U.K.
startup Marshmallow has blown up over the years by using innovations in data science to build car insurance policies for immigrants and other consumers who have been overlooked or priced out of traditional insurance.
Now, with a million drivers insured and a profitable annual revenue run rate of $500 million, Marshmallow has raised a fresh $90 million to expand.Marshmallow plans to use the funding to move into financial services, as well as more insurance products that it hopes will appeal to a population of people that despite the chilling effects of Brexit is growing.We think of migration as a huge opportunity, CEO Oliver Kent-Braham said in an interview.
He noted that in the U.K., there are more people coming out of the workforce than there are going in, with 1.2 million migrants recorded coming to the U.K.
in 2024 alone.
We need migration to put more people into work, and we want to help people move and integrate into the U.K.In Marshmallows view, that integration comes with being able to drive your own insured vehicle and soon, the startup hopes, buying home insurance and taking out loans.Marshmallow plans to launch its first lending product later this year, Kent-Braham said, en route to building a one-stop shop for everything financial and insurance that a new arrival to the U.K.
might need to adjust to life.This round is roughly split 50-50 between equity and debt, according to Kent-Braham, and it is coming at a valuation of just over $2 billion.
To put that into context, Marshmallow last raised funding at $1.25 billion in 2021.The startup has seen considerable growth on the business front in that time.
In 2021, Marshmallow had insured just 100,000 people.
Now, in cities like London, the one-million insured number is bolstered with a pink outdoor ad campaign that is hard to miss.Portage Capital is leading the round, with participation from BlackRock and Columbia Lake Partners.
Previous backers of the company have included Passion Capital, Investec, and Scor.
Marshmallow has raised around $220 million to date.Notably, the new round has been in the works since at least January, and Kent-Braham noted that one part of the equity was convertible debt raised in 2023.Marshmallows funding is coming at a complex moment for insurance startups in Europe.On one side, there is the grim story of WeFox.Backed by SoftBank, Omers, Salesforce, and dozens of others, WeFoxs valuation rose to as much $4.5 billion by 2023.
Just two years later, after years of losses and complications in its distributed/broker-based business model, WeFox has fallen on hard times.
The company has been selling off parts of its business and picking up lifeline financing to stay afloat.Yet there are also some brighter signs of insurtech startups building more sustainable businesses.
And those that can demonstrate a strong technology story are getting attention from investors.Just last week, Ominimo a new startup out of Poland picked up a major strategic investor that invested $10 million at a valuation of over $200 million.
It was Ominimos first time raising outside money after becoming profitable while bootstrapped.
Like Marshmallow, the startup started off with car insurance and is rethinking actuarial formulas and using AI to make new inroads into risk prediction.Image Credits:MarshmallowWhile data science and AI are quickly becoming table stakes for insurance startups, there are other details about Marshmallow that set it apart from the pack and even some of its bigger competitors (like the price-busting mega-retailer Tesco).The ideas of inclusivity and diversity that underpin how Marshmallow is approaching its target customer base run deep at the startup.Kent-Braham co-founded London-based Marshmallow with his identical twin, Alexander, and David Goat.
The twins really do look a lot alike.
You could actually be talking to Alexander right now!, Oliver joked when we spoke for this story.
More seriously, though, the startup is an underrepresented rarity in another way, too.It is one of what appears to be only two unicorn startups in the U.K.
from a Black founder, the other being WorldRemit.
The statistics are not hugely encouraging outside the U.K.
either; one 2024 study found that across the U.K.
and the United States , only 3% of startups with valuations of over $1 billion have Black founders.At a time when diversity, equity, and inclusion programs are being dismantled in the United States , its notable that Marshmallows investors see particular strength precisely because of its diverse leadership.This is a very strong founding team, Devon Kirk, GP and co-head of Portage Capital Solutions, said in an interview.
We think that financial services benefits from different perspectives and leaders coming up with innovative solutions to address those needs.
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