Brex, a US fintech startup, has cut more than 200 employees from its 1,000-person workforce. This move shows that even a decacorn—a privately held company with a valuation topping $10 billion—isn’t immune to job losses. The startup said it’s doing some restructuring, according to an email sent today (Jan. 23) to an employee who received a layoff notice.
The company, launched in 2007 by Henrique Dubugras and Pedro Franceschi, who both founded and sold a fintech firm in Brazil, offers credit cards to startups; it’s also branched out into other services, such as travel expense management.
Brex counts Y Combinator and Kleiner Perkins, along with PayPal co-founders Max Levchin and Peter Thiel, as investors. The company is valued at $12.4 billion, according to PitchBook.
The job cuts follow an earlier round of layoffs—totaling 11% of the workforce—in late 2022, when the company’s then-CFO joined its competitor Rippling.
It’s not just Brex, though. Well-funded fintech players have been struggling as they adjust to a high-interest rate environment. Last year, Stripe—which plans to go public in 2024—and Plaid reportedly laid off 1,000 and 260 employees, respectively.
“Looking inward, I realized we grew our org too quickly, making it harder to move at the speed we once did,” Brex CEO Pedro Franceschi wrote in a blog post in regards to the job cuts.