According to a recent LinkedIn post from Quantifind, company representatives participated in an event at 30 Rockefeller Plaza marking World Wildlife Day 2026, focused on medicinal and aromatic plants. The post notes that the gathering included United for Wildlife, the CITES Secretariat, Deloitte, and cross-sector leaders discussing efforts to combat illegal plant and wildlife trade.
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The company’s LinkedIn post highlights a panel titled “Stories of Hope: Working Together to End the Illegal Plant and Wildlife Trade,” which emphasized collaboration among government, finance, technology, and conservation organizations. This emphasis on cross-sector partnerships suggests Quantifind may be positioning its analytics and technology capabilities as relevant to financial crime, trafficking risk detection, and ESG-aligned compliance solutions.
From an investor perspective, participation in high-profile conservation and anti-trafficking discussions could signal strategic alignment with growing regulatory and reputational pressures on financial institutions to address illicit trade and biodiversity loss. If Quantifind can translate this visibility into concrete engagements with banks, corporates, and NGOs, it may support demand for its risk intelligence products and strengthen its standing in the financial crime and ESG data markets.
The post also underscores ongoing momentum in global initiatives against wildlife trafficking, which increasingly intersect with supply-chain transparency, sanctions, and anti-money-laundering frameworks. This environment may create incremental opportunities for data and analytics providers like Quantifind that can help institutions identify trafficking-related risks, though the LinkedIn post itself does not reference specific customers, contracts, or revenue impacts.

