CDPQ Leads $185 Million Funding into AppDirect

The fast-growing online subscription commerce platform will use the Canadian pension giant’s capital to expand overseas. 


An online subscription commerce platform has raised $185 million from pension fund Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec (CDPQ) and other investors. 

AppDirect, which has offices in San Francisco and Montreal, Quebec, among other locations, plans to use the funding to support hiring and additional acquisitions to power a global expansion, the firm said this week. In total, the recurring digital services company has raised about $465 million since its first funding round in 2015. 

“Businesses are facing unprecedented challenges. Many companies began digital selling practically overnight, but need assistance integrating new technologies and processes into their operations and making them work at scale for the long term,” said Daniel Saks, president and co-CEO at AppDirect. 

“Our mission at AppDirect has always been to make technology globally accessible, and we are rising to meet that calling at a time when it feels especially urgent,” he added.

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The Quebec pension fund has about $38 billion devoted to private equity, about 15% of its $253 billion total portfolio. Some 22% of its private equity assets are allocated to information technology (IT) and telecommunications. 

“AppDirect plays a key role in simplifying the digitalization of businesses through cloud services, and CDPQ’s investment will contribute to the acceleration of its growth plan,” said Thomas Birch, global managing director of venture capital and technology at CDPQ. 

The transition to online commerce has accelerated since the start of the pandemic. AppDirect is expanding its business as experts forecast that the global service subscription market will grow to more than $340 million in four years, about a 24% compound annualized growth rate, according to market research firm IMARC Group.  

AppDirect already counts cable company Comcast and human resources (HR) software firm ADP, among others, as clients. 

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International Fugitive, Disbarred Lawyer Charged in Cryptocurrency Scam

Randy Levine, a man of many aliases, had been on the lam for 15 years before getting caught in Austria.


The Southern District of New York has charged an international fugitive who had been on the run for 15 years, and his disbarred lawyer partner, with commodities fraud, wire fraud, and money laundering offenses related to a fraudulent Bitcoin offering.

The charges were levied against Randy Levine and Philip Reichenthal. According to the charges in the complaint, Levine allegedly persuaded investors to send millions of dollars to Reichenthal, who was a Florida-licensed attorney at the time, to fund the purchase of Bitcoin, purportedly to sell in large quantities to buyers. 

Reichenthal, who had claimed to be acting as an escrow agent for the transactions, sent a significant portion of the money to Levine before any Bitcoin was provided to investors. However, according to the complaint, neither one ever provided any Bitcoin to investors nor refunded their money.   

“The money was funneled, as alleged, to overseas bank accounts controlled by Levine,” William Sweeney Jr., assistant director-in-charge of the FBI’s New York field office, said in a statement. “While the charges brought today against Levine and Reichenthal are fairly detailed and laden with allegations of complex criminal activity, the truth is much more simple: They were con artists who finally got caught in the act.”

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Levine, who also went under the aliases Viktor Lapin, Andre Santiago Santos Galindo, Alexander Martinez Lavrov, and Hristo Danielov Marinov, fled the US in 2005 after learning that he was under investigation for passport fraud.  

In 2018, Levine was arrested in Guatemala with a Russian passport posing as Viktor Lapin, and this past June he was arrested in Austria with a Bulgarian passport containing the alias Alexander Koslov. Extradition proceedings are pending. Reichenthal was arrested last week in Homestead, Florida.

The charges against the men involve two fraudulent schemes, the first of which occurred in June and July of 2018. Levine allegedly convinced the principal of a purported cryptocurrency escrow firm to wire Reichenthal more than $3 million from an over-the-counter cryptocurrency broker to purchase Bitcoin.

The charges allege Levine falsely told the individual that he would sell thousands of Bitcoin, but never intended to.

After receiving the $3 million, Reichenthal wired more than $2 million to bank accounts in Guatemala held in the name of one of Levine’s aliases. Levine allegedly then lied to the investor for days about why the deal had not worked out, the status of the purported Bitcoin, and the location of the invested money, which was never returned.

In the second scheme, which ran from approximately February to May 2019, Levine persuaded a Florida resident involved in brokering Bitcoin transactions to cause investors to send Reichenthal more than $2 million of their money to fund the purchase of Bitcoin. Like the first alleged scam, Levine said he would sell Bitcoin but had no intention of doing so.

After receiving the funds from the investors, Reichenthal sent more than $1.9 million to bank accounts in Mexico controlled by Levine, and that money was then wired to a bank account in Russia held in the name of one of Levine’s aliases. After the investor sought the return of the funds, Levine sent an electronic message threatening to drag the investor into Levine’s legal problems in Guatemala, and to falsely tell US authorities the investor was involved in money laundering.

Reichenthal used bank accounts held in the name of his law firm and an attorney trust account to receive the funds and then pass them to Levine, according to the complaint. Reichenthal voluntarily agreed to be disbarred by the state of Florida after a dozen attorney disciplinary charges were filed against him related to over $2 million in escrow funds that he failed to disburse in accordance with the escrow agreement.

Levine and Reichenthal are each charged with one count of conspiring to commit commodities fraud, which carries a maximum term of five years in prison, and one count of conspiring to commit wire fraud, which carries a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison.

They also face two counts of commodities fraud, each of which carries a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison, two counts of wire fraud, each of which carries a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison, and one count of money laundering, which carries a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison.

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