June 4 (Reuters) – Financial technology company Ramp said on Thursday it had raised $750 million in a new funding ​round at a $44 billion valuation, up from $32 billion in ‌November.
The valuation jump reflects mounting optimism that AI can reshape corporate finance by automating tasks such as expense reporting, invoice processing and book-keeping, potentially ​reducing costs and improving efficiency.
The deal also highlights a ​broader rebound in fintech, with investors once again backing fast-growing ⁠startups that they bet can challenge legacy businesses.
Ramp’s latest funding ​round was led by ICONIQ, GIC, and Ontario Teachers’ Pension ​Plan, with backing from Goldman Sachs Alternatives, D.E. Shaw and Morgan Stanley Investment Management.
Existing backers Founders Fund, Lightspeed Venture Partners, D1 Capital Partners, T. Rowe ​Price and General Catalyst also joined the round.
Founded in 2019, ​the company offers corporate cards, payment services and expense management applications.
Ramp said ‌more ⁠than 70,000 organizations, from family farms and space startups to Fortune 100 companies, use its platform and have saved more than $12 billion and 27 million hours.
Customer benefits are growing, with data showing ​the median customer ​saved 50% ⁠more money and 32% more time annually in May 2026 than a year earlier, Ramp said. ​Customers using its full suite of products more ​than ⁠doubled those gains, it added.
“We’re growing as fast as we were three years ago, at roughly twenty times the size, and that’s ⁠because ​finance is going through the biggest structural ​change since the spreadsheet,” said Eric Glyman, co-founder and CEO of Ramp, in ​a statement.

Sourced: Reuters (5 June 2026)
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