
Allvue Systems, Passthrough Partner to Digitize Private Markets Fundraising and Onboarding
Allvue Systems, LLC, a leading technology provider for private capital markets, announced a strategic integration with Passthrough, a financial technology firm specializing in investor onboarding and financial crime compliance. The partnership is designed to streamline and automate private markets fundraising, replacing the fragmented, paper-based onboarding process with a unified digital workflow.
The integration seeks to modernize three critical stages of the investor lifecycle—prospecting, onboarding, and management—by directly connecting investor data, documentation, and compliance tools within the Allvue ecosystem. This joint solution aims to eliminate inefficiencies and compliance bottlenecks that have long burdened fund managers and investors.
“The integration marks a major step forward in the digital transformation of private markets, where manual PDFs, email threads, and siloed systems still dominate the investor onboarding process,” Allvue said in its announcement. “By combining Passthrough’s automation technology with Allvue’s front-to-back platform, fund managers can deliver a seamless, transparent investor experience.”
“In private markets, efficiency is the new transparency,” said Ivan Latanision, Chief Product Officer at Allvue Systems. “Fund managers are under immense pressure to deliver a world-class experience to LPs, and relying on outdated processes is no longer sustainable.”
Passthrough’s Co-Founder and CEO Tim Flannery added, “We built Passthrough because fund managers were losing deals at the finish line—spending months cultivating investor relationships only to introduce friction with clunky paperwork at the worst possible moment. Our integration with Allvue fixes that by merging investor operations with seamless, automated compliance.”
By reducing administrative burden and compliance risk, the partnership enables general partners to focus on investment execution, portfolio performance, and fiduciary responsibilities, rather than operational overhead. Both firms view the collaboration as part of a broader shift toward digitized investor ecosystems, as institutional and wealth channels increasingly demand transparency, scalability, and speed in alternative fund participation.
