Startups

Digital banking startup Mercury abruptly shuttered service for startups in Ukraine, Nigeria, other countries

Comment

abstract graphic of dollar bills in water
Image Credits: Bryce Durbin / TechCrunch

Digital banking startup Mercury said it’s no longer serving U.S.-domiciled customers with business and residential addresses from certain countries, including Ukraine, the company confirmed to TechCrunch. The company later revised the terms, saying the information in its help pages that said its banning founders with Ukrainian passports was an “error.”

“The accounts being offboarded were identified based on business and residential addresses given to us during onboarding and regular KYC/KYB refreshes, as well as frequent location of account activity (via IP addresses),” a Mercury spokesperson told TechCrunch.

Mercury made headlines earlier this year when it was caught up in federal scrutiny through one of its partners, Choice Bank, around the practice of allowing foreign companies to open accounts. 

The FDIC was “concerned” that Choice “had opened Mercury accounts in legally risky countries,” the Information reported. Officials also reportedly chastised Choice for letting overseas Mercury customers “open thousands of accounts using questionable methods to prove they had a presence in the U.S.” 

Mercury told TechCrunch in April that it was investing in its risk and compliance teams. In an apparent response to that federal scrutiny and as part of the company’s “ongoing commitment to compliance,” the spokesperson said Monday that it recently updated its eligibility requirements and notified certain customers that it could “no longer support them due to either the address(es) they provided or the locations where we recorded frequent account activity.” 

Some of those countries on the will-not-support list are not surprising: North Korea, Iran, Libya, Russia. (A full list can be found here.) But Ukraine is also now on the list, a country that was known for its robust-and-growing startup community, particularly before Russia invaded. 

Mercury said its change in policy only applies to founders living in the country, not founders living in the U.S. with a Ukrainian passport, responding to an earlier report by Ukrainian founder Alyona Mysko, CEO and founder of Fuelfinance. Mysko posted on LinkedIn on Monday that Mercury closed her company’s bank account “because I hold a Ukrainian passport!”

A Mercury spokesperson said that it does, and continues to, support founders with Ukrainian passports located in the United States but changed its policy to no longer support “companies with founders located in Ukraine.”

But the spokesperson also admitted to TechCrunch that it did, initially, say that it was banning founders with Ukrainian passports and later revised that, calling it an “error.” 

“We made an error in our help center article which incorrectly said we could not support founders with a Ukrainian passport,” the spokesperson told TechCrunch.

Mysko told TechCrunch that she wrote to Mercury CEO Immad Akhund via LinkedIn and email, asking him to explain the situation. Mysko said she’s now concerned that this situation is not restricted to just Mercury and is worried that it’s emblematic of “a problem in the whole banking system where banks don’t differentiate Ukraine from Russia.” 

The FDIC told TechCrunch that fintechs like Mercury are not under its direct jurisdiction but did not answer our questions on whether its guidance on Ukraine had changed. 

Mercury explains why it banned Ukraine

Mercury explained its decision to include Ukraine in its list of banned countries by saying it has become “too complex” to support the country, given current U.S. sanctions programs.

“While Ukraine is not comprehensively sanctioned, several regions of Ukraine are sanctioned. We previously applied a region-based model to support as many customers in Ukraine as possible; however supporting this policy while also upholding our rigorous standards on compliance has become increasingly complex,” a Mercury spokesperson said, and promised to “revisit” the policy in the future.

When asked what Fuelfinance was doing for a bank account, Mysko said the company secured a second bank account at Chase following the decline of Silicon Valley Bank in March 2023. 

She also referred to a similar X post by Ukraine-based Lemon.io CEO Aleksandr Volodarsky from Monday that referenced Mercury, saying, “As a founder, you are going to eat s*** all the time,” he wrote. “Today on my menu is @mercury throwing customers under the bus. As a founder to founder, @immad, thanks, dude, that’s some tasty s***.”

Mysko said she received a response from Mercury, but the startup is not going to reinstate her company as a customer. Mercury co-founder Jason Zhang also responded to her via email, which she posted on LinkedIn, and said he agreed how unfair this situation is to founders in Ukraine; however, “it’s an unfortunate reality that we can’t support founders located in Ukraine right now.” 

He went on to say that the company doesn’t put Ukraine “in the same category as Russia.” He also said that in managing Mercury’s compliance and risk, and the U.S. sanctions against regions of Ukraine, “there are commonalities in the controls and systems we have to put in place.”

Nigerian founders in the U.S. were also impacted

Ukraine is not the only country impacted. Mercury has also included Croatia and Nigeria on its list. 

Two Nigerian founders living in the U.S. narrated similar experiences to TechCrunch. According to the founders, who asked not to be named, Mercury will close their accounts in the next 30 days despite their startups being domiciled in the U.S.

It was initially unclear if Mercury is using passports, rather than local addresses, in making such decisions, however, the company has since provided comment that “Passports were not considered in these offboarding decisions.”

In an updated policy, Mercury said, “If you are domiciled outside of one of these countries, please reach out to [email protected] for assistance in opening your account.”

For the founders in Nigeria, this isn’t their first rodeo with Mercury. In 2022, Mercury restricted almost 30 accounts linked to tech startups in Nigeria and other African countries, most of which had already gone through U.S.-based accelerators, including Y Combinator and Techstars. 

Nigeria and some affected countries on Mercury’s list, including Croatia, are on the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) “grey list,” which means they’re subject to additional scrutiny because of deficiencies in their regimes to counter money laundering, terrorist financing, and proliferation financing.

Regarding the recent development, Benjamin Dada, a fintech partnerships expert from Nigeria, told TechCrunch: “But a customer from Nigeria is not on the same level as a customer from Iran or North Korea, risk-wise. Because they’ve failed to put in place the right compliance infrastructure which gets their banking partners, and the partner bank’s regulators comfortable, they are having to do a bulk pruning of their customer base to show that they are now more conservative in customer onboarding.”

African fintechs, including Raenest, Verto and Leatherback, that provide U.S. accounts to businesses will look to seize this opportunity and take in some of the affected customers. 

“This isn’t the first time African businesses have been threatened with service disruption by the likes of Mercury, Wise. For us, Africa was on the table from the get-go from partnership to compliance, and not slotted in at the end of the conversation,” Raenest co-founder Richard Oyome told TechCrunch.

Geek Ventures managing partner Ihar Mahaniok also posted on X, advising founders with Mercury accounts to open another account just in case. And to founders in general, “We do not recommend opening an account in Mercury; they have proven they are not a reliable bank. Thankfully, there are plenty of better options around.”

Mercury responded to Mahaniok’s post with the same statement it sent TechCrunch about why it has changed its policy regarding Ukraine. 

Meanwhile, Mercury competitor Brex is helping venture-backed Ukrainian founders who lost their accounts. Account holders get a 50,000-point sign-up bonus after depositing $500,000 into a Brex business account and an additional 25,000-point sign-up bonus after spending $10,000 via their Brex card.

Additional reporting by Rebecca Szkutak.

Want more fintech news in your inbox? Sign up for TechCrunch Fintech here.

Want to reach out with a tip? Send an email to [email protected] or a message on Signal at 408.204.3036. You can also send a note to the whole TechCrunch crew at [email protected]. For more secure communications, click here to contact us, which includes SecureDrop (instructions here) and links to encrypted messaging apps.

Updated to include information on Brex and additional comment from Mercury.

More TechCrunch

AWS today announced that it is transitioning OpenSearch, its open source fork of the popular Elasticsearch search and analytics engine, to the Linux Foundation with the launch of the very…

AWS brings OpenSearch under the Linux Foundation umbrella

Insight Partners is reportedly on the cusp of on more than $10 billion in capital commitments for its 13th fund, per the FT.  The FT report notes that two of…

Insight Partners is closing in on a whopping $10B+ new fund

The Port of Seattle released a statement Friday confirming that it was targeted by a ransomware attack. The attack occurred on August 24, with the Port (which also operates the…

Port of Seattle shares ransomware attack details

A decade after the wildly popular game Flappy Bird disappeared, an organization calling itself The Flappy Bird Foundation announced plans to “re-hatch the official Flappy Bird® game.” But this morning,…

Flappy Bird’s creator disavows ‘official’ new version of the game

Platforms to connect apps that wouldn’t normally talk to each other have been around for a minute (see: Zapier). But they have not gotten dramatically simpler to use if you’re…

DryMerge promises to connect apps that normally don’t talk to each other — and when it works, it’s great

Featured Article

Cohere co-founder Nick Frosst’s indie band, Good Kid, is almost as successful as his AI company

Nick Frosst, the co-founder of $5.5 billion Canadian AI startup Cohere, has been a musician his whole life. He told TechCrunch that once he started singing, he never shut up. That’s still true today. In addition to his full-time job at Cohere, Frosst is also the front man of Good…

Cohere co-founder Nick Frosst’s indie band, Good Kid, is almost as successful as his AI company

Blockchain technology is all about decentralization and virtualization. So it’s a little ironic that humans love to come together in person at big blockchain events. Such was the case last…

A walk through the crypto jungle at Korea Blockchain Week

I have a guilty pleasure, and it’s not that I just rewatched “Glee” in its entirety (yes, even the awful later seasons), or that I have read an ungodly amount…

The LinkedIn games are fun, actually

It’s looking increasingly likely that OpenAI will soon alter its complex corporate structure. Reports earlier this week suggested that the AI company was in talks to raise $6.5 billion at…

OpenAI could shake up its nonprofit structure next year

Fusion startups have raised $7.1 billion to date, with the majority of it going to a handful of companies. 

Every fusion startup that has raised over $300M

Netflix has never quite cracked the talk show formula, but maybe it can borrow an existing hit from YouTube. According to Bloomberg, the streamer is in talks with BuzzFeed to…

‘Hot Ones’ could add some heat to Netflix’s live lineup

Alex Parmley has been thinking about building his latest company, ORNG, since he was working on his last company, Phood.  Launched in 2018, Phood was a payments app that let…

Why ORNG’s founder pivoted from college food ordering to real-time money transfer

Lawyers representing Sam Bankman-Fried, the FTX CEO and co-founder who was convicted of fraud and money laundering late last year, are seeking a new trial. Following crypto exchange FTX’s collapse,…

Sam Bankman-Fried appeals conviction, criticizes judge’s ‘unbalanced’ decisions

OpenAI this week unveiled a preview of OpenAI o1, also known as Strawberry. The company claims that o1 can more effectively reason through math and science, as well as fact-check…

OpenAI previews its new Strawberry model

There’s something oddly refreshing about starting the day by solving the Wordle. According to DeepWell DTx, there’s a scientific explanation for why our brains might feel just a bit better…

DeepWell DTx receives FDA clearance for its therapeutic video game developer tools

Soundiiz is a free third-party tool that builds portability tools through existing APIs and acts as a translator between the services.

These two friends built a simple tool to transfer playlists between Apple Music and Spotify, and it works great

In early 2018, VC Mike Moritz wrote in the FT that “Silicon Valley would be wise to follow China’s lead,” noting the pace of work at tech companies was “furious”…

This is how bad China’s startup scene looks now

Fei-Fei Li, the Stanford professor many deem the “Godmother of AI,” has raised $230 million for her new startup, World Labs, from backers including Andreessen Horowitz, NEA, and Radical Ventures.…

Fei-Fei Li’s World Labs comes out of stealth with $230M in funding

Bolt says it has settled its long-standing lawsuit with its investor Activant Capital. One-click payments startup Bolt is settling the suit by buying out the investor’s stake “after which Activant…

Fintech Bolt is buying out the investor suing over Ryan Breslow’s $30M loan

The rise of neobanks has been fascinating to witness, as a number of companies in recent years have grown from merely challenging traditional banks to being massive players in and…

Dave and Varo Bank execs are coming to TechCrunch Disrupt 2024

OpenAI released its new o1 models on Thursday, giving ChatGPT users their first chance to try AI models that pause to “think” before they answer. There’s been a lot of…

First impressions of OpenAI o1: An AI designed to overthink it

Featured Article

Investors rebel as TuSimple pivots from self-driving trucks to AI gaming

TuSimple, once a buzzy startup considered a leader in self-driving trucks, is trying to move its assets to China to fund a new AI-generated animation and video game business. The pivot has not only puzzled and enraged several shareholders, but also threatens to pull the company back into a legal…

Investors rebel as TuSimple pivots from self-driving trucks to AI gaming

Welcome to Startups Weekly — your weekly recap of everything you can’t miss from the world of startups. Want it in your inbox every Friday? Sign up here. This week…

Shrinking teams, warped views, and risk aversion in this week’s startup news

Silicon Valley startup accelerator Y Combinator will expand the number of cohorts it runs each year from two to four starting in 2025, Bloomberg reported Thursday, and TechCrunch confirmed today.…

Y Combinator expanding to four cohorts a year in 2025

Telegram has had a tough few weeks. The messaging app’s founder, Pavel Durov, was arrested in late August and later released on a €5 million bail in France, charged with…

Telegram CEO Durov’s arrest hasn’t dampened enthusiasm for its TON blockchain

Martin Casado, a general partner at Andreessen Horowitz, will tackle one of the most pressing issues facing today’s tech world — AI regulation — only at TechCrunch Disrupt 2024, taking…

A fireside chat with Andreessen Horowitz partner Martin Casado at TechCrunch Disrupt 2024

Christina Cacioppo, CEO and co-founder of Vanta, will be on the SaaS Stage at TechCrunch Disrupt 2024 to reveal how Vanta is redefining security and compliance automation and driving innovation…

Vanta’s Christina Cacioppo takes the stage at TechCrunch Disrupt 2024

On Thursday, cybersecurity giant Fortinet disclosed a breach involving customer data.  In a statement posted online, Fortinet said an individual intruder accessed “a limited number of files” stored on a…

Fortinet confirms customer data breach

Meta has confirmed that it’s restarting efforts to train its AI systems using public Facebook and Instagram posts from its U.K. userbase. The company claims it has “incorporated regulatory feedback” into a…

Meta reignites plans to train AI using UK users’ public Facebook and Instagram posts

Following the moves of other tech giants, Spotify announced on Friday it’s introducing in-app parental controls in the form of “managed accounts” for listeners under the age of 13. The…

Spotify begins piloting parent-managed accounts for kids on family plans