roberts_dan_nayms
Dan Roberts, NAYMS
23 June 2021News

Nayms raises $6m as it prepares to launch digital token for its insurance market

Nayms, the insurtech that was one of the first companies to operate as part of the Bermuda Monetary Authority’s regulatory sandbox, has raised $6 million to help finance NAYM, its proprietary digital token.

Nayms uses smart insurance contracts to collateralise cryptocurrency risk with matching crypto-assets. It is designed to provide a bridge between capital and risk, in which capital matches risk or assets match liabilities, so there are no pricing errors.

Investment came from a number of existing investors, including XBTO, Maven11 and Coinbase Ventures, as well as new ones like Spartan Ventures, DFG, LD Capital, Cadenza, Woodstock, and Kin Insurance CEO, Sean Harper. In all more than 20 funds and angel investors are partaking in the NAYM token round, which comes after Nayms secured $2.1 million seed funding in January 2021.

The NAYM token is designed to enable participants on the Nayms Insurance Market to share in the growing value of the network. It will capture fees from contract placements, trading activity and growing collateral on the protocol and will align incentives across capital providers, underwriters, brokers and insureds, promoting healthy insurance placement and risk trading, Nayms said.

Nayms has been building its team in recent months, having hired David Verbeeten, the insurance lead at Consensys, as chief commercial officer, and Tyler Skelton, previously chief financial officer of crypto venture Bakkt Trust Company, as head of finance. Nayms now has a team of 12 people, and plans to make two more insurance hires in the coming months.

Nayms will also be announcing a launch programme with brokers and underwriters across the insurance market later in 2021. That will include an allocation of the initial supply of NAYM, which is expected in early 2022.

Dan Roberts, chief executive officer at Nayms, said the oversubscribed round had allowed the insurtech to be highly selective with who it brought into the project. “The additional expertise across capital markets, legal and compliance, token economics and community building will continue to help us support the growing insurance movement within the digital asset space,” he said.

Verbeeten said: “I appreciate the potential of blockchain for coordinating stakeholders over shared infrastructure, including marketplaces. It makes financial and technical sense to insure digital assets with digital assets.”

Tommy Quite of Flow Ventures, which participated in the funding, added: “Insurance is a severely underrepresented vertical within the crypto industry and, as one of the biggest markets, will be fundamental to the future of decentralised finance.”




More on this story

News
12 February 2021   As insurtech startup Nayms gears up to graduate from Bermuda’s regulatory sandbox, Bermuda:Re+ILS explores how far the company has come, its future plans and how the sandbox has helped it get to this point.

More on this story

News
12 February 2021   As insurtech startup Nayms gears up to graduate from Bermuda’s regulatory sandbox, Bermuda:Re+ILS explores how far the company has come, its future plans and how the sandbox has helped it get to this point.