Symphony, a financial industry messaging start-up, announced Monday that it has raised $100 million in a new round of funding from backers that included Google. An encrypted messaging platform launched by the year-old company has become a fast-growing rival to a service offered by Bloomberg.
Google was joined in the new funding round by Swiss bank UBS, French banks Natixis and Societe Generale, and venture capital firms Lakestar and Merus Capital, an existing investor, according to Symphony.
The new funding was reported to up Symphony's value to $650 million.
The Silicon Valley-based company expected the cash infusion to power world-wide expansion and efforts to win more users, which the start-up says currently number more than 40,000 in 100 countries.
"$100+ million is more than what we anticipated to raise!" Symphony CEO David Gurle said in a blog post on the company website. "This amount gives us the runway to stay focused on our vision of becoming the standard for business communications and allow us to accelerate our growth globally." The rise of Symphony poses a lower-cost challenge to the messaging service on Bloomberg's terminals, which have long been an industry-standard communications tool for financial institutions, traders and clients.
Prior to the new funding round, Symphony had been backed by some of the biggest global financial firms, which gained access to the messaging service through their investment. Silicon Valley-based Symphony had made the service publicly available September 15.
The addition of tech giant Google to the largely finance- and venture capital-dominated pool of backers, was seen as opening the possibility for Symphony to broaden beyond the financial industry Monday.