Frank Rotman, co-founder of Prolific Fintech Investor and QED Investors, said Friday that he will move into the Partner Honor role by the end of the year to focus on establishing his own startup.
However, these startups are not necessarily financial technology companies. In X's post, Rottman, who helped launch QED in 2007, declared that “the first business” is in the music industry “that's planning to get out of the ground.”
He writes: “It's easy to get me crazy for all the obvious reasons, but it's worth booking my judgment until I evolved in my head and learned more about the business I've been sitting on the shelf for years. It's fun to build and can make a huge difference to an industry that none of us could have imagined actually live.”
Rotman has launched Virginia-based QED. It managed $4 billion in managed assets with Nigel Morris and Caribou Honig nearly 20 years ago. He led the company's investment in credit karma and played a role in QED's investment in unicorns such as Greenski, Flywire and Sophie. (In fact, QED was the first institutional money to credit karma.) Other companies supported by the company include Creditas, Nubank, Avidxchange and Bitso.
QED is investing only in companies that build pre-seeded financial technology in Series A stage.
Rotman, who will be on X's handle “The Fintech Junkie,” said he will move to a new role on January 1, 2026.
In addition to establishing a music startup, Rottman said he plans to write a book that focuses on “Observation and Framework of the World of Startups and VCs.”
He wrote in the X-Post: “This should not surprise anyone who knows me. Writing is my oxygen. ChatGpt and Claude are better writers than me, and I can't imagine life without it.”
In a statement, QED managing partner Nigel Morris said he and Rottman had worked together for more than 30 years.
“Frank is at his heart, an entrepreneur and he's certainly good in the next chapter,” he said.
QED Investor Partner Amias Gerety will be encouraged to lead QED's US investment team.