Full-Time
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Junior, Mid
Company Does Not Provide H1B Sponsorship
London, UK
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Company Size
1,001-5,000
Company Stage
Debt Financing
Total Funding
$414.5M
Headquarters
Copenhagen, Denmark
Founded
2015
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An investor in expenses management platform unicorn Pleo has cut the value of its stake by over 25 per cent year-on year, according to a new report.Kinnevik, which holds a 14 per cent stake in Denmark-founded Pleo, valued the stake at SEK 2445m ($227m) in Q4, 2024, a 26 per cent cut compared to the SEK 3293m ($298m) value the year previous.This cut gives Pleo an implied valuation of around $1.62bn in Q4, 2024, compared to a $2.13bn valuation the year previous.The Swedish firm also cut the value of its stake in Pleo by 10 per cent between Q3, 2024 and Q4, 2024.Pleo, founded in 2015, achieved star status in 2021 when it became the fastest Danish startup to reach unicorn status, in just six years.The Danish startup, which has raised more than $430 million in funding, provides European businesses with various spend management tools including company cards, employee expense reports, as well as credit products.In 2021, it raised $150m at a $1.7bn valuation, and six months later raised another $200 million at a valuation of $4.7 billion, making it one of the more valuable fintech startups in Europe.In the report, Kinnevik said Pleo grew between two and three times faster than its SaaS benchmarks last year with above average gross margins.It added:“Profitability improvement measures over the past years have shown good results, and in 2025 Pleo plans to accelerate investment in product and market expansion. “This leads to stalling margin improvements in 2025, but is expected to create a larger and stronger business in 2026 and beyond.”Last month, Pleo moved into the treasury space, rolling out a suite of tools.Meanwhile, Kinnevik has upped the value of its 15 per cent stake in TravelPerk by 66 per cent year on year, giving it an implied valuation of $2,26bn.Pleo did not respond to a request for comment
UK businesses anticipate another tough year in 2025, according to new research from Pleo, one of Europe’s leading business spend management platforms.Pleo’s latest research found that the majority of UK businesses (56%) expect 2025 to be tougher than 2024. Despite this, the study of 3,250 finance leaders across Europe reported that 2 in 5 (37%) UK leaders lack confidence in their business’s current level of financial agility. This reveals a worrying trend that many companies are unprepared to face the economic difficulties they anticipate will impact business performance in 2025.In response to this growing need for better financial visibility and control, Pleo is expanding into the treasury space with the upcoming launch of its cash management solution. The suite of treasury tools will be rolled out throughout this year, starting with a financial dashboard giving businesses a consolidated overview of their funds. This will then be followed by multi currency accounts and FX trades, automation for cash management and monitoring, configurable alerts, sub-accounts and treasury accounts generating yield. New and existing customers will be invited to gain early access to these tools during the first half of 2025.Manual tasks holding businesses back from mission-critical workThe UK’s economic outlook remains uncertain in 2025, and 3 in 4 (76%) UK finance leaders say that stress-testing their business’s financial health has never been more important
Pleo launched Pleo invoices at the end of the year to help organisations by automating their accounts payable processes.
"Without the UK we’re not in business”, says the UK boss of Danish expense management unicorn Pleo.Ben Swails, general manager of UK, Ireland and the Nordics, Pleo, spoke to Tech.eu as Pleo reported its financial figures for 2023.Top line figures show that revenues across Pleo came in at £64m in 2023, up from £42m the year before.Losses were £44m in 2023, compared to losses of £61m in 2022.The losses were attributed to product and platform investment, and “growth plans and budgets”.Like other fintechs, Pleo wants to swing into profit, but this is unlikely to be in 2024.The financial statement says in 2024, Pleo expects to make a loss in the range of between £37m and 45m.Swails (an American, who is speaking to Tech.eu from Kentucky but is in the UK “quite frequently”), says the UK, where Pleo has around 120 staff, is “hand’s down” Pleo’s biggest market.UK key Pleo marketThe UK, where it has a London office, accounts for around 40 per cent of its revenues and around 43 per cent of business spend on the Pleo platform.Swails says:“We are seeing extensive growth in the UK and continued opportunity there."Pleo, co-founded by Jeppe Rindom and Niccolo Perra, who met at Tradeshift, the Danish supply chain fintech, is something of a Danish fintech darling,Ordained as Denmark’s eighth unicorn in 2021, when a $150m raise gave it a valuation of $1.7m, six months later it raised another $200m at a valuation of $4.7bn, making it one of the more valuable fintech startups in Europe.Since those heady days, amid a correction in the market, Pleo’s valuation has shrunk, according to one investor.In the first quarter of 2024, Pleo was estimated to be valued at around $2.3bn by Kinnevik, which holds a 14 per cent stake in Pleo.Today, the spend management platform is still a big hit with FDs and CFOs and is spreading its tentacles, both geographically and to new revenue streams.Facing challengesThat said, it is facing challenges, not least in the UK where Swails points to figures showing that one in four UK businesses are looking to cut spend while interest rises across Europe are impacting business spend.Pleo employs around 1,000 people, with Denmark, the UK and Germany among its core seven European markets.Recent new European markets it has entered include France and Austria.On how it is faring in its news markets, Swails says it is “going well” but adds “I think it’s important to acknowledge the fact that we are in a pretty difficult macro economic climate”.Pleo, whose investors include Coatue Management, Alkeon and Bain Capital Ventures and which has raised around $470m in debt and equity funding, has also recently got a toehold in the US market too.Pleo is an expenses management platform, a next-gen tech which allows SMEs to better manage employee spend by auto-submitting expenses.It is a zippier alternative for businesses than the cumbersome expense reporting of yesteryear, where individuals could spend hours every month inputting expenses.Pleo sweet spotIts sweet spot is SMEs, which can be as small as just a few employees, and up to 5,000 employees.According to its annual report, it has over 33,000 business customers, somewhat short of Rindom’s ambition to snare one million users by 2025.Beyond expense management, it also offers invoice payments, vendor cards, so businesses can categorise recurring payments, all with the aim of easing the money management process.Pleo, which has 10 offices in Europe, Canada and India, has also moved into credit and last year bagged a €40 million debt financing facility from HSBC Innovation Banking to enhance its credit facilities.Swails said:“I think it is almost a necessity that our customers expect. “They don’t want to have to worry about if cash flow is tight one month, they don’t want to worry that their digital wallet with Pleo is going to run empty.”On its soft US launch, where Pleo has a card partner, Swails stressed Pleo’s focus remains on Europe, not the US, and there is no official launch planned as of yet for the US.He said:“The reality is that we are a global economy. A lot of these customers have employees in the US. “It would make no sense at all for us to set them up with a really great solution in Europe, but not to be able to extend that feature set to a US base employee.”On the one hand, Pleo has new markets to attack and, on the other hand, more mature markets, like the UK, where it will look to sell its new products.Pleo restructureLike other fintechs, under deteriorating economic conditions, Pleo has restructured: in 2022, it axed around 10 per cent of its staff to between 900 and 1,000 staff.Meanwhile, at the behest of its new CFO Søren Westh Lonning, the fintech is also reviewing some of its operations, as it looks to take costs out of the business.He says:“Our CFO is coming in and saying ‘no, we need to spend responsibly, we need to see clear ROI on everything and we need to have better control.'”He adds:“The reality is if we are going to be a profitable business we can’t just spend that money like it's going out of style. “We have really done a big scrub within the company. We need to be a bit more responsible.”Examples of belt-tightening include a review of travel expenses (although Swails jokes "I probably have the biggest travel budget in the company, just because I am the one flying across the ocean most frequently”).Pleo has also assessed its business subscriptions: for example, reviewing whether its sales teams need to use the manifold sales tools, such as forecasting assistants and commissions trackers and other SaaS technologies.The belt-tightening does not extend to a recruitment freeze, adds Swails.On AI, like others, Pleo is assessing and scrutinising how it can be used effectively at Pleo.“Are we going to be an AI-first company? he asks
Pleo, one of Europe’s leading spend management platforms, is celebrating another year of triple digit SaaS growth, leading to group revenue increase of over 50% for FY23. This growth was fuelled largely by a surge in its customer base up 39% from the previous year, reaching to date, over 33,000 active companies. The number of active users also saw an increase of 37% compared year on year.In 2023 Pleo took great strides to enhance the user experience for its larger customers as it moved into the mid-market space. The company invested significantly across the business, repositioning from expense management to a much broader business spending platform to ensure its customers have access to a full suite of tools to help them better manage their finances.Towards the end of the year, Pleo launched its partnership with Oracle NetSuite and launched Pleo Invoices to its customers in France, Spain and The Netherlands, following its successful launch in the UK and Germany in 2022.More recently, to give its customers even greater financial flexibility, Pleo secured a €40m debt financing deal with HSBC Innovation Banking. This strategic deal enables Pleo to extend its existing credit offering into new countries, support higher amounts and offer additional currency options. It presents a valuable financial resource for businesses, offering the ability to cover both significant business investments and incidental expenses, therefore ensuring smooth cash-flow management and facilitating uninterrupted operations.Pleo also launched a US Wallet, enabling multi-entity companies based in Europe to support US employees with Pleo cards and associated spend management solutions