Trust Science Named Top 30 of The Americas’ Fastest Growing Companies 2023 by The Financial Times and Statista

Palo Alto, CA – March 28, 2023 – Trust Science, an AI-powered service to find great borrowers for ethical lenders, proudly announces that it is one of the fastest growing companies in the 20 countries of the entire Western hemisphere, as assessed by The Financial Times and Statista. Trust Science ranked 29th overall among all companies (all sectors, sizes, locations) and 4th among companies in the FinTech, Financial Services and Insurance sector.

“This award belongs to my team and to our innovative, highly-regulated lender customers,” said Evan Chrapko, CEO of Trust Science. “Together, we are growing extremely quickly by finding great borrowers and then reducing the risk of lending money to these deserving ‘Invisible Prime™’ and ‘Hidden Prime™’ people who otherwise get ignored or marginalized by the industry’s old and weak methods of assessing creditworthiness.”

The Americas’ Fastest Growing Companies 2023 ranking lists the top 500 companies in the Americas (North, Central, and South America) that have achieved the highest compound annual growth in revenues between 2018 and 2021. The data was collected via desk research in official sources like publicly available earning presentations, investor relations, websites, and annual reports. Over 7,000 companies were examined closely out of tens of millions of active companies.

This accolade reinforces Trust Science’s standing as a company that has high growth potential. This recognition validates Trust Science’s strategy to develop its proprietary, legally compliant Explainable AI (xAI) to help lenders make accurate consumer credit decisions. Trust Science’s banks and consumer finance customers mitigate risks, automate their lending processes, and drive safe growth.

“This award belongs to my team and to our innovative, highly-regulated lender customers,” said Evan Chrapko, CEO of Trust Science. “Together, we are growing extremely quickly by finding great borrowers and then reducing the risk of lending money to these deserving ‘Invisible Prime’ and ‘Hidden Prime’ people who otherwise get ignored or marginalized by the industry’s old and weak methods of assessing creditworthiness.”