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FinRebel
FinRebel markets itself as an entrepreneurial peer rather than a conventional institutional investor, framing its capital as "patient" and its founders as...
FinRebel
FinRebel markets itself as an entrepreneurial peer rather than a conventional institutional investor, framing its capital as "patient" and its founders as aligned with the operators they back. The firm maintains a headquarters in New York, though its disclosed portfolio tilts heavily toward European consumer-finance and infrastructure plays, suggesting a cross-border investment team or a deliberately unconstrained geographic mandate. The firm’s known portfolio stretches across financial technology, healthcare, real estate technology, and digital media. Confirmed positions include a leading digital mortgage originator in Spain, modern banking platforms in the Nordics and Mexico, and a crypto-investing gateway — indicating a willingness to back regulated asset-heavy models alongside pure software. It also holds a B2B travel hub for tours and activities, a compliance and procurement platform, and an ETF-enabling infrastructure provider for asset managers, which points to an opportunistic, theme-driven deployment pattern rather than a rigid stage or check-size bracket. FinRebel does not disclose its total assets under management or deployment pace publicly. The listed portfolio companies suggest a bias toward minority and structured equity across seed to growth stages, with some exposure to buyout-style e‑commerce aggregation. The firm has not publicized a dedicated philanthropic vehicle or a formal co‑investor club alongside its direct investment activity. A May 2024 website refresh highlighted 20 named portfolio companies spanning healthcare diagnostics, programmatic advertising, and immigrant-focused financial services, signaling ongoing capital deployment into both digital health and inclusive-finance verticals. Structurally, FinRebel operates without the visible partnership committee or sector-lead hierarchy typical of a multi-billion-dollar manager, and its "entrepreneur to entrepreneur" posture suggests a concentrated decision-making core — likely a small group of founding partners who write checks without a layered IC process. This architecture, while opaque in public filings, can offer the speed that early-stage founders in regulated markets value, at the cost of the institutional scaffolding that pension funds and endowments typically require to diligence a manager.
General information
Firm type
Private Equity
Year founded
—
AUM
Undisclosed
Location
Region
North America
Country
United States
City
New York
Corporate office
New York, NY, United States
Sector focus
Frequently asked questions
Does FinRebel operate as a single-family office or a traditional venture firm?
FinRebel is structured as an asset manager and does not disclose a single-family backing. Its website frames the firm as a collective of entrepreneurs investing directly into companies, which suggests a partnership-led, principal-investing model rather than a multi-family office or a structured fund with external limited partners.
What investment stages and structures does FinRebel target?
The firm's known positions — such as a digital mortgage originator in Spain and modern banking platforms in the Nordics — indicate an appetite for growth-stage equity and venture rounds in regulated industries. The presence of an e-commerce aggregator in the portfolio also suggests the firm will pursue buyout-style roll-ups, but FinRebel has not published a formal check-size range or preferred instrument.
Which geographies does FinRebel prioritize?
While headquartered in New York, FinRebel’s disclosed portfolio is anchored in Europe, with named holdings operating in Spain, the Nordics, and Mexico, alongside US-based companies. No dedicated Asia or Middle East presence appears in the public record.
How does FinRebel source its investments?
FinRebel has not disclosed a dedicated sourcing platform, outbound analyst team, or formal co‑investor network. Its portfolio composition — featuring a cross-border remittance provider and an ETF infrastructure company — implies a network-driven sourcing model likely reliant on founder referrals and entrepreneurial circles that intersect with the firm's own principals.
Has FinRebel established a philanthropic foundation or a formal impact-investing carve-out?
No philanthropic foundation or separate impact vehicle is disclosed. The “improving the world” language on the firm’s website applies to portfolio company missions rather than a defined ESG or concessionary-return mandate.
Profile maintained by Altss using OSINT (open-source intelligence), regulatory filings, licensed data partners, and verified direct submissions. Read the methodology. Last updated: . Continuous refresh with full update cycles at least every 30 days.
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