Retail Banking – CB Insights Research https://www.cbinsights.com/research Thu, 23 Jan 2025 22:46:08 +0000 en-US hourly 1 State of Fintech 2024 Report https://www.cbinsights.com/research/report/fintech-trends-2024/ Tue, 14 Jan 2025 14:00:41 +0000 https://www.cbinsights.com/research/?post_type=report&p=172664 Fintech funding and dealmaking declined again year-over-year (YoY) in 2024, hitting their lowest levels in 7 years. However, some positive signals are emerging, including growing deal sizes and a pickup in M&A, with a focus on cybersecurity capabilities. Download the …

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Fintech funding and dealmaking declined again year-over-year (YoY) in 2024, hitting their lowest levels in 7 years.

However, some positive signals are emerging, including growing deal sizes and a pickup in M&A, with a focus on cybersecurity capabilities.

Download the full report to access comprehensive data and charts on the evolving state of fintech across sectors, geographies, and more.

DOWNLOAD THE STATE OF FINTECH 2024 REPORT

Get 200 pages of charts and data detailing the latest venture trends in fintech.

Key takeaways from the report include:

  • Fintech dealmaking continues downward trend in 2024. Annual fintech deals and funding both dropped to 7-year lows in 2024. While deals dropped by 17% YoY to a total of 3,580, funding fell by 20% to $33.7B.
  • One positive signal: bigger deals. The median fintech deal size increased to $4M in 2024 — marking a 33% jump YoY — with deal sizes rising across every major global region. Across fintech sectors, the biggest jump occurred in banking, where the median deal size rose by 70% YoY to reach $8.5M. Though fintech saw fewer deals overall in 2024, the increase in deal sizes suggests that investors are writing bigger checks for companies with compelling growth potential.
  • M&A activity is also picking up. Fintech M&A exits jumped 24% quarter-over-quarter (QoQ) to 189 in Q4’24, with Stripe’s $1.1B purchase of stablecoin platform Bridge marking the quarter’s largest deal. Overall, fintech saw a total of 664 M&A exits in 2024 (up 6% YoY) as financial services companies sought to diversify their capabilities and build full-service platforms.
  • Mature banking companies are catching the eyes of investors. Banking saw mid- and late-stage deals rise to 38% of its total deal volume in 2024 (vs. 21% in 2023), outpacing the 4 percentage point increase in fintech more broadly. Uncertainty about new banking technology and regulatory volatility — particularly among banking-as-a-service players — is likely driving investors to more proven solutions.
  • Payments tech ends 2024 as a bright spot. Five of the top 10 equity deals in Q4’24 went to companies building payments solutions, from mobile payments apps to cross-border payments enablement tools to platforms digitizing B2B payments. This concentration of large deals within payments tech reflects the ongoing push to digitize commerce and business exchanges. 

We dive into the trends below.

Fintech dealmaking continues downward trend in 2024

In 2024, annual fintech funding and dealmaking both decreased YoY, hitting 7-year lows.

Fintech funding declines in 2024, though by a smaller percentage

However, there are signs that the fintech market is steadying. The annual decline in funding was fintech’s smallest in 3 years. Meanwhile, at the quarterly level, funding rebounded to close the year strong, increasing 11% QoQ to reach $8.5B in Q4’24.

One positive signal: bigger deals

While there are fewer fintech deals overall, deal sizes are climbing. 

Following 2 consecutive years of decline, the median deal size in fintech jumped 33% YoY in 2024.

Across fintech sectors, banking saw the biggest jump in median deal size in 2024 — a 70% YoY increase to $8.5M. 

Fintech deal sizes climb in 2024

This shift reflects increased investor selectivity in the current market. Companies that pass more rigorous due diligence are attracting larger investments, even as overall deal volume remains constrained.

M&A activity is also picking up

Fintech M&A deals jumped 24% QoQ in Q4’24. 

US-based companies captured 8 of the largest 10 deals, including the top 5. Stripe’s $1.1B acquisition of Bridge was the largest of the quarter.

M&A exits jump 24% QoQ in Q4'24

The quarterly increase points to broader stirrings of an M&A resurgence: for the year, fintech M&A exits rose by 6% YoY to 664 deals in 2024. 

Acquirers are boosting capabilities across functions. For instance, Stripe’s purchase of stablecoin platform Bridge gives the company a stronger standing in the reinvigorated market for digital assets and boosts its cross-border payment capabilities. The deal also emphasizes stablecoins’ growing role in driving accessibility and stability within crypto’s current wave.

Bolstering cybersecurity was also a focus for acquirers in Q4’24, pointing to financial services companies’ push to integrate fraud detection in their product offerings. For example, in November 2024, IT company N-able bought Adlumin, which deploys its solutions to financial firms, to enhance its cybersecurity capabilities. In October, Socure — specializing in digital identity verification — acquired Effectiv to enhance its AI-driven fraud detection capabilities.

Mature banking companies are catching the eyes of investors

Early-stage deals made up a larger share of fintech investment activity in 2022-23, suggesting that investors shifted their focus toward nascent innovation requiring smaller capital commitments during the market slowdown.

The trend shifted in 2024, particularly in the banking sector. While mid- and late-stage deal share rose by 4 percentage points YoY across fintech broadly, it jumped 17 percentage points in banking. 

Mid- and late-stage deal share rises in 2024, particularly in banking

Recent volatility in banking-as-a-service — such as Synapse’s bankruptcy in April — and intensified regulatory scrutiny are likely driving investors to more proven solutions.

Payments tech ends 2024 as a bright spot

Five of the 10 biggest fintech deals in Q4’24 went to payments companies, capping a relatively strong quarter for the sector. Despite a YoY decline, funding to payments companies rose by 20% QoQ to $1.8B in Q4’24.

Argentina-based mobile payments company Ualá secured a $300M Series E in Q4’24, tying home equity release firm Splitero for the largest round of the quarter.

Payments companies raise half of the largest rounds in Q4'24

Of the top payments deals, two went to companies automating accounts payable and other aspects of B2B payments (Melio and ASAAS). The opportunity to digitize B2B payments continues to expand, especially since businesses in many geographies still rely on manual processes.

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Fintech 100: The most promising fintech startups of 2024 https://www.cbinsights.com/research/report/top-fintech-startups-2024/ Thu, 24 Oct 2024 13:00:00 +0000 https://www.cbinsights.com/research/?post_type=report&p=171781 CB Insights has unveiled the seventh annual Fintech 100 (previously the Fintech 250) — a list of the 100 most promising private fintech companies in the world. For companies interested in the future of fintech, these startups — working on …

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CB Insights has unveiled the seventh annual Fintech 100 (previously the Fintech 250) — a list of the 100 most promising private fintech companies in the world.

For companies interested in the future of fintech, these startups — working on everything from deploying novel AI solutions across the landscape to expanding access to financial services — should be on your radar for partnership and investment opportunities.

The list primarily includes early- and mid-stage startups driving innovation across fintech. Our research team picked winning companies based on CB Insights datasets, including deal activity, industry partnerships, team strength, investor strength, employee headcount, and proprietary Commercial Maturity and Mosaic scores. We also dug into Analyst Briefings submitted directly to us by startups.

Please click to enlarge.

Fintech 100 2024 map: Lending, wealth management, compliance and risk management, data extraction, embedded finance, workflow automation, banking, insurance, sustainability enablement, financial management and accounting, cryptocurrency and blockchain, payment acceptance, spend management, fraud detection and prevention, cross-border payments, payroll, capital markets

Here is a summary of the 2024 Fintech 100 cohort highlights:

  • The 100 winners include 13 wealth management companies, 11 in embedded finance, and 10 in insurance.
  • $7.2B in equity funding raised over time, including more than $2B in 2024 so far (as of 10/23/2024).
  • Nearly 50% are early-stage companies (primarily seed/angel or Series A).
  • 52 companies from outside the United States, across 23 countries on 6 continents. This includes 17 companies from 11 emerging and developing economies.
  • 850+ business relationships since 2022, including with industry leaders like Mastercard, State Street, and Flipkart.

Companies are categorized by their primary focus area and client base. Categories in the market map are not mutually exclusive.

CB Insights customers can interact with the entire Fintech 100 list here and view a detailed category breakdown using the Expert Collection.

2024 FINTECH 100 COHORT HIGHLIGHTS

Funding and valuations

The 2024 Fintech 100 winners have raised $7.2B across 370+ disclosed equity deals to date (as of 10/23/2024).

Gaming payments company Coda Payments and rent rewards company Bilt Rewards lead all winners in disclosed equity funding (with $715M and $560M in funding, respectively). 

In 2024 so far, this year’s winners have raised just over $2B across 72 disclosed equity deals.

 

2024 funding tops $2B for Fintech 100 winners

Three winners have raised mega-rounds ($100M+ deals) in 2024 so far: 

  • Bilt Rewards — $200M Series C, $150M Series C – II
  • Akur8 — $120M Series C
  • FundGuard — $100M Series C

Just 5 companies on this year’s list have reached unicorn status (a $1B+ valuation). Amid the broader venture slowdown, just one winner has hit unicorn status in 2024 so far: Pennylane, a France-based financial management and accounting platform for businesses.

Stage breakdown and commercial maturity

Nearly half — 48 — of this year’s Fintech 100 winners are early-stage companies (primarily seed/angel or Series A).

More than 60% of the companies on the list (62) have a CB Insights Commercial Maturity score — which measures a private company’s current ability to compete for customers or serve as a partner — of 4, or Scaling. This indicates they are gaining market traction and growing clients, partners, headcount, and revenue. 

Twenty-six winners have a score of 3, or Deploying, which means they have validated ideas and are beginning commercial distribution.

Top investors

Plug and Play Ventures leads all venture capital (VC) firms, including CVC firms, in the number of winners backed. The 2024 Fintech 100 companies in its portfolio operate across financial management and accounting (Finally), capital markets (FundGuard), payment acceptance (AiFi, Fintoc), banking (Tuum), wealth management (Boldin), and payroll (WorkPay). 

Meanwhile, General Catalyst leads in the total number of investments in the 2024 Fintech 100, as it has invested 13 times across 6 companies. It has invested in Bilt Rewards, financial management & accounting firm Collective, alternative credit scoring company Nova Credit, cross-border payments platform Finom, student loan management platform Summer, and AI agent Powder.

2024 Fintech 100: Top 5 venture investors (by disclosed number of winners backed)

Geographic distribution

Just over half (52) of this year’s Fintech 100 winners are based outside of the United States. The United Kingdom leads all non-US countries with 12 winners, and Canada and Singapore are tied for second with 6 companies each. 

Seventeen companies on this year’s list come from 11 emerging and developing economies (Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Egypt, India, Kenya, Pakistan, United Arab Emirates, South Africa, Thailand, and Uruguay). Many of these winners are focused on solutions driving financial inclusion and accessibility for groups like small businesses and consumers building their credit.

Headcount growth

This year’s Fintech 100 winners collectively employ more than 18,000 people. Median year-over-year headcount growth is more than 30%.

Bilt leads all winners with $3.1M in equity funding per employee. Embedded finance company Brim Financial, blockchain company Fnality, and Coda Payments are tied for second with $1.6M per employee.

2024 Fintech 100: Top companies by equity funding per employee

Company health

Eighty-three of this year’s winning companies have a CB Insights Mosaic score — a proprietary measure of private company health and growth potential — of at least 700 out of 1,000 (as of 10/23/24). Compared to all private companies — fintechs or otherwise — with Mosaic scores, these 83 winners rank in the top 4% by Mosaic score. 

Bilt Rewards leads the cohort with a score of 952. Nova Credit and Arta are tied for second with 883.

Winners deploy AI across a variety of use cases

AI’s dominance in the venture market and broader tech conversations is reflected in this year’s Fintech 100 cohort. 

Several winners have developed AI solutions to automate financial services operations. For example, Alkymi and Saphyre are among the handful of companies using AI to analyze and extract data from financial documents.

But winners are also deploying AI within specific financial services sectors, including embedded finance, compliance, and insurance.

For instance, Gynger uses AI and data analytics to quickly approve and underwrite financing. The company is backed by PayPal Ventures and Google’s AI-focused venture arm Gradient Ventures

Meanwhile, Norm Ai offers AI agents for compliance teams, enabling them to assess content or actions against regulatory requirements. The company raised a $27M Series A round in June 2024 from investors including Bain Capital Ventures and Citi Ventures.

Delos Insurance Solutions, on the other hand, issues property insurance and analyzes satellite data using AI to identify areas with greater wildfire risk. Its founders’ backgrounds in the space industry inform their approach to data gathering via satellite.

Delos Insurance: Key people

Fintechs gear solutions toward financial inclusion and accessibility

Many of this year’s winners are focused on making financial services and technology more accessible to growing customer segments. 

Small businesses are a focus worldwide. This year’s list includes solutions like Sequoia Capital– and Founders Fund-backed Found, which offers banking for self-employed people and small business owners. Meanwhile, Pakistan-based NayaPay offers financial management for consumers as well as small businesses. Singapore-based YouTrip also has both B2C and B2B platforms for cross-border payments, focusing its B2B services on small businesses in southeast Asia. 

Companies in this year’s cohort are also targeting consumers building their financial profiles and wealth. US-based MAJORITY allows individuals to get banked in the US without social security numbers. OTO, meanwhile, offers loans for electric bike and scooter purchases in India. Banks are hesitant to finance the purchases despite strong government support for the vehicles, so the massive consumer market is turning to fintechs.

Meanwhile, companies like Bilt Rewards and CheQ are helping consumers manage their credit and build toward major purchases in different ways. Bilt converts rent payments into points that can be redeemed toward a down payment on a home, and it can also send renters’ on-time payment reports to credit bureaus. 

In India, where credit cards have lower penetration but are growing quickly, CheQ helps consumers pay off all of their credit cards and earn rewards on one digital platform. It aims to support users who are new to the credit system and offers free credit reports and tips on managing credit. The company recently announced a partnership with India’s e-commerce giant Flipkart to enable consumers to earn extra points on purchases during Flipkart’s sale event.

 

CheQ partners with India's e-commerce leader to help shoppers build rewards

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State of Fintech Q3’24 Report https://www.cbinsights.com/research/report/fintech-trends-q3-2024/ Tue, 15 Oct 2024 13:00:20 +0000 https://www.cbinsights.com/research/?post_type=report&p=171585 On the surface, Q3’24 was a sobering quarter for fintech. Funding declined by 25% from Q2’24, to $7.3B. Total deals also dropped 16% quarter-over-quarter (QoQ) to 753 — their lowest quarterly level since 2017. However, average deal size has remained …

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On the surface, Q3’24 was a sobering quarter for fintech. Funding declined by 25% from Q2’24, to $7.3B. Total deals also dropped 16% quarter-over-quarter (QoQ) to 753 — their lowest quarterly level since 2017.

However, average deal size has remained roughly stable in 2024 YTD, suggesting dealmakers are putting more money behind a select group of fintech companies.

Download the full report to access comprehensive data and charts on the evolving state of fintech across sectors, geographies, and more.

DOWNLOAD THE STATE OF FINTECH Q3’24 REPORT

Get 160+ pages of charts and data detailing the latest venture trends in payments, banking, wealth tech, and more.

Below, we cover key takeaways from the report.

  • Global fintech funding sinks to $7.3B, a 25% QoQ decline. However, Q2’24 funding was propped up in part by mega-rounds for Stripe and AlphaSense totaling $1.3B. Excluding those rounds, the decline from Q2’24 to Q3’24 would have been 13%.

Global fintech funding drops 25% QoQ after Q2 spike

  • Deal volume drops 16%. Total deals for fintechs continued to decline, falling 16% from 892 in Q2’24 to 753 in Q3’24. This marks the lowest quarterly level since 2017. For comparison, fintech deal volume clocked in at nearly 1,500 two years ago, in Q3’22 — roughly double where it stands now.

Global fintech deal volume slides for a 2nd straight quarter

  • Average deal size remains stable at $12.7M. Despite deal volume declining, average deal size has remained roughly flat YTD, at $12.7M, compared to $13.2M for full-year 2023. The decline in deal volume and stable deal size indicates dealmakers narrowed their focus to fewer, higher-dollar bets.

Fewer deals, bigger checks: Average deal size remains roughly stable, while deal volume declines

  • 52% of the top early-stage deals are in less-crowded fintech markets. Just over half of the top early-stage deals occurred in financial services markets outside the US and UK — in countries like France, India, Italy, and Kenya. Less-crowded markets like these offer more room for early-stage fintechs to find niches and grow their client bases. 

Majority of top early-stage deals are in less-crowded geographic markets

  • Wealth tech funding increases by 67%, thanks to 2 $100M+ mega-rounds. Wealth tech funding increased the most of any fintech sector QoQ, from $0.6B in Q2’24 to $1.0B in Q3’24. The increase was fueled by 2 substantial deals: 
    • $242M Series F round for turnkey retirement plan provider Human Interest
    • $200M Series B round for Earned Wealth, a digital wealth manager targeting medical professionals.

Two mega-rounds drive surge in wealth tech funding

ADDITIONAL FINANCIAL SERVICES RESEARCH FROM CB INSIGHTS:

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Fintech: Top research and trends to watch https://www.cbinsights.com/research/fintech-research-trends/ Thu, 10 Oct 2024 16:57:52 +0000 https://www.cbinsights.com/research/?p=171328 Fintech startups are innovating to meet customer demand for seamless digital experiences, enhance transaction security and transparency, and streamline financial institutions’ operations. From embedded banking and payments to fraud prevention and workflow automation — our research below covers these trends …

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Fintech startups are innovating to meet customer demand for seamless digital experiences, enhance transaction security and transparency, and streamline financial institutions’ operations. From embedded banking and payments to fraud prevention and workflow automation — our research below covers these trends and more.

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Essential resources to understand the future of financial services:

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State of Fintech Q2’24 Report https://www.cbinsights.com/research/report/fintech-trends-q2-2024/ Tue, 16 Jul 2024 13:00:48 +0000 https://www.cbinsights.com/research/?post_type=report&p=169626 On the surface, Q2’24 was a return to growth for fintech, with funding increasing 19% quarter-over-quarter (QoQ) to $8.9B. However, two huge deals — for market intelligence firm AlphaSense and payments juggernaut Stripe — obscured the reality that it was …

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On the surface, Q2’24 was a return to growth for fintech, with funding increasing 19% quarter-over-quarter (QoQ) to $8.9B.

However, two huge deals — for market intelligence firm AlphaSense and payments juggernaut Stripe obscured the reality that it was another tepid quarter for the sector as a whole.

DOWNLOAD THE STATE OF FINTECH Q2’24 REPORT

Get 160+ pages of charts and data detailing the latest venture trends in fintech.

Based on our deep dive in the full report, here is the TL;DR on the state of fintech:

  • Funding increases by 19% quarter-over-quarter (QoQ), buoyed by 2 blockbuster deals. Quarterly funding rose in Q2’24 to $8.9B. But if it weren’t for 2 late-stage deals for Stripe ($694M) and AlphaSense ($650M), funding would have remained flat QoQ. A 16% decline in deal volume also indicates fintech investors remain cautious.​Q2'24 fintech funding gets a boost from 2 $650M+ deals
  • Average deal size decreases to $12.8M, down 4% vs. 2023. The slight decline in average deal size YTD highlights broad stagnation in fintech deal sizes. Yet, when looking at the median, deal size has ticked up from $3.1M in 2023 to $4M this year. The 29% increase could signal strength in the long tail of smaller fintech deals.
  • Mid- and late-stage deal share is at 20% YTD, up from 18% in 2023. In a more favorable operating environment, investors are showing greater confidence in later-stage companies than they did in the past 2 years — especially in areas like payments and lending. In payments, mid- and late-stage rounds make up 27% of deals YTD, vs. 21% in 2023. In digital lending, mid- and late-stage deals make up 35% of deals YTD, compared to 20% in 2023. 
  • 30% of the biggest early-stage deals are for digital asset companies. Crypto and blockchain-focused fintechs are receiving renewed focus, as the crypto winter thaws. Digital asset companies accounted for nearly one-third of the top 10 seed/angel and top 10 Series A rounds. The two largest early-stage deals in the crypto space went to digital asset infrastructure platforms TradeDog ($75M seed) and Biton ($44M Series A). Crypto winter thawing for early-stage companies
  • US-based funding increases by 45% QoQ to $4.8B. In addition to the funding increase, the US led the world across a few metrics in Q2’24, including share of equity deals (40%) and exits (36%). Mega-rounds led the way: Nine of the 10 biggest deals in the US were worth $100M or more, the most since Q2’22. LatAm was the only other major global region with a funding increase, up by 22% to $442M.Mega-rounds drive growth for US in Q2'24

DOWNLOAD THE STATE OF FINTECH Q2’24 REPORT

Get 160+ pages of charts and data detailing the latest venture trends in fintech.

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The embedded finance market ranking: Where integrated financial services are maturing, emerging, and plateauing https://www.cbinsights.com/research/report/embedded-finance-market-ranking/ Fri, 12 Jul 2024 18:22:03 +0000 https://www.cbinsights.com/research/?post_type=report&p=169655 Increasingly, consumers and businesses alike expect transactions to be fully digital and frictionless. To meet this demand, businesses across industries are embedding financial tools — from buy now, pay later (BNPL) to insurance distribution — into their platforms. Integrating these …

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Increasingly, consumers and businesses alike expect transactions to be fully digital and frictionless.

To meet this demand, businesses across industries are embedding financial tools — from buy now, pay later (BNPL) to insurance distribution — into their platforms. Integrating these financial services can help not only improve customer engagement, but also drive new revenue streams and loyalty in the process. 

To help strategy teams prioritize embedded finance markets in their planning decisions, we plotted markets using CB Insights’ TECH framework, which scores markets across 2 dimensions:

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The embedded banking & payments market map https://www.cbinsights.com/research/embedded-banking-payments-market-map/ Wed, 08 May 2024 19:03:32 +0000 https://www.cbinsights.com/research/?p=168822 Embedded finance is making it easier to make purchases, take out loans, open bank accounts, buy insurance, and more.  Broadly, these solutions integrate financial tools into non-financial services. Building them into digital experiences ensures consumers and partners remain there for …

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Embedded finance is making it easier to make purchases, take out loans, open bank accounts, buy insurance, and more. 

Broadly, these solutions integrate financial tools into non-financial services. Building them into digital experiences ensures consumers and partners remain there for every part of the customer journey.  

The benefits are drawing businesses across industries to integrate financial tools into their platforms. For instance, banking-as-a-service (BaaS) platforms, which help companies offer features including account opening and deposits, will draw $36B in global revenue in 2024 from account and card fees. That figure is set to grow 2.5x by 2028 to reach $94B, per Juniper Research.

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If you’re already a customer, log in here.

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AI strategies for 11 of the world’s largest companies: Where Eli Lilly, Visa, Oracle, and 8 other giants are making moves https://www.cbinsights.com/research/report/ai-strategies-largest-companies-largest-companies-pharma-financial-services-industrials-enterprise-tech/ Thu, 02 May 2024 17:52:52 +0000 https://www.cbinsights.com/research/?post_type=report&p=168818 For many of the world’s largest companies, AI simply can’t be ignored.  Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff called AI “the single most important moment in the history of the technology industry” in the company’s most recent earnings call. JPMorgan CEO Jamie …

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For many of the world’s largest companies, AI simply can’t be ignored. 

Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff called AI “the single most important moment in the history of the technology industry” in the company’s most recent earnings call. JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon said, in his April 2024 letter, “we are completely convinced the consequences [of AI] will be extraordinary.” 

Others are hyper-focused on AI’s potential to drive new efficiencies and product development. Big pharma companies are pushing ahead with AI-powered drug discovery collaborations, with the goal of accelerating drug development timelines. Payments giants, meanwhile, are leveraging AI to fight back against a wave of fraud.  

Much of the hype around recent advances has yet to translate to revenue. No AI-discovered drug has been approved yet for sale (though Insilico Medicine brought the first drug fully generated by AI into human trials in 2023), and Salesforce acknowledged its latest AI push would not have a material impact on its revenue this year. 

But the promise of future opportunities — and the perceived risk of inaction — is driving leaders to make moves now that could eventually reshape some of the world’s biggest industries. Our 70-slide report surveys the AI strategies of the following companies:

Using the CB Insights technology intelligence platform, we analyzed signals like investment & partnership activity, executive chatter in earnings transcripts, patents, and more to understand their efforts. Download the full report to see them all. 

THE AI STRATEGIES OF JP MORGAN, SALESFORCE, J&J, AND MORE

Dive deep into the AI activity of 11 of the world’s largest companies.

Largest companies based on market cap (as of 4/15/2024). Our analysis excludes big tech, semiconductor developers, and state-owned companies.

AI strategies for 11 of the world's largest companies

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State of Fintech Q1’24 Report https://www.cbinsights.com/research/report/fintech-trends-q1-2024/ Thu, 18 Apr 2024 13:00:05 +0000 https://www.cbinsights.com/research/?post_type=report&p=168574 Despite growth in broader venture funding, fintech funding continued to slide in Q1’24, declining 16% quarter-over-quarter (QoQ%) to $7.3B. Fintech deal volume, on the other hand, increased for the first time since Q1’23. Based on our deep dive below, here …

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Despite growth in broader venture funding, fintech funding continued to slide in Q1’24, declining 16% quarter-over-quarter (QoQ%) to $7.3B.

Fintech deal volume, on the other hand, increased for the first time since Q1’23.

DOWNLOAD THE STATE OF FINTECH Q1’24 REPORT

Get 170+ pages of charts and data detailing the latest venture trends in fintech.

Based on our deep dive below, here is the TL;DR on the state of fintech:

  • Fintech funding falls 16% QoQ to its lowest quarterly level since 2017. Quarterly funding declined to $7.3B in Q1’24, counter to the 11% rebound in the broader venture market. That said, fintech deals increased by 15% QoQ as investors focus on writing smaller checks.
    Fintech funding reaches its lowest level since Q1'17
  • Average deal size YTD in fintech is $11.1M, down 18% vs. $13.6M in full-year 2023. A dearth of blockbuster deals is driving the decline: In Q1’24, there were just 12 mega-rounds (deals worth $100M or more) representing 26% of total funding — the lowest share since Q2’23, when it hit 23%. Nevertheless, these rare deals can reach a massive scale: the biggest fintech round in the quarter was UK-based challenger bank Monzo‘s $431M Series I deal — worth 6% of the global funding total. 
  • Mid- and late-stage deals make up 20% of deals YTD, up from 18% in full-year 2023, as investors look to startups with more established track records. So far this year, investors are favoring later-stage companies to a greater degree than the past 2 years. The shift is most pronounced within specific sectors. In payments, for instance, mid- and late-stage deals make up 29% of deals YTD, vs. 21% in 2023. In digital lending, mid- and late-stage deals make up 40% of deals YTD, nearly double the 2023 total.
  • Banking startups have a billion-dollar quarter. Banking funding doubled in Q1’24 to reach $1B across 38 deals. Five of the top 10 banking deals in the quarter were late-stage, and 2 were mega-rounds of $100M+. Besides the Series I deal for Monzo, Germany-based banking-as-a-service company Solaris raised a $104M Series F round.
  • Europe fintech funding increases 22% QoQ to $2.2B. Europe was the only major global region to see fintech funding increase in Q1’24. The continent also led all regions with 37% of exits in the quarter. Meanwhile, funding declined 11% QoQ to $3.3B in the US, which still led all regions in total fundraising.

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The retail banking fraud & compliance market map https://www.cbinsights.com/research/retail-banking-fraud-compliance-market-map/ Thu, 14 Mar 2024 17:34:32 +0000 https://www.cbinsights.com/research/?p=167377 Combating fraud to protect customers and complying with regulatory mandates are critical goals for retail banks. These goals are only becoming more challenging to meet as retail banks watch fraud attempts climb. Meanwhile, advancements in artificial intelligence are adding more …

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Combating fraud to protect customers and complying with regulatory mandates are critical goals for retail banks.

These goals are only becoming more challenging to meet as retail banks watch fraud attempts climb.

Meanwhile, advancements in artificial intelligence are adding more fuel to the fire by enabling more sophisticated threats. For instance, bad actors are using generative AI to create fake identification photos for use during the account application process or to clone voices to trick phone verification systems, allowing them to open fraudulent accounts and steal from existing customers. This makes it more difficult for banks to comply with regulatory requirements, like anti-money laundering (AML) standards. These regulations require banks to monitor and screen financial transactions to avoid aiding illegal and high-risk activity, and they are associated with hefty non-compliance penalties.

In response to the rising frequency and sophistication of threats as well as the costs associated with them, banks are turning to technology solutions that simplify and enhance fraud prevention and regulatory compliance.

In the market map below, we identify 102 tech vendors addressing fraud and compliance across 12 different categories.

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Retail banking fraud and compliance market map

Note: This map includes primarily private startups that have raised at least $20M and achieved a Mosaic score of at least 400. It is not intended to be exhaustive of the space and categories are not mutually exclusive.

Key takeaways

  1. Retail banks’ tech priorities are shifting as AI regulations evolve. The growth of AI technologies is pushing banks to protect their data. In 2023, the data governance & privacy market secured the most deals (21) among featured markets. Meanwhile, the development of more robust AI regulation may drive the adoption of new tools, such as machine learning security solutions that monitor the data employees feed large language models (LLMs).
  2. Rapidly maturing deepfake tech will drive innovation in the identity verification market. Companies in this market will need to evolve quickly to recognize the deepfake images, videos, and audio used to commit synthetic fraud.
  3. Customer and workforce authentication is moving toward biometrics and passwordless authentication. While biometric identity saw only 7 deals in 2023, this verification method could become the new authentication standard in financial services. Biometric identity solutions are drawing attention for their ability to simultaneously address fraud and security risks as well as ease the user experience.

Market descriptions

Bot management

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State of Fintech 2023 Report https://www.cbinsights.com/research/report/fintech-trends-2023/ Thu, 18 Jan 2024 14:00:18 +0000 https://www.cbinsights.com/research/?post_type=report&p=166488 The fintech sector has not been spared from the sweeping downturn in the venture market. In fact, in 2023, funding to fintech startups dropped off more severely than broader venture funding. Based on our deep dive below, here is the …

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The fintech sector has not been spared from the sweeping downturn in the venture market. In fact, in 2023, funding to fintech startups dropped off more severely than broader venture funding.

Based on our deep dive below, here is the TLDR on the state of fintech:

  • Global fintech funding nosedived to $39.2B in 2023 (down 50% YoY), while deal volume slipped 38% to 3,801 — the lowest levels since 2017. On a quarterly basis, Q4’23 saw the fewest fintech deals in 7 years.
  • The US increased its dominance of fintech, drawing 41% of deals in 2023 — its highest share since 2016. Meanwhile, Asia’s deal share fell to a recent low of 20%. The uptick in US deal share came as investors shifted toward early-stage companies: early-stage deal share in the US climbed to its highest level in more than a decade.
  • At 612 deals, annual M&A exit volume remains higher than it was any year prior to 2021. Quarterly M&A deals saw a modest gain in Q4’23, rising to 149. Europe saw 34% of these deals — more than any other global region — but the top 3 M&A exits in Q4’23 all went to US fintechs.
  • Eight fintech unicorns were born in Q4’23 — a 6-quarter high, but far below 2021’s quarterly average. Asia contributed half of the new unicorns — 3 of which are based in Gulf States. This was the first time since 2019 that more fintech unicorns were born in Asia than in the US in a given quarter.
  • Investment to banking startups has evaporated, with funding falling 72% in 2023 — the biggest YoY decrease across fintech sectors. Payments startups saw funding decline just 30% YoY — the least of any fintech sector — though the annual funding total was propped up by 2 massive rounds to Stripe ($6.5B) and Metropolis ($1B). Payments remains the most well-funded fintech sector by a wide margin.

Below, we’ll explore these themes across 7 charts.

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Get 200+ pages of charts and data detailing the latest venture trends in fintech.

Fintech funding is slashed in half in 2023

Globally, funding to fintech startups fell 50% YoY, slipping below $40B for the first time since 2017. Fintech fared worse than the broader venture market, which saw funding decline 42% YoY in 2023.

The average and median deal sizes in fintech continued to decrease from 2021’s highs, falling to $13.8M and $3.2M, respectively, in 2023.

Among global regions, LatAm and Europe saw the largest drops in fintech funding in 2023:

  • LatAm funding slid 68% to $1.2B
  • Europe funding fell 64% to $6.5B

Fintech deal volume at a 7-year low

Q4’23 was a particularly harsh quarter for fintech in terms of deal activity.

The quarter saw fintech startups secure just 740 deals — the fewest in a quarter since Q4’16, and the third straight quarter of declines. 

Among the top deals of the quarter, payments solutions for online and in-person shopping were prominent. These included SumUp ($307M Series F), as well as buy now, pay later players Tamara ($340M Series C) and Tabby ($200M Series D). Notably, payments leaders Checkout.com and PayPal invested in the deals to Tamara and Tabby, respectively.


The US captures deal share at Asia’s expense

Despite global declines in deal volume, the US picked up a greater share of deals in 2023 at 41%. The 4-percentage-point increase came at the expense of Asia, which lost 3 percentage points in share YoY. The US’ share was the highest for the country since 2016.

Fintech dealmaking in the US has shifted toward the early stages (seed/angel and Series A), which now claim 70% of all US deals — the highest annual share in more than a decade.


A steady flow of M&A deals for fintech startups

While down from a peak in Q1’22, M&A activity remains relatively steady for fintech startups. Financial services incumbents, larger fintech firms, and PE buyers continue to seek out undervalued assets. In Q4’23, global M&A volume ticked up to 149 deals.

While Europe led in M&A deal share in Q4’23 at 34%, the top 3 M&A deals that quarter all went to US-based firms:

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Asia overtakes the US in creating new fintech unicorns

Eight fintech companies reached unicorn status (valued at $1B+) in Q4’23. Among global regions, Asia led with 4 of these new unicorns, followed by the US with 2. LatAm and Oceania each accounted for 1.

This was the first time since 2019 that Asia outpaced the US in the number of new fintech unicorns in a single quarter.

Within Asia, the Gulf States saw especially strong representation. Two unicorns (Tabby and Tamara) came out of Saudi Arabia, while the United Arab Emirates contributed one (Andalusia Labs).


Banking is hit hardest by funding drought

Within fintech, banking startups’ access to capital has been restricted substantially. In 2023, they raised $2.2B in equity funding, down 72% from $7.8B the year prior.

Wealth tech funding wasn’t far behind, with a decline of 61% YoY in 2023. 

Funding to payments startups, on the other hand, remains relatively strong, down just 30% in 2023. The top equity deal in Q4’23 went to parking management and payment platform Metropolis, which raised over $1B.


Africa sees smallest funding drop among global regions

While fintech funding fell across every global region in 2023, Africa was the least affected by the downturn. Africa-based startups drew $0.8B in funding in 2023, down just 27% from 2022.

Meanwhile, the continent’s early-stage deal share declined to a recent low of 83% in 2023. While the vast majority of deals are still early-stage, this trend suggests a growing contingent of companies are maturing into later stages of funding.

Across the whole year, the top 2 deals in Africa went to North Africa-based startups: Egypt-based MNT Halan ($260M Series D) and Morocco-based Cash Plus ($60M round). The third-largest round went to Kenya’s M-Kopa ($55M round).

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The core banking automation market map https://www.cbinsights.com/research/core-banking-automation-market-map/ Thu, 04 Jan 2024 20:28:59 +0000 https://www.cbinsights.com/research/?p=165695 Retail banks face growing customer demand for seamless digital banking experiences. At the same time, fee compression continues to cut into their margins. To maintain a competitive edge, banking incumbents are turning to technologies that can help digitize their existing …

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Retail banks face growing customer demand for seamless digital banking experiences. At the same time, fee compression continues to cut into their margins.

To maintain a competitive edge, banking incumbents are turning to technologies that can help digitize their existing processes and offerings in ways that drive efficiencies, cut costs, and add new revenue streams.

In the back- and middle-office, this includes replacing or improving legacy systems with SaaS offerings, as well as leveraging APIs and AI/machine learning (ML) solutions to automate repetitive tasks like know your customer (KYC) approvals and mortgage application reviews.

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State of Fintech Q3’23 Report https://www.cbinsights.com/research/report/fintech-trends-q3-2023/ Wed, 18 Oct 2023 13:00:09 +0000 https://www.cbinsights.com/research/?post_type=report&p=163971 Global fintech funding reached $7.4B in Q3’23 — a 3% drop from the previous quarter. Fintech deal activity also continued to trend down in Q3’23. Deal count slid back to 2017 levels, falling by 18% QoQ to hit 754. Using …

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Global fintech funding reached $7.4B in Q3’23 — a 3% drop from the previous quarter.

Fintech deal activity also continued to trend down in Q3’23. Deal count slid back to 2017 levels, falling by 18% QoQ to hit 754.

Using CB Insights data, we highlight key takeaways from our State of Fintech Q3’23 Report, including:

  1. Global fintech funding falls 3% QoQ to hit $7.4B.
  2. US fintech funding experiences a 5% drop in Q3’23.
  3. Unicorn births remain at 3 in Q3’23.
  4. Fintech mega-round funding climbs 50% QoQ.
  5. Digital lending funding jumps 70% while deals fall 56% QoQ.

Let’s dive in.

Global fintech dollars dipped 3% QoQ to hit $7.4B in Q3’23, leveling off after seeing sharp declines in most quarters since the end of 2021. Meanwhile, deal count fell by 18% QoQ.

This fintech funding stabilization was supported by $100M+ mega-rounds, which accounted for 33% of total fintech funding ($2.4B) in Q3’23.

The top 3 deals of the quarter went to:

  • Hong Kong-based microfinance platform Micro Connect ($458M Series C)
  • US-based spend management company Ramp ($300M Series D)
  • India-based digital lending solution Perfios ($229M Series D)

While US-based fintechs saw a 5% drop in funding QoQ, they continued to drive a significant chunk of global fintech funding. The US accounted for almost half (47%) of all quarterly fintech funding in Q3’23 — the highest share among global regions.

Asia, on the other hand, secured a smaller share of the funding total but saw funding rise substantially. Companies in the region experienced an 82% increase in funding QoQ.

This jump was supported by deal-making activity among digital lending companies — 6 of Asia’s top 10 deals in Q3’23 went to companies in this category.

get all the data behind the state of fintech q3’23

This data file is chock-full of stats on global fintech funding, deals, exits, unicorns, top investors, and more.

Unicorn births also showed signs of stabilizing in Q3’23. Like the previous quarter, 3 unicorns (private companies valued at $1B+) were born in Q3’23, bringing the total unicorn count to 312.

Viewing unicorn births through an annual lens shows just how pronounced the unicorn slowdown is in the fintech arena. Just 8 unicorns have been born in 2023 so far, down from 163 in 2021 and 73 in 2022.

The US accounted for 2 new unicorns in Q3’23: crypto custody platform BitGo ($1.8B valuation) and insurtech Kin ($1B). The only other unicorn born in Q3’23 was Hong Kong-based microfinance platform Micro Connect ($1.7B).

Fintech mega-round funding rose 50% QoQ to hit $2.4B across 14 deals in Q3’23. Despite the upward trajectory, this marked fintech’s second lowest quarter for mega-round funding since 2016.

Asia surpassed the US in mega-round funding, securing $1.1B across 5 deals. The US raised $1B across 7 mega-rounds.

Despite a drop in deals, digital lending secured the most funding among fintech sectors in Q3’23 — funding to the space rose by 70% QoQ to hit $1.7B.

Digital lending’s funding boost was driven in part by mega-rounds, which brought in more than half of the sector’s quarterly funding.

Payments and insurtech tied for second in total fintech funding, raising $1.1B each. While this marked a 22% increase for insurtech QoQ, it represented a 39% drop for payments.

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Fintech 100: The most promising fintech startups of 2023 https://www.cbinsights.com/research/report/top-fintech-startups-2023/ Tue, 03 Oct 2023 13:00:40 +0000 https://www.cbinsights.com/research/?post_type=report&p=163428 CB Insights has unveiled the winners of the sixth annual Fintech 100 (previously the Fintech 250) — a list of the 100 most promising private fintech companies across the globe. Three-quarters of this year’s winners are B2B fintechs, including business …

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CB Insights has unveiled the winners of the sixth annual Fintech 100 (previously the Fintech 250) — a list of the 100 most promising private fintech companies across the globe.

Three-quarters of this year’s winners are B2B fintechs, including business spend management platforms, cross-border and real-time payment providers, and core banking and infrastructure platforms.

Additionally, 24 companies in this year’s cohort are B2C, including challenger banks, mobile wallets, and retail investing platforms. 

Using the CB Insights platform, our research team picked these 100 private market companies from a pool of over 19K companies, including applicants and nominees. They were chosen based on CB Insights datasets — including equity funding, investor profiles, business relationships, R&D activity, news sentiment analysis, competitive landscape, proprietary Mosaic scores, and Yardstiq transcripts — and criteria such as tech novelty and market potential. The research team also reviewed thousands of Analyst Briefings submitted by applicants.

CB Insights clients can access the entire Fintech 100 list and interactive Expert Collection here.

If you are not already a CB Insights client, sign up for a free trial to analyze each winner’s funding and valuation history, headcount growth, key competitors, and more.

Want to be considered for future rankings? Fill out this initial application form (it’ll take no more than a few minutes). If selected, you’ll be asked to complete our Analyst Briefing Survey so that our analysts can better understand your products, customers, and market traction.

Fintech 100 2023 Winners by Category

Companies are categorized by their primary focus area and client base. Categories in the market map are not mutually exclusive.

Please click to enlarge.

TOP FINTECH COMPANIES 2023: FINTECH 100 COHORT HIGHLIGHTS

Overall funding and valuation trends: The Fintech 100 includes a mix of companies at different stages of maturity, product development, and funding. The cohort has raised nearly $22B in equity funding across 381 deals since 2019 (as of 9/22/23). This year’s list includes 31 unicorns (private companies with a $1B+ valuation).

Early-stage innovation: Twenty companies in this year’s winning cohort are in early fundraising stages (seed/angel or Series A). Solutions from early innovators are being developed across categories, including B2B BNPL (Mondu and Two), account-to-account (A2A) payments (Banked and kevin.), and mobile wallets and remittances (DANA and LemFi).

Most represented categories: The cohort is broken down into 20 categories. “Spend management” and “insurance” are tied for the largest portion of this year’s winners (9 companies each).

The spend management category is led by later-stage market leaders Brex and Ramp, which both launched generative AI product features this year. The category also includes two new winners in non-US markets: Singapore-based Aspire and Mexico-based Clara.

Insurance is one of the biggest categories for the second straight year. Eight out of the 9 insurtechs are B2B, including two insurance distribution platforms: repeat winner bolttech and new winner Cover Genius

Global reach: This year’s winners represent 24 different countries across the globe. Forty-three percent of the selected companies are headquartered in the US — down from 53% last year. The UK comes in second with 12 winners, followed by Singapore with 7.

Additionally, some emerging markets stand out with multiple winners this year. For example, India has 3 winners, while Indonesia and Egypt each have 2.

Novel applications: Two of this year’s winners are developing large language models purpose-built for financial services: conversational AI provider and returning winner Kasisto and financial document processing platform Cognaize.

Two winners in the wealth and asset management category, AlphaSense and SESAMm, have integrated generative AI into their market intelligence platforms for document summarization and extraction. 

Finally, within core banking and infrastructure, embedded finance platforms — like repeat winner Unit and an early-stage new winner Synctera — are growing quickly in the United States.

Fintech 100 (2023)

Track the 100 most promising fintech startups to watch in 2023. Look for Fintech 100 (2023) in the Collections tab.

Track the Fintech 100 (2023) winners

THE FINTECH 250 CLASS OF 2022: WHERE ARE THEY NOW?

The Fintech 250 2022 cohort has posted some notable accomplishments since October 4, 2022. Collectively, this cohort has seen:

  • $10B in equity funding across 64 deals — including Stripe’s $6.5B round in March 2023.
  • 14 mega-rounds (deals worth $100M+).
  • 2 acquisitions: Uplift was acquired by another Fintech 250 winner, Upgrade, for $100M, and PolicyGenius was acquired by Zinnia.
  • 4 new entrants to the unicorn club: eToro, Kin, Liquidity, and Quantexa all hit $1B+ valuations for the first time.

Fintech 250 2022 Winner by Category

 

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The state of Latin America’s challenger banks in 5 charts https://www.cbinsights.com/research/latin-america-challenger-banks/ Mon, 07 Aug 2023 13:30:56 +0000 https://www.cbinsights.com/research/?p=160321 Latin America’s largest challenger bank, Nubank, delighted its investors in Q1’23 when it reported record quarterly revenue of $1.6B, up 87% YoY. Shares jumped following the news, taking Nubank’s market value to over $30B. Nubank isn’t the only challenger seeing …

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Latin America’s largest challenger bank, Nubank, delighted its investors in Q1’23 when it reported record quarterly revenue of $1.6B, up 87% YoY. Shares jumped following the news, taking Nubank’s market value to over $30B.

Nubank isn’t the only challenger seeing tailwinds in Latin America, which offers fertile ground for these digital-first banks. The banking penetration is considerably low in the continent, with around 70% of the population unbanked or underbanked. In contrast, 3 in 4 people have mobile phones, suggesting that a significant portion of Latin America is digitally connected, but excluded from the traditional banking system.

Nevertheless, the region’s challenger banks face a stiff competitive landscape and have seen funding dry up in 2023 so far.

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Here’s how top open banking players compare across funding, headcount, and customer satisfaction https://www.cbinsights.com/research/open-banking-landscape/ Mon, 24 Jul 2023 17:00:01 +0000 https://www.cbinsights.com/research/?p=161779 Open banking is ushering in a new era of financial services.  The industry — which relies on APIs to access and share banking data with other financial institutions — has also attracted billions of dollars in funding in the last …

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Open banking is ushering in a new era of financial services. 

The industry — which relies on APIs to access and share banking data with other financial institutions — has also attracted billions of dollars in funding in the last few years.

Payments-focused open banking startup Volt raised a $60M Series B led by IVP in June, one of the top mid-stage fintech deals of Q2.

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State of Fintech Q2’23 Report https://www.cbinsights.com/research/report/fintech-trends-q2-2023/ Wed, 19 Jul 2023 13:00:08 +0000 https://www.cbinsights.com/research/?post_type=report&p=161491 Following a spike in funding in Q1’23 (driven by Stripe‘s $6.5B round), global fintech funding decreased 48% quarter-over-quarter (QoQ) in Q2’23 to $7.8B. Deal count also fell for the fifth straight quarter to hit 845. Using CB Insights data, we …

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Following a spike in funding in Q1’23 (driven by Stripe‘s $6.5B round), global fintech funding decreased 48% quarter-over-quarter (QoQ) in Q2’23 to $7.8B. Deal count also fell for the fifth straight quarter to hit 845.

Using CB Insights data, we dig into key takeaways from our State of Fintech Q2’23 Report, including:

  1. Global fintech funding falls by nearly half to $7.8B, its lowest level since 2017.
  2. Funding from $100M+ mega-rounds totals $2B — a 6-year low.
  3. Payments funding falls 75% QoQ, the biggest decrease across all fintech sectors.
  4. LatAm & the Caribbean funding more than doubles, making it the only region to see funding grow QoQ.
  5. All 5 of the quarter’s IPO exits come from fintechs based outside of the US.

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Analyzing UBS’s growth strategy: How the global investment bank is doubling down on technology bets https://www.cbinsights.com/research/ubs-strategy-map-investments-partnerships/ Thu, 06 Jul 2023 20:24:44 +0000 https://www.cbinsights.com/research/?p=160421 UBS — one of the world’s largest wealth managers — has greatly expanded its market footprint over the past few years. Notably, the bank recently completed a $3.2B rescue acquisition of its Switzerland-based competitor, Credit Suisse, which collapsed amid US banking …

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UBS — one of the world’s largest wealth managers has greatly expanded its market footprint over the past few years. Notably, the bank recently completed a $3.2B rescue acquisition of its Switzerland-based competitor, Credit Suisse, which collapsed amid US banking turmoil in March.

Beyond this deal, UBS has also turned to technology to strengthen its leadership position. In fact, it spent roughly $4B on tech in 2022 alone.

Its commitment to technology can be broken down into 2 main objectives. The first is the digitization and expansion of its existing services to enhance the client experience. The second is diversifying its investment and trading products through the use of novel technologies like blockchain, cloud, and alternative investment platforms.

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Retail Bank AI Readiness Index: Who’s best-positioned for the AI boom? https://www.cbinsights.com/research/ai-readiness-index-retail-banking/ Wed, 28 Jun 2023 13:00:25 +0000 https://www.cbinsights.com/research/?p=160330 CB Insights has launched the Retail Bank AI Readiness Index — a ranking of the 50 largest retail banks in the Americas and Europe by market cap, based on their demonstrated ability to attract top AI talent, execute AI projects, …

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CB Insights has launched the Retail Bank AI Readiness Index — a ranking of the 50 largest retail banks in the Americas and Europe by market cap, based on their demonstrated ability to attract top AI talent, execute AI projects, and innovate through R&D and investments.

The index is calculated based on CB Insights datasets including patent applications, partnership & licensing agreements, dealmaking activity, acquisitions, key people, product launches, and earnings transcripts.

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Generative AI chatbots for banks are gaining traction. Here’s how the market is evolving and the players to watch https://www.cbinsights.com/research/generative-ai-chatbots-banking-market/ Mon, 26 Jun 2023 18:35:21 +0000 https://www.cbinsights.com/research/?p=160466 AI-based chatbots are nothing new for the banking industry.  This technology category uses conversational AI to automate bank-customer interactions, allowing customers to find quick answers to their questions while providing banks with a potentially valuable source of customer data. However, …

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AI-based chatbots are nothing new for the banking industry. 

This technology category uses conversational AI to automate bank-customer interactions, allowing customers to find quick answers to their questions while providing banks with a potentially valuable source of customer data.

However, they’ve historically faced limitations such as misinterpreting complex questions by relying too heavily on keywords, as well as providing responses that can sound too robotic and be off-putting to customers.

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Banking-as-a-service (BaaS) is seeing a burst of M&A and venture activity. How do these embedded fintech providers stack up? https://www.cbinsights.com/research/banking-as-a-service-baas-embedded-fintech-funding-valuations-ranking/ Fri, 23 Jun 2023 18:52:06 +0000 https://www.cbinsights.com/research/?p=160587 Despite a slowdown in the overall fintech market, VCs, banks, and tech companies are opening their checkbooks to invest in or acquire banking-as-a-service (BaaS) providers. BaaS providers use application programming interfaces (APIs) to enable banks, fintechs, and companies outside of …

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Despite a slowdown in the overall fintech market, VCs, banks, and tech companies are opening their checkbooks to invest in or acquire banking-as-a-service (BaaS) providers.

BaaS providers use application programming interfaces (APIs) to enable banks, fintechs, and companies outside of financial services to offer banking and payment products to end users. BaaS is also referred to as embedded finance or embedded fintech.

The financial technology behemoth FIS — which provides core banking, payments acceptance, and other services to banks and retailers around the world — recently acquired BaaS provider Bond for an undisclosed amount. 

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ESG Market Map: 115 companies powering ESG-focused investing and banking https://www.cbinsights.com/research/esg-market-map-technology/ Wed, 24 May 2023 18:49:26 +0000 https://www.cbinsights.com/research/?p=159275 ESG (environmental, social, and governance) investing is at a crossroads. 2022 was a year of draining flows to sustainable funds, disappointing ESG investment performance, and political backlash in the US.  There are mixed reports on ESG demand and performance. However, …

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ESG (environmental, social, and governance) investing is at a crossroads. 2022 was a year of draining flows to sustainable funds, disappointing ESG investment performance, and political backlash in the US. 

There are mixed reports on ESG demand and performance. However, several prominent data providers still suggest a relatively healthy market and appetite for ESG among investors. 

For example, despite negative returns for Morningstar’s US Sustainability Index in 2022, it still outperformed the overall market. And according to Refinitiv Lipper, ESG equity funds saw net inflows in Q1’23, while non-ESG equity funds suffered more withdrawals than inflows. 

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Y Combinator’s fintech investment strategy focuses on B2B offerings, especially treasury automation https://www.cbinsights.com/research/y-combinator-fintech-investment-strategy/ Wed, 24 May 2023 13:24:48 +0000 https://www.cbinsights.com/research/?p=158591 Y Combinator‘s Winter 2023 batch welcomed 48 fintech startups, representing nearly a fifth of the total W23 cohort. Business-to-business (B2B) fintechs were central to its strategy — in fact, 85% of the fintechs accepted in W23 cater to businesses. While …

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Y Combinator‘s Winter 2023 batch welcomed 48 fintech startups, representing nearly a fifth of the total W23 cohort.

Business-to-business (B2B) fintechs were central to its strategy — in fact, 85% of the fintechs accepted in W23 cater to businesses.

While 77% of the fintech companies in the W23 cohort are based in the United States, Y Combinator also turned to emerging markets. The accelerator invested in 5 emerging-market fintechs, most of which cater to businesses. A couple of examples include Colombia-based treasury automation platform Milio and account-to-account (A2A) payments solution Palomma.

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Analyzing Apple’s fintech strategy: How the tech giant is quietly building a next-gen fintech ecosystem https://www.cbinsights.com/research/apple-fintech-strategy-map-partnerships-acquisitions/ Wed, 24 May 2023 12:27:53 +0000 https://www.cbinsights.com/research/?p=159623 Apple‘s high-yield savings account, unveiled in April through a partnership with Goldman Sachs, reached almost $1B in deposits in the first 4 days alone and 240,000 accounts in the first week. This wasn’t the first time Apple has sent waves …

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Apple‘s high-yield savings account, unveiled in April through a partnership with Goldman Sachs, reached almost $1B in deposits in the first 4 days alone and 240,000 accounts in the first week.

This wasn’t the first time Apple has sent waves across the fintech landscape. Since Apple’s foray into the space almost a decade ago, the company has been gradually shaping itself into a fintech giant. 

While products like Apple Pay and Apple Card laid the foundation for Apple’s fintech strategy, it has relied heavily on partnerships to drive growth in the adoption and scope of its offerings. The company has inked deals with banks, buy now, pay later (BNPL) players, card issuers, payment gateways, and spend management platforms to reach further into the sector.

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Analyzing Wells Fargo’s growth strategy: How the banking giant is investing in fintech https://www.cbinsights.com/research/wells-fargo-strategy-map-investments-partnerships/ Wed, 10 May 2023 14:17:13 +0000 https://www.cbinsights.com/research/?p=157996 Wells Fargo is the fourth-largest bank in the US by total assets, with a market capitalization of around $138B. Its customer base of over 70M spans across 8,700+ locations worldwide. Over the last few years, the company has turned to …

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Wells Fargo is the fourth-largest bank in the US by total assets, with a market capitalization of around $138B. Its customer base of over 70M spans across 8,700+ locations worldwide.

Over the last few years, the company has turned to fintech startups to help meet customer demand for secure, seamless, and customized banking experiences. Its recent investments and partnerships have targeted solutions that enhance its offerings to business banking and wealth management clients. 

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For example, Wells Fargo and its primary investment arm, Wells Fargo Strategic Capital, have backed several cash and spend management automation fintechs to better address the needs of business clients. On the wealth management side, Wells Fargo’s partnerships have allowed it to embed AI and natural language processing (NLP) into its back-end processes, such as market intelligence research and user onboarding. 

The banking giant is also investing to amp up its core processes, focusing on quick cross-border transfers and virtual card offerings. 

Using CB Insights data, we uncovered 5 of Wells Fargo’s most important strategic priorities highlighted by its investments and partnerships since 2018. We then categorized companies by their business relationships with Wells Fargo across these priorities:

  • Wealth management
  • Fraud, risk, & compliance
  • Payments
  • Accounting & cash management automation
  • Open finance & data aggregation

These designations are not exhaustive of Wells Fargo’s investment and partnership activity in the analyzed period.

Accounting & cash management automation

Wells Fargo has leveraged investments and partnerships to ramp up its cash management and automation offerings for its business banking clients.

After leading a $20M Series A round to US-based cash automation software startup Trovata in 2021, Wells Fargo rolled out Trovata as its strategic cash positioning and forecasting tool, making the solution available to its business and corporate clients. The bank’s other investments in this category include the accounts receivable (AR) automation software DadeSystems in 2020, and the accounting practice solution Canopy in 2018.

On the AR/AP side, Wells Fargo partnered with Bill.com in 2020 to launch Bill Manager, an automation solution that integrates into the bank’s digital banking platform and streamlines back-office financial operations for Wells Fargo’s SMB clients. 

Fraud, risk, & compliance

Wells Fargo has primarily backed companies that leverage AI to ensure fraud prevention and compliance. These include AI/ML-powered supervision and threat detection solutions ThetaLake and H2O.ai, and regulatory text-scanning solution Ascent AI. The deals reinforced Wells Fargo’s current fraud prevention strategy, which leverages FICO’s AI/ML-powered Falcon Fraud Manager solution.  

Digital ID verification and authentication is also a focus area for the bank. For example, Wells Fargo has invested in Arkose Labs, which offers a user authentication solution, and ID verification startup Socure. Wells Fargo also partnered with Socure to fight synthetic identity fraud, in which a made-up name, date of birth, mailing address, email account, and phone number are applied to a real person’s Social Security number.

Finally, while Wells Fargo doesn’t offer any crypto-based products, it made two repeat investments into the UK-based Elliptic, a crypto transaction monitoring software that aims to accelerate the institutional adoption of crypto.

Payments 

Most of Wells Fargo’s activity in this space focused on faster cross-border payment processing, followed by virtual card solutions.

In 2021, Wells Fargo made a $10M growth equity investment in the cross-border payment processing and financial messaging fintech Volante. Later in 2022, the bank partnered with Volante to modernize its payments strategy, and migrate to the new ISO 20022 financial messaging standards.

Within card payments, Wells Fargo made two investments in the virtual card issuer and virtual card-platform-as-service provider Extend, including an incubator/accelerator round in 2020. The same year, the bank launched its own one-time virtual card payment offering, called WellsOne, to ensure safe transactions for its commercial clients.

The banking giant also entered strategic partnerships with payments providers TransferMate and Bilt Rewards. In 2019, Wells Fargo partnered with TransferMate to speed up international payments for its business customers. Later in March 2022, the bank partnered with Bilt Rewards and Mastercard to issue the first credit card that helped users earn points on their rent payments. 

Overall, the bank’s investments and partnerships here focused on ensuring regulatory compliance, and high customer satisfaction.

Open finance & data aggregation 

As the broader banking industry shifted toward API-based data aggregation, Wells Fargo followed suit. In 2021, it joined the open finance platform Akoya’s Data Access Network, which allowed fintechs and data aggregators to access Wells Fargo’s data for mutual customers. As of 2020, Wells Fargo also became one of the joint owners of Akoya —  along with Fidelity, The Clearing House Payments Co, and 10 other banks.

The bank has also entered a number of data-sharing agreements with fintechs such as Expensify, Envestnet Yodlee, and Plaid in an effort to enhance Wells Fargo customers’ control over their financial data, and streamline their access to services offered by fintech companies. In 2020, the bank launched its own open API channel, Wells Fargo Gateway, which allowed corporate clients and partners to embed Wells Fargo products and services into their own digital experiences and offerings. 

Wealth management

Wells Fargo has invested heavily in wealth management solutions, targeting both alternative and traditional asset trading, as well as analytics and customer experience. CEO Charlie Sharf says that wealth management is a significant source of growth for the bank, and he aims to increase digital engagement for Wells Fargo’s 2.6M wealth management clients.

The bank invested in the institutional-grade digital asset trading solution Talos, along with alternative investment platforms Forge Global and iCapital. On the market intelligence side, Wells Fargo invested in the AI-powered research and insight engine AlphaSense in 2021, and the financial market analysis software Visible Alpha in 2018. Wells Fargo’s investments here signaled the banks’ prioritization of AI and NLP in equity research and insight generation

Following these investments, the banking giant has also expanded its own wealth management offerings. In early 2023, Wells Fargo announced the rollout of its net-worth management and financial planning mobile app tool LifeSync. The year before, in an effort to appeal to the new generation of investors, the bank redesigned its robo-advisor Intuitive Investor to be more intuitive, and lowered its required minimum deposit to $500, down from $5,000.

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