrow, and recording services provider has now raised a total of $110 million in funding.
June 2 -
The cloud-based mortgage closing platform’s Series D round earned $150 million for the company.
May 25 -
The digital lender’s valuation ballooned to $6 billion from $4 billion less than five months after closing a $200 million fundraise.
April 8 -
The financial-technology firm Plaid is close to a new round of funding at a valuation of about $13 billion, almost three months after scrapping its sale to Visa, according to people familiar with the matter.
April 5 -
Now approved by Fannie Mae, the digital servicer aims to shake up the status quo by reducing costs caused by a “monopoly in the market.”
February 2 -
The fintech world is expanding at a sometimes breathtaking pace. Much of that growth is driven by venture capital, but how do VCs decide which companies to invest it in--or not? Join Greycroft partner Will Szczerbiak in a discussion with Olugbenga Agboola, the founder and CEO of Flutterwave, the San Francisco-based startup building the largest payments infrastructure in Africa. Guest host James Ledbetter, editor and publisher of the fintech newsletter FIN, will explore these questions: What are VCs looking for in a fintech startup? What are the hottest fintech sectors in 2021? How has the rise in fintech valuations affected the market? Where will growth be strongest in the next few years?
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After doubling its valuation in five months, Blend plans to use its latest funding to strengthen its digital lending experiences for banking and mortgages.
January 13 -
Bee Mortgage App will use blockchain and automation provided by Elphi to create "a COVID tool for real estate agents" to get fully digital mortgage approval in under three minutes.
November 25 -
The substantial Series D fundraise fuels speculation on whether Better.com will be the next mortgage company to hop on the IPO trend.
November 13 -
Record-low interest rates, high origination volumes and social distancing created a perfect storm for mortgage fintechs like SnapDocs and LoanSnap to score a cash infusion.
October 13 -
Fintechs are facing unique challenges in the pandemic. There might be a resurgence in funding on the horizon, but startups are looking to see what they can do now to weather the storm.
July 31 -
In the latest example of a new wave of mortgage-related fintech investment, Snapdocs will boost its artificial-intelligence capabilities with its new $25 million funding round.
November 7 -
Blooma has developed a software product that combs databases to create property profiles for commercial real estate lenders. It can drastically cut origination costs and approval times and help banks identify safer loans, the company says.
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