We buy great businesses.
We make them run better.
We own them forever.

If your business has high finance-related costs and outdated systems that aren't getting any better on their own — we want to talk.

We look across industries. The pattern is the same.

What We Look For
Great Businesses
How We Acquire
At least $1M in EBITDA with a consistent track record of growth and profitability
We use technology to lower finance-related and customer acquisition costs
Repeat customers — no single-customer dependency
We don’t replace your team or flip your company
Experienced team with a desire to keep running things (or a clear succession plan)
We buy majority ownership — and if you want to keep some ownership, we’ll structure it that way
Established distribution and customer base, saddled with friction — interchange, settlement, borrowing, infrastructure
Permanent capital — no fund timeline, no exit pressure
Learn more →
Why It Matters

You have a list. The stuff you know you should fix but haven't gotten to. The back-office system that's ten years old. The vendor you're overpaying. Borrowing costs that should be lower. You've accepted it because there are only so many hours in a day.

It doesn't have to be.

We raised permanent capital. No fund. No timeline. No mandate to sell. The only way we make money is if the business does well for a very long time. That changes every decision we make.

Santiago Roel Santos
Santiago Roel Santos
Founder & CEO
Read Letter to Founders →
Permanent Capital

Backed by a single equity raise to pursue our first acquisitions — similar to how Berkshire Hathaway and Constellation Software got started.

Let's talk.

No pitch deck required. Tell us about your business. If it's a fit, you'll know quickly. If it's not, we'll tell you that too.

santiago@inversioncap.com →
Insights

We obsess about technology so you don't have to.

But if you want to geek out with us — here's what we're thinking about.

Our People

One team. Start to finish.

The same people who evaluate your business show up after closing. That's the model.