Lloyds Eyes Fintech Firm Curve

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Lloyds Banking Group is in talks to acquire fintech firm Curve for up to £120 million, aiming to expand its digital payments infrastructure.

 


 

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Lloyds in Talks to Acquire Fintech Firm Curve for Up to £120 Million

Lloyds Banking Group is in advanced negotiations to acquire Curve, a London-based fintech company, in a deal that could be valued between £100 million and £120 million. The discussions, if finalized, would mark a significant moment in the UK’s financial technology sector, pairing one of the country’s largest banking institutions with a startup known for its digital wallet technology.

Curve was launched in 2016 with a product that allowed users to combine multiple debit and credit cards into a single platform. Over time, the company developed tools aimed at optimizing transactions and managing spending, positioning itself as a potential competitor to services such as Apple Pay. With a user-facing product that merges convenience and control, Curve has continued to build its brand around seamless payments and smart financial tools.

Lloyds has identified Curve as a strategic acquisition target as it seeks to strengthen its position in technology-driven banking. Under CEO Charlie Nunn, the group has increased its focus on digital infrastructure, viewing payments not only as a service line but as a key area of innovation. The acquisition would give Lloyds direct access to Curve’s core platform and its customer base, offering new opportunities to reshape how payments are handled inside its broader ecosystem.

The bank’s interest appears to be driven in part by the rising operational cost of relying on third-party payment tools. Platforms like Apple Pay and Google Wallet charge fees to both users and merchants, creating friction for financial institutions seeking to control end-to-end customer experiences. A proprietary digital wallet — with programmable features and direct integration into a bank’s back end — may offer a path to reduce such dependencies.

 

A Valuation Below Peak

If the final valuation stays within the reported range, it would mark a decrease from Curve’s most recent funding round in 2023, which valued the company at £133 million. That round brought support from a range of backers, including IDC Ventures and Outward VC, and raised more than £40 million. Still, the reported price may reflect a reassessment of growth prospects amid broader cost reductions and a paused US expansion strategy.

Since inception, Curve has raised over £200 million in equity funding. The company made internal cuts last year and scaled back certain international ambitions, opting instead to focus on deepening product capabilities in its existing markets. It continues to differentiate itself through a core feature set that enables transaction routing and dynamic benefits allocation — including the ability to assign rewards, apply savings, or manage card-level preferences from a single dashboard.

The company is being advised by KBW, a unit of investment bank Stifel, on the ongoing negotiations. No deal has been formally announced, and talks remain subject to change.

 

Fintech Acquisition Momentum Builds

This potential deal follows a wave of renewed interest in the UK’s fintech sector. Government officials have indicated plans to support the industry with a series of new proposals, including mechanisms to better connect early-stage companies with capital. As global competition intensifies, the UK is attempting to reinforce its position as a hub for financial innovation — not only through startups, but also through corporate reinvestment in technology.

Lloyds already maintains a portfolio of fintech partnerships and investments. One of the most notable is its stake in ThoughtMachine, a cloud-native core banking platform. These relationships reflect a broader strategy aimed at rebuilding legacy systems with modern architectures, enabling faster deployment of new services and reducing long-term technology debt.

Acquiring Curve would serve a dual purpose: expanding Lloyds’ control over payment interfaces and reinforcing its position in a segment where digital giants continue to gain ground. Mobile wallets have become a central battleground for customer engagement, and traditional banks are under increasing pressure to offer alternatives that match the fluidity and user experience of their technology-focused rivals.

 

Payments Infrastructure as Competitive Leverage

For Lloyds, Curve represents more than a standalone app — it is a modular layer with the potential to enhance customer journeys across personal and business banking. Curve’s ability to “intercept” transactions and route them through preferred paths may eventually help the bank offer differentiated payment flows, personalized incentives, and a more tailored interface between users and their money.

This approach aligns with a broader industry trend where traditional financial institutions seek to regain control over the customer interface. As embedded finance continues to blur the line between banks and software providers, owning the underlying rails — or at least minimizing reliance on third-party layers — is becoming strategically important.

While no final agreement has been confirmed, the reported talks illustrate how fintech consolidation is becoming an active strategy for established players navigating digital transformation. As banks adapt to new operating realities, platforms like Curve may offer not just technical value, but strategic leverage in a competitive landscape increasingly defined by user experience and payment fluidity.

The coming months will reveal whether this alignment between fintech agility and institutional scale results in a formal deal — and how such integrations might reshape the payment experience for millions of users in the UK and beyond.

 

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