The company, which aims to simplify freight shipment payments, plans to use $26 million in new capital and $100 million in debt financing to scale and give customers access to working capital
Denim is targeting the $134 billion freight broker industry, and the company has handled $250 million in total payments volume year-to-date, a spokesperson for the company said.
The fintech automates invoicing, collections and payments as it aims to simplify finance operations for its freight broker customers, who connect shippers and carriers. Paper-based payments are still used frequently in industries like logistics and trucking, and other fintechs like Relay Payments are catering to that area of the payments world by digitizing processes.
The company’s fundraising comes as venture investments have ebbed somewhat and valuations have fallen, causing companies to cut staff and focus more on profitability.
But over the past year, Denim has added employees and made upgrades to its platform to better serve its customers, said Shawn Vo, the company’s cofounder and chief technology officer, per the release.
"The core challenge our clients face is adapting to the pressures of an increasingly complex and unpredictable supply chain," Denim CEO and cofounder Bharath Krishnamoorthy said in the release. "Freight brokers — and the shippers and carriers they work with — must find ways to evolve how they do business together with smarter tools."
To address that need, Denim will “continue to scale and serve our clients while strengthening our position as a payments ecosystem that powers the supply chain,” Krishnamoorthy said in the release.
By Caitlin Mullen on Sep 16, 2022
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