The 2024 report highlights that Fintech founders diligently improved their results in 2024 despite a 91% drop in investments since the 2021 peak.
SAN FRANCISCO, October 23, 2024 /PRNewswire/ — While fintech companies face significant headwinds – from high interest rates to increasing regulatory scrutiny – they are also finding opportunities in 2024, according to the latest report. Future of Fintech Report of Silicon Valley Bank (SVB), a division of First Citizens Bank. Venture capital (VC) investment remains weak, hovering near a six-year low for the sector, as deal flow has shifted to early-stage, with more than three seed deals for each series A. Artificial intelligence (AI) is also making an appearance. as a bright spot for the industry as investors and founders explore its growing role in the sector.
THE 2024 Future of Fintech Report provides detailed analysis of the fintech market, including investment and fundraising trends. It also examines the growing importance of AI in horizontal applications, including customer service and productivity, as well as in vertical applications specific to finance.
“While fintech companies face challenges, we expect a broader recovery in investment in 2025, as we continue to see opportunities for the sector,” said Nick ChristianNational Head of FinTech and Specialty Finance at Silicon Valley Bank. “For example, US fintech companies are becoming more efficient: almost 80% of them are improving their EBITDA margins year over year and almost 30% now have six to 12 months of runway, compared to 20% last year. “Over time, generative AI opens up opportunities for value creation in the fintech sector – whether traditional businesses improve efficiency by reducing labor costs or AI-native companies creating new solutions.”
Additional findings from The Future of Fintech 2024 the report includes:
Key Data Points on Fintech Investing
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Fintech-oriented venture capital fundraising has fallen 91% since its 2021 peak, with fundraising 5 billion dollars until September. The funds announced, including those not yet closed, amount to a total of 9 billion dollarsthe lowest since 2020.
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One in twelve venture capital dollars went to a fintech company in 2024, up from one in twelve. five dollars in 2021.
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Venture capital firms have slowed their pace of deployment in fintech. In 2021, the 100 most active US fintech investors were closing more than two deals per month. That rate has fallen to less than one transaction per month this year.
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In 2021, fintech transactions end 100 million dollars accounted for 65% of deal activity in the sector. By 2024, this figure has fallen to 34%.