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SoftBank-backed Metropolis raises $1,6 billion to expand beyond AI parking lots

Metropolis Technologies has raised $1.6 Billion in new capital for its expansion into other sectors, such as retail, gas stations and restaurants.

This funding round includes a $500,000,000 Series D equity round, led by LionTree. The company was valued at $5 billion. SoftBank Vision Fund and Vista Equity Partners were also involved in the round.

Los Angeles-based company secured a syndicated $1.1 billion term loan led J.P. Morgan and backed by cashflow from its parking operations.

In an interview, Chief Executive Alex Israel stated that the new capital would be used to hire and accelerate technical talent, speed up product development and deploy recognition and payment automation technology in new verticals such as drive-through restaurants and gas stations.

Israel stated that the goal was to create a "Recognition Economy", whereby a customer’s presence or identity is sufficient to trigger a purchase, thus saving time.

Metropolis, founded in 2017, has grown rapidly through acquisitions and integration of its technology. This includes the $1.5 billion buyout of parking services provider SP+ by 2024.

It acquired Oosto, a biometrics firm and vision analytics company backed by SoftBank for $125 million.

Metropolis operates more than 4,200 parking lots in 40 countries. The company claims to be profitable and processes $5 billion worth of transactions annually from its 50 million customers.

Metropolis uses license plate readers and cameras to identify cars whose owners are enrolled in its system. This allows them to enter or exit parking lots with no need to stop and pay.

The company plans to charge businesses for software subscriptions and sell the same technology in the hospitality sector to automate check-ins and payments.

Other retail automation initiatives have been challenged. Amazon, for example, has reduced its "Just Walk Out", checkout-free system, in its Fresh supermarkets, citing costs and complexity. However, it continues to licence the technology to other third parties.

(source: Reuters)