Krafton leads Cashfree’s $53M funding at $700M valuation


Cashfree, an Indian payments startup that facilitates and processes more than $80 billion for its customers each year, has raised $53 million in a new round of funding as it gears up to deepen its presence in some international markets.

Krafton, maker of sleeper hit titles such as PUBG and BGMI, led Cashfree’s Series C financing round alongside existing investor Apis Growth Fund, the two said Wednesday. The funding values the eight-year-old startup at $700 million, according to a source familiar with the terms.

It’s an unusual deal – a gaming company investing in a payments startup – but the two firms see strategic value in the partnership. In Cashfree, Krafton has found a reliable payments partner both for itself as well as its growing portfolio of startups in the country, many of which will explore switching to the Bengaluru firm’s offerings in the future.

Sean Hyunil Sohn, who heads Krafton’s India business, said the gaming giant is betting on India’s evolving media and entertainment sector, where robust payment systems have become crucial for enhancing user experience.

The Bangalore-based startup, which serves more than 800,000 businesses including prominent names such as Swiggy, Zepto, and Bajaj Finance, has seen merchant sign-ups surge 130% in the current fiscal year. The startup is particularly focused on expanding in the UAE and other Middle Eastern markets.

Cashfree’s founders stumbled into the payments business by accident. In 2015, Akash Sinha and Reeju Datta started with a basic service: helping Bangalore restaurant delivery workers collect cash from customers. Neither had worked in payments before. But when their restaurant clients asked for online payment options, they spotted a bigger opportunity.

Early investors weren’t convinced. Many doubted a payment processing startup could scale quickly enough to matter. Y Combinator’s acceptance changed that trajectory, even though the founders had missed application deadlines and couldn’t make it to the batch on time. Eight years later, Cashfree processes $80 billion annually for 800,000 businesses.

Cashfree’s technology stack allows businesses to process up to 12,000 transactions per second during peak demand. The startup has also developed SecureID, an identity verification system that has performed over a billion verifications to date, helping businesses combat fraud while reducing customer drop-offs during onboarding.

Cashfree is one of the first companies to receive authorization from India’s central bank to operate as a payment aggregator for both domestic and international transactions. The startup, which was incubated by PayPal, counts Y Combinator and State Bank of India among its earlier backers.

More to follow.


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