Startup
AI startup Auquan secures $4.5M led by PeakXV
Auquan, an AI-powered analytics engine provider for the financial industry, raised an additional $4.5 million in its seed funding round led by Peak XV’s Surge, with participation from Neotribe Ventures.
With this, the London-based startup has raised a total seed funding of $8 million.
“The financial world is a fast-paced, high-pressure environment with time as the most valuable asset. Auquan empowers financial professionals to reclaim their time by automating the mundane tasks that drain their productivity on an industrial scale,” said Chandini Jain, Co-founder and CEO of Auquan, in a statement.
“Three years from now, the brightest minds in finance will look back and wonder why they ever had to spend days sifting through hundreds of documents and typing up lengthy reports and memos, with the power of AI,” she added.
The company will allocate the capital to expand its engineering team in Bengaluru by hiring talent in AI/ML and streamlining knowledge-intensive financial workflows using AI.
The team will further work on developing the company’s Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG) and AI agent architecture to address the financial sector’s most complex workflow challenges.
“Auquan’s remarkable growth and customer traction validates our belief that they’re uniquely positioned to solve a critical challenge in finance: freeing highly skilled teams from the grind of wading through noisy data, performing undifferentiated work to support high-impact decisions. We’re thrilled to support Auquan as they revolutionise deep work productivity and decision-making in finance,” said Swaroop Kolluri, Founder and Managing Partner of Neotribe.
Auquan caters to prominent global asset managers, investment banks, and private equity firms such as UBS, Federated Hermes, and BC Partners for analysis, decision-making, and operational efficiency.
Similar to the advanced reasoning capability seen in OpenAI’s o1 model, Auquan’s RAG-based architecture helps to handle deep knowledge workflows by cutting them into specific tasks.
The company offers data on over 550,000 global public and private companies and access to over two million public and subscription data sources. This data, available in over 65 languages, includes native processing for the 30 largest economies and essential supply chain hubs like India, the US, the UK, Europe, Latin America, Southeast Asia, and China.
Startup
Irdai proposes to amend regulatory sandbox norms
Regulator Irdai has proposed to amend the norms related to ‘regulatory sandbox’ by incorporating principle-based approach and further facilitating the adoption of innovative ideas and new concepts across the insurance value chain.
Regulatory sandbox usually refers to live testing of new products or services in a controlled/test regulatory environment for which regulators may or may not permit certain relaxations.
The Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India (Irdai) constituted an internal committee to review the Irdai (Regulatory Sandbox) Regulations.
Based on the recommendations of the committee, it has proposed amendments to the regulatory sandbox regulations and seeks comments from the public at large on the proposed amendments.
Issuing an exposure draft on regulatory sandbox regulations, Irdai said the amendment seeks adoption of principle based approach over rule based approach.
The changes to the norms are also aimed to facilitate the introduction of innovative ideas/new concepts across the insurance value chain, Irdai said.
Irdai has invited comments from the stakeholders on ‘Exposure draft – Irdai (Regulatory Sandbox) (Amendment) Regulations, 2024’ by November 25.
Startup
Prodigy Finance secures $310M financing from DFC
Prodigy Finance, a global higher education finance company, has secured financing of up to $310 million with a funding commitment from the US International Development Finance Corporation (DFC).
This latest financing, building on the previous partnership with DFC, prioritises social impact with a minimum financing threshold of 30% for women and 50% for individuals from low- and lower-middle-income countries, it said in a statement.
“Together, we are empowering a new generation of global leaders to unlock opportunities that shape a brighter future,” said Prodigy Finance Chief Financial Officer Neha Sethi.
The higher education finance company’s borderless lending model allows students to apply for loans based on their future earning potential rather than their current circumstances or credit history.
Since its founding in 2007, the international student lender has enabled over 43,000 postgraduate master’s students to attend top universities, disbursing over $2.3 billion in funding to students from more than 150 countries.
Sonal Kapoor, Global Chief Commercial Officer of Prodigy Finance, told YourStory that India is its core market and has the largest share of its funding.
According to the Prodigy Finance 2022 Impact Report, students reported that the company’s loan helped them to pursue their dream career (91%), achieve success in their personal life (83%), and at least double their salary (74%).
In September, Prodigy Finance launched a $30 million blended finance programme in collaboration with The Standard Bank of South Africa Limited and Allan & Gill Gray Philanthropies.
Startup
Swiggy IPO: Retail portion subscribed 84%, overall 35% shares allotted
Food delivery and quick commerce platform Swiggy’s Initial Public Offering (IPO) was subscribed only 35% on the second day of bidding as broader market indices slipped in red.
Sriharsha Majety-led Swiggy witnessed the quota reserved for employees being subscribed 1.15 times by the end of bidding on the second day. Retail investors subscribed to 84% of the shares.
According to data from the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE), non-institutional investors purchased 14% of their allocated shares, and qualified institutional buyers’ (QIBs) part was booked at 28%.
As of the second day, Swiggy’s IPO received bids for 5.57 crore shares, amounting to 35% of the total issue size. The issue was subscribed 12% on day one.
Swiggy, which is set to list on Indian stock markets on November 13, initially aimed for a valuation of approximately $15 billion, but later updated its RHP to seek a valuation of around Rs 87,000 crore or about $11.3 billion at the upper price band.
“Swiggy’s decision to lower its valuation leaves some upside room for the investors, we still recommend an AVOID recommendation to this issue due to the “reported negative” cash flows and ongoing losses, alongside a slightly high valuation of 7.7x FY24 price-to-sales,” noted Aditya Birla Money in a research report dated Nov 4.
It raised nearly Rs 5,085 crore (about $605 million) from anchor investors, which included life insurance and mutual fund arms of HDFC, ICICI, and SBI. The anchor book, which witnessed participation from over 75 key domestic mutual funds, also saw bids from global mutual fund investors like Astrone Capital, Fidelity, and Blackrock.
Swiggy plans to raise close to Rs 11,700 crore in its IPO which will include fresh issue of 11.54 crore equity shares along with an offer for sale (OFS) of 17.51 crore equity share by existing stakeholders. It has set IPO price band at Rs 371- Rs 390.
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