(Bloomberg) — Singapore payments company Nium Pte is pushing back its plans for an initial public offering in the US by more than a year, focusing on shoring up its team and growing revenue.
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Nium, now valued at $1.4 billion, will be ready to go public by the end of 2026, co-founder and Chief Executive Officer Prajit Nanu said in an interview. It had previously targeted the second quarter of 2025. Nanu attributed the delay to a long search for a finance chief, saying a new leadership now in place will allow it to focus on IPO preparation.
Like larger US peer Stripe Inc., Nium helps companies handle cross-border payments. The company, whose backers include Singapore sovereign wealth fund GIC Pte, increased revenue by about 50% last year to $120 million and is now focusing on expanding in regions including the UK and Latin America, Nanu said.
The firm announced Monday it hired Andre Mancl as chief financial officer, tapping the former CFO of online food booking platform ChowNow to lead functions including corporate development, planning and investor relations. The former Credit Suisse internet investment banker has advised and executed transactions for companies including Lyft Inc., Meta Platforms Inc. and GoDaddy Inc., the company said.
“We started looking for a CFO a year back — it’s just been a really painful process,” Nanu said.
Nium’s valuation, a 30% discount to its previous market value, came on the back of a $50 million fundraising round in June that was led by Brunei’s sovereign wealth fund, Nanu said. The funds will be used for acquisitions in the real-time payments space, he said. The company, which expanded rapidly by buying London-based Ixaris, Singapore’s SoCash as well as Wirecard Forex India Pvt over the past few years, expects to increase net revenue to $200 million next year, Nanu said.
“We raised at $2 billion when the public market was crazy,” Nanu said. “Now the public markets are not crazy anymore.”
Nium, whose backers also include GIC’s sister firm Temasek Holdings Pte and California-based Riverwood Capital LLC, is looking to snap up one to two payments startups worth about $40 million to $50 million by the end of the year and has about $100 million in cash to fund the purchases, Nanu said.
Nanu co-founded Nium, which means “rules” in Sanskrit, as a cross-border remittance service in 2014. After growing up in Mumbai, he got a taste of what it’s like to build businesses during his dozen years at upstart companies including Adventity and WNS Global Services.
He came up with the idea after trying to send money from India to Thailand to organize a bachelor’s party for a friend in 2013. He ran into a problem as a Thai resort refused to take his credit card and insisted on a bank transfer, while his bank in India requested an extensive list of documents for transferring $640.
Today, Nium has about 950 employees across more than 25 offices worldwide. Its software helps businesses accept online payments, and allows them to send money and issue physical and virtual credit cards.
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