Many consumers and businesses keep significant amounts of cash in accounts that generate little or no return. UK fintech Stoa is building a platform designed to change that by giving deposits an additional purpose beyond earning interest.
The London-based company has announced a €2.1 million pre-seed funding round, led by Bespokeist Partners and Ingenii Capital, with participation from Force Over Mass Capital, Fuel Ventures and several experienced financial services investors. The new capital will support the growth of Stoa’s cash management platform and help accelerate product development and market expansion.
Turning savings into everyday value
Rather than competing solely on interest rates, Stoa has developed a model that provides customers with upfront rewards when they commit funds to fixed-term savings products known as Stoa Pots. The goal is to make savings more rewarding while leaving eligible deposits protected through regulated banking partners under the UK’s Financial Services Compensation Scheme (FSCS).
The platform has been designed with multiple users in mind. Consumers receive practical benefits linked to their savings, businesses can make better use of excess cash, banks gain another way to attract deposits, and merchants can encourage stronger customer loyalty through reward programmes.
Its technology also allows financial institutions and merchants to integrate the service directly into their own digital products. By using open banking connections, the platform can tailor offers based on individual saving and spending patterns.
Investor focus remains on financial infrastructure
Stoa’s latest funding reflects continued investor interest in fintech infrastructure across Europe. Solutions that improve cash management, treasury operations, payments and banking services continue to attract capital as financial institutions look for more efficient ways to serve both retail and business customers.
The market opportunity is considerable. According to figures shared by the company, hundreds of billions of pounds remain in low-yield consumer accounts and SME cash reserves across the UK. Unlocking additional value from these deposits without changing customers’ saving habits presents an attractive proposition for both users and financial institutions.
Having already launched its platform in the UK, Stoa is now also exploring partnerships that could support future expansion into the United States.
Before wrapping up, here are the main lessons fintech founders can take from this funding announcement.
Key takeaways for fintech startups
- Innovation in savings products is moving beyond traditional interest rate competition.
- Creating value for consumers, banks and merchants can strengthen a fintech’s business model.
- Embedded and modular financial services remain attractive to investors.
- Open banking continues to enable more personalised financial experiences.
- Large pools of underutilised cash can create opportunities for new fintech products.
If you are building a fintech startup and want to sharpen your product strategy, positioning or go-to-market approach, Your Fintech Story helps founders turn innovative ideas into scalable businesses. Get in touch.
