Parker, a well-funded startup offering corporate credit cards and banking services for e-commerce businesses, has filed for bankruptcy and is widely reported to have shut down.
The startup was part of Y Combinatorโs winter 2019 cohort, and its Series A was led by Valar Ventures.
Parker came out of stealth in 2023, touting a corporate credit that it said was designed for use by e-commerce companies. At the time, co-founder and CEO Yacine Sibous said the startupโs โsecret sauceโ was an underwriting process that could properly assess e-commerce cash flows.
โWe imagined building better financial products for e-commerce founders with the mission of increasing the number of financially independent people,โ Sibous told TechCrunch.
Parkerโs website is still up and doesnโt mention any shutdown. Instead, a banner at the top boasts that the company has raised more than $200 million in total funding, including a $125 million lending arrangement.
However, multiple social media posts state that Parkerโs credit card partner Patriot Bank sent a message to customers this week confirming the shutdown. Parkerโs competitors seemed to jump on the news with their own posts seeking to lure over the startupโs former customers.
And Parkerโs troubles seem to be confirmed in its May 7 filing for Chapter 7 bankruptcy protection. The filing states that the company has between $50 million and $100 million in assets, with liabilities in the same range. It also states that Parker has between 100 and 199 creditors.
Fintech consultant Jason Mikula recently claimed that Parker had been in negotiations for a potential acquisition, with the failure of those talks ultimately leading to the startupโs abrupt shutdown. Mirkula added that this โhas left small business customers in a tough spotโ and also raised โquestions about [banking partner] Piermontโs and Patriotโs oversight of the program.โ
Parker did not immediately respond to an email from TechCrunch.
The companyโs CEO Sibous has not explicitly acknowledged the shutdown or bankruptcy on LinkedIn, and in a recent post, he repeated the $200 million funding figure, adding that the company had reached $65 million in revenue. But he also said that if he started over, heโd do some things differently, such as: โAvoid over-hiring, reactive decisions, and doomsayers.โ