a16z Podcast - Latin America: A Tech Powerhouse?
Episode Date: August 24, 2024Latin America is emerging as a tech powerhouse, but it's not a one-size-fits-all market. In this episode, we explore why what works in Argentina won’t necessarily fly in Brazil or Mexico, and how c...ompanies are adapting to these unique regional dynamics. Join Dileep Thazhmon, Cofounder and CEO of Jeeves; Santiago Suarez, Cofounder and CEO of Addi; Gabriel Vasquez, a16z investment partner; and Angela Strange, a16z General Partner, as they discuss the future of fintech in LatAm and the unique approach required to succeed in this diverse market.Whether you're interested in the nuances of product development, the complexities of scaling across diverse markets, or the future of fintech in Latin America, this episode offers perspectives from industry leaders deeply invested in the region's tech ecosystem who believe the next big tech giants might just come from Latin America.Resources: Find Dileep on Twitter: https://x.com/thazhmonFind Santiago on Twitter: https://x.com/santiasuaFind Gabriel on Twitter: https://x.com/gevs94Find Angela on Twitter: https://x.com/astrangeStay Updated: Let us know what you think: https://ratethispodcast.com/a16zFind a16z on Twitter: https://twitter.com/a16zFind a16z on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/a16zSubscribe on your favorite podcast app: https://a16z.simplecast.com/Follow our host: https://twitter.com/stephsmithioPlease note that the content here is for informational purposes only; should NOT be taken as legal, business, tax, or investment advice or be used to evaluate any investment or security; and is not directed at any investors or potential investors in any a16z fund. a16z and its affiliates may maintain investments in the companies discussed. For more details please see a16z.com/disclosures.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
There was 80% smartphone penetration, and I think about 20% credit card penetration.
What works in Argentina doesn't work in Brazil, doesn't work in Colombia, doesn't work in Mexico.
Today, companies go global increasingly fast from day one, but banking is still country and currency specific.
We're going to see the most valuable companies in the region being technology companies.
There's no way to build in Brazil unless you're in Brazil.
It requires a totally different mindset when it comes to product development.
Hello, everyone. Welcome back to the A16Z podcast. Now, if you've been listening over the last few weeks, hopefully you followed our Olympic series. So far, you've learned how Olympian Ellie Reisman has traversed the transition from gymnast to investor, but also, you've explored how few technologies actually move the needle in athletics. And also, we've dissected the forces behind the ongoing competition for talent across both France and the UK. Now, if you've missed those episodes, of course, be sure to go back and give them a listen. But today, we cap off the
the series by turning our attention to Latin America. We'll explore why the region has long been
overlooked despite a highly proficient, technical savvy, internet-penetrated population,
plus the role regulation has played as a tailwind, the nuances of recruiting in the region,
and much more. Our guests today are all investing in Latin America in their own way.
First up, Delete Thasmon, founder and CEO of Jeeves, a financial platform for global startups,
which operates in over 20 countries, which has recently expanded its own.
presence in Latin America. Next, we have Santiago Suarez, the co-founder and CEO of Adi,
a Colombian buy-now-pay-later fintech with over 2 million clients. We also have Gabriel Vasquez,
investment partner at A16Z, where he's focused on enterprise and fintech investments, of course,
in Latin America. And this conversation was moderated by A16C general partner,
Angela Strange, who, of course, has also long invested in the region. All right, let's kick
things off with Santiago, or Santi, who reflects on the opportunity that drove him back to
Colombia, where he's originally from, after years of working in financial services in the United
States. As a reminder, the content here is for informational purposes only, should not be taken
as legal, business, tax, or investment advice, or be used to evaluate any investment or security,
and is not directed at any investors or potential investors in any A16C fund. Please note that A16D
and its affiliates may also maintain investments in the companies discussed in this podcast.
For more details, including a link to our investments, please see A16C.com slash disposures.
There's a sense of duty. You know, I'm Colombian, and I've had the opportunity to see many
incredible things in the U.S. well-run companies, J.P. Morgan, McKinsey, some fun startup experiences.
So there was a little bit of being able to go.
back home and contribute to the local ecosystem that I think inspired me. And then the other thing
you realize is that Latin America is not China, so I'm not going to be sitting here, be like,
oh, it's the new China. But it was so overlooked. You had tens of millions of people in a single
country. And everyone just thought it was kind of flyover country for technology development.
And then also realizing that you had a English proficient, technically sophisticated population,
both in the consumer side but also frankly
on the call it supply of talent side
that then let me say
that I should probably move back
and see what we could make happen.
And in hindsight, it's always easy to see
like, oh, we had a master plan.
There was a vague plan, I wouldn't call it a master plan.
But enough of an intuition that there was a big thing going.
That's what I needed to get myself on a plane
and move back to Colombia.
Yeah, I think one of the stats
that really struck me back when you started Adi
was there was 80% smartphone penetration, I think about 20% credit card penetration.
So just a real opportunity to bring what is fundamental access to being able to run small businesses
to run commerce to the country.
So Dilip, you approached Latin America from a different perspective.
Like Jeev was started right off the bat with a very global ambition.
But then Latam quickly became one of your biggest markets.
And I think interesting on the Jeeves website, it says Latin America is entering the golden age
for tech. Sure. So we're basically building a global business bank. And the idea is that today
companies go globally increasingly fast from day one, but banking is still country and currency
specific. So we provide corporate cards, payments, deposits, et cetera, for business banking
accounts. So when we look at a country or region to start in, there's usually about two or
three things we look at. One, is it a region that's opening up to Pintech? I think one of the
things that's most exciting about Latin America was that there's a regulatory push to be more
open towards fintech. I mean, you look at picks in Brazil. It's just amazing what's been done
in about three, four years. And so that's a pretty good indicator that you can build what I call
banking 2.0 or 3.0 on top of what's already in market. So that's the first one. The second one,
which I keep saying company like Jeeves couldn't have been built really five, six years ago
because there was infrastructure components like open banking that wasn't around five, six years
ago. And again, if you look at Latam, if you look at Mexico, you look at Brazil, that's at a level
that's actually more sophisticated than a lot of other countries, including some parts of the U.S.
And so that was very exciting. And then the third one, which was very, very obvious, was where's
the flow of capital going. And that also correlated with Latam. And so for us, our first
launch market was Mexico. Till today, it's our biggest market. And it's also where we test any product
that we launched. And so it made it very, very simple for us that Brazil would follow Mexico,
but Mexico was the origination point.
And the gap, I think going back to what Sontium was talking about, was very, very clear.
You'd seen a version of what we're building in the U.S.
It hadn't really scale internationally.
And so we looked at this from a perspective of if you were building a global business bank,
what are the regions you touch?
Latam was always going to be the core of where that would sit.
And then two, does it have the infrastructure that we need to be successful, which it does.
That's a good TEP for talking about the region overall.
So, Gabe, we've been investing in Latam for.
for probably more than five years now,
and I think a lot of investors actually
have gotten excited about Latam.
So the secret is out.
I think one of the arguments in the early days was,
well, there's lots of opportunities
to invest in companies closer to us,
which obviously we do.
What drove the interest in the region back
when it was a little bit left obvious?
Super excited to talk about Latam,
something that I'm incredibly passionate about.
So to your point,
I think this is a question that companies like Nouve and got a lot
when people were initially analyzing the opportunity,
especially at the early stages.
Nuvenk is now a 55 billion market cap public company.
And when you think about the winners in the region,
you also have other players like Mercado Lieber that came before,
but as of last week,
actually became the most valuable company in Latin America,
finally surpassing Petrobras.
And I think that that's an statement of the opportunity in Latin America
that eventually we're going to see the most valuable companies in the region
being technology companies.
We have examples of successful companies,
like Stone, XP, the local, D-TECs that all of them have IPO and are in the public markets right now.
And that leads to the second point that is actually quite exciting,
which is you have all this talent kind of being nurturer that had experience
that operating a successful technology companies in the region and now want to build their second or third company.
And I'll say the last point is there's a lot of opportunities when it comes to building in Latin America
that is slightly different from countries like the United States
where in Latin America there's opportunity to build super apps.
The example that I usually like to use for this
is a company called Paxaguro based out of Brazil.
This company actually is a public company
that started as a merchant-acquired for micro-merchants in Brazil.
Then they realized that a lot of the customers that they serve,
they didn't have bank accounts.
So they created a bank that served these micro-merchants.
Then they realized that a lot of the consumers
that went and buy would product.
from these micro merchants didn't want it to transact online, so they built a marketplace
on top of it.
And they realized that these consumers also didn't have a bank account.
So they eventually developed like a consumer bank.
This company basically created four different companies within one.
And I think that that speaks of the opportunity of Latin America.
We've seen companies like RAPI launching a bank or companies like NuVang now that have actually
launched a marketplace as well.
Let's stick on the talent point for a bit, which I think is the opportunity and challenge
in every single market.
You've built a world-class talent team based in Colombia,
but you've also recruited global employees.
What have been the things that have been advantageous have been in Colombia
and what have been maybe some of the challenges?
Things that are advantageous of being Colombia as a Colombian,
you get to know the talent a little bit better.
So you have that edge that you wouldn't have otherwise.
It's a small country, certainly compared to Mexico or Brazil,
so it also allows you to plug into the deep talent pools very quickly.
And probably the most obvious one is you're an employer,
of choice. So we offer equity to every single one of our colleagues from the call center
operators to starting sales folks all the way up to senior folks that really allows you to
get like your pick of the litter where it comes to talents. The challenging part is you don't
have any executive experience. And at some point you need to balance this. So what has worked for
us is kind of get the raw material here because you have very talented people and then
sprinkle it with extremely competent leadership.
And by the way, some of these local folks eventually become leaders.
We're seeing some of them actually be transformational leaders at our company.
But then that's because you pair them with product leaders with experience at a firm,
advise, capital one.
So for us, that has been the recipe for success.
And I think you have to be creative when you're in Latin America.
So, for example, or a remote company in large parts so we can attract these key folks in key positions.
but that has worked really well.
Get the raw talent in which there's a lot
and then pair them with the right
season leadership to see the magic happen.
Would you say a little to Gabe's point
five years ago, maybe the scaled Latam
companies didn't have as many seasons execs,
but now those seasons executives
are starting to come out of
some of the large multi-million dollar exits in Latin America
so you don't necessarily have to go to the U.S.
I think so, though I would say,
that's still very much in the early beginnings, early beginnings in part because I think it's a weird
ecosystem. Mercado lever is an almost 30-year-old company. So we have some great ex-Melly folks,
but when they join Melly, Melly was a 20-year-old company. And then it's just interesting because
I think some of the reference cases of Latham, Mali, New, and Rappi, each has a very distinct way
in which they build the culture. So you need to be very mindful.
of that because you get a lot more, let's say, executive variety than in the U.S.
I think if you went to a B2B SaaS company in the U.S. and you said, I want a VP of product
marketing. Seriously, you're going to get the same person. I know exactly what you're getting
and you know exactly what you're not getting. I think if you get the VP of product marketing
at Melli, at Rappi, and at NU, you're going to get three very different cats, none of whom
may be the person you're looking for because they're very good syncretic culture. So I think you just have
to be very aware of that, that you don't yet have this kind of standard, in part because the
region is so varied, right? So what works in Argentina doesn't work in Brazil, doesn't work,
Delaware doesn't work in Mexico. Makes a ton of sense. So Deleap, maybe if you're built in
Colombia, you've built primarily in Mexico, Brazil, and obviously other global regions.
Maybe talk about the experience of scaling up in two countries that are in the same continent,
but very different beyond that. Yeah. So the way our model works is we break up the functions
depending on what touches the customer directly.
And so usually the first hire in any region is a general manager,
and they tend to be fully local.
I think there's no way to build in Brazil unless you're in Brazil.
There's no way to really build in Colombia or Mexico unless you're in Colombia and Mexican.
So that model has worked fairly well so far where anything that's customer facing is fully local,
and then we build the product, engineering, finance, etc., centrally.
What's changing now is as we get more into scale,
we're actually starting to move some of the product components also locally.
And that is a little bit different from how it was in the beginning.
And by the way, we learned this also the hard way where you can sell,
but then if you need to collect and you call them from Texas or Brazil,
they're like, yeah, I'm not picking up your phone call.
You have to be local.
You have to be on the ground.
You have to be collecting there as well.
So anything touching the customer has to be fully local to that region.
What we're learning now, and we've been in market now for about three years,
is that even the product side at scale has very specific nuances that need local knowledge.
And I think to the point Gabe was making, now what's interesting is you have folks that have seen what good looks like.
They've been at New, they've been at Mercado.
They know a version of what this looks like.
That's been really, really useful that we didn't have, honestly, even five, six years ago where you can hire someone that's built a product.
Now, leadership, I think, I kind of agree, like, you have to find the right person for the right culture fit.
and we have had some success.
We've had some areas we're still working through.
But you can find what I call
kind of intermediate managers
that are, I think, fairly consistent
for the region.
They know what payments looks like.
They've seen it at scale.
They've seen it in the public Latime company.
And that's been very, very helpful for us.
You operate in three, four, five maybe languages.
How do you manage to get smooth communication across the country?
Do you hire for necessarily speaking more than one
or using AI translation tools?
Yeah.
It's a good question.
because it really affects culture.
And so one of the things that we try to do
is we have people that obviously locally
are fully fluent in the local language,
but you have to be able to communicate in English as well
because you do have counterparts in the UK.
You do have counterparts in the U.S. in Canada, etc.
But everything that we do in region tends to be local.
And it even took us about two years
just to get the localized experience on the product.
Sandy, how are you balancing Spanish and English
and recruiting employees across country
who are very talented?
but might not speak English, which then restrains the recruiting pool for sure.
We've always been extremely religious about the English-speaking requirement.
We are now testing a couple of instances on relaxing it and using AI to figure this out.
I agree with you. I agree with the leap. The biggest challenge here is culture.
But we're actually even erring on the other side. At this point, we've actually gone
almost all native, so now you need CEO approval to hire anyone that's not in Colombia.
We're a single country focus, you know, we were going to go deep here.
And what we realized is that there are certain positions for which the expertise outweighs the local knowledge, most famous the credit.
But pretty much everywhere else, you want the person around, you want them using your product on any given day, you want them getting rejected, you want their app crashing, you want all of these things that are extremely difficult to achieve if you're not on the ground.
And also, we now serve a broader swat of the Colombian population, including a bunch of people who don't speak English.
So culturally, even just having people who speak English at your company, they may as well be from a different country, right?
We just have a bunch of people out in the Presidio in San Francisco building product for the entire United States with no real sense of what's happening in choose your favorite Midwestern state.
So that's also a lesson we have recently learned.
Watch out for those Presidio product managers. Agreed. All right. I want to.
Zoom out a little bit. You guys are clearly building in financial services. I think that there is a
specific opportunity for financial services in the region. And we even wrote a post together entitled
for Brazil, which was that regulation is a tailwind. There are two words that you never hear in the
same sentence in general, but in Latin America, you sort of do. So maybe we gave outline what's going
on in the region there that creates a particularly interesting opportunity. Yes. So I think that
There's three main areas.
The first one, I think, is less specific to the region, but more specific that fintech is a
deco-local business.
So there's a lot of local regulation that plays an important role when it comes to operating
different countries.
There's domestic infrastructure that when you're thinking about building a business in
Brazil or Mexico, you kind of have to rely on.
And there's also cultural nuances.
Brazil completely different from the rest of Latin America and even Mexico is completely
different from South America, even though all the countries speak Spanish, except for Brazil.
Brazil has actually been quite advanced.
The central bank has done a great job, basically disrupting the duopoly between the merchant
acquires that enable players like Nuvang to come in and take advantage of that, and then
the rise of payment acquires like Stone, and then they created open finance, and from there,
they started the instant payment solution that now is the main payment method in Brazil,
complex. One of the aspects is actually quite exciting as well is the smartphone penetration is
quite high in the region. So the numbers vary between 75 and 80%. But when you look at the credit
car penetration or even the bank population in countries like Mexico, it goes around 50%, which is
quite low when you compare it to countries like Brazil where it's around 85%. So there's a lot of
opportunities still. They basically can have a bank in their pocket. And when it comes to the size of the
market, Latin America is, you know, there's 650 million people living in the region.
The GDP per capita is higher, especially when you compare to other emerging markets like India.
So I think that those are the three main reasons why Latin America has become such an
important hub for fintech innovation.
So great from a thesis point of view.
We have two people that are actually going through it, starting maybe with you, Sonsi,
who've recently spent a lot of time with the Colombian banking regulators, is the practicality,
the same as investors might perceive and what advice might you have to other entrepreneurs in the
region? I would say, no, the practicality is not always the same thing as the investors might see
for many reasons, obviously, and not least of which, this is still an emerging market. And
I think when you do venture investing, you're taking two types of risk. You're taking venture
risk and you're taking emerging markets risk. But that being said, I think the situation
Columbia is extremely pragmatic, right? You've got a regulator who's issued licenses. You've got a
regulator who's pushing for financial inclusion. You've got a central bank that's driving instantaneous
payments adoption following very much the playbook of Brazil. So if you're sitting here now,
we're just 10 years ago, I mean, when we started, I think they hadn't issued a single de novo
banking license in God knows, like a decade. And now they issued three or four a year. Similarly with the
payment side, right? Like, the payment system, Columbia is still a bit of a mess, but it's much
a lot of a mess than it was, and we're on track-to-launch index in the next 18 months or so.
So you do see a very pragmatic regulator, and honestly, in that case, very differentiated from
the U.S. event, which is a bit more of a unknown, unknown, right? You just don't know what
regulator in the agenda is. You obviously have the Fed, you have the FDC, the CFPB, the SEC, and you
can't quite figure out what the boundaries are. What I can tell about a lot of time,
it's not like in the U.S. where the boundaries are X, but then you've got to like interpret
the tea leaves on what actually X means. Here it's pretty well defined. So if you have the patience
for dealing with the emerging markets environment, you have the patience of dealing with the natural
challenges that come from being outside the U.S. It can be a very attractive hunting ground and a very
attractive place to build a company. I think just touching on this point, actually one of our big
hires last year was getting the chief compliance officer for Marquetta, it's a public company,
And a big reason is exactly this, which is as we scaled from a smaller company moving really
fast to a bigger company, I think the biggest thing that we started noticing was that we were
much more on the radar for folks locally.
And so Brazil so far, it's smaller for us as an operation compared to Mexico.
With Mexico, we have invested quite substantially even from a license perspective, but also
from, let's call it, light lobbying in terms of companies that we work with, such as external
law firms, right? And so it's come back once or twice where we've had, let's just call it,
issues that we had to work through in Mexico. And the one learning for me is as we scale and as we
get bigger, whenever you think you need to do it, you probably should have done it six months
before that. I think what we're both hitting on is it's still an onerous regulatory process.
But unlike in the U.S. and other regions is at least a relatively clear onerous regulatory
process such that if you put together a very strong team, like you still need to recruit
A plus compliance people. They still need to do a lot of work to get it together. But the
governments do seem much more motivated to create competition in their regions. And in particular,
I think one of the stats often quoted is, you know, banks in Brazil, it's a little bit different
with New Bank, but the banks in Brazil, Mexico, Columbia serve the top 20% of the population and
the rest are very starved for good financial services, and one of the ways to solve that
is to allow de novo licenses for new companies to enter the regions and provide more innovative
products.
They want to try to work with new entrants, whereas in the U.S. it isn't always like that.
And I'm always surprised in a good way in terms of the companies that we get to serve in Mexico,
Brazil, et cetera.
And it goes back to the same point, which is most of the options are older banks.
When we were in Brazil, we had a customer that was coming close to me like, hey, the fact that we have virtual cards, this is great.
And for us, that's almost table stakes.
We don't even sell that because we expect that to be just an offering in market.
And so that's what I keep getting reminded about, which is it's still a huge monopoly.
And I think regulators do see that in a way that they don't in the U.S.
Sonti, you touched on this.
I think one of the advantages of building in Colombia is you do become the employer of choice.
There's not 50 adi competitors that employees are choosing between.
but then you do run into different types of challenges.
What's pressing one is the mental model of most investors around TAM
remains very much what it should be for about 95% of companies.
I think when you combine retail and financial services,
the way you think about TAM is probably a little bit different.
I mean, I will tell you, even I have learned
if I look at the performance of our company today
versus what we expect it out of the Colombian market.
And I don't think anyone would have thought we'd be here within five years, right?
So I would say the first thing is your understanding of TAM, when you think about Colombia, it's just very difficult.
And the other piece is your product development approach has to be very different because what you lose by not being in the U.S. or in Brazil, you gain by being able to go extremely deep, extremely quickly.
But it requires a totally different mindset when it comes to product development.
And by the way, paradoxically, the aspirations of choice are not in the U.S. or not in the U.S. or not any.
the UK, but are in Central Asia, in Turkey, these are the places where people have also figured
out small country, deep tam equals massive successful outcomes. So when people ask us, what do you
get inspired about? We always start with Cassidy, a $30 billion public company that is single
country focused in Kazakhstan, GDP, half of Colombia's. So those are some of the things that
you've got to start thinking about and also recognize that even the successful models,
we're built in a different paradigm.
So Rappi was built at zero interest rates, paradigm,
new was built, that almost 12-year-old company
built and raised in a different world.
So just knowing all of these things as a founder
are important period about what Gio,
but certainly when your geography is not Brazil, not Mexico, so to speak.
Yeah, no, and hitting on the point that Gabe made also
is that the products can encompass so many more,
almost many companies that the results end up being
a lot bigger than you might think if you just look to Tam.
Well, said.
I think one of the powers of Jeeves that you've discovered is the strong need for Latin American
companies to move money, both from the U.S., into Latin America, into other corridors
that might be a little bit less obvious.
But along with that comes with, I think, more than just one country regional challenges,
but multi-country regional challenges.
So one of the things that's interesting is everything.
thing we do is B2B, and there's obviously consumer components, and I would say most fintech
tend to focus on the consumer side, which is massive. But B2B has very different problems that are also
very unique to how businesses move money and spend. And so just as an example, we launched
the ability to move money out of Mexico, Colombia, Brazil. One of the hardest things is if you move
money out of Colombia, you're usually going to get flagged. And you're not moving $50 or $100,000,
you're moving $50,000 or $100,000. And so part of where we invest in is how do you
have the ability to move that in an efficient way
so that we can actually compete with local offerings in the region.
And so it's one of those things where you have to invest a lot in compliance.
You have to invest a lot in operational efficiencies,
but it is fairly untapped because it's so, so hard.
I keep saying this, but for me, the difficulty is the defensibility.
It's the fact that it is this hard.
It's the fact that moving money, especially for B2B,
is very complex to do, that gives an opportunity to us to kind of succeed in the market.
But it takes a lot of work.
And what I'm coming back to on the payment side
is how to we layer this on top of credit,
which is our core offering,
so that the platform becomes much more sticky.
And one of the things we've started to see
is that retention is actually a lot higher
if a customer uses us both for cards,
which I call kind of like the candy, right?
It's credit. We give you the money.
Everybody wants that in some sense.
But then moving to payments, which is your money,
and you're trusting us to move your money,
which is a very different kind of go-to-market sales cycle.
But if you can combine the two, kind of like given like a bill.com where you have divi, which is the spend
magnetin side and then you have bill, which is the payment side, it becomes a very, very powerful product.
And so we're still, I'd say, in early innings on the payment side, very, very different set of problems than corporate credit.
But combining those two to me provides much more value for the companies that we work for, especially when you come in it from a B2B angle, which is very different from consumer.
Yeah, I think one of the things that you're both hitting on versus in the U.S., if you're going to build many funny enough
services products or embed many financial services products. There's all of these different now very
modern companies that provide even credit as a service, KYC as a service, lots of data fraud as a
service. When you go down to Latam, those for the most part don't yet exist. And so you end up
having to build a lot of that yourself, which is, I would say, a disadvantage at the start because it
takes more time, but then ends up being a significant source of defensibility. And I think one quickly to point
this out is when we started, one of the hardest things was how do you actually ship
cards? Because people forget the fact that cards actually have to be delivered to different
countries, right? And most card operators just deliver in that single country. And so in the
US, that's fine. It's a massive single geo with a single currency. You can do that fairly
easily. But when you move to Latam and you're like, I need to deliver cards, the provider
of the cards don't ship those cards. And so we had to go figure out like an operational way to
make that easy and like bolt that on. But there wasn't a provider we could just go to and be like,
okay, can you ship this for us to six countries?
All right, I want to bring this back around
and looking forward to the future.
What are you excited about going forward
and what might other investors think about
that haven't yet invested in the region?
One of the verticals actually has been quite exciting
in Latin America has been e-commerce.
You've seen players like Mercow-Liberg come in,
rapi, eye foot in Brazil,
and even Calac in Mexico,
which is the largest private company now.
So I expect that we'll continue
to see a lot of these companies tackling the e-commerce opportunity as the majority of these people
continue to come online, and especially as the majority of the payments go online and it becomes
easier to transact. But there's a specific segment too that I think gets, let's notice in the region,
which is just the SaaS companies. So in Brazil, you have companies like Totus, which is a large
public company going after the European space, but also you have companies like Out Zero that
actually started in Argentina and went global.
We've met a bunch of companies that, starting Latam, they signed the largest enterprise
companies in Latin America.
They developed product really, really fast for them.
And then they're also very ambitious.
And then they're like, okay, we want to expand outside of the region because our customer
set is probably not as big in the region.
So we're starting to see, we invested in this company called UNU, which is a payment
registration company.
It started in Latin America, specifically Colombia.
They expanded to the region very quickly, and now they have operations in Europe and Southeast Asia.
So I think that we will continue to see a lot of that.
I think the opportunities said when you come to the region are quite different.
So what gets developed in Brazil, you know, an ecosystem that the main payment method is PICS,
and 85% of the population is banked.
And you have regulation that is pro-innovation.
It's going to create different opportunities that's Mexico, for example,
where half of the population still doesn't have a bank.
bank account. The main payment method is cash and regulation has not been a catalyst for innovation.
So it will be quite exciting to see how this innovation emerges per country. But I think with
AI, we're starting to see a bunch of founders in the space that are taking advantage of these
new tools to make their operations either more efficient or lever that to have a better go-to-market
motion or actually increase even the willingness to pay for software, which I think has been
one of the main challenges historically in the region.
What do you think Silicon Valley could learn from Latam?
And what makes you particularly excited about your regions in the next five, ten years?
One is resiliency, right?
You and I have a few mutual friends who have been operating in the region for a long time.
And there are nothing if not resilient and paranoid.
So that resilience and paranoia is something I think comes in handy,
especially in the lean years of Silicon Valley, right?
So you can always do so much more with so much less.
And I think that hustle and that resiliency is something if I count on.
And then what gets me excited, I mean, honestly, it goes back to why I moved back here, right?
There's just a lot of work to be done.
And I like what Gabe said, which is that this idea of whatever's happening in AI
and whatever's happening in tooling and ways of company building can be quite
transformational for Latin America because in a place which doesn't have a lot of capital.
And let's be honest, capital has come back to a lot of time, but it's not what it used to be.
Your ability to leverage AI, leverage no code tools is awesome.
You could build companies in different ways than you could even when we built a company.
You know, there were a lot of things we had to invest up front that today I wouldn't have to do if I were building the company from scratch because you can use AI, you can use no code.
You can use some companies in the stack, some of these SaaS vendors.
So I get excited about that.
I get excited about the fact that the jobs nowhere near done.
and the tooling is only getting better.
I think two things.
So one, what I really enjoy in some sense
is the ability to get things done
tends to have this spirit
of just moving anything that needs to be moved
to get to an outcome.
And the second thing is the impact
in some sense that we have, even as Jeeves,
we would get companies that reach out to us
and were like, look, before Jeeves came along,
we weren't able to expand.
And these are like companies
that do can manufacturing.
It's not necessarily all sexy tech companies.
So its impact is different.
in a way because there tends to be a monopoly on banking there
and actually providing credit and banking services
touches folks in a way that I don't see the same impact in the U.S.
I think those two things for me is very, very exciting
and the potential to Santi's point is just getting started.
All right, that's all for our Olympic series.
Remember, if you missed some of our episodes on the UK or France
or the technology behind the Olympics,
or even our episode with Olympian Allie,
make sure to go give those a listen. But if you did like any part of the series, let us know
at rate thispodcast.com slash a 16c. Or you can drop us a line at podpitches at a16c.com.
All right. We'll catch you next time.