C2FO raises massive $100M round for global expansion
March 1, 2018 | Bobby Burch
In what is believed to be the largest venture-backed funding round in the Kansas City area’s history, C2FO is lighting the fuse on its global expansion with a $100 million capital raise.
The Leawood-based financial tech firm’s round was led by Munich-based Allianz X and Abu Dhabi-based Mubadala Investment Company, and included participation from Temasek, Union Square Ventures and Mithril Capital.
The capital will support strategic initiatives including international growth, additional working capital solutions and greater development of the C2FO customer community, the company said in a release. It will also be used for secondary share purchases from earlier investors and associates.
The company created an online marketplace where buyers can negotiate with suppliers, earning quicker payments in exchange for discounts to free up cash that would be stuck in accounts receivable. C2FO customers include Costco, Amazon, Nordstrom, Chevron, Sysco and many other corporations.
“When we launched C2FO in 2010, our goal was to be the most convenient and lowest-cost source for business funding in the world,” said Sandy Kemper, C2FO founder and CEO. “Today, 99.5 percent of our customers tell us we have achieved that goal. We continue to deliver tremendous value to our global corporate buyer customers while helping their suppliers access working capital at a fair price. We are honored to have the support and confidence in C2FO from Allianz X, Mubadala and all our investors.”
At the end of 2017, C2FO said it reached a milestone of providing $1 billion of funding per week to businesses in more than 100 countries. That metric effectively makes C2FO one of the largest non-bank providers of working capital in the world. C2FO expects to be providing about $1 billion per day by 2021.
The $100 million round is the largest venture-backed round in the Kansas City area’s history. The closest in value in recent memory were previous $40 million rounds by Farmlink and C2FO.
Kansas City area venture capital investors were wowed by the news, not for its value but its significance to the firm’s growth.
“More importantly than the size of the round is who is in the round,” said Darcy Howe, managing director of the KC Rise Fund. “Top-tier institutional fin tech investors and strategic investing in a Kansas City company that can find enough talent to grow in Kansas City is huge. The lesson for founders is to choose the most strategic investors you can whose networks and muscle are additional leverage to accelerate quickly.
C2FO’s huge round lends credence to Kansas City and its business community for several reasons, said John Fein, managing director of Firebrand Ventures.
“It shows a homegrown Kansas City company can build a team and grow their business to the point of raising a nine-figure round. It also brings more attention and credibility to KC,” he said. “The numbers are important. Many investors need to see the potential for $1 billion exits. For example, Indianapolis didn’t gain that credibility until ExactTarget exited for $2.5 billion. C2FO is well positioned for that at some point.”
The round also sets a good example for Kansas City startups by holding true to the mission and by building a quality team, Fein added.
“C2FO has earned their funding via traction — $1B is flowing through their platform per week,” Fein said. “A long-term mindset is paying off versus accepting a quicker acquisition offer. Many Midwest startups exit too soon — before they can become this big. … Sandy is phenomenal but he can’t do it all himself. He’s built an amazing team around him, all in KC.”
If or when C2FO has a big exit, it would have a massive impact on Kansas City’s startup community, Fein added.
“It’ll hopefully spawn other great new startups and facilitate more capital flowing back into the Kansas City ecosystem,” he said. “This is another big reason why the numbers matter: It takes really big exits to create the virtuous cycle of an ecosystem becoming self-sufficient — see San Francisco, Boston, New York City, Chicago, Austin and Boulder. If anything, I’m probably most excited about this possibility.”
Founded in 2008, C2FO employs about 200 people and has raised about $200 million to date. The company was named a Startland News Top Startup to Watch in 2016.

2018 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Freelance Exchange plans expo for gig-economy creators, panel on hiring solopreneurs
An expo this week in Johnson County will put the work of freelance creators on display, as well as offer insight into the minds of Kansas City solopreneurs, said Cami Travis-Groves. The FX Portfolio Showcase — set for 10:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. Friday at the Johnson County Arts & Heritage Center — is expected to…
Movista exit: Mid-America Angels portfolio firm scores $12M growth equity investment
A $12 million Series A growth equity investment in Movista is a significant win for Mid-America Angels, as well as for the region, said Laura McCoolidge. The Arkansas-based startup — which uses a mobile-first, real-time platform to power labor and workforce management software for retailers, manufacturers, and service providers — is among the leading portfolio…
Startup Crawl returning Oct 5 for First Friday with festival-style entertainment, innovation
Editor’s note: Startup Crawl and Startland News are both programs of the Kansas City Startup Foundation, though the content below was produced independently by Startland. Startup Crawl has a carnival feel to it, said Lauren Conaway, noting the returning event is positioned to help startups collide with people who wouldn’t typically encounter the early-stage businesses.…
MECA students to Goodwill: Everyone has a mission now — what else are you selling?
Editor’s note: MECA Challenge and Startland News are both programs of the Kansas City Startup Foundation, though the content below was produced independently by Startland. For more information on the relationship, click here. Goodwill must innovate and change with the times if it’s going to survive after 125 years in business, said Ed Lada. “The…
