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AI Startup DualEntry Raises $90 Million to Challenge ERP Giants

New York-based AI startup DualEntry has raised $90 million in a Series A funding round led by Lightspeed Venture Partners and Khosla Ventures, aiming to shake up the entrenched enterprise resource planning (ERP) software market long ruled by heavyweights such as Oracle NetSuite, Sage, and Acumatica.

GV (Google Ventures) also joined the round, valuing the year-old company at $415 million — a sign of investors’ growing appetite for AI-driven enterprise tools that streamline operations and eliminate long-standing inefficiencies in business management systems.

REVOLUTIONIZING ERP MIGRATIONS

DualEntry’s main product is an AI-native ERP platform designed to automate financial workflows and drastically reduce the time and cost of system migrations. Its flagship capability, called “NextDay Migration,” can reportedly transfer a company’s historical financial data from legacy systems to DualEntry’s platform within 24 hours, compared to the months-long implementations typical in traditional ERP setups.

The company’s strategy targets mid-sized businesses — firms that have outgrown entry-level tools like QuickBooks but lack the resources or appetite for expensive, complex ERP overhauls.

“The process of moving to a traditional ERP can be clunky, expensive, and painful,” said CEO Santiago Nestares, who founded DualEntry after struggling with ERP migration in his previous company. “We built a platform that gets businesses live in 24 hours.”

RAPID GROWTH AND INVESTOR CONFIDENCE

Since its launch, DualEntry has attracted a diverse customer base — from startups to publicly listed companies — and plans to use the new funding to expand its 40-person team, accelerate product development, and scale internationally.

Lightspeed partner Ravi Mhatre said DualEntry’s approach replaces armies of consultants with automation:

“It takes an understanding of how complex ERP migration really is, and training AI to act as the data consultants that would normally handle the process. That drastically accelerates everything.”

A $500 BILLION MARKET RIPE FOR CHANGE

Analysts estimate the global ERP market is worth $500 billion, yet innovation has stagnated since the industry’s transition from on-premise to cloud systems. Many legacy providers still depend on third-party consultants charging by the hour, creating a slow and costly adoption cycle.

DualEntry’s model aims to disrupt that structure — not only by cutting costs but by enabling companies to deploy systems in days rather than quarters. With automation and AI at its core, investors say the startup is tapping into both the digital transformation wave and a looming talent shortage in accounting and financial operations.

If successful, DualEntry could redefine how businesses approach ERP — turning a process notorious for frustration and downtime into one measured in hours instead of months.

European AI Adopter Stocks Slide as Powerful New Models Spark Investor Caution

Shares of European companies investing heavily in artificial intelligence have faced a sharp selloff this week, as the emergence of more advanced AI models raises concerns about potential disruption across software, data analytics, and financial services sectors.

European software stocks, including Germany’s SAP (SAPG.DE) and France’s Dassault Systèmes (DAST.PA), fell sharply on Tuesday following a downgrade of U.S. rival Adobe (ADBE.O) by broker Melius Research. Since mid-July, shares in London Stock Exchange Group (LSEG.L), UK software firm Sage (SGE.L), and French IT consulting company Capgemini (CAPP.PA) have dropped 14.4%, 10.8%, and 12.3%, respectively.

These companies—often labeled AI adopters—have invested heavily in AI to enhance products and services, attracting investor interest amid a shortage of European AI suppliers. However, the release of more powerful AI models, such as OpenAI’s GPT-5 and Anthropic’s Claude for Financial Services, has prompted a reassessment of their long-term competitiveness. Kunal Kothari of Aviva Investors noted that each new AI iteration challenges the business models of data providers like LSEG.

While the broader European markets have posted modest gains—FTSE 100 up 2.5% and STOXX 600 up 0.6% since mid-July—high valuations have made AI adopter stocks particularly vulnerable. SAP trades at around 45 times earnings, compared with a STOXX 600 average of 17.

Investors are debating whether AI will “eat software,” as Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang famously predicted. Analysts caution that not all software companies are equally exposed. Firms with deeply embedded enterprise applications or proprietary data may retain a competitive edge. For example, UK credit data company Experian (EXPN.L) and Sage benefit from extensive integration into client workflows, making them less vulnerable to disruption.

Some experts view the selloff as a buying opportunity, noting that affected companies could leverage AI to boost earnings over time. However, market watchers warn that proving tangible returns from AI investments may be a race against the clock for major European software players.