Kenneth Chan is also a senior vice-president at Pacific Century Group, MoneyHero’s largest shareholder
[SINGAPORE] MoneyHero Group is investigating a complaint made by an employee about its board chair Kenneth Chan, Tech in Asia understands.
The complaint was filed via MoneyHero’s official channel on Nov 9, 2025, prompting the investigation. The Nasdaq-listed company has appointed its general counsel to lead the probe and has also engaged an external law firm.
A second complaint was filed by a management-level employee in early December. Chan has disputed characterisations by one of the complainants internally, circulating his response along with the original complaint to a wider group of senior managers.
MoneyHero and Chan have declined to comment.
However, it stressed that the company takes any employee complaint it receives seriously and has “established procedures to ensure appropriate review of such matters”.
The complaints mark an escalation in tensions between Chan and MoneyHero’s management team. Tech in Asia first reported about the conflict in September 2024.
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Though MoneyHero remains in the red, its net loss narrowed to US$5.7 million between January and September last year from US$19.6 million during the same period in 2024. Since the first quarter of 2025, the company’s revenue has trended upward and as at Q3, operating costs and expenses fell by some 13 per cent year on year.
MoneyHero listed on the Nasdaq in 2023 via a merger with Bridgetown Holdings, the special purpose acquisition company backed by PayPal founder Peter Thiel and Hong Kong billionaire Richard Li.
Chan is a senior vice-president at Li’s Pacific Century Group, MoneyHero’s largest shareholder. He served as MoneyHero’s interim CEO for several months in 2022 and 2023.
The firm operates financial comparison sites including Seedly and SingSaver, where users can compare prices of credit cards, personal loans, insurance and other financial products. MoneyHero has a presence in Singapore, Hong Kong, the Philippines and Taiwan.
As a public company, MoneyHero has its work cut out for it, a source says. But the firm is making progress and trending closer towards profit this year.
Significant effort has gone into rebuilding culture amid the departure of some senior leaders after MoneyHero’s IPO in 2023, according to the anonymous sources. One employee tells Tech in Asia that 2025 has been a “transformational year” for the firm, noting how hard it has worked to turn the business around.
In December, MoneyHero projected that it would become adjusted Ebitda (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation) positive in Q4 2025 – a first since its public listing. This improvement was driven by a shift towards higher-margin verticals like insurance and wealth, efficiency gains from using AI, and a leaner cost base. TECH IN ASIA
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