Cross-border payments startup Keeta snags $17M


Former Google CEO Eric Schmidt is among the investors in Keeta, which enters a competitive cross-border market

As migrants increasingly turn to remittance services to send money home to family and friends, the cross-border payments sector has ballooned in recent years. 

While Keeta vies for a share of the cross-border payments market, it faces stiff competition from current players. Paysend, the London-based international payments provider, opened a U.S. headquarters in Miami last month, a move it made to connect more worldwide Latino and Hispanic customers.

Other cross-border rivals include Remitly and Euronet, along with legacy companies MoneyGram International and Western Union. In April, MoneyGram said it was extending services across more than 500 locations of French retailer Carrefour.

However, where current cross-border payments can cost 5% of the amount transferred or more, and take almost a week to process, Keeta transfers money in seconds for 50% to 70% less than “traditional” options, the company said in the release.

Keeta’s technology “is orders of magnitude more scalable and efficient than existing solutions,” Schmidt said in the release.

“We want to make international payments as easy as Venmo,” Keeta CEO and founder Ty Schenk said in the release. The startup aims to offer more convenient and secure payments “while adhering to the highest regulatory standards,” he said.

As Keeta works to replicate the ease of peer-to-peer payment app Venmo, Venmo parent PayPal is reported to be considering a sale of its cross-border peer-to-peer payments business Xoom. 

Meanwhile, peer-to-peer payment providers have recently faced regulatory scrutiny. Earlier this month, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau cautioned consumers about keeping their funds in payment apps like Cash App and Venmo due to the lack of deposit insurance protection. The agency urged consumers to move their funds into FDIC-insured accounts.


By Tatiana Walk-Morris on June 7, 2023
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