Press & Articles

The latest press coverage about Foxhound and our own takes on asset discovery, technology, and what’s next.

Press

Yahoo Finance

Foxhound by Trustate: The World's First Platform to Deliver Verified, Real-Time Asset & Liability Intelligence at the Click of a Button

Leah Del Percio and Tara Faquir, Co-Founders of Trustate and Inc. Magazine's 2026 Female Founders 500 honorees, today announced the upcoming launch of Foxhound by Trustate — from the technology company recognized by Forbes, Yahoo Finance, and Business Insider. Foxhound by Trustate is the first platform of its kind to deliver verified, real-time asset and liability data to legal and financial professionals across every practice area. Foxhound by Trustate is built on six years of proven technology, battle-tested by the nation's leading trust and estate attorneys, and powered by an unprecedented network of global data partnerships — including many of the largest banks, investment firms, and life insurers in the world.
Inc.

Inc. Names Trustate’s Leah Del Percio and Tara Faquir to Its 2026 Female Founders 500 List

Trustate is proud to announce that Leah Del Percio and Tara Faquir have been named to Inc.'s 2026 Female Founders 500, an annual list honoring the most dynamic women business leaders in the United States. The honor recognizes founders whose bold ideas, resilience, and execution are shaping the future of their industries.
Law.com

Trustate Founders on Estate Administration's 'Data Problem,' Growing a Startup During Pandemic

Trustate's founders discuss how they grew a startup during the pandemic and why they believe the importance of data is often overlooked in the estate process. Two years after its launch, startup Trustate, which looks to streamline the estate administration process, is realizing the importance of data in the trust and estate process—and just how overlooked it can be.

Articles

Forbes

How Data Can Give Lawyers And Wealth Managers A Competitive Edge In The AI Era

When most people hear the word "data," they picture a Silicon Valley startup or a Wall Street quant desk. Data, in popular culture, belongs to the tech world. But data doesn't care about industry labels, and in three of the oldest professional disciplines, estate planning, divorce law and wealth management, it is quietly becoming a competitive differentiator. Not AI. Not automation. Data.