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§ Private Profile · Harwell, Oxfordshire, United Kingdom
Nium is a technology company.
Nium has raised $310.0M across 7 funding rounds.
Key people at Nium.
Nium was founded in 2022 by Prajit Nanu (Co-Founder and CEO).
Nium has raised $310.0M in total across 7 funding rounds.
Nium provides a comprehensive global payment infrastructure that enables businesses to send and receive funds instantly across borders, regardless of location or currency. The company offers a suite of modern cross-border payment and card issuance solutions, supporting account, wallet, and card disbursements in numerous currencies and countries. Its technology streamlines complex international financial transactions, providing a unified platform for various payment needs.
The company was founded by Prajit Nanu and Michael Bermingham, initially launching to address challenges in consumer remittance. Their insight stemmed from the need for more efficient and accessible global money movement, leading them to develop a robust platform designed to simplify international payments. This foundation allowed them to evolve their offerings to cater to a broader business audience.
Nium primarily serves businesses seeking to optimize their global financial operations, facilitating quick, secure, and easy cross-border money transfers. The company’s long-term vision centers on building the future of global payments, striving to deliver an advanced infrastructure that supports seamless worldwide transactions. They aim to continually enhance their platform, anticipating the evolving demands of international commerce.
Key people at Nium.
Nium was founded in 2022 by Prajit Nanu (Co-Founder and CEO).
Nium has raised $310.0M in total across 7 funding rounds.
Nium's investors include Accelr8, Alumni Ventures, Better Capital, Majinx Capital, Master Ventures, Master Ventures Investment Management, Ben Huh, Orion Willow Parrott, Shaan's All Access Fund, SRB Ventures, Trajectory Ventures, Tribe Capital.
Nium is a Singapore-headquartered fintech company that provides a global payments infrastructure for real-time cross-border money movement, enabling businesses to send, receive, spend, and manage funds across borders.[1][2][4][5][6] It builds products like pay-ins, pay-outs, card issuance, banking-as-a-service, and crypto-as-a-service, serving banks, fintechs, enterprises, and platforms in industries such as travel, gaming, and e-commerce.[3][4][5][6] Nium solves the challenges of slow, costly, and fragmented international payments by offering instant processing in 100+ currencies across 190+ countries, with over 80% of transactions worldwide in real-time, processing $25 billion in annual volume.[1][4][6][7] The company has raised $280 million in Series D funding at a $2 billion valuation, employs around 1,100 people, and maintains strong growth momentum through acquisitions, license expansions, and recognitions like Forbes Fintech 50.[2][3][4][6]
Nium traces its roots to 2014, when founders Prajit Nanu and Michael Bermingham launched Instarem, a consumer remittance platform in Singapore, driven by a passion to simplify cross-border payments amid frustrations with legacy systems.[1][4][6] By 2016, the company pivoted to B2B payments, hitting $1 billion in processed volume that year while opening offices in the UK, Hong Kong, and Malaysia, and securing licenses like Electronic Money Transfer in Malaysia and the EU.[1][4] Pivotal moments included real-time delivery to 50+ countries in 2018, a full rebrand to Nium in 2019 with the launch of its enterprise platform (Instarem as a consumer subsidiary), and Series B ($13M) and C ($38M) funding rounds.[1][3][4] Growth accelerated with acquisitions like Socash (2022) for Malaysian remittance capabilities and Ixaris for B2B travel cards, alongside expansions into Japan, Europe, and the US, building a global team of over 750 across 10+ offices.[1][4][6]
Nium stands out in the crowded fintech payments space through these key strengths:
Nium rides the on-demand economy and digital transformation waves, capitalizing on surging cross-border e-commerce, gig platforms, and fintech proliferation amid post-pandemic globalization.[2][4][6] Its timing aligns perfectly with real-time payment rails (e.g., RTP networks) maturing globally and regulatory shifts favoring licensed innovators, reducing barriers for instant, compliant transfers that legacy banks struggle to match.[1][5][7] Market forces like rising FX volatility, supply chain demands, and financial inclusion in emerging markets (Africa, Middle East, LatAm) favor Nium's broad network and optionality across channels (wallets, cards, accounts).[1][4][5] By powering banks, fintechs, and enterprises—while pioneering crypto integration and white-label solutions—Nium influences the ecosystem, accelerating B2B money movement and setting standards for speed and seamlessness.[3][6][7]
Nium is poised for explosive growth, with CEO Prajit Nanu targeting a US IPO by Q2 2025 and 2-3 acquisitions in high-potential regions like Africa, the Middle East, and Latin America to deepen its network.[1] Trends like AI-driven fraud prevention, embedded finance, and CBDC interoperability will shape its path, potentially pushing annual volumes beyond $25B as real-time adoption hits 100+ more markets.[4][6][7] Its influence could evolve from payments enabler to full-stack financial OS, solidifying leadership in a fragmented space—much like how it transformed remittances into enterprise infrastructure, Nium will redefine global money for the next decade of borderless business.[2][3][6]
Nium has raised $310.0M across 7 funding rounds. Most recently, it raised $50.0M Series E in June 2024.