- byHellen Villena
- February 7, 2024
- No comments
- 1 minute read
Brazilian agriculture fintech startup Traive raised $20M in funding from Banco do Brasil and existing investors. The round comes 15 months after its $10M Pre-Series B in October 2022, totaling $47.8M raised to date.
Traive will use the funds to advance its technology, expand operations in Brazil, and launch a credit platform connecting the agriculture supply chain to capital markets.
“The contribution aims to generate efficiency and a positive impact in the credit granting process for agriculture, and in the production activity of our clients in the sector,” said Rodrigo Vasconcelos, Director of Digital Business at Banco do Brasil.
Traive’s solution offers complete management of the credit process, employing artificial intelligence to assess risk profiles in the agribusiness sector.
“Our next step would be to expand to other countries, with the goal of consolidating our risk diversification thesis,” said Fabricio Pezente, CEO of Traive.
Founded in 2017, Traive reports processing over $1.7B in credit transactions on its platform.
Read more at Latam Fintech
Hellen Villena
Hellen is a content writer with over 5 years of experience writing about startups and venture capital. Having held several different titles throughout her career, she stays true to form as a marketer by believing LinkedIn descriptors matter less than the jobs to be done.
You May Also Like
Mercadoni Raises $9M Series A from Brazil’s Movile
- bySophia Wood
- January 3, 2018
Movile, the Brazilian mobile application giant with more than 120M monthly users invested $9M into Colombian delivery company…
Wayra Chile Invests $500K into Three Chilean Startups
- bySophia Wood
- February 8, 2018
Wayra, the investment arm of Telefonica and Movistar, the Spanish telecom giant, announced that they’d invested a total…
Chilean construction startup Ipsum raises US$1M round, led by Cemex
- bySophia Wood
- January 10, 2018
IPSUM is streamlining construction projects across Latin America. In a story originally reported by El Mercurio, this Chilean startup,…