Coyote Software, a UK-based software provider powering many of the largest Commercial Real Estate (CRE) firms in the UK and Europe, has been bought by Menlo Park, California-based, InvestorFlow.

Coyote acquired by InvestorFlow

Coyote Acquired By Investorflow

CEO and co-founder Oli Farago, said: ‘We embarked on this journey over a decade ago to transform the way real estate investment firms source opportunities, manage deals and maximize asset performance.’

‘Alongside the broader InvestorFlow team, we can extend our capabilities into fundraising and investor relations. This will provide deeper and more granular reporting for clients that demand real-time transparency and insights as we expand this capability to new and emerging private asset types.’

InvestorFlow is a cloud-based platform for alternative investment firms. The privately-owned company has financial backing from Greenwich, Connecticut private equity firm, Ambina Partners, which has been helping the US firm make acquisitions. In 2022, Ambina Partners made a $30 mln Series A investment into InvestorFlow to accelerate growth at the same timr as InvestorFlow merged with Cloud Theory Inc.

On its deal to buy Coyote, InvestorFlow said it would collaborate across all fundraising, transaction, and asset management stakeholders and provide more ‘granular reporting’ to investors within the commercial real estate (CRE) ecosystem on a single platform.

Coyote has over 80,000 assets on its platform and a roster of firms including Nuveen, Legal & General Investment Management (LGIM), and Royal London Asset Management.

‘Coyote was designed and built by real estate professionals,’ said Todd Glasson, CEO and founder of InvestorFlow. ‘The addition of Coyote will expand InvestorFlow’s capabilities to drive collaboration among investment, asset, and property managers at scale, while yielding faster and deeper insights into performance and risk for LPs. This transaction immediately expands our footprint in EMEA and will accelerate our continued growth across all alternative asset classes globally.’