Revolut launches publicly in Singapore, signs deal with Mastercard

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
London-based fintech startup Revolut has two pieces of news to announce this week
First, Revolut is expanding to Singapore after a long beta period
The company already has 30,000 customers there and anyone can open an account now. Singapore residents will be able to take advantage of all
of Revolut core features
You can open an account from your phone, get a card and start spending anywhere in the world. Revolut supports Singapore dollar as well as
13 other currencies
You can top up your account, and send and receive money from the app. With a free account you can convert money in the app without any
markup fee on weekdays up to S$9000 per month
You can also withdraw money anywhere in the world without any fee, up to S$9000 per month. Premium accounts cost S$9.99 per month and Metal
accounts cost S$19.99 per month in Singapore
You get higher limits and a few additional features with Metal. Revolut is currently available in the U.K., Europe and Australia
There are 7 million Revolut customers in total
The company is still working on its launch in the U.S
and Canada for later this year. The other piece of news is that Revolut has signed a global partnership with Mastercard
Revolut has already been working with Mastercard to issue cards, so this is an expansion of the current deal. Revolut can now issue cards
that work on the Mastercard network in any market where Mastercard is accepted, which represents around 210 countries
It doesn&t mean that Revolut will launch in 210 countries
But the startup says that the first Revolut cards in the U.S
will work on Mastercard. It also doesn&t mean that Revolut will work exclusively with Mastercard
The company also works with Visa and recently announced a partnership deal
But at least 50% of all existing and future Revolut cards in Europe will be Mastercard branded. It shouldn&t matter much to end customers,
as I have yet to see a place that accepts Mastercard but not Visa, or Visa but not Mastercard
But Revolut is clearly using market competition to its advantage.