Technology

Fintech for Micro-Investing to Support its Expansion Across Europe, Acorns Purchased the Child and Teen-Focused Digital Banking Firm GoHenry

Fintech for Micro-Investing to Support its Expansion Across Europe, Acorns Purchased the Child and Teen-Focused Digital Banking Firm GoHenry

GoHenry, a business in digital banking that aims to teach children about money, was purchased by American micro-investing platform Acorns for an undisclosed sum.

The company exclusively disclosed to CNBC that it has reached an all-stock agreement with GoHenry, under which the company will become a fully owned subsidiary of Acorns, with the GoHenry workers and investors rolling over their equity.

Founded in 2012, GoHenry offers a spending card for children aged six to 18, linked to an accompanying money management app. Parents can track their kids’ transactions in real time and set spending limits or savings goals.

The deal’s timing is noteworthy. High inflation and rising interest rates have created a challenging climate for the fintech sector. As a result, several publicly-traded companies’ share values have fallen, denting market sentiment. This has had a domino effect on privately held fintech companies, with many late-stage startups experiencing a dramatic decline in valuation.

However, Noah Kerner, Acorns’ CEO and co-founder, insisted market conditions had no effect on the timing of the acquisition as talks between the two companies started as early as 2021.

Acorns’ interest in financial wellbeing for families “goes back many years,” he said, starting in 2020 with the launch of Acorns Early an investment account for kids.

We pioneered kids and teens with GoHenry, and Acorns very much pioneered investing and saving and bringing mental wellness to the up and coming, to everyday America.

Louise Hill

“Acorns looked at more than 100 deals globally before landing on GoHenry,” Kerner said, “adding a $55 million cash infusion into GoHenry last year and its buyout of rival firm PixPay in France made the deal more attractive.”

“We pioneered kids and teens with GoHenry, and Acorns very much pioneered investing and saving and bringing mental wellness to the up and coming, to everyday America,” Louise Hill, co-founder and chief operating officer of GoHenry, told CNBC in an interview.

“But both of us had ambitions to stretch beyond that in terms of customer demographics, so that we could start to serve people throughout their lifecycle, through all life stages.”

GoHenry charges parents a monthly subscription, which it claims covers for features like the ability to set up paid chores and parental controls, as opposed to providing a free service and earning money via interchange fees.

Acorns, meanwhile, focuses on investments, letting customers automatically invest spare change from card payments into index funds.

Acorns also charges a monthly subscription fee. The company said it now has a combined 6 million subscribers after its acquisition of GoHenry.

Despite this, Acorns’ acquisition of GoHenry signals a major growth bet for the company, which has up until now only been available in the U.S. By buying GoHenry, it will now be able to access Europe, a market that is less advanced when it comes to retail investing.

GoHenry has operations in the U.K., France, Spain and the U.S. In the U.S., GoHenry’s app will be renamed GoHenry by Acorns. GoHenry will still be named GoHenry in the U.K., while its name in France and Spain, where it is known as PixPay, will also remain the same.

Kerner and Hill wouldn’t comment on the price of the transaction, however Kerner said it represented a good deal for GoHenry and its shareholders.

Acorns was valued at $1.9 billion last year in a $300 million funding round after scrapping plans to go public via merger with a special purpose acquisition company or SPAC due to volatile market conditions.

It is unclear what the company’s latest valuation is following the GoHenry deal.

Prior to its acquisition by Acorns, GoHenry raised a total of $121.2 million from investors including Edison Partners, Gaia Capital Partners, Citi Ventures, and Muse Capital.

The company has faced stiff competition from rival firms with their own child-focused offerings, including Revolut which launched its own account for kids in 2020, and established banks like NatWest.

GoHenry has also struggled to book a profit, and posted a £30.9 million ($38 million) loss on £30.6 million of revenue in 2021, according to a Companies House filing. Acorns, too, is losing money, however Kerner said its goal is to become a profitable company.