Goldman Sachs backs U.S. construction finance tech
startup Rabbet
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[February 20, 2019]
By Anna Irrera
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Goldman Sachs Group
Inc has backed Rabbet, a U.S. startup that develops software to help
make construction finance more efficient, the companies said on
Wednesday.
Other investors in the $8 million round include QED Investors and Camber
Creek, the companies said.
Rabbet, formerly known as Contract Simply, will use the funding to
further develop its platform and grow its software engineering and sales
team, the company said.
Rabbet's platform helps companies involved in construction finance --
such as banks, developers, and contractors -- digitize and view
documents relevant to a deal. The process is currently heavily manual
and paper-based, making it time consuming and prone to errors.
Rabbet's technology uses machine learning to automatically find and
extract key information from documents, in a format that can be more
easily analyzed by the parties involved.
The Austin, Texas-based company says the platform enables lenders and
developers to gather more insight from the information they have and
transact faster than by emailing each other spreadsheets and PDFs.
"All this information is trapped in disconnected PDFs, spreadsheets,
emails," Will Mitchell, Rabbet's chief executive and co-founder, said in
an interview. "We want to focus on the efficiency, accuracy and
transparency that software can bring to this complex industry."
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The ticker symbol and logo for Goldman Sachs is displayed on a
screen on the floor at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New
York, U.S., December 18, 2018. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File Photo
Goldman's investment comes as banks and other large financial institutions
increasingly turn to fintech startups for technology that can help them
streamline some of their processes.
Mitchell said Goldman's construction finance division was using Rabbet's
software.
"We firmly believe construction finance is going to be automated and brought out
of its decades-old, paper-ridden process," David Bell, managing director of
Goldman Sachs' construction group, said in an interview. "Rabbet is the only
solution we've seen that can handle the complexity of this transition."
(Reporting by Anna Irrera; Editing by Tom Brown)
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