Fintech Fragment eases bank account reconciliation, nabs $9M from Stripe, Jack Altmam, others



Ask anyone who’s ever closed out the books at the end of the month, what that experience is like, and you’ll get a deep sigh that says, reconciliation is the bane of existence. That’s especially true for a business with hundreds, thousands or hundreds of thousands of transactions a month.

Fragment is a startup that offers a digital ledger API that applies real-time, double entry accounting to find the errors where things aren’t adding up. Founders Thomas Neckel, CEO, and Omi Chowdhury, CTO, founded Fragment in 2021.

It’s the third startup this pair of cofounders have done together. They previously built an identity management company called Scuid that competed with Okta and was acquired by CA Technologies in 2014. They then built a private investment platform called Cove.io. This is was the catalyst for identifying the importance of a ledger, with Neckel saying that was “a huge problem we had ourselves.”

“In order for anyone to close their books for the month, the balances have to be right and reconciled with the bank statements,” Neckel told TechCrunch. “Accountants typically perform this function with the help of enterprise resource planning systems.” But for those that can’t go down the complicated ERP software route, Fragment says its software reconciles accounts faster than humans can do, especially when a large volume of transactions are involved. 

Reconciliation issues are what happened with Evolve Bank and Synapse, Neckel pointed out, and those issues led to rounds of finger pointing and allegations between the two.

With Fragment, fintech developers can use the API to build financial products. They can compose funds flow, turn it into code, embed the code into their products. Fund flows are the set of steps that are recorded in the database as entries, and each entry updates a set of accounts, Neckel said. 

Fragment's dashboard for composing and simulating your funds flow.
Fragment’s dashboard for composing and simulating your funds flow.
Image Credits: Fragment / Fragment

For example, say you want to deposit money into an account. One fund flow step is making the deposit. The entry is called “make deposit,” and it will update the account in both your product and at the bank.

“We give you a designer to model the funds flow, and then basically a database, not unlike Postgres, to implement it, and a dashboard to operate it,” Neckel said. (Postgres, of course, also known as PostgreSQL, is an open source database.)

Although the New York-based startup says it already counts companies like TruckSmarter, Nala and Pleo as early customers, it is officially launching to the public on Monday. TruckSmarter runs its own fuel payments network and finance purchases using Fragment. Nala uses Fragment to help businesses send payments to Africa. Meanwhile, B2B spend management platforms Pleo uses it to store and track the historical balances for their 30,000 customers, Fragment says.

The startup is also announcing a seed round of $9 million backed by fintech infrastructure executives from Stripe, BoxGroup, Avid Ventures, Zack Perret (Plaid), Jack Altman (Lattice), Gokul Rajaram (DoorDash), Dara Khosrowshahi (Uber), Emilie Choi (Coinbase), Scott Belsky (Adobe) and Cristina Cordova (Linear). Including this new investment, Fragment raised a total of $10.8 million since June 2021. Gradient Ventures invested in the company’s pre-seed round.

Fragment’s ledgering tech competes most directly with payments company, Modern Treasury, according to Neckel. However, Fragment’’s mission is to go beyond balances to solve the more basic problem of exchanging value online.

”Stripe gave two people in a garage the same payments infrastructure as Amazon,” said Neckel, referring  “Let’s see what’s possible when we give two people in a garage the same financial infrastructure as Square, Stripe and Uber.”

Fragment plans to use the funding to grow its engineering team and invest in go to market resources.

“We’re excited to see what’s possible when you arm technology companies with programmable versions of the double-entry systems the modern economy runs on,” said Adam Rothenberg, a partner at BoxGroup, in a written statement. 




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