Plumery’s AI fabric is future-proofed and designed for use cases beyond today’s horizon

Plumery, a digital banking development platform for customer-centric banking, has released AI Fabric. It creates an artificial intelligence (AI)-ready foundation for AI-assisted digital banking.

AI-Ready Digital Banking

Based on an event-driven data mesh, the new solution gives financial institutions a standardised way to connect AI and generative AI (GenAI) models/agents to banking data. Eliminating the need for bespoke system integrations. AI Fabric moves institutions away from brittle point-to-point architectures towards an event-driven, API-first architecture that scales with innovation.

Most financial institutions struggle to operationalise AI because their data is fragmented across legacy cores, channels, and point-to-point integrations. Each new AI pilot can require fresh plumbing, security reviews, and governance work, which delays time-to-value and increases risk. In addition, under increasing regulatory pressure, institutions are required to explain, audit, and govern AI decisions. Together, these factors make ad-hoc approaches to AI difficult to scale.

AI Fabric

Plumery’s AI Fabric enables institutions to plug in and swap AI capabilities as the ecosystem evolves. It exposes high-quality, domain-oriented banking events and data streams in a consistent, governed, and reusable way. This works across products, channels, and customer journeys. Importantly, the platform separates systems of record from systems of engagement and intelligence. Offering financial institution long-term agility instead of short-lived AI experiments.

By reducing point-to-point integrations and one-off data pipelines, an institution can lessen operational complexity and technical debt. This makes change cheaper, safer, and more predictable. Additionally, having clear data lineage, ownership, and control makes it easier to explain decisions, manage model risk, and satisfy regulators – reducing compliance friction as AI adoption grows.

“Financial institutions are clear about what they need from AI. They want real production use cases that improve customer experience and operations, but they will not compromise on governance, security, or control. Our AI Fabric gives them a standard, bank-grade way to allow AI use within their tools and data without rebuilding integrations for every model. The event-driven data mesh architecture improves the process by changing how banking data is produced, shared, and consumed, rather than adding another AI layer on top of fragmented systems.”

Ben Goldin, Founder and CEO of Plumery

Why Financial Institutions need an AI Foundation

In today’s fast-changing world, financial institutions need an AI foundation that absorbs change instead of amplifying it. With AI Fabric, institutions can experiment, deploy, and evolve AI-assisted use cases incrementally without re-architecting every time a model, vendor, or requirement changes.

Additionally, operational, customer, and risk decisions can be powered by live banking events rather than delayed, batch-based snapshots. This enables AI to assist where it matters most: in-journey, in-context, and in-the-moment.

Even financial institutions not yet ready to operationalise AI can lay the groundwork today with AI Fabric, ensuring they can move quickly and safely when priorities, budgets, or markets shift.

About Plumery

Headquartered in the Netherlands, Plumery’s mission is to empower financial institutions worldwide, regardless of size, to craft distinctive, contemporary, and customer-centric mobile and web experiences.

Plumery operates with a diverse team that embodies a unique combination of seasoned expertise and vibrant innovation. This blend has been cultivated through years of experience at start-ups, scale-ups, and established financial institutions, and most notably at globally leading financial technology companies, where they were instrumental in creating disruptive digital banking solutions and platforms that now serve more than 300 banks globally.

Plumery’s Digital Success Fabric platform provides banks with the foundation for success beyond fast time to market by expediting the development of their digital front ends while significantly cutting costs compared to in-house initiatives or solutions with high total cost of ownership.

Learn more at plumery.com

  • Artificial Intelligence in FinTech
  • Digital Payments
  • Neobanking

Gareth Richardson, CEO at Finova, on tackling the challenges that persist in creating a truly inclusive financial system

Financial inclusion has felt out of reach for too many people. According to the FCA, nearly a million people in the UK remain unbanked, and for those who do have access to financial services, that access isn’t always affordable or designed with their everyday needs in mind.

The UK is taking steps to address this, including the government’s latest financial inclusion strategy, which puts a welcome spotlight on digital inclusion. As more of life moves online – from paying bills to applying for credit – being digitally connected and being financially included are all packaged together.  But despite huge advances in digital banking, many consumers still find themselves priced out, left behind or navigating services that weren’t built with them in mind.

So, in a world of instant payments and AI-powered apps, why are so many people still excluded from products that should be available to everyone? With the right technology, these rigid, outdated models can be replaced with services that adapt to customers rather than shutting them out.

The Hidden Problem with Traditional Pricing Models

The issue comes down to legacy thinking. Traditional pricing models didn’t grow out of customer needs. They grew out of the way banks organised themselves internally. Products are designed by departments, and those departments are managed according to systems, processes, risk models, and profit lines. The result? Customers were viewed as isolated cases. Our sector missed the bigger picture. We do not see a whole person with a rich and complicated financial life.

So what’s the solution? It starts with innovation. Cross-product, cloud-based core systems, open banking and AI-driven decisioning tools allow lenders to build a more complete picture of someone’s financial life, including their saving habits, spending patterns and long-term behaviour.

For example, a seasonal worker whose income rises and falls throughout the year could be penalised if a lender focused on their income profile in the quieter months. A more advanced decisioning tool could make an assessment based on a seasonal worker’s whole annual pattern, providing a fairer and fuller picture of their finances.

Another solution is a product that automatically adjusts its rates depending on the customer’s day-to-day financial decisions. Here’s how it works: the rates would dynamically evolve in line with the product holder’s behaviour and their changes in liabilities. As a result, people with low credit history learn good financial behaviour and can improve their access to banking services.

The message is simple. Financial products can be more flexible. They can be truly aligned with the realities of people’s everyday lives. But we must invest in the right technology to make it happen.

How Can Smarter Pricing Reach the People Who’ve Been missed?

The fact is that most pricing decisions today still rely on a limited view of a customer’s data. We end up with a situation where lenders are making decisions whether or not to do business with a customer based on information held by a single institution or even a product line.

But anyone could tell you that such a narrow view isn’t enough to really understand what a person does with their money. We all manage money across several banks, financial apps and credit providers. Some of us save in one place, borrow in another and budget somewhere else entirely.

Smarter pricing technologies can bring these pieces together in a way that feels more rounded and fair. By using open banking data, behavioural insights, and, soon, digital identity frameworks, lenders can build a richer, fairer view of a customer.

There’s a longer term benefit, too. Digital identity and federated data models will allow people to securely share verified data across institutions. This gives customers more control over how they’re understood and ensures their financial story doesn’t reset every time they switch providers. It shifts the emphasis from exclusion to inclusion.

Why Moving Faster Helps People Feel More Included

Speed might not be the first thing that comes to mind when thinking about financial inclusion, but it matters more than you might expect. When products take months to design, approve and launch, lenders struggle to respond to changing customer needs – particularly for people in vulnerable situations.

Cloud technology changes everything. Lenders can bring new ideas to market more quickly, test them with real customers and adapt the product spec based on what’s working. We can move beyond static and one-size-fits-all offerings. We can push for cloud-native systems, for a market where products can grow with a customer, rewarding positive behaviour and opening doors to better terms over time.

The Technologies Shaping A More Inclusive Future

Of course, a range of new technologies is coming to the market. All could make financial services more inclusive for the average everyday customer. The UK government has recently acknowledged that financial education is very poor, and it is worse in the areas of society that are typically unbanked. Our industry, of course, has known this for some time. UK Finance members have built inroads, with over 145,000 educators across 25,000 schools.

But the work isn’t quite over. The simple fact is that financial products are hard for people to understand and scary.  AI can help people navigate decisions that once felt overwhelming or confusing. A person applying for credit for the first time, for instance, could use an AI assistant to compare options in plain language. By providing guidance that is both clear and tailored, AI helps people make informed choices without feeling intimidated.

Next comes digital identity and data portability, which tackle one of the most persistent obstacles to inclusion: lack of verifiable financial history. For people with irregular incomes or those new to the UK, these technologies can make a huge difference. Being able to carry verified financial information securely reduces the need to repeatedly prove financial standing and ensures continuity as customers move between services.

Finally, modern core banking architectures are laying the foundation for financial services that are flexible and human-centric. By moving away from predefined products, banks can design experiences that truly reflect a customer’s circumstances. This could mean flexible repayment plans that adapt to seasonal income or savings tools that respond to a customer’s habits over time.

Towards A More Accessible Financial System

Technology will play a central role in closing the financial inclusion gap in the UK. It can help create services that are easier to access and easier to understand. It’s about products that adapt to people’s lives rather than the other way around. And tools that give individuals the confidence and control they need to manage their money in a digital world.

The goal is a financial system that works for everyone and where no one is excluded because of outdated systems, incomplete data, or products that simply don’t reflect real life. And it’s in our reach. On the battlefront for financial inclusion, AI and technology can be a force for good. It’s up to our sector to embrace it without overlooking safety or structure.

Learn more at finova.tech

  • Digital Payments
  • Neobanking

FinTech Connect was a crossroads for strategy and execution. Global banks, FinTech challengers, regulators and investors gathered to define 2026 priorities, debate operational challenges and benchmark technology roadmaps.

A Decade of Fintech Innovation

FinTech Connect marked its 10th anniversary at ExCeL London. Drawing 5,000+ industry professionals, 140+ speakers and 100+ exhibitors to explore banking, payments, compliance, digital transformation and blockchain innovation. The co-location with Tokenize: LDN brought deeper coverage of tokenisation and digital-asset infrastructure alongside core FinTech topics.


AI in Fintech: From Vision to Practice

A theme threaded through almost every theatre was AI adoption in financial services. But unlike earlier years’ speculative hype, this edition focused on practical deployment and risk management.

One standout panel, “GenAI That Customers Can Trust: The One Zero Digital Banker Story,” shared how One Zero built responsible generative AI features tailored for banking workflows, emphasising transparency and user trust. Industry leaders underscored that explainability, governance and compliance are no longer optional in enterprise AI.

A direct follow-on session, “How Do We Make AI Responsible in Practice?”, featured Rajeev Chakraborty from the Home Office discussing model governance and ethical safeguards for operational AI—an area rapidly becoming central to CIO and risk officer agendas.

Across both days, panels also explored how AI can reduce backlog in financial institutions, with Santander UK’s Head of AI demonstrating measurable impact on operational efficiency, and tackling tech debt at scale—a perennial challenge heightened by the influx of automation projects.

Key takeaway: AI’s role has shifted from emerging trend to core enterprise infrastructure, but success now hinges on responsible implementation, observable outcomes, and regulatory alignment.


Digital Transformation & Core Banking Strategies

Transforming legacy systems was another anchor topic. The Digital Transformation stage hosted robust discussions around neobanks and challenger strategies, with executives from TSB Bank and HSBC highlighting how incumbents are adopting agile ways of working while balancing risk and customer expectations.

The session “All In on Legacy? Driving Time to Market Without Big-Bang Migrations” resonated with many practitioners: incremental modernisation beats wholesale lift-outs when prioritising stability and customer continuity.

Another practical highlight, “Engineering Productivity Measurement: Traditional Bank to UK’s Largest Fintech,” narrated the journey of building measurable engineering benchmarks to align business goals and product delivery.

Key takeaway: Attendees left with a reinforced understanding that successful transformation blends cultural shift, incremental modernization, and strategic tech investment—not hurried replacement of core systems.


RegTech & Ethical Compliance: Balancing Innovation with Governance

RegTech, Compliance & Security sessions tackled the tension between rapid innovation and tightening regulatory guardrails—a debate central to fintech scaling.

A standout session titled “Ethical AI in Regulatory Technology: Balancing Innovation & Compliance” featured voices from governance, compliance and data-ethics functions. Panelists discussed strategies for embedding fairness, bias mitigation and traceability into machine-assisted workflows—a crucial step for institutions deploying automated decisioning.

Another forward-looking talk, “How Quantum Innovation Will Redefine Regulatory Operations,” examined how future computing paradigms could reshape compliance tooling and data verification—but also stressed the need to prepare today’s infrastructure for tomorrow’s disruptions.

Key takeaway: Compliance isn’t just a cost centre; speakers argued that robust RegTech can be a competitive advantage, reducing risk while enabling faster scaling.


PayTech & eCommerce: Securing the Digital Commerce Era

The PayTech & eCommerce stage delivered insights on securing payment flows and shaping the next wave of commerce innovation.

In “Emerging Global Tech Trends in Payments & Cash Management,” HSBC’s payment leaders unpacked how real-time rails and open APIs are influencing cross-border flows. Fintech Connect 2025

The panel “Transforming Payment Security with AI” brought together payment experts and academics to examine fraud detection innovations—AI-enabled risk scoring, adaptive authentication and cooperative intelligence sharing—as a defence against evolving threats. Fintech Connect 2025

A later session on “Tackling Cyber Threats in a New Era of Digital Payments,” addressed real-time threat detection, third-party risk and securing complex ecosystems, underscoring cybersecurity’s front-and-centre role for digital commerce. Fintech Connect 2025

Key takeaway: Payments remain fertile ground for innovation, but trust and security are foundational determinants of user adoption and ecosystem resilience.


Tokenisation & Blockchain: Institutional Pathways Ahead

The Tokenize: LDN co-located stage brought in robust debate around real-world asset (RWA) tokenization and Web3 infrastructure—not as fringe buzzwords, but as emerging institutional tools.

Panels like “Bridging the RWA Infrastructure Gap” unpacked regulatory friction points and scaling challenges, highlighting custody risk, compliance complexity and standardisation needs—critical prerequisites to institutional adoption.

Another session on “Expanding Investment Opportunities With Fractional Ownership” featured cross-sector thought leaders, including Dr Lisa Cameron (MP & Crypto APPG Chair), exploring how tokenised assets can democratise access to traditionally illiquid markets.

Web3 panels examined trust, privacy and compliance in blockchain ecosystems and navigated the practicalities of smart contracts and decentralised identities—topics that are rapidly gaining traction with enterprise adopters.

A key session, titled Blockchain and CBDCs: At the Heart of Public Transformation? featured NatWest’s Head of Group Payment Strategy Lee McNabb, EY’s Emerging Tech & Innovation Leader Igor Mikhalev and Joy Adams, COO for Digital Assets at Deutsche Bank. A lively debate chaired by CommerzBank’s Poonam Ahuja examined the pros and cons of digital currencies and the rise of stablecoins.

Key takeaway: Tokenisation is still nascent, but panels stressed it’s transitioning into a practical institutional infrastructure conversation, with regulatory clarity and integration tooling cited as catalysts for broader uptake.


Startup Innovation & Demo Highlights

The Innovation & Start Up stage and Start-Up LaunchPad provided rapid-fire exposure to emerging companies pushing the frontier.

Live demos included:

  • DaMoney.ai, showcasing AI-guided compliance workflows;
  • Narrative, an AI-native engagement platform for SMEs;
  • Profylr, offering comprehensive consumer duty landscapes analytics;
  • 3AI, demonstrating self-learning investment intelligence models.

These sessions were among the most interactive parts of the show, with founders directly answering questions on integration, compliance and product-market fit.

Key takeaway: Startups revealed solutions that dovetail with enterprise needs—especially around AML automation, customer engagement and data orchestration—making them compelling partners for larger financial services buyers.


Networking, Community & Celebration

FinTech Connect didn’t just deliver talks; it facilitated dense networking across peer groups, investors, regulators and tech leads. The AI-powered networking app helped attendees pre-book conversations and tailor agendas, turning serendipity into structured discovery.

The 10th anniversary celebration—complete with drinks, a Christmas Market theme and live entertainment—reinforced the community aspect and capped the event on a high note.


Conclusion: A Hard-Working Fintech Forum

FinTech Connect 2025 proved to be more than a conference—it was a strategic inflection point. While technology and vendor showcases were abundant, it was the panel debates and operational talks that delivered the most actionable insight. Attendees departed with:

  • A clearer view of AI adoption roadmaps;
  • Practical frameworks for RegTech and compliance transformation;
  • Nuanced understanding of payments security and real-time rails;
  • Emerging tokenisation playbooks suitable for institutional pilots.

As FinTech leaders prepare 2026 budgets and technology plans, FinTech Connect has reaffirmed itself as a must-attend forum where strategy, innovation and regulation intersect—and where the next decade of financial services will continue to take shape.

  • Artificial Intelligence in FinTech
  • Blockchain & Crypto
  • Events
  • Host Perspectives
  • InsurTech
  • Neobanking

Alex Mifsud, CEO and co-founder of Weavr.io, on how embedded finance is the perfect solution for employee retention

To earn loyalty, stop making your team act like the company’s lender. In the war for talent, few things corrode trust faster than asking employees to bankroll the business they work for. Across the UK and Europe, 42 percent of employees say waiting for expenses harms their financial health, while 36 percent say it affects their mental wellbeing. Behind those percentages are real frustrations: professionals dipping into overdrafts to cover hotel bills, freelancers waiting weeks for per diems that never quite arrive, and finance teams juggling hundreds of delayed claims.

In Twisted Sifter recently, one worker described waiting a month for reimbursement of a modest $268 business expense – only to receive $84 and “lose all motivation to go the extra mile”. It’s a small story, but it captures a bigger truth: when employees feel the system works against them, they stop believing in the company that designed it.

The Retention Cost of Reimbursement

Most businesses don’t connect their expense process with employee retention, yet the link is clear. Work-related stress costs the UK economy £28 billion a year, largely through lost productivity and attrition. Meanwhile, research shows that happier employees drive better results: “Company profits are much higher – and turnover is much lower – when employees feel positive and supported”.

Reimbursement systems do the opposite. They impose a financial burden on staff, add administrative friction, and create daily reminders that the company’s systems aren’t designed around their needs. According to HR News, UK employees collectively front an estimated £51 billion a year in work-related expenses before being repaid.

The fallout is predictable: financial anxiety, or even just annoyance, leads to disengagement; disengagement leads to turnover. Replacing a skilled employee can cost up to 1.5 times their annual salary once hiring, onboarding and lost productivity are included. That’s a high price to pay for outdated workflows.

Where SaaS Platforms Meet the Problem

Many purpose-built expenses management SaaS platforms have closed the gap and now offer end-to-end expense experiences, but the opportunity extends far beyond the category itself. HR systems that handle onboarding and travel approvals, accounting platforms that oversee budgets, even workforce and travel platforms that coordinate trips all touch the same underlying workflow;  employees spending on behalf of the business.

A common pattern still emerges when employees need to travel for work, for example. They request trip approvals in one tool, capture receipts in another, and submit claims through a third. Finance teams then reconcile spend manually. Even where processes are digital, they often live in separate tools;  approvals in one place, receipt capture in another, reconciliation elsewhere.

This fragmentation limits what SaaS platforms can achieve. They automate forms and digitise reports, but the process still ends with an employee waiting for a reimbursement that shouldn’t exist. For product and strategy leaders, this is an opportunity hiding in plain sight: the chance to redesign expense workflows around real-time spending rather than post-hoc repayment.

Business Travel: The Perfect Illustration

Corporate travel exposes this inefficiency in its rawest form. Most travel platforms monetise only pre-trip spend – flights, hotels and transfers – leaving meals, taxis and incidentals out of their reach. Yet by 2027, global business travel spending is forecast to reach $1.8 trillion, with a significant share of that occurring during the trip itself.

It’s also where employees feel the pain most acutely. Travellers frequently use personal cards abroad, juggle currency conversions, photograph receipts on their phones, and then upload them into another system days later. Managers approve after the fact; finance reconciles even later. Three tools, three teams, one frustrated traveller.

Now imagine that flow redesigned. Pre-approved budgets are assigned before travel, spend happens seamlessly during the trip, and reconciliation is automatic. Employees never pay out of pocket. Finance teams see every transaction as it occurs. The SaaS platform at the centre of this becomes indispensable – not because it automates forms, but because it eliminates friction. For the traveller, it means simplicity. For finance, control. And for the platform, visibility into the full journey, richer data on spend patterns, and incremental revenue from card transactions that flow through its ecosystem.

The Art of The Possible

This isn’t about layering FinTech complexity onto software. It’s about simplifying the experience by unifying what should never have been separate: approval, payment and reconciliation. We’ve already seen how embedded finance reshapes customer experience in other industries – e-commerce, ride-hailing, even healthcare. The same logic applies here: when money moves at the speed of the workflow, satisfaction follows.

For SaaS platforms, the implication is profound. The closer a product gets to the flow of funds, the deeper its integration into the customer’s operations. That’s not just a revenue opportunity;  it’s a retention strategy. Bain & Company describes embedded finance capabilities as “a way for software platforms to become systemically irreplaceable”. Expense management may be where that principle finds its purest expression. Few workflows touch as many people, as often, or with as much potential frustration. Fixing it is not just good UX; it’s good economics.

For SaaS leaders: A Reframing, Not a Roadmap

There’s no single architecture for the future of expenses. Each platform,  whether in travel, HR or accounting,  will interpret it differently. The point is to stop digitising the reimbursement process and start designing for prevention, where policy, payment and visibility converge. In practice, that means mapping friction, owning the journey, and measuring how faster, stress-free processes impact satisfaction and retention. When your platform participates directly in how money moves, your relationship with the customer becomes foundational, not functional. The art of the possible here isn’t about FinTech sophistication. It’s about empathy in design.

Retention and Reputation are Built, not Bought

Retention isn’t earned through perks or slogans; it’s built into experiences that show respect for people’s time and money. Expense reimbursement may seem trivial, but it’s a daily ritual that shapes how employees feel about their work, and how customers feel about the tools they use. A recent survey found that employees left out of pocket by slow expense reimbursements are significantly less likely to recommend their employer to job-seekers. That makes expense friction not only a retention issue, but a reputational one.

If the last decade of SaaS was about automating the back office, the next will be about humanising it. When expense workflows are rewired so that approval, payment and reconciliation flow as one, everyone gains: employees, employers and the platforms that serve them. Because when you stop making people act like the company’s lender, they start acting like its advocate.

Learn more at weavr.io

  • Embedded Finance
  • Neobanking

Chief Operating Officer Bhavna Saraf gives us the lowdown on the genesis of Quidkey and how it is leveraging APIs & AI to transform open banking networks into merchant-ready solutions driving higher conversion and borderless coverage with no-cost simple integration

Founded in early 2023, Quidkey has quickly established itself as a trusted provider of next-generation Account-to-account (A2A) payments. Also known as ‘Pay by bank’. Leveraging AI-powered bank prediction, instant settlement, and a streamlined user experience, Quidkey has created a bank-branded checkout system powered by Open Banking. It combines refunds, rewards, and real-time settlement bringing together cash flow, trust, and convenience for merchants. Its growth in the UK and EU is now being expanded to service Australia and the US corridors.

Chief Operating Officer Bhavna Saraf met CEO Rob Zeko and CTO Rabea Bader, Quidkey’s co-founders, at the end of her time with Santander. They were pitching Quidkey’s offering to top bank executives. Their vision was ambitious:

  • Democratising access to bank products amongst its customers through a single channel
  • Leveraging and monetising its API stack for payments
  • Providing value add services making open banking usable for businesses

“I remember thinking it wasn’t a standard FinTech pitch,” recalls Bhavna. “It was a real infrastructure story that was additive and complimentary to all ecommerce ecosystem players, merchants, banks, PSPs and consumers. When I began figuring the next steps in my career, Rob reached out. The discussion evolved into a collaboration – the timing was serendipitous.

Rob believes A2A payments are the future of commerce, and merchants deserve simpler, faster and fairer ways to get paid. “We’ve built a model designed to scale responsibly,” he notes. “Bhavna brings the structure and operational depth to help us do just that.”

Rabea is responsible for technology and product at Quidkey. With a seasoned background in technology, he has developed the core engine driving Quidkey’s diverse solutions. These include bank-prediction algorithm, refund automation, and multi-currency settlement, through simple API integrations.

“Our aim is to make the technology invisible,” Rabea explains. “If it feels effortless for merchants, it means we’ve done the hard work well.”

Together, Rob and Rabea laid the foundation. Bhavna’s arrival added the operational layer needed to take Quidkey global.

FinTech Strategy spoke with Bhavna to learn more about her journey. And how her experience is driving Quidkey’s progression across the payments landscape…

Bhavna Saraf

Tell us about your approach to leadership at Quidkey… How do you reflect on what has been achieved during your time with the organisation?

Learning has always meant leaning into the unknown. It’s not just about a strategy, but a mindset. Taking on new business lines, exploring unfamiliar customer segments, getting closer to technology, or stepping into entirely new organisations. It’s important to look outside your comfort zone, because that’s where you find growth. Each pivot builds experience equity. The instinct to link problems with solutions, to adapt with nuance, and to lead effectively no matter the context.

It’s the same mindset that underpins my approach to leadership. That it’s not just about hierarchy but influence. Creating an environment where people feel trusted, empowered, and part of something larger than themselves. It’s important to build a feel-good factor where collaboration replaces control and purpose drives performance. Such a philosophy can shape teams and inspire peers. It has helped me forge strong connections across clients, colleagues and ecosystems alike.

What drives and inspires you?

At the core of my journey is a relentless drive to deliver progress. Time is money. And… Impossible is nothing. Those words capture my pragmatism and optimism. Qualities that have guided me from scaling trade finance at Citi, to launching digital propositions at Lloyds, to leading payments innovation and strategy at Santander UK. Each chapter has broadened my perspective and sharpened my instinct for where financial infrastructure is headed next. At Quidkey, I get to bring all I’ve learned from building at Citi Ventures to leading across banks and apply it where innovation and impact truly meet on a day-to-day basis.

Could you share how your extensive experience with the dynamics of payments across your career (Citi, Lloyds, SWIFT, Santander etc) have honed your skills in the space? How is it enabling you to drive positive change in the market through your role at Quidkey?

Across leadership roles at Citi, Lloyds, Santander and HSBC, I built and scaled businesses that fuse technology, finance, and innovation. Taking ideas from zero to one or propelling growth to the next level. The focus has consistently been on unlocking near-term value while shaping future-ready roadmaps aligned with market trends, regulatory change, and evolving customer needs.

Alongside my day job, at Citi, I first experienced entrepreneurship, as the founder of an intra-bank start-up within Citi Ventures’ D10X program. We raised funding, assembled a team and developed algorithms to match clients across the bank’s global network. The project advanced to Seed 2 funding, earning recognition from Citi’s Global TTS CEO and the Head of Citi Ventures.

I caught the founder’s bug. That experience showed me the power of turning an idea into reality. It taught me to balance innovation, risk, and speed. And gave me a deep respect for what it takes to build something new.

Tell us about the genesis of Quidkey and its mission…

Quidkey was born from a simple idea, that merchants should be able to grow with confidence, scale sustainably, and offer customers a seamless payment experience, at home or abroad.

For too long, fragmented rails and card scheme costs have added friction to the payment ecosystem, especially hurting SMBs. Quidkey changes that. Our payment solution requires no change to the checkout experience yet simplifies payment routing, reconciliation, and settlement optimisation behind the scenes.

By cutting out unnecessary intermediaries and using Open Banking rails, Quidkey delivers faster, more transparent and cost-efficient payments, empowering merchants to grow and helping banks realise greater value from existing infrastructure.

This novel approach sets the foundation for what could evolve into a global clearing layer for digital commerce, removing friction, reducing cost, and reshaping the future of payments.

What industry challenges can Quidkey solve?

Payments today are still more complicated than they need to be. Merchants face high fees, chargebacks, and slow settlements, while banks and PSPs struggle to turn their Open Banking investments into meaningful value. The result is a fragmented system that creates friction for everyone.

Quidkey bridges that gap. By simplifying how money moves between banks, fintechs, and merchants, we make payments faster, cheaper and transparent. The outcome is better liquidity and smoother experiences for merchants, stronger customer relationships, and a real return on infrastructure for the banks that power it all.

What benefits are your clients experiencing from Quidkey’s approach to open banking?

Open banking adoption is accelerating fast. There are already more than 15 million UK consumers and small businesses taking advantage of open banking-powered services, generating two billion transactions per month and growing. We expect Open Banking payments to generate about 5x more in global revenue by 2030.

Quidkey is at the centre of this evolution, turning Open Banking into measurable value through intelligent settlements, stronger customer loyalty, and real returns on investment. We optimise payment rails for merchants, enhance efficiency for banks, and keep payments frictionless for consumers.

Why should UK businesses and consumers embrace open banking with Quidkey? How does Quidkey make the cross-border rails more usable so everyone can benefit?

With the rapid global expansion in consumer adoption of A2A payments, global A2A transaction volume is expected to increase by 209% in the next 5 years. From 60 billion in 2024 to over 185 billion by 2029. This growth is driven by cost efficiency, speed, convenience and enhanced security compared to traditional card payments. It is especially prevalent across key markets like Europe, where A2A is a leading online payment method in several countries.

Quidkey offers merchants the ability to seamlessly integrate this new technology and deploy it both domestically and for cross-border purposes, while simultaneously reducing transaction costs by up to 60-70% as compared to legacy payment models:

  • Consumers enjoy frictionless, bank-authenticated payments with protections
  • Merchants save on processing costs, increase conversions, and reduce fraud/chargebacks
  • Banks strengthen customer primacy and democratise access to their products at checkout.
API – Application Programming Interface. Software development tool. Business, modern technology, internet and networking concept.

How easy is it for merchants to deploy Quidkey?

Quidkey offers easy integrations via Shopify plug-in, WooCommerce, or iFrame with set up in minutes… No code and zero impact to existing payment options – just faster payments that generate capital to invest in growth.

With fair fees and no lock-ins, Quidkey’s daily settlement can cut costs and optimise cash flow with product bundles designed for growth. Additionally, Quidkey delivers an Apple Pay–style one-tap experience but over bank rails that reduce fraud and charge back risks.

Talk us through some of the big success stories for Quidkey that will provide a platform for future growth?

Our early priorities focused on go-to-market execution – getting the Quidkey solution in the hands of consumers to iterate and prove product-market fit. Quidkey is among the few companies approved to service Shopify checkout globally.

Additionally, we’ve announced a strategic partnership with Tryp.com to power next-generation ‘Pay by Bank’ travel payments. The collaboration is delivering instant settlement, loyalty rewards, and a frictionless A2A experience – achieving a 12% checkout take-up rate versus <1% for traditional Open Banking solutions. The early data shows strong consumer resonance, with room to grow through education and incentivisation. Quidkey’s tech is industry-agnostic – already extending to sectors like fashion, cosmetics, jewellery, and home goods. And we plan to expand next into globalised B2B payments.

What’s next? What forthcoming initiatives are you particularly excited about for 2025 and beyond…

“The transition from multinational banking to fintech is less of a leap and more of a return. In a bank, you have all the resources but with layers of bureaucracy; in a start-up, full permission but no resources. The goal is to combine both, the creativity of a start-up with the rigour of an institution.

Looking ahead, Quidkey’s focus is clear: scale globally, expand merchant adoption, deepen ecosystem partnerships, and build a sustainable, purpose-driven organisation.

Cross-border commerce remains one of the toughest challenges – yet also the biggest opportunity. Global payment flows reached $45 trillion in 2023 across B2B, e-commerce, and remittances, and are expected to hit $76 trillion by 2030. Still, businesses face high fees, slow settlements, and fragmented rails.

Quidkey is tackling this head-on by building a merchant-facing clearing layer that harmonises domestic and cross-border payments, making it as easy to sell abroad as it is at home.”

Tell us about some of the partnerships Quidkey has forged?

Quidkey recognised the geographical limitations in the A2A payments market presented a significant adoption barrier. It’s an increasingly globalised economy, with existing open-banking providers unable to provide full-service cross-border functionality. So, we’ve been hard at work developing a new payments paradigm with mutually beneficial partnerships to help us deliver on the full potential of globalised A2A payments. Now, with our initial solutions fully tested and our user experience optimised to provide seamless integration across channels, we are focusing on cross-border flows to build out the foundations that will underpin Quidkey as the next generation A2A global clearing house.

For example, our partnership with Transfermate enables cross-border A2A ecommerce, harnessing open banking technology to replace costly card rails with a faster, more efficient model of payments. TransferMate’s global network of payments, receivables, and local accounts will power Quidkey’s merchant offering, enabling instant or near-instant settlement in domestic markets and accelerated cross-border payments worldwide, with a waiting list of 100+ merchants in Australia selling into EU, UK and US.

“We believe execution doesn’t slow down innovation – it amplifies it. I want to make sure Quidkey scales with purpose – fast, but in control, ambitious, yet trusted.”

About Quidkey

Quidkey is a cross-border payments technology company enabling merchants to accept instant account-to-account payments across the UK, EU, and US. By operating alongside existing PSPs rather than replacing them, Quidkey gives merchants a seamless path to lower costs, faster settlement, and higher checkout conversion. Quidkey is simplifying today’s fragmented payment mix (cards/wallets), enabling tomorrow’s open banking corridors, and preparing for the future of tokenised money – capturing the $2.6tn and growing global e-commerce payments opportunity.

Find out more at quidkey.com

  • Artificial Intelligence in FinTech
  • Digital Payments
  • Neobanking

Kani Payments CTO Panos Savvas on the next generation of banking and payments and why it’s not just about fast banking but complex banking

The future of banking won’t be decided by algorithms or apps, but by how well we manage the data that drives them...

For years, ‘next generation banking’ has been shorthand for agility, innovation and a clean break from the technological baggage that constrained traditional institutions. Neobanks and fintech challengers built their reputations on speed, automation and digital-first thinking. Yet as the sector matures at a rapid pace, a more layered picture is emerging.

Despite their reputation for a ‘tech-centric’ approach, many digital banks are discovering that operational excellence is harder to achieve than customer experience. In some of the most critical areas of financial infrastructure, data management, reconciliation and reporting, modern banks are grappling with challenges that feel decidedly old generation.

Of course, this is not a failure of innovation, but a reminder that progress in banking is rarely linear. Building for scale, compliance and resilience inevitably exposes the complexity beneath the sleek surface of digital transformation and in this sense banks aren’t alone with this.

The Automation Illusion

Being ‘born in the cloud’ should have freed newcomers from legacy infrastructures. Yet research shows that manual processes remain surprisingly prevalent. Kani’s recent survey found that 22 per cent of UK neobanks still use spreadsheets as a standalone tool to perform reconciliation and compliance reporting. A much higher proportion than any other group surveyed.

This is a very revealing statistic. While the customer interface has evolved rapidly, the back office hasn’t kept pace. The typical neobank experience may be seamless for users on the surface, but behind the scenes, operations often rely on fragmented data flows, multiple third-party integrations and human oversight.

The mismatch doesn’t make them laggards. It simply highlights a structural truth: automation is easy to market, but difficult to master. Data integrity, not digital branding, is what separates the truly next generation from the merely new.

Data: The Hidden Legacy

Every modern bank understands that clean, reliable data is its most valuable asset. It fuels compliance, supports decision-making and underpins every audit trail. Yet half of neobanks in the same survey said data cleansing was among their most time-consuming reconciliation tasks, with 44 per cent citing auditing and 39 per cent data verification as similar drains on time.

These are not edge cases, they are foundational disciplines. When half of a bank’s operational resource is tied up in validation rather than value creation, the issue is not technology but data governance.

Traditional institutions often blame legacy systems for inefficiency. For fintechs, the challenge is different. Modern platforms are fast to deploy, but when combined across multiple partners without shared data standards, they can create inconsistencies that require manual resolution. The future of finance depends less on speed and more on how consistently that speed produces trustworthy data.

Managing Risk, Not Just Reputation

Errors in reconciliation aren’t just accounting irritants, they’re board-level risks. Half of neobanks pointed to compliance exposure as their biggest concern, with 44 per cent linking data breaks directly to market trust.

That finding alone reflects sector maturity. Modern institutions now recognise that trust is not simply a brand asset but a measurable operational outcome. The firms investing in traceability, explainability and real-time audit trails are also the ones strengthening their regulatory relationships.

It’s important to recognise that regulators are not barriers to innovation. They are collaborators in resilience that want firms to show evidence-based controls. The direction of regulation, particularly under initiatives like the UK’s Consumer Duty and Europe’s PSD3, points toward transparency, not obstruction.

Turning Data into Context

How a bank enriches and contextualises transaction data is a reliable indicator of operational maturity. Yet many organisations, not only neobanks, still have enrichment processes that rely heavily on human intervention. 61 per cent of neobanks manually add metadata to transactions, while only a third integrate third-party data automatically.

That dependence on manual enrichment reflects an industry-wide balancing act. The challenge is not capability but confidence. Integrating external data sources requires robust governance, clear permissions and the ability to trace every enrichment to its origin. For a sector under constant regulatory scrutiny, it’s no surprise that many firms err on the side of caution.

The next step is to make enrichment auditable as well as automated, so that data quality, not data quantity, becomes the competitive differentiator.

The AI Rush

Artificial intelligence (AI) has become the headline act of modern banking, promising to transform everything from fraud detection to credit scoring. Yet there’s a risk in assuming that AI will fix underlying operational inefficiencies.

Across the industry, many are racing to bolt AI onto customer-facing functions while leaving back-office processes largely untouched. Without robust data hygiene, reconciliation and enrichment, AI is at risk of improvising around gaps rather than accelerating truth.

True next-generation banking will emerge not from the adoption of algorithms but from the discipline of data stewardship. When banks invest in consistent, explainable data architectures, AI becomes a multiplier for accuracy and trust, not a mask for structural fragility.

Beyond the Buzz

The phrase “next generation banking” has become so elastic that it risks losing all definition. For some, it means AI-driven services; for others, embedded finance or real-time payments. These innovations matter, but they rest on the same foundational truth of, if the data isn’t right, nothing works as it should.

A bank that can open an account in minutes but takes days to close its books is not yet fully digital. A platform that deploys AI for insights but can’t trace the lineage of its data is not yet intelligent. The goal of next-gen banking should be to make the invisible visible, ensuring that every process beneath the surface is as modern as the experience on top.

The Real Definition of “Next Generation”

It’s easy to imagine next-generation banking as something futuristic and abstract. In reality, it’s about something deeply practical: building systems that make data dependable.

Neobanks and fintech banking began as the antidote to legacy complexity. Their next chapter will depend on how well they tackle their own hidden legacies and the invisible operational debt that lurks beneath every modern interface.

The banks that succeed will be those that blend speed with substance, innovation with integrity, and automation with accountability. In the end, the only kind of innovation that endures is the kind that accelerates truth.

Learn more at kanipayments.com

  • Digital Payments
  • Neobanking

Our cover star Scott Gunther, General Partner at IAG Firemark Ventures, reveals how the company is bringing powerful investments to…

Our cover star Scott Gunther, General Partner at IAG Firemark Ventures, reveals how the company is bringing powerful investments to life to transform the ways insurance is delivered.

Read the latest issue of FinTech Strategy here

IAG Firemark Ventures: Transforming Insurance

Scott Gunther, General Partner at IAG Firemark Ventures, tells FinTech Strategy how the company is championing key InsurTech investments to transform how insurance is delivered.

“We realised that if we were going to bring the best of the outside world in, we needed to be a truly global CVC.”

Publicis Sapient

Financial Services Director Arunkumar Gopalakrishnan tells us how Publicis Sapient is developing the playbook for delivering successful AI-led digital transformations across the financial services landscape.

“Working with Generative AI today feels like standing on a new frontier. It keeps us on our toes, but it’s also what drives us – to stay relevant, deliver outcomes and connect both worlds of business and technology.”

Techcombank

Chief Strategy & Transformation Officer, PC Chakravarti reveals the operating model, Data & AI foundations, culture and talent playbook, and the partnerships turning ambition into market leading outcomes at Techcombank in Asia.

Tech is not the limiting factor – it’s about supporting people and talent to leverage capabilities to enhance business models.”

CIBC Caribbean

Deputy CIO Trevor Wood explains how CIBC Caribbean is blending technology, culture, and customer-centricity to deliver seamless digital experiences across the region with a ‘Future Faster’ strategy.

We want to lead in every market we operate, build maturity across our practices and be architects of a smarter financial future for all.”

Nationwide

Dan Wilson, Head of Customer Journey at the trusted mutual, reveals the strategic ambition driving payments innovation to modernise Nationwide’s platform delivering a resilient and secure financial future for customers across the UK.

“We’re seeking to modernise the Society’s core infrastructure but also build the tools and features our customers need to help them manage their money and payments.”

Alexforbes: Transforming & Diversifying Financial Services

Chief Information Officer, Jan Bouwer, explores the work Alexforbes has undertaken to modernise and expand its financial services for its 1.2 million members and retail customers alike. “Alexforbes can now engage its 1.2 million members more directly, offering a wider range of services.”

Read the latest issue of FinTech Strategy here

  • Artificial Intelligence in FinTech
  • Digital Payments
  • InsurTech
  • Neobanking

Raman Korneu, CEO and Co-Founder of neobank myTU, on how FinTech innovation can push positive payments progression

In 2025, you’d think payments would move as fast as the businesses they power. But for many digital-first companies (especially marketplaces, lenders, and online platforms) the basic task of reliably moving money in and out is still a daily struggle.

This shouldn’t be the case. The industry has made huge advances in consumer UX, credit innovation, and embedded finance. But when it comes to back-end operations, FinTech has left too many problems unsolved. The result? A silent drag on growth, unnecessary labour costs, and a persistent erosion of customer trust.

Broken Payments, Broken Business

When payments are slow or opaque, everything suffers. Vendor payouts get delayed. Customer refunds take too long. Internal teams lose hours manually checking for confirmation or chasing missing funds. And while the friction is operational in nature, the consequences are strategic: damaged relationships, regulatory risk, and lost revenue.

Take reconciliation, for example. Many businesses still use spreadsheets to match payment events across bank accounts, payment processors, and internal systems. Others run Slack channels to manually track funds. This makes things slow and leads to a complete lack of real-time, reliable visibility.

This complexity becomes a serious burden when transaction volumes scale. Time zone differences, batch file delays, poor API support, and siloed software can all contribute to failures or mismatches that cause downstream chaos. According to Modern Treasury’s 2025 Payment Operations report, 98% of businesses still run some payment operations manually, and 49% use five or more systems, making reconciliation slow, error-prone, and expensive.

The Core Problem: No One’s Talking to Each Other

It’s not payment initiation that’s broken; it’s what happens after. Money gets sent, but teams don’t know if it landed. Banks don’t notify businesses. Systems don’t talk to each other. In many cases, there’s no real-time feedback loop to confirm what worked, what failed, and what needs action.

This disconnect is a byproduct of legacy infrastructure and siloed design. Most banks don’t expose real-time payment events, and their APIs (when they exist) are often outdated, cumbersome, or not developer-friendly. This leaves businesses stuck in a limbo where payments can go missing, get delayed, or trigger compliance issues, and no one knows until it’s too late.

What Better Systems Look Like

FinTechs are uniquely positioned to solve this, not with dashboards, but with infrastructure that integrates directly into the tools businesses already use.

Plug-and-play APIs and webhooks are the key. When embedded into CRMs, ERPs, and accounting platforms, they can push real-time payment updates exactly where they’re needed. No more spreadsheet-based tracking, and no more switching between portals.

The best systems will feel less like platforms and more like invisible plumbing, meaning that they’re always running, always syncing, always up to date. Businesses won’t want to log into yet another dashboard. They’ll expect payments to “just work” within the flows they already operate in.

Cards Help, But They’re Not the Solution

Modern business cards can improve control on the front end (think: spend visibility, real-time limits, cash flow planning). But they don’t solve the backend challenge of inter-system communication or reconciliation. What’s needed is a shift in how we think about payments infrastructure. We need to insist on and build for clarity and control after the money moves.

Why FinTech Hasn’t Solved This Yet

For years, payment operations have been seen as ‘boring’. That’s why so many startups have chased flashier front-end use cases: crypto, neobanking, buy now/pay later, and super apps. But that neglect is catching up with the industry.

As the ‘Decoupled Era’ of banking continues to fragment the value chain, the complexity of payments behind the scenes only grows. And with instant payments in the EU projected to surge 10x by 2028 (McKinsey), reconciliation needs to happen in real time, 24/7, without manual input.

This isn’t a nice-to-have anymore. It’s an operational baseline.

The Competitive Edge No One Talks About

Payments should be boring, because they should work flawlessly in the background. But for too many fast-scaling businesses, they’re still one of the most complex and error-prone parts of operations.

Ultimately this will create a divide. Businesses that build on flexible infrastructure will outpace and outperform those who constantly hit limits and choose to stick to more manual transaction tracking and the guesswork that comes with it. Pulling ahead of the competition isn’t always a matter of out-innovating them. Smoother operations are a way to steadily and quietly outcompete. Fintech is in the position to build this better, and to give smart businesses the edge they deserve

Raman Korneu is CEO and co-founder of neobank myTU, a fully automated, AI-powered and cloud-first digital bank offering smart, secure, and affordable financial services. With over 25 years of experience in banking, Raman has held senior roles across finance, including consulting roles at Ernst & Young and PwC, where he worked on over 100 projects for over 50 major banks and companies, including Merrill Lynch Securities and Raiffeisenbank. Raman holds prestigious qualifications including an EMBA from Judge Business School at Cambridge University, the prestigious Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA), and ACCA membership. Driven by his passion to tackle problems in traditional banking, Raman leverages his extensive expertise to lead myTU in delivering innovative financial solutions.

  • Digital Payments
  • Neobanking

Paul Clarke, Chief Growth Officer at Cashdflows, on how payments infrastructure can support both trust and scale

The UK’s game of skill, competition and raffle sector is undergoing rapid transformation. While data on the sector is limited, UK Government analysis indicates that 14% of UK adults collectively spend a total of £1.3 billion per year. For comparison, 44% of adults spend an estimated £8.2 billion annually on the National Lottery.

The same report shows an upward market trajectory with 60% of operators anticipating an increase in ticket sales over the next three years, while only 5% expect a decline. When it comes to the players themselves, 22% have increased their spending in the past year, outpacing the 17% who have reduced theirs.

Against this backdrop of sustained engagement, fair access to effective payment solutions is essential to support competition among merchants.

The Payments Layer of Trust and Scale

As operators mature, they must balance commercial growth with strong operational integrity. Unlike purely entertainment-driven apps, these platforms are rooted in real-money participation, whether through entry fees, prize payouts, or both. This heightens expectations for merchants and consumers around security, compliance, and player protection.

Payments infrastructure therefore becomes a fundamental line of defence. Tools such as Strong Customer Authentication (SCA) and two-factor authentication (2FA) provide robust safeguards against fraud, account compromise, and unauthorised transactions, reinforcing trust with both consumers and regulators.

Enhanced checkout features also play a significant role. Pre-populated payment details and secure card-on-file capabilities streamline repeat purchases, reducing manual errors and checkout abandonment. Click to Pay and network tokenisation support secure one-click transactions, improving conversion performance while ensuring PCI compliance.

Real-time fraud analytics, velocity checks, and dynamic transaction routing help maintain strong approval rates and minimise friction, ensuring legitimate users enjoy a smooth and reliable payment experience.

From Back-Office Burden to Brand Advantage

Payments were once viewed purely as a back-end process, a necessary function behind the scenes. Today, they are a frontline driver of user experience and commercial differentiation. Deposits and withdrawals bookend the player journey, so speed, transparency, and seamless execution boost satisfaction, reduce churn, and can become pivotal to brand advocacy.

In a high-volume environment where microtransactions dominate, even brief delays or failed payments can quickly damage trust. Conversely, efficient transactions turn reliable payments into a competitive advantage – one that encourages repeat play and referrals.

Powering the Platform Economy of the Future

The broader creator and competition economy is still in its infancy, with new formats emerging at pace but what unites them is a reliance on secure, scalable, and accessible payment systems. What those that succeed will have in common is whether those payment systems can support growth while maintaining compliance and safeguarding trust. As investment continues to flow into the sector, the platforms that thrive will be those that view payments not just as operational plumbing but as a strategic asset.

Paul Clarke, Chief Growth Officer at Cashflows, has a wealth of experience successfully leading product, business strategy, and innovation functions in the payments, eCommerce, and digital sectors. He was previously Executive Vice President for Product and Innovation at international payments solutions provider: Network International. Prior to this, Paul held leadership positions at key payment organisations, such as Barclaycard, Elavon, and Worldpay. Having joined Cashflows in 2021, Paul is responsible for leading the product proposition, strategy, go to market and delivery functions of the business. 

About Cashflows 

Cashflows is a new breed of FinTech payments company that makes it easy for small corporates and SMEs to accept card and digital payments – online, in store and on the move. 

Through its own acquiring platform and gateway, Cashflows provides a safe, secure ecosystem for processing payments right across Europe. Cashflows products and services are built with the latest technology and the future in mind, always to meet the specific needs of partners and customers. 

Learn more at www.cashflows.com  

  • Digital Payments
  • Neobanking

Robert Kraal, Co-founder of Silverflow – a cloud-native payments platform designed to reduce cost and complexity while enabling innovation – examines the future for merchants and digital payments

There are dozens of examples of companies, and even whole industries, that have failed because they simply weren’t aligned to what people wanted. Nobody in 1985 was desperate for Coke to taste different. In 2001 no one needed a self-balancing electric scooter. And nobody in 2021 needed to have their ownership of JPEG images recorded on the blockchain. The history of business contains many instances of ideas that seemed to emerge fully formed from the minds of their creators rather than as responses to genuine needs.

The payments industry might not make as many headlines. However, it is just as full of companies that don’t seem to address any real need on the part of merchants. Too many providers build technology in search of a market, rather than starting with a clear understanding of the challenges merchants face.

As payments evolve, that misalignment becomes more visible. Merchants today operate in an environment defined by thin margins, rising costs, and fast-changing customer expectations. Payment Service Providers (PSPs), PayFacs, acquirers, and processors that fail to adapt risk losing touch with what truly matters. Enabling merchants to grow their business efficiently, securely, and globally.

So, what do merchants really want from their payments technology – and how can the industry close the gap between expectation and delivery?

Beyond ‘Just Getting Paid

At first glance, payments can appear to be a simple utility. Money goes in, money goes out. Merchants want to get paid quickly and cheaply – and nothing more. But that view misses the larger strategic role payments play in business operations.

Cost certainly matters. With corporate bankruptcies at a fourteen-year high and economic uncertainty still weighing heavily, cashflow is critical. Even a small reduction in processing fees can make a difference over time. But “low cost” doesn’t automatically equal ‘good value’.

Think of it like buying cheap shoes: they may save money upfront, but if they wear out quickly, the total cost of ownership is higher. The same principle applies to payments infrastructure. The right technology can reduce friction, improve customer experience, and unlock new revenue streams. Far outweighing a slightly higher transaction fee.

For many merchants, payments are not just a back-office function but a strategic lever. The ability to expand into new markets, optimise acceptance rates, or adapt quickly to new consumer payment preferences can directly influence growth.

What Merchants Say Frustrates Them Most

Across industries, merchants face a familiar set of pain points when dealing with payments providers. These often include:

Lack of transparency and control over fees

Slow onboarding and inflexible contracts

Poor technical support and inconsistent service levels

Limited access to useful payment data and analytics

Outdated systems that make innovation difficult

In short, merchants feel constrained by legacy processes and opaque systems that fail to match the agility of their wider digital operations.

What Merchants Want Now

To move beyond seeing payments as a commodity, providers must understand the specific outcomes merchants are trying to achieve. In practice, that means focusing on five key areas:

Higher Acceptance Rates and Fewer False Declines

Every false decline represents lost revenue and potential long-term damage to customer loyalty. According to Aite-Novarica, merchants lose billions each year to legitimate transactions mistakenly flagged as fraudulent.

Often, these issues arise from outdated or overly rigid risk rules, or from poor visibility into the transaction lifecycle. Merchants need access to data and tools that help identify patterns, adjust rules dynamically, and balance security with customer experience. Smarter fraud management – not just stricter – is key to protecting revenue.

Faster Access to New Payment Methods

The payments landscape is diversifying rapidly. Account-to-account (A2A) transfers, Buy Now Pay Later (BNPL), mobile wallets, and super-apps are reshaping how consumers pay.

For merchants, staying relevant means supporting the methods their customers actually use – without long integration times or complex vendor dependencies. Providers that can onboard new payment types quickly and seamlessly give merchants a crucial competitive advantage.

Simplified Cross-Border Payments

Global expansion is a natural ambition for digital-first businesses, but cross-border payments remain a major operational headache. Local regulations, currency management, and consumer habits vary dramatically between markets.

Merchants want simplified access to local payment methods, along with dynamic currency conversion and compliance tools that minimize friction when operating internationally. A provider that can simplify this complexity – through unified access to multiple schemes and currencies – creates tangible value beyond simple processing.

Intelligent Payment Orchestration

Many large merchants now work with multiple acquirers and payment processors to optimise cost, performance, and redundancy. But without an orchestration layer to intelligently route transactions, they risk inefficiency and downtime.

Modern payment orchestration platforms can automatically send each transaction through the most cost-effective or reliable channel in real time. That capability depends on robust infrastructure – not a tangle of APIs and patches. Merchants increasingly expect their providers to offer orchestration as a native feature, not an afterthought.

Modern, Cloud-Native Infrastructure

This is where the real bottleneck lies. Many PSPs and acquirers still operate on systems designed decades ago – architectures built for a different era of commerce. They’ve been maintained with patches, middleware, and manual workarounds that make innovation slow and integration difficult.

Merchants now expect cloud-native systems that are modular, scalable, and API-driven. Platforms that deliver real-time data visibility, analytics, and adaptability – allowing merchants to build and evolve without being constrained by legacy code.

Providers that cling to old systems risk not just technical debt, but strategic irrelevance. Payments infrastructure should be an enabler of innovation, not an obstacle.

Rethinking the Infrastructure Layer

The issue isn’t that modern payment solutions don’t exist – they do. The problem is that too many are bolted onto outdated foundations. Layering new features onto old systems is like fitting a Formula 1 engine into a 1970s chassis: technically possible, but structurally unsound.

The future of payments lies in rethinking the infrastructure layer entirely. That means building platforms that are natively cloud-based, flexible by design, and ready to integrate with tomorrow’s technologies.

Modern infrastructure enables:

  • Faster onboarding and deployment
  • Greater transparency into transaction data and fees
  • Easier compliance with evolving regulations
  • Continuous innovation without system downtime

This shift isn’t just technical – it’s strategic. It’s about giving merchants the confidence that their payment systems can scale with them, wherever their business goes next.

A New Standard for Payments

The payments industry has reached an inflection point. Merchants no longer see payments as a commodity or cost centre – they see them as a growth driver. Providers that continue to build products in isolation from merchant needs will fall behind.

Success will come to those who build with a merchant-first mindset: reducing barriers, improving performance, and enabling future growth.

The question for every PSP, PayFac, and acquirer is no longer “What features can we add?” but “Are we ready to deliver what merchants actually need?”

About Silverflow

Silverflow is a new kind of payment processing platform designed for today’s payment needs and fit for the future. A cloud-native solution with a single API to the card networks. One platform with one connection. Reducing cost and complexity, easy to use, data-rich, Silverflow frees you to innovate. Find out more at silverflow.com

Co-founder Robert Kraal is one of the few people in the world with over 20 years of experience in online payments.

After completing his degree in Geophysics, he started his career at Bibit, the first global Payment Service Provider (PSP) which was acquired by RBS/Worldpay. At RBS/Worldpay he went on to lead account management, before moving on to Google Netherlands. He joined Adyen in 2010 in the role of COO, where he was responsible for building and running the global acquiring and processing service.

As the Business Development lead at Silverflow, Robert is responsible for maintaining relationships with the card schemes, acquirers, PSPs and regulators.  

  • Digital Payments
  • Neobanking

ClearBank research finds half of large firms say embedded finance will drive new revenue, but concerns over outdated systems, implementation challenges, integration and customer trust loom

New research from ClearBank reveals that large UK businesses now view embedded financial services as a strategic boardroom decision and business growth driver.

The research, The embedded economy: Why brands are embracing financial services as a driver for innovation and growth’ explores the attitudes of 200 senior business leaders at large UK-based corporates towards embedded finance and the potential for payments, accounts, and lending to enable new services, new revenue streams, and enhanced customer loyalty.

It found that despite growing enthusiasm for embedded finance’s potential to deliver these services, many companies are still held back by fears of regulatory requirements, technical complexity, and ongoing concerns around finding the right partner to deliver at scale.

A Boardroom Priority: Nearly Half of Corporates see Embedded Finance as a Revenue Driver

Implementing embedded finance has rapidly moved from a niche innovation to a strategic boardroom decision. Survey results found that 38% of C-suite leaders cite embedded finance as important for their company’s growth, reflecting the shift in mindset from viewing it as a back-office payments tool to a driver of competitive advantage.

Crucially, nearly half (48%) of corporates surveyed see embedded finance as a way to improve payments and launch new revenue-generating services. These services range from offering own brand accounts to saving tools and lending services. For many, the potential increase in revenue is compelling, with more than a quarter (28%) of the view that embedded finance could help drive double-digit revenue growth for their business. 67% believed growth would be at least 5% and just over a third (39%) suggest between 5-10% of revenue growth.

“Embedded banking allows businesses to integrate payments, lending and account services directly into their customer propositions. For corporates, this is a real opportunity to create stronger relationships with customers while also building new and potentially significant revenue streams for the business. We believe we’re on the cusp of the embedded economy.

“For any business looking to remain competitive in the digital age, these services can no longer be seen as ‘add-ons’. They are becoming essential infrastructure to deepen customer loyalty and open new revenue streams.

“We see this shift first-hand through the financial services clients already embedding our infrastructure. That experience gives us a clear view of how the same approach can be applied to corporates more widely and why embedded finance is such a significant opportunity across industries.”

Emma Hagan, ClearBank UK CEO

Cross-Sector Growth:  Companies Across Consumer Products & Services, Retail and Healthcare Have Biggest Appetite for Embedding Financial Services

Although embedded finance has often been associated with the retail sector, interest is broadening across other sectors. Research found that appetite was highest in consumer products and services (23%), retail (20%) and healthcare (18%), with the likes of the payroll and travel industries increasingly seeing the potential to integrate financial services into their customer journeys.

Of those companies surveyed that said they are actively considering offering embedded financial services within their own platforms, payment services were most considered (16%), followed by insurance (13%) and lending (13%). This signals a structural change in non-financial companies as they look to add layers of value and deepen engagement and loyalty with customers.

Untapped Potential: Only 19% Have launched Embedded Finance Services – Challenges Slowing progress

While appetite for embedded finance is growing rapidly, adoption is still maturing. Three-quarters (75%) said they would offer embedded finance today if it were easy to implement. This gap between ambition and reality underlines the perception that embedded finance is still typically difficult to employ and highlights the need for a new type of partner to tackle practical obstacles before broader uptake can occur.

When asked about the challenges corporates faced, some firms pointed to the technicalities of setting up such an offering in terms of integration challenges (61%), regulatory compliance (49%) and lack of technical expertise (44%)

Beyond the technical barriers, businesses also flagged reputational and regulatory risks such as greater regulatory scrutiny (57%), a loss of customer trust (52%) with reputational damage if the service fails (65%).

Taken together, these figures highlight that while embedded finance is seen as a major growth opportunity, corporates remain cautious. Success will depend not only on demonstrating the revenue potential but also on reducing risks during implementation through providing trusted infrastructure, regulatory clarity, and a smooth integration path that allows businesses to move from intent to action with confidence.

The Benefits & Motivations: Convenience & Customer Loyalty

For many corporates, embedded finance is first and foremost about strengthening customer relationships. Over half of firms 63% highlighted the opportunity to deliver a more seamless and convenient experience, positioning embedded finance as a customer service differentiator as much as a commercial driver. A further (57%) saw offering embedded services as a way of improving customer loyalty through creating more frequent and valuable touch points.

“Traditional banks we have found, give you a good brand halo and risk expertise but the cycles are killing us. They are slow, the integrations are not really bespoke and the slower cycle of development and keeping up to track with regulation has been the problem consistently.” (spokesperson from consumer industries)

About the Report

Ronin conducted interviews with  30 Senior Business Leaders at UK-based organisations across technology, healthcare, consumer, retail, travel, energy, and utilities sectors, along with surveying 200 Senior Business Leaders on the evolving nature of payment strategies, with a particular focus on the role of embedded finance in enabling new services and revenue streams. The interviews took place over August and September 2025.

  • Embedded Finance
  • Neobanking

Elina Rayberg, Principal at Valar Ventures, on the changing face of payments across the FinTech ecosystem

Wise’s exploration of a UK banking license is more than a single company milestone; it’s reflective of a significant, wider industry trend. Fintechs are no longer content to operate on the periphery of payments; they are stepping out of the shadows to compete directly with traditional banks. The implications for the payments ecosystem are profound.

Expanding Beyond the Payments Value Chain

For many years now, fintechs have added various components to the payments value chain. From BNPL, cross-border transfers, embedded payments and beyond, building financial infrastructure that allows businesses to integrate simpler, varied payment options for consumers has been a lucrative and innovative industry, one that’s attracted swathes of investment.

Until very recently, these fintech players haven’t felt a need to expand into more consumer-facing, traditional banking settings, and particularly not the need to tackle the various compliance and capital requirements needed to become a bank. This is changing.

Wise’s Strategic Move

Wise is a payments giant. It already operates at a global scale, with over 10 million customers and billions in transfers each quarter. By seeking a banking license, Wise is demonstrating an ambition to move beyond payment infrastructure and offer regulated financial products such as savings and credit. This would open new revenue streams while strengthening its position as a consumer brand, not just a payments rail.

A Broader Competitive Landscape

Wise is part of a wider movement. Revolut has been pursuing banking licenses in both the UK and US. Block (formerly Square) holds a banking charter, whilst both Stripe and Apple have partnerships with Goldman Sachs to offer banking products and services. Together, these moves illustrate a convergence: fintechs expanding into regulated banking, while incumbent banks adopt fintech-driven product strategies to protect market share.

The Full-Stack Future

The movement of both fintechs into the banking space and banks integrating fintech product strategies is reshaping the payments ecosystem in real time. Broad advances in technology since the inception of banking and financial services mean that it is entirely possible for one platform to operate as a full-stack digital bank proposition.

Traditional banks, challengers, and neobanks are all racing to execute on this opportunity, though with varying degrees of success, often constrained by regulation and the complexity of scaling financial infrastructure.

Regulatory Implications

As fintechs edge deeper into banking, regulators face the challenge of adapting rules to a landscape where the line between payment providers and banks blurs. This presents both opportunity and risk. Companies that can scale responsibly within regulatory frameworks may unlock significant advantage; those that outpace their compliance capabilities risk severe consequences.

Looking Ahead

Fintechs have historically been content to capture slices of the payments market. Today, signals suggest they are preparing to compete head-on with traditional banks. Non-bank firms that successfully leverage technology, regulatory approval, and customer reach stand to evolve into diversified, full-stack financial institutions, reshaping the future of payments in the process.

  • Digital Payments
  • Neobanking

New research from bluQube shows that, despite years of digital investment, many finance teams are still stuck in manual mode, with 40% of businesses managing up to half their financial data by hand

Despite years of investment in digital transformation, finance functions remain heavily reliant on manual processes that slow down decision-making and increase risk, according to new research from finance and accounting software company bluQube.

The survey of 700 finance and business leaders found that 40% of businesses continue to manage up to half of their financial data manually. More striking still, more than a quarter (26%) admitted that the majority of their financial data is still being handled in this way.

Digital Transformation Delayed

The findings point to a widespread dependence on spreadsheets and manual entry, even as digital finance tools and automation have become commonplace. This reliance is creating significant bottlenecks for organisations, leaving finance professionals tied up in routine processes rather than focusing on analysis and strategy.

When asked where they lose the most time, nearly a third (31%) of finance teams said reconciling accounts between entities was their biggest monthly pain point, followed by the month-end close (26%) and audit and compliance reporting (20%). These time-intensive activities underline how far many teams remain from achieving true automation.

The research also highlights a confidence gap in financial reporting. While just over half (54%) of respondents said they are very confident their current processes would satisfy investor or audit requirements for accuracy and speed, nearly half (46%) expressed at least some doubt about their data’s reliability or timeliness.

The appetite for improvement is clear. A third (33%) of finance leaders said eliminating manual processes would have the biggest positive impact on their work, followed by faster consolidated reporting (26%) and improving cash flow visibility (24%).

Facing Up to the Risks of Manual Processes

The risks stretch well beyond inefficiency. Manual handling of financial data increases the likelihood of mistakes, duplication, and delays. These errors compromise the accuracy of financial reporting and reduce the confidence leaders need to make critical decisions. place in the insights they need to steer their organisations. 

“Finance teams have been at the centre of digital transformation strategies for over a decade, yet our research shows many organisations remain trapped in outdated practices. Too much time is still being spent reconciling spreadsheets rather than generating insights that drive growth. Manual processes not only waste resources but also expose businesses to unnecessary risk. In a business environment defined by economic uncertainty, regulatory pressure, and heightened competition, that lack of reliability can have serious consequences. Automating financial workflows should now be seen as essential, not optional.”

Simon Kearsley, CEO of bluQube

The survey underscores the urgency for businesses to modernise their finance functions. By adopting intelligent accountancy software and embedding automation, organisations can cut down on errors, free up capacity for strategic projects and base decisions on accurate, real-time information.

  • Digital Payments
  • Neobanking

Evident’s annual AI Index reveals the banks making the biggest moves in AI… JPMorganChase, Capital One and Royal Bank of Canada are the three leading banks in AI adoption…

JPMorganChase has maintained its position as the world’s most AI-advanced bank in the Evident AI Index. The global standard benchmark for AI adoption in the financial services sector.

According to Evident, the leading banks for AI maturity have pulled away from their peers in 2025, consolidating earlier gains and – increasingly – realising ROI for their AI investments. 

Evident AI Index

The annual Evident AI Index evaluates the ongoing AI performance of 50 major banks in North America, Europe, and APAC against 70+ indicators drawn from millions of public data points.

It reveals that although nearly every bank is advancing in the Evident AI Index, the top 10 banks are increasing their scores 2.3x faster year-on-year than the rest of the Index.

This year’s top three AI performers – JPMorganChase, Capital One and Royal Bank of Canada – have retained their rankings for a third successive year. JPMorganChase takes the top spot in three of Evident’s four pillars of AI capability – Innovation, Leadership and Transparency. Capital One leads on Talent, and has continued to gain ground on its rival. While the two undisputed leaders have further extended their lead, there is now little to separate the two in terms of overall AI maturity.

The top 10 is increasingly dominated by US-headquartered institutions, but RBC, UBS and HSBC continue to secure places among the global leaders as the top performers in Canada, Europe and the UK respectively. 

Based on the Evident AI Index, the ten banks leading the race for AI maturity are:

BANK2025 INDEX2024 INDEX2024-25Change
JPMorganChase11
Capital One22
Royal Bank of Canada33
CommBank45+1
Morgan Stanley510+5
Wells Fargo64-2
UBS76-1
HSBC87-1
Goldman Sachs911+2
Bank of America1015+5

“Banking is one of the most advanced and competitive industries on the planet when it comes to developing and rolling out AI at scale. While some have described recent history as ‘The Summer AI Turned Ugly’, in the banking industry a different story is playing out. We’re beginning to see clear signs that AI investment is starting to translate into tangible financial gains, both in terms of efficiency and, increasingly, via new revenue opportunities. Banks and their shareholders expect ROI to accelerate over the next few years, and those in our top 10 are in pole position to see their efforts come to fruition.

Alexandra Mousavizadeh, Co-founder & CEO, Evident

By far, the most competitive segment of the Index was found among those banks ranked just outside the top 10. All five of the banks in this range – BNP Paribas (#11), Citigroup (#12), TD Bank (#13), BBVA (#14), and Lloyds Banking Group (#15) saw a >20% increase in scores year-on-year (compared to ~10% for the wider Index), highlighting the intensity of the battle to keep pace with the leading banks.

Across the regions covered in the Index, all six regional leaders are unchanged from 2024, with the gap between domestic leaders’ and laggards’ AI capabilities also growing year-on-year.

Mousavizadeh adds:

“Bifurcation in AI maturity creates a credibility gap. Banks that fail to keep pace risk losing the confidence of boards, regulators, and investors. At the same time, lagging institutions will struggle to attract and retain top-tier AI talent. This combination of stakeholder doubt and the risk of talent flight slows deployment, undermines momentum, and compounds the difficulty of turning AI investments into measurable business outcomes.”

HSBC Heads Top AI Performing UK Banks

When it comes to AI adoption, the UK is one of the most consistent regions in terms of bank performance. Four of the five UK banks rank in the top half of the Index. Three of the five UK banks advanced their position in the ranking year-over-year. And all five UK banks are tightly clustered – featuring the narrowest spread between the top-performing bank (HSBC) and bottom-performing bank (Standard Chartered) across every region.

Responsible AI continues to be an area of strength, with four of the five UK banks ranking among the top 10 in the Transparency pillar. Conversely, no UK bank places in the top 10 in the Talent pillar.

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HSBC improved its standing by +1 position across both the Talent and Innovation pillars, while ceding ground in Leadership (-10 rank) and Transparency (-3 rank). Consequently, HSBC lost one position in the overall ranking, but maintained a spot among the top 10 banks.

In contrast, Lloyds Banking Group demonstrated the most forward momentum, rising from 27th to 15th in the ranking. This performance was buoyed by significant jumps in Talent (+12 rank), Leadership (+20 rank), and Transparency (+14 rank), with Lloyds one of only four Index banks to improve across all four pillars of the methodology.

Mousavizadeh comments:

“Lloyds Banking Group’s strong performance reflects a significant mindset shift at the bank, with the establishment of a centralised AI team and an increased focus on AI hires to accelerate the execution of its AI strategy. The upshot is that Lloyds is now sharing more details of its active use cases and long-term plans, translating into a much improved ranking in the Index.” 

In a short space of time, Lloyds has matched HSBC in the number of recent AI use cases specifying outcomes. In March, the bank filed a patent for its Global Correlation Engine (CGE) – documenting an AI-driven approach to cybersecurity threats that results in 92% fewer false positives. And in July, the bank rolled out Athena, its first large-scale GenAI product.

Measuring Returns on AI Investment

According to Evident, twice as many banks reported a total number of active artificial intelligence use cases (jumping from 12 to 25 banks since last year), and 32 out of 50 have disclosed at least one use case with an associated financial or non-financial impact – up from 26 in 2024. 

While more banks are reporting returns at the use-case level, only a small group have quantified the performance of their AI portfolios at Group level. Today, eight banks are disclosing portfolio-level ROI estimates – either realized or projected – with just three reporting both.

These frontrunners include BNP Paribas, DBS, and JPMorganChase (all of which have already revised projections upwards). JPMorganChase is at the top of the table, raising its estimates from $1 billion to “heading more towards $2 billion” in AI-driven benefits, according to President and COO Daniel Pinto.

Annabel Ayles, Co-founder & Co-CEO of Evident, comments:

“All banks – regardless of size – are increasing their AI budgets, and our data shows virtually every key metric of AI adoption increasing.We’re already seeing these investments translate into tangible examples of use cases deployment. And our discussions with banking leaders suggest they’re expecting to see material, reportable AI returns in the next 12-18 months. Our data strongly suggests that this achievement is imminent. The question is: how big will the returns be? If they exceed expectations, current AI investment levels could pale in comparison to what comes next.”

Talent, Innovation, Leadership and Transparency in AI

According to Evident, the top 10 banks in the Index all demonstrate industry-leading AI performance across at least one of the four pillars, as follows:

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Talent: 

  • Ten banks now employ almost half of all AI talent in the Index (circa 90,000 workers), with US banks dominating the leaderboard.
  • The AI talent pool across the top 50 banks grew 25% year-over-year, the fastest on record, nearly 5x faster than overall headcount growth.
  • On average, the top 10 banks by talent volume disclosed nearly 2x more use cases than the rest of the banks in the Index.
  • 38 of the 50 banks now disclose some form of AI training to its employees (up from 32 banks last year). And 33 banks now offer distinct training for senior leadership.

Innovation: 

  • JPMorgan retained #1 spot for Innovation through the unparalleled strength of its AI research team and continued venture investments into AI-focused companies. 
  • Capital One overtook Royal Bank of Canada for the #2 spot, partly driven by the Discover merger, doubling its AI research team and showing steady growth in patents.
  • HSBC moved up to #8, the leading light amongst the European banks, who otherwise don’t feature.
  • Despite banks rushing to fund hyperscalers and the infrastructure that will power the AI era, general investment by banks into AI-focused and Data/Tech-focused companies is down double digits (17% from 2024) for the second year in a row.

Leadership:

  • Over the past year, even those organizations that have traditionally chosen to keep their progress behind closed doors, are making their AI activities more visible.
  • Five banks maintained their top 10 ranks in Leadership: JPMorganChase took the top spot, strengthening its external AI communications efforts considerably, and Royal Bank of Canada jumped +5 ranks to take #3 position, publishing projected financial returns from AI for the first time during its Investor Day in March.
  • New entrants to the top-10 included: Natwest, UBS, and Morgan Stanley – and while they did not go as far disclosing financial targets for AI value, they each provided richer updates on use cases and impact than ever before.

Transparency: 

  • JPMorganChase retained the top position for Transparency and seven of the top 10 banks carry over from 2024.
  • Responsible AI activity continues unabated across the industry – over the past year, the volume of RAI-specific talent found across the 50 banks more than doubled, and nearly 300 RAI-specific research papers were published, a +60% increase year-on-year. 
  • 35 of the 50 banks engage in partnerships with academic institutions, government bodies, or private companies (up from 31 banks last year), with nearly 80% of these partnerships yielding published case studies or use cases (up from 45% last year), demonstrating the increasingly tangible outcomes of their RAI efforts.

Evident AI Index Methodology

Since launching in January 2023, the Evident AI Index has quickly become established as the leading independent source of data and insight on artificial intelligence adoption across the banking industry.

The Index combines extensive research, automated data capture from public sources, consultation across Evident’s network of AI experts, and ongoing dialogue with featured banks.

Drawing from millions of public data points spanning 70+ individual indicators, it ranks each bank across four key capability areas which collective signal AI maturity:

  • Talent: measures the depth, density and development of AI talent within each organisation.
  • Innovation: captures long-term investment in AI-related innovation, including research, patents, partnerships and engagement with the open-source ecosystem.
  • Leadership: assesses the role of leadership in setting and communicating the organisation’s AI agenda.
  • Transparency: evaluates public engagement with Responsible AI (RAI), from internal talent and frameworks to external partnerships and disclosures.
  • Artificial Intelligence in FinTech
  • Neobanking

Our round up of the five neobanks best positioned to lead the space in 2026… Nubank (Nu Holdings) Why It’s…

Our round up of the five neobanks best positioned to lead the space in 2026…

Nubank (Nu Holdings)

Why It’s Likely to Lead in 2026: Nubank already has over 100 million customers in Latin America and is actively pushing into new markets, including applying for a U.S. banking charter. This international expansion, combined with strength in credit, deposits, and FinTech adjacent services, gives it a shot at becoming a truly global neobank.

Risks/Challenges: Breaking into the U.S. (or other mature markets) is tough. Regulatory compliance, competition from domestic digital banks, and local consumer trust are big hurdles.

Revolut

Why It’s Likely to Lead in 2026: Revolut has deep product breadth (multi-currency, trading, credit, crypto, business accounts), and is aggressively expanding globally. It also has strong brand momentum. For instance, it was named the fastest-growing bank brand in the UK. Revolut’s capacity to cross-sell services and innovate puts it in a strong position.

Risks/Challenges: Scalability of regulatory compliance across many jurisdictions, potential regulatory crackdowns, and maintaining profitability with heavy investment costs are key risks.

Monzo

Why It’s Likely to Lead in 2026: Monzo recently crossed into profitability, bolstered by rising interest rates and growth of its lending and subscription services. It also has ambitions to expand beyond the UK into broader Europe and the U.S. As more neobanks are judged by their ability to monetise at scale, that profitability is a strong signal.

Risks/Challenges: Expansion outside the UK will test its product-market fit, regulatory compliance in new regions, and capital backing. Also, competition in the mature markets is fierce.

Bunq

Why It’s Likely to Lead in 2026: Bunq is one of the stronger pan-European neobanks, with multi-IBAN accounts, a broad user base across Europe, and deposit protections under EU frameworks. Its steady growth in deposits and commitment to European expansion gives it a solid foundation in its home turf.

Risks/Challenges: Scaling beyond Europe (or outside the EU regulatory regime) is harder. Also, its earlier ambition in the U.S. seems to have been pulled back, demonstrating how regulatory unpredictability can slow growth.

U.S. Digital Banks

Why It’s Likely to Lead in 2026: While Chime, SoFi, Varo, and others aren’t “neobanks” in the same exact model in all respects, they are dominant digital banking players in the U.S. market. Their deep user bases, product stacks (savings, credit, investing), and ability to leverage scale make them key contenders in the “neobank era”. As the U.S. digital banking adoption continues, one or more of these could claim leadership by 2026.

Risks/Challenges: U.S. regulation, interest rate cycles, competition from incumbents and fintechs, and margin pressures are big challenges. Also, converting free users to revenue-paying ones is an ongoing tension for all these models.

Honorable Mentions / Dark Horses

  • Starling Bank (UK) — It already has a strong UK presence, though regulatory scrutiny (e.g. fines) is a risk.
  • Kroo (UK) — Newly licensed, growing deposits quickly, potentially disruptive in niche markets.
  • Regional & Asia / Africa challengers — Several neobanks in Asia, Africa, Latin America, and Southeast Asia are scaling fast; some may emerge as leaders in their regions (and eventually go global).

Conclusion & What to Watch

By 2026, what will separate the winners from the also-rans are:

  1. Profitability / Unit Economics — It isn’t enough to grow; you need sustainable margins.
  2. Regulatory & Compliance Strength — Multi-jurisdiction operations demand strong controls.
  3. Platform / Ecosystem Expansion — Embedding finance (e.g. via APIs, partnerships), offering non-bank products (insurance, investing) will be key.
  4. Global Reach & Localisation — The ability to expand across borders, but localise offerings to fit each market.
  5. Trust & Resilience — In banking, trust is critical. Neobanks will be judged harshly on outages, fraud, security, and financial stability.
  • Digital Payments
  • Neobanking

Plumery’s expansion, collaborating with Vancouver-based Aequilibrium, brings specific Canadian market capabilities to support credit unions delivery of personalised, compliant, and elevated member experiences

Plumery, the digital banking experience platform, today unveiled Canada-specific features and integrations giving Canadian credit unions a clear path to deliver personalized, compliant, and modern digital banking experiences.

Canadian financial institutions are facing heightened customer expectations, stiff competition from FinTechs, and growing pressure to modernise legacy systems. These pressures have been amplified by Central 1 Credit Union’s announcement that it will wind down its Forge (formerly MemberDirect) digital banking platform. The system, until recently, served over 170 credit unions across Canada.

This represents both a risk and an opportunity for credit unions. They must now plan for a replacement quickly, and also have the chance to adopt a platform that gives them greater control and the ability to compete on user experience.

The collaboration with Aequilibrium, with their deep knowledge of the Canadian regulatory landscape and user experience design ensures Plumery’s Canadian-ready platform is built around how Canadians, especially credit union members, expect to bank.

Though Canada’s banking sector is among the most advanced globally, many credit unions are held back by outdated infrastructure.

Plumery Tailored for Canadians

Meanwhile, members are demanding hyper-personalised, mobile-first and intuitive digital journeys. To meet these needs, Plumery has localised its platform with out-of-the-box features tailored for how Canadians bank. These include:

  • Everyday payments and transfers such as bill payments, cheque deposits, and Interac e-Transfers.
  • Support for Canadian savings and lending products including GICs, mortgages, and student loans.
  • Business banking capabilities like bulk payments and payroll management.
  • Compliance and user experience features including bilingual English/French support, privacy and data residency adherence, and accessibility standards.

Ben Goldin, CEO & Founder of Plumery, said: “With Forge winding down, Canadian institutions have a rare opportunity to modernise on their own terms, rather than being tied to outdated systems. Our platform provides an immediate, future-ready option that puts control back in the hands of credit unions. By working with Aequilibrium, we are combining global banking innovation with local expertise to deliver experiences that meet the unique needs of Canadian credit unions’ members.”

Plumery’s Canadian-ready platform is available now, and the company is already in discussions with multiple credit unions evaluating their digital futures beyond Forge.

About Plumery

Headquartered in the Netherlands, Plumery has a mission is to empower financial institutions worldwide, regardless of size, to craft distinctive, contemporary, and customer-centric mobile and web experiences.

Plumery operates with a diverse team that embodies a unique combination of seasoned expertise and vibrant innovation. This blend has been cultivated through years of experience at start-ups, scale-ups, and established financial institutions, and most notably at globally leading financial technology companies, where they were instrumental in creating disruptive digital banking solutions and platforms that now serve 300+ banks globally. 

Plumery’s Digital Success Fabric platform provides banks with the foundation for success beyond fast-time-to-market by expediting the development of their digital front ends while significantly cutting costs compared to in-house initiatives or solutions with high total cost of ownership (TCO).  

About Aequilibrium

For over 13 years, Aequilibrium has supported small to large-sized credit unions globally, helping them modernize their digital banking, elevate their training practices through VR + AI, and create member-first experiences that leave a lasting impression. They simplify technology, co-create strategies, and deliver personalised experiences that enrich people’s lives.

  • Digital Payments
  • Neobanking

Chirag Shah, Founder & CEO of Pulse, on ULI, and what it could mean for lenders and their customers

The UK’s financial services ecosystem is currently in the process of profound transformation. Traditional lending frameworks, characterised by siloed systems, static risk models, and manual processes, are no longer fit for purpose. They’re outdated and ineffective, unable to answer the needs of today’s digital economy. With the growth of embedded finance, real-time data, and rising customer expectations, financial institutions, platforms, and regulators are having to rethink their infrastructure from the ground up.

Initiatives like Open Banking, Making Tax Digital (MTD), and Open Accounting have already laid the groundwork for greater data accessibility, meaning that data is not only available but useable. But with that usability comes greater expectations – both businesses and consumers expect instant decisions, seamless experiences, and personalised products. The problem is that the lending infrastructure that should be able to deliver on this promise remains fragmented. Lending decisions are still difficult to make because data is scattered, while processes are duplicated and manual. While lenders, platforms, and regulators are unable to work in unison. The Unified Lending Interface (ULI) is emerging as both a technical solution and the next generation of lending infrastructure in the UK.

What is ULI?

ULI is a standardised interoperability framework that governs the exchange of credit-related data, events, and permissions across lending ecosystems. Unlike a product or single platform, ULI acts as an underlying protocol, a form of modular APIs, data schemas, and event models that make it easier for lenders, platforms, and borrowers to interact in a consistent, secure, and scalable way. The idea being that if data can be standardised and exchanged in real time, credit decisioning and servicing can become significantly more efficient, transparent, and inclusive.

What this looks like in real terms is:

  • The use of standardised data models for origination, underwriting, and loan servicing
  • Real-time event streaming for repayments, defaults, and restructures
  • Cross-lender affordability and exposure checks
  • Secure, user-driven consent mechanisms
  • Customisable APIs to suit various regulatory and operational contexts
  • In-built analytics and reporting tools for compliance and performance

ULI is not yet a formal regulatory term, but its equivalents are already emerging in industry-led pilots and fintech platforms. In my view, its adoption would be the next logical step in the evolution of UK lending.

The Challenges That ULI Could Solve

Despite the rapid uptake of embedded finance, the underlying infrastructure that should power and enable it has begun to fall behind. This disconnect has created multiple pain points that need to be addressed if innovation and effective risk management are to continue.

One major challenge lies in siloed integrations. Many lenders rely on custom-built connections with each distribution partner, which typically results in fragile systems that are difficult to scale and costly to maintain. This is not only inefficient, it makes it harder to respond to changing market demands.

Risk visibility is another concern. As things stand, most lenders assess credit exposure in isolation, which means that a business could have multiple existing loans on different platforms with no aggregated affordability assessment. This creates obvious blind spots, increasing the chances of overextension and missed risk signals.

Borrowers themselves are often unaware of why or how credit decisions are made or how their data is used. This opacity leads to a lack of trust, and can deter people from responsible borrowing. And regulatory friction adds further strain. Many institutions still rely on outdated tools for supervisory reporting, including batch files and CSVs, which are prone to error and inefficiency. This creates compliance burdens and slows down oversight.

Lastly, customer concerns around data sharing presents another barrier. Without clear, user-driven consent frameworks, individuals and businesses are reluctant to share financial data. This not only limits lenders’ ability to personalise offerings but also undermines accurate risk assessment.

The ULI directly addresses these challenges by introducing a common framework for interoperability. It brings much-needed structure to an otherwise fragmented ecosystem, enabling lenders and platforms to work together more efficiently without stifling innovation. It also helps restore trust to all users.

How ULI Works

Rather than acting as a centralised system, ULI operates as a distributed interoperability layer, purpose-built for credit. It works in four general phases:

Standardising loan origination

ULI defines a shared schema for different credit products, whether that’s long-term loans, merchant cash advances, invoice financing, or credit lines. This shared language allows platforms and lenders to integrate quickly and consistently. My company has already pioneered this approach, embedding ULI frameworks into platforms that support the entire loan lifecycle, from application to disbursement, collections, and ongoing management.

Affordability and risk aggregation

A critical ULI function is its ability to aggregate exposure across multiple lenders in real time. This enables federated credit checks, prevents borrower overextension, and enhances regulatory oversight. Again, this is something that my company is already doing, with a solution that integrates with ULI to assess a borrower’s receivables, providing granular visibility into cash flow and repayment capacity.

Real-time event notifications

With ULI, you also introduce real-time event notifications that allow key loan events, such as repayments and missed instalments, to be monitored in real-time. This enhanced visibility enables lenders to monitor risk continuously, rather than relying on retrospective data. It also allows for the automation of collections to streamline the response to any such events. Additionally, lenders can make easy adjustments to credit limits based on a borrower’s behaviour and financial performance over time. Essentially, bringing both control and flexibility to lending.

Streamlined application journeys

ULI also helps streamline multi-lender application journeys through a single interface. Our system, for example, allows for automated underwriting, with over 95% of applications decisioned in under 60 seconds. This means that loan applications can be completed in minutes, drastically improving both lender efficiency and borrower experience.

Is The UK Ready For ULI?

Several recent developments suggest that, from a regulatory standpoint, the UK is uniquely positioned to adopt ULI, or similar. First, there’s the government’s Smart Data agenda, which is expanding the legal framework to support cross-sector, user-permissioned data sharing, which is an essential foundation for interoperable lending. While the ongoing development of Open Finance reflects a clear determination to build modular, interconnected financial services systems that mirror the goals of ULI. At the same time, increased regulatory scrutiny of traditional credit bureaus signals a broader appetite for more transparent, real-time credit models that can better serve both lenders and borrowers. As such, ULI wouldn’t replace existing financial infrastructure, it would complement it. Helping to modernise business lending and improve access to credit.

Financial services have become increasingly modular. It’s an approach that answers the evolving needs of today’s digitally driven businesses. A side effect of that is a lack of standardisation and agility. ULI provides a solution to resolve that problem. By empowering lenders with real-time data, simplifying compliance, and creating a more inclusive and transparent borrower experience, it signals a move towards more responsible finance. In my book, that’s the future of lending.

  • Embedded Finance
  • Neobanking

Integration of open banking technology and digital banking experience platform delivers seamless, standards-compliant customer experiences

Ozone API, the global leader in open banking and open finance technology, and Plumery, a digital banking experience platform, today announced a strategic partnership for true customer-centric banking. The collaboration combines Ozone API’s specialist open banking platform with Plumery’s Digital Success Fabric, to empower financial institutions to deliver seamless, compliant, and innovative digital banking experiences.

The partnership combines Ozone API’s standards-based open API technology, built to support all global open banking standards and regulations, with Plumery’s modern, cloud-native digital banking experience platform. This integration empowers banks and financial institutions to rapidly deploy customer-centric mobile and web applications. These can seamlessly incorporate open banking capabilities without compromising on compliance or security.

Ozone API & Plumery – A Digital Partnership

“At Ozone API, we do one thing better than anyone else – provide standards-based open API technology to banks and financial institutions. Our partnership with Plumery represents the perfect orchestration of market-leading technologies. By combining our specialist open banking technology with Plumery’s innovative digital banking platform, we’re enabling financial institutions to deliver truly differentiated customer experiences with an accelerated time to market.”

Huw Davies, Co-founder and CEO of Ozone API

“Our partnership with Ozone API represents a significant milestone in our mission to empower financial institutions with truly customer-centric digital banking experiences. The integration enables banks to not just meet regulatory requirements, but to transform open banking from a compliance necessity into a competitive advantage. Through future-proof architecture our clients can now deliver innovative, personalised services that leverage open banking data while maintaining the flexibility and speed-to-market that our platform is known for.”

Ben Goldin, CEO, Plumery

The joint solution addresses the growing demand from financial institutions for integrated digital banking platforms that can harness open banking capabilities. These can enhance customer engagement and create new revenue streams. Banks can now utilise Plumery’s flexible, developer-friendly platform to craft tailored digital experiences. Meanwhile, seamlessly integrating Ozone API’s robust open banking functionality.

About Ozone API

Ozone API empowers banks, fintechs, and financial institutions worldwide to thrive in the world of open banking. Founded by the team behind the UK’s open banking standards, our platform delivers secure, compliant, and high-performance APIs that unlock the potential of open finance. We help clients across multiple continents comply with evolving standards, create commercial value from their data, and deliver innovation at speed. Learn more: https://ozoneapi.com

About Plumery

Founded in 2016 as a private consultancy collaborating with leading global banking companies, Plumery became a registered brand in 2017 and evolved into an independent product company in 2022. Backed by renowned venture capital firms, Plumery now offers a modern, cloud-native digital banking experience platform. Headquartered in the Netherlands, Plumery operates with a diverse team that embodies a unique combination of seasoned expertise and vibrant innovation. Operating across Amsterdam, Lisbon, and Vilnius, Plumery’s mission is to empower financial institutions worldwide, regardless of size, to craft distinctive, contemporary, and customer-centric mobile and web experiences. Learn more: https://plumery.com/

  • Digital Payments
  • Neobanking

The financial services industry has been in a state of disruption for over a decade. However, this year has marked…

The financial services industry has been in a state of disruption for over a decade. However, this year has marked a new chapter for neobanks. What began as lean, digital-first challengers to traditional banks has now evolved into a powerful movement reshaping the definition of what a bank can be. Today’s neobanks are no longer just mobile apps for managing money…. They are full-fledged lifestyle platforms blending finance with connectivity, commerce, and personalisation.

From telecom integration to global market expansion, neobanks are aggressively diversifying their services. They are embedding themselves deeper into everyday life. Consumers are no longer just looking for convenience. They expect financial tools that anticipate their needs, adapt to their behaviours and seamlessly connect with the services they use daily.

Here are the top five Neobanking innovations defining 2025:

1. Neobanks Entering the Telecom Arena with Digital SIMs & Mobile Services

  • Monzo (UK) is planning to launch a digital SIM card service. Marking its entry into telecomms to improve customer convenience and diversify its revenue streams.
  • Klarna (Sweden/US) has taken a similar step by launching a $40/month unlimited 5G mobile plan in the U.S. Available via MVNO partnerships with AT&T and Gigs.

This trend highlights a notable shift: neobanks are blending finance with connectivity to create new customer touchpoints and offerings.


2. Embedding Finance Across Everyday Activities

Neobanks continue to evolve from stand-alone financial apps into integrated platforms within broader ecosystems:

  • monobank (Ukraine) introduced “Shake2Pay”—a quick, seamless way to pay for fuel at WOG gas stations by just shaking your phone.
  • It also launched “Group Expenses” for effortless bill splitting and a “market by mono” in-app marketplace offering over 20,000 products with installment buying.

These features demonstrate how everyday financial actions—from buying to splitting bills—are becoming deeply integrated into daily life.


3. AI-Driven Personalisation & Behavioural Coaching

Personal finance is becoming highly tailored:

  • Industry reports emphasise that AI and machine learning are being leveraged to deliver advanced personalisation, predicting spending behaviors and recommending tailored products.

The result is a more proactive and individualised banking experience, where the app anticipates your financial needs rather than just reacting.


4. Global Expansion Through Licensing and Market Architecture

Neobanks are aggressively scaling internationally:

  • Revolut has reached 60 million users in over 48 countries by mid‑2025 and is expanding further—setting up Paris as its Western European HQ and investing $1.1 billion in France.
  • It’s also pursuing a ‘lean bank’ licence in Israel, expanding its regulated banking footprint.

This approach underscores a strategic push to become truly global, not just by user count, but by regulatory presence.


5. Diversification Beyond Traditional Banking Services

Traditional neobanking isn’t enough—2025 is about expanding into new verticals:

  • Klarna’s shift from BNPL to full-scale digital banking—with debit cards, mobile plans, and FDIC-insured deposit services—signals how neobanks are making themselves indispensable.
  • Neobanks increasingly aim to become one-stop financial destinations rather than niche providers.

Neobanks have moved far beyond their origins as scrappy FinTech challengers. In 2025, they are building holistic ecosystems that combine money management, AI-driven personalisation, mobile connectivity, and lifestyle integration. This transformation signals a broader truth: banking is no longer just about finance… It’s about creating seamless experiences that fit into every corner of modern life.

  • Neobanking

FinTech Strategy meets with Seema Desai, COO at iwoca, to hear how customer experience is being redefined in a digital lending era

Financial Transformation Summit 2025 EXCLUSIVE

At the Financial Transformation Summit, Seema Desai, COO at iwoca, spoke on a panel (alongside representatives from Zopa Bank and Citibank) about the shifting needs for customer experience in digital lending. How can lenders create hyper-personalised loan products to meet diverse customer needs? What are the best practices for maintaining a human touch in automated lending processes? How can lenders build and maintain customer loyalty in a competitive market? What role does omnichannel strategy play in delivering a seamless lending experience?

Following the panel, we spoke with Seema to find out more…

Hi Seema, tell us about your role at iwoca?

“I am the Chief Operating Officer at iwoca. We provide fast and flexible finance to small businesses across the UK and Germany. In my role as COO, I’m responsible for all of our UK operations teams. So, all of our agents that engage with customers throughout the customer journey. And I make sure that we’re offering a really high quality service that is also highly efficient.”

You were part of a panel at this Summit focused on redefining CX in the era of digital lending. Can you give us an overview of your thoughts?

“So, maintaining that personal touch is really important because that personal touch helps us to build trust with our customers. We all know that when dealing with money, that trust element is super important. There’s lots of things that iwoca does to maintain that. For example, every customer has a dedicated account manager. They can get through to them via a direct number. We also respond to emails fast, every email on the same day. And then we commit to answering at least 80% of calls in less than 60 seconds. We’ve got 10,000 new applications every month and about 30,000 customers making repayments currently. We’re doing all of this with an account management team of just 30 people. So, to maintain that level of personal touch whilst also being able to deal with that volume of customers, we absolutely have to leverage digital technology to be able to do that really efficiently. And there’s many ways that we do that…

“First of all, we make sure that our account pages and our signup flow is as clear and seamless as possible so that customers can self-serve if they want to. But we also make sure that with our operations activities, we’ve broken down every step of every operational process into a task that is visible on our in-house built CRM system. And then what we can do is run tests on every single step of those to see where having human interaction really adds the most value. So, we are constantly upgrading where we apply human interaction in a really forensic way to make sure that it’s optimised as much as possible.”

Why is this an exciting time for the business?

“It’s really exciting right now. We’ve been having some record months recently and broken some big milestones. We are now approving around 10,000 new business loans every month, which is huge. Our loan book across the UK is almost £1 billion. And then a bit closer to home, we’ve also just moved offices. We’ve got more space and we’re still able to attract exceptional talent into iwoca and it’s great to have a new home in central London to do that.”

“Embedded finance is a big trend right now. It’s important for us to make sure that customers can access lending when and where they need it. We’re integrating lots of partners through our open API – around a third of our applications come through partner channels. So, that’s a very important trend and growing for us in the future. We’re also seeing a lot of hyper-personalisation. We know that customers want to be able to tailor loan products exactly to their needs, and we want our products to be able to provide that flexibility to them. We’re looking at increasing loan amounts, changing durations and offering different types of repayment schedules with interest only options. And that’s hugely exciting. And one of the big trends that I’ve heard about here at FTS, and which we are working on at iwoca, is how we leverage AI and what we might be able to do with AI to make us even more efficient, but still maintain an excellent customer service.”

What pain points are your customers experiencing that you need to address? What are they asking you for help with? How are you meeting the challenge?

“So, it’s important to remember that iwoca exists in order to solve pain points for customers because customers were just relying on traditional lenders. Those traditional lenders, the big banks, have much longer application processes, typically taking weeks and sometimes just aren’t able to lend to those customers at all because it’s not within their risk appetite. Whereas at iwoca you can get a loan within minutes. We can also lend to customers that banks couldn’t lend to because we’re able to use data and data science to be able to understand the risk level and different customers much better.”

Tell us about a recent success story…

“We are operational in the UK and Germany, and a success story for us is the fact that we are now working with a loan book of almost a £1 billion and we are profitable. And we have been for quite a while now, since early 2023. So, it’s a real success story for us that we’re able to use that profitability to fund our core business growth but also use it to invest in solving other pain points for customers beyond lending.”

What’s next for iwoca? What future launches and initiatives are you particularly excited about?

Yeah, there’s a lot of things that we’re working on right now. I’m excited about some of the AI tools that we are trialling to make our service even more efficient. There’s a number of exciting applications out there, so there’s a lot of people at iwoca exploring and exploiting different AI technologies. It’s going to be very exciting to see how that rolls out across our business in the rest of this year. And then also looking at new ventures that are beyond lending, which we may be launching later this year or early next.”

Why do you think the evolution of collaboration between banks and FinTechs is set to continue? What are you excited about?

“Collaboration is hugely important to us and our business model. Traditional banks are able to access capital more cheaply than we can, but they’re able to provide us with access to their balance sheet so that they provide financing to us so that we can then lend to our customers. So, with their financing, we are able to use our data and our technology to reach customers that they wouldn’t be able to reach directly. At the moment, something like 80% of our funding comes from banks such as Barclays and Citi. So, they’re hugely important to us and we are continuously reviewing with them the performance of our own book and finding ways that we’d be able to lend to more of our customers.”

Why Financial Transformation Summit? What is it about this particular event that makes it the perfect place to embrace innovation? What’s the response been like for iwoca?

“This is my first time at this event, and I’ve been really impressed. It’s been really well organised and the panels have been insightful with some great speakers. I’ve learned quite a lot. I’ve met some really interesting people and I’m really impressed by the diversity of people that are coming here. So, I was just on a panel with somebody from Zopa, which is where I used to work. I also met somebody in the audience who came from Lloyd’s, which is where I worked about 15 years ago. So, it’s great to see that this ecosystem being brought together at FTS.”

Learn more at iwoca.co.uk

About iwoca

Fast, flexible finance empowers small businesses to manage their cash flow better and seize opportunities – making their business and the economy stronger as a whole. At iwoca, we do just that. We help businesses get the funds they need, when they need it, often within minutes. We’ve already made several billion pounds in funding available to over 100,000 businesses since we launched in 2012 and positioned ourselves as a leading Fintech in Europe. Our mission is to finance one million businesses. We’ll get there by continuing to make our finance ever more relevant and accessible to more businesses by combining cutting-edge technology, data science and a 5-star customer service.

Our cover star Rebecca Fitzgerald, Director of Data & AI at Yorkshire Building Society, reveals a digital transformation journey meeting…

Our cover star Rebecca Fitzgerald, Director of Data & AI at Yorkshire Building Society, reveals a digital transformation journey meeting customers, wherever they are.

Read the latest issue of FinTech Strategy here

Yorkshire Building Society: Data, AI & Inclusive Leadership

Our cover story focuses on the data revolution taking place at Yorkshire Building Society (YBS)… Navigating this journey of change is Director of Data and AI, Rebecca Fitzgerald. Her ambitious vision is to transform the 160-year-old mutual through ethical, human-centred data strategies and AI innovation. In a rapidly evolving digital landscape, she aims to ensure YBS does not just keep up but leads from the front.

“I’m accountable for developing and implementing strategies to enhance data-centricity and drive value from data and AI for our customers and colleagues,” Rebecca states. This directive is grounded in strong governance, positive data culture, and the empowerment of people through data literacy and technological upskilling.”

Tyme Group: Scalable Global Digital Banking

Dietmar Bohmer, Chief Analytics Officer at Tyme Group, on operationalising innovation, cultivating a culture of empowerment and driving transformation from the inside out…

“It’s been wild ride from a technology point of view,” admits Dietmar… Today, that foresight is paying off. The cloud-native architecture has provided Tyme with the elasticity, resilience, and speed it needs to support its rapid growth across emerging markets. “With each new deployment, the organisation has evolved and refined its technological foundation,” notes Dietmar. “When the time came to launch GoTyme Bank in the Philippines, lessons learned from the rollout of TymeBank in South Africa enabled the team to rethink and redesign their stack, optimising for scale, performance, and localised feature delivery.”

ČSOB: A Digital Transformation Journey

ČSOB Slovakia is undergoing a major transformation aimed at future-proofing its technology, enhancing customer experience, and reinforcing its leadership in digital banking. Under the stewardship of its CIO Ludek Slegr, the bank’s IT team is navigating a major upgrade of its responsibility, overhauling core IT systems and implementing agile methodologies to meet its strategic goals. At the heart of this transformation is a focus on delivering value through technology, supporting people development, and fostering sustainable innovation.

“The next step for digital-first is continuous improvement of straight-through processing ratio, i.e. reducing involvement of manual work in our processes.”

Money20/20 Europe

FinTech Strategy also reports from the conference floor at Money20/20 Europe in Amsterdam. Bringing together the world’s leading innovators, institutions, investors, and influencers from across the FinTech and financial services spectrum, more than 8,000 delegates from over 2,300 companies were in attendance… We sat down with Standard Chartered’s Head of Digital Assets – Financing & Securities Services, Waqar Chaudry, to discuss how the bank is connecting traditional with digital, collaborating with FinTechs and taking a measured approach to entering the crypto market. And we spoke with Veritran’s CMO, Jorge Sanchez Barcelo, to find out more about the tech firm’s partnership with Manchester City which is reimagining CX to create a frictionless digital experience for fans.

Financial Transformation Summit

The Financial Transformation Summit at London’s ExCel is one of the most immersive and interactive events in the financial services calendar. As a media partner, FinTech Strategy took the temperature of industry innovation at our stand with on camera hot takes from the tech leaders pushing the boundaries at Hyland, Fidelity, HSBC, Citigroup and more…

Also in this issue, we keep you up to date with the key FinTech events across the globe; and read on for more insights from InsurTech disruptors Qover, lending innovators iwoca and investment experts Eastern Horizon…

Read the latest issue of FinTech Strategy here

  • Artificial Intelligence in FinTech
  • Blockchain & Crypto
  • Cybersecurity in FinTech
  • Digital Payments
  • Embedded Finance
  • InsurTech
  • Neobanking

Our cover story charts the rise of RAKBANK in the UAE driven by agile practices and a people-first culture delivering…

Our cover story charts the rise of RAKBANK in the UAE driven by agile practices and a people-first culture delivering banking with a human touch.

Read the latest issue of FinTech Strategy here

RAKBANK: A Banking Transformation in the UAE

Our cover story explores the digital transformation journey of RAKBANK in the UAE. Head of Digital Transformation, Antony Burrows, reveals the agile practices, enterprise-wide enablement and people-first culture delivering digital banking with a human touch.

“Culture is the cornerstone,” Antony stresses. RAKBANK codifies this into its Four Cs Framework – Connect, Communicate, Collaborate and Celebrate. “Here in the UAE, banks are pivoting from a model of ‘we know everything’ to recognising that one of the best ways to deliver continuous change and value to customers is through partnerships with startups and FinTechs. It’s no longer banks versus startups – it’s banks and startups, working together for the customer. This shift is especially meaningful as banks expand beyond traditional services to focus on customers’ broader financial lives.”

MTN MoMo: Empowering Africa Through FinTech

Hermann Tischendorf, Chief Information & Technology Officer at MTN MoMo (the telco’s mobile money division) reveals a bold roadmap for leveraging FinTech to drive financial inclusion across the African continent.

“MoMo is comparable in monthly active users to some of the top ten FinTechs globally. We’re playing in the same league as Revolut or Nubank – but in much more complex markets,” notes Hermann. “Access to financial services is fundamental. Without it, people are excluded from the global economy. Our services are the equaliser allowing individuals in frontier markets to participate in trade, store value, and ultimately improve their quality of life.”

Republic Bank: Building a Digital Bank

Republic Bank has been serving customers via its branches for over 185 years and now serves 16 different countries across the Caribbean and beyond. It’s “a regional bank with a growing global reach,” explains Group Chief Information & Digital Transformation Officer, Houston Ross.

His team is building a digital bank during a Year of Delivery and Accountability (YODA). “When we talk about digitalisation it’s a journey that never ends. And product is the vehicle to make sure we’re continuously improving.This is our digital pathway and we have to change minds in terms of going beyond the challenges to achieve what’s possible with the right frameworks, tools and processes for our people to serve our customers.”

Also in this issue, we keep you up to date with the key FinTech events across the calendar and read on for insights from Lloyds Banking Group, Recorded Future, AAZZUR, Ayre Group, Marqeta, SCOR and TerraPay.

Read the latest issue of FinTech Strategy here

  • Artificial Intelligence in FinTech
  • Blockchain & Crypto
  • Cybersecurity in FinTech
  • Digital Payments
  • Embedded Finance
  • InsurTech
  • Neobanking

Silverfin’s CEO, Lisa Miles Heal, on how the accountancy industry must innovate with technology to evolve

The accountancy industry is at a crossroads. With rapid technological advancements, accountants are balancing the demand for more efficient compliance and an increased emphasis on value-added advisory services.

Meeting the Challenges

Inflation and the unstable economic outlook are also having a serious impact on all sectors. The UK has been through a tumultuous few years, and the combined effects of Brexit, the COVID-19 pandemic, and high inflation are only gradually receding. Growth remains meagre across the economy as a whole.

At the same time, the global geopolitical situation remains unpredictable, threatening to upset the applecart again at any moment. Alongside this, the possibility of high trade tariffs coming into force in the US in 2025 brings a whole host of conceivable challenges, including spiralling goods costs suppressing growth across a host of industries, with knock-on effects across the services sector. All of this impacts accountants directly, as businesses lean on them for guidance through economic uncertainty.

But it’s not all doom and gloom. Innovations  like automation and AI can help accountants navigate through the volatility and focus on the higher value tasks. But we know that this isn’t an easy one and done. Firms purchasing fintech technology are on an education journey, requiring a cultural shift to overcome resistance and replace fear with an understanding of how machine learning and analytics drive growth, not replace staff. As firms embrace this shift, 2025 could see accountancy transformed into even more of a more strategic, data-led profession. 

As a result, 2025 is set to be a year of rapid change, of challenge and opportunity. Two key areas will continue to impact the sector – inflation, and further consolidation through mergers and acquisitions (M&A). Let’s explore in more detail how these two issues will shape 2025 for accountancy firms and their clients, as well as looking at the way professionals’ roles are likely to evolve in response.

Automation Will Transform the Way Accountants Respond to Inflation

Inflation remains a significant dynamic that accountancy firms must navigate carefully in 2025. It impacts everything – from wages and employee culture through to supply costs and cash flow. As inflation stabilises, it’s crucial for accountancy firms to reflect on how they handled recent high inflation periods, and adapt their strategies for a lower-inflation environment.

Using technology and data insights can help firms remain competitive and navigate this new economic phase. A data-led approach is crucial given the complexity of the factors that feed into the inflationary landscape, and the myriad ways it can affect business. Reacting based on intuition won’t cut it. Accountants need to base their strategic decisions on insights derived from rich data, in as close to real time as possible.

This approach has two critical advantages. First, it allows firms to act proactively, leveraging advanced analytics to anticipate trends and outcomes before they occur.. Second, it allows for greater agility, enabling firms  to gain deeper insights  into how  rapid market changes are affecting  their business, and to adjust their strategies swiftly in response.

Mergers & Acquisitions Will Ramp Up

The accounting sector is set for more consolidation as firms face high numbers of partner retirements, due to an ageing workforce. This consolidation is an opportunity for both large and specialised practices – if they can pivot in the right way. 

Larger firms have the potential to dominate, leveraging scale to process work more efficiently across different markets. On the opposite end of the scale, smaller, niche firms can shift to offer highly personalised services. It’s the middle ground that’s at risk. Mid-sized firms that don’t evolve will either be absorbed by larger entities or see talent move towards more specialised practices. 

Private equity is also playing a part in this M&A trend. Investors see opportunities to modernise firms and extract value through efficiency gains and technology adoption. Fintech tools, such as cloud-based financial reporting and compliance platforms, present a low-risk avenue to drive long-term value for pension funds and other stakeholders, especially during the current volatile environment. These trends signal an era of structural evolution within the sector, driven by innovation and investment.

Accountants Will Grow Their Strategic Role

Finally, amid all this change, accountants will need to redefine their role. By automating routine tasks, accountants can reclaim valuable time to focus on higher-value work, such as compliance and providing fiscal and legal advisory services. Firms that adapt to this shift will thrive, while those clinging to traditional models risk losing relevance or being absorbed by larger, more agile competitors.

In 2025, the widening availability of next-gen, AI-enabled technology will make success dependent on firms that fully  integrate their operations. These firms will harness  insights and expertise from all areas of the business  to inform decision-making. Accountants have a crucial role to play in providing these insights based on the financial status of their clients – a role they can only play if they’re freed up from repetitive, low-value tasks. Technology holds the key to the evolution of the sector – 2025 is the time to take that next step.

About Silverfin

It all started with two founders and a big idea… to create an innovate cloud platform to make accountants more successful.​ These are exciting times for accountants.

Technology has changed bookkeeping forever. While bookkeeping has been transformed, the day-to-day life of the accountant has yet to see the same change. Until now.

Silverfin was founded by an accountant frustrated by how he had to work and a software architect looking for a tough problem the cloud could crack. 

So they turned their thinking to how data, and the cloud, could make life easier for accountants, make their businesses better, and at the same time unlock new opportunities for revenue streams from value-added client advisory services.

We give accountants the technology and tools they need to be more successful. For themselves. For their clients. We improve the efficiency, competitiveness and profitability of compliance and reporting services. We make this work faster, easier and better. Plus we power the development and delivery of new advisory services.

  • Artificial Intelligence in FinTech
  • Neobanking

Building on a long-term partnership, Klarna will leverage Marqeta’s platform and the Visa Flexible Credential to expand payment options for Klarna’s new debit card 

Marqeta, the global modern card issuing platform enabling embedded finance solutions, has announced it is working with Klarna. It will enable the global digital bank and flexible payments provider’s new debit card. The debit card is powered by Visa Flexible Credential (VFC) that allows access to built-in flexible payment options.  

Klarna powered by Visa Flexible Credential and Marqeta

In July 2024, Marqeta became the first issuer processor in the US certified for Visa Flexible Credential. With VFC, Marqeta will enable Klarna customers to pay immediately or pay later when needed, all on the same card. This milestone builds on years of collaboration between Marqeta and Klarna. Including powering Klarna’s virtual cards in the US since 2018. The card is currently in a trial phase in the US, with a broader rollout expected later this year. 

“The future of payments is flexible. We’re proud to enable this new offering together with Visa,” said Rahul Shah, Chief Product and Engineering Officer at Marqeta. “Our ongoing partnership with Klarna is a true testament to what’s possible with Marqeta’s platform. And how we enable our customers to grow and innovate at global scale.”  

With its flexible card issuing platform, Marqeta makes it possible for global leaders like Klarna to expand to new markets. And offer innovative payment options tailored to evolving customer needs. Marqeta currently supports Klarna in six countries, helping to drive global growth and deliver seamless, consumer-first experiences.  

“Through our continued partnership with Marqeta and Visa, we’re evolving the Klarna Card into a truly dynamic and versatile payment experience,” said David Sandström, Chief Marketing Officer, Klarna. “We’re excited to continue innovating alongside Marqeta as we scale the Klarna Card to provide smart, seamless payments that empower smarter, more informed shoppers everywhere.” 

About Marqeta 

Marqeta makes it possible for companies to build and embed financial services into their branded experience. And unlock new ways to grow their business and delight users. The Marqeta platform puts businesses in control of building financial solutions, enabling them to turn real-time data into personalized, optimized solutions for everything from consumer loyalty to capital efficiency. With compliance and security built-in, Marqeta’s platform has been proven at scale, processing nearly $300 billion in annual payments volume in 2024. Marqeta is certified to operate in more than 40 countries worldwide. Visit www.marqeta.com to learn more. 

About Klarna 

Klarna is a global digital bank and flexible payments provider. With over 100 million global active Klarna users and 2.9 million transactions per day, Klarna’s AI-powered payments and commerce network is empowering people to pay smarter with a mission to be available everywhere for everything. Consumers can pay with Klarna online, in-store and through Apple Pay in the U.S., UK and Canada. More than 724,000 retailers trust Klarna’s innovative solutions to drive growth and loyalty, including Uber, H&M, Saks, Sephora, Macy’s, Ikea, Expedia Group, Nike and Airbnb. For more information, visit Klarna.com

About Visa 

Visa (NYSE: V) is a world leader in digital payments, facilitating transactions between consumers, merchants, financial institutions and government entities across more than 200 countries and territories. Our mission is to connect the world through the most innovative, convenient, reliable and secure payments network, enabling individuals, businesses and economies to thrive. We believe that economies that include everyone everywhere, uplift everyone everywhere and see access as foundational to the future of money movement. Learn more at  Visa.com

  • Digital Payments
  • Neobanking

The final day at Money20/20 Europe 2025 was packed with more insights on the future of FinTech, from banks to borderless innovation.

Money20/20 Conference Themes & Tracks

Money20/20 Europe 2025 is structured around four thematic content tracks:

  • Digital DNA – Exploring core infrastructure, platform strategies, and foundational technologies.
  • Embedded Intelligence – AI, machine learning, data strategies, and real-time analytics.
  • Beyond Fintech – Partnerships between fintechs and other sectors like retail, health, and climate.
  • Governance 2.0 – Regulation, digital identity, privacy, and ESG compliance.

Day three featured more impactful sessions across all four pillars, offering attendees more valuable insights and strategies for innovation.

Highlights from Key Sessions at Money20/20 Europe:

How to Create and Leverage FinBank Partnerships

The discussion focused on the evolution and success of FinTech partnerships with banks. Key points included the shift from transactional partnerships to more collaborative, value-driven relationships, emphasizing joint KPIs and product creation. 

Alex Johnson, Chief Payments Officer, Nium

“You really have to differentiate. You really have to stand out for a bank to say, ‘Yeah, I like what you offer enough to go through, six months of onboarding.’ Dare I say, maybe more.”

John Power, SVP, Head of JVs & AQaaS, Fiserv

“The legacy system, it’s a fact of life. They’re there. They’re pervasive. They’re going to be here for a long time, and banks historically have made huge investments in those platforms and systems. So I think both the challenge for the for the bank and the opportunity for the FinTech is, how do you at the front end of those legacy systems develop new products that can scale and that you can bring cross border easily and readily.”

Cecilia Tamez, Chief Strategy Officer, Dandelion Payments

 “It really is cutting the line to be able to deliver opportunity for customers and to be able to expand propositions for new customers.”

“The economic development supply chains shifting to low to middle income countries are incredibly important right now, and cross border payment rails have not been good in low middle income countries.”

Where Fintech goes Next: Tapping into Platforms and Verticals 

The discussion centred on the democratisation of financial services through embedded finance. The panel emphasised the importance of data quality, personalisation, and strategic partnerships in delivering seamless financial experiences – ultimately enhancing customer satisfaction and improving business efficiency.

Hiba Chamas, Growth Strategy Consultant – Independent

“Embedded finance is going to be defined by region and use cases.”

Amy Loh, Chief Marketing Officer – Pipe

“Small businesses don’t want to manage their business through a bunch of different tools that are stitched together. They’re looking to platforms to do everything for them and keep high end services.”

Zack Powers, VP Commercial & Operations – Mangopay

“Most platforms or merchants out there trying to diversify revenue, and they will get auxiliary revenue, or maybe get primary revenue through FinTech activity.”

The Neobanks Strike Back

​​In a dynamic exploration of neobanking’s evolution, Ali Niknam revealed bunq’s remarkable journey from a tech-driven startup to a sustainably profitable digital bank. By leveraging AI across every aspect of their operations, bunq has transformed traditional banking, reducing support times to mere seconds and creating a hyper-personalised user experience. Niknam emphasised the power of user-centricity, showing how innovative features like simple stock trading and multi-language support can democratise financial services.

The bank’s strategic approach – focusing on user needs rather than investor expectations – has enabled them to expand thoughtfully, with plans to enter the UK and US markets. By embracing technological change and maintaining a relentless commitment to solving real customer problems, bunq exemplifies the next generation of banking.

Ali Niknam, Founder & CEO, bunq


“Somewhere in the 70s, we let go of the gold standard, and now currencies are basically floating. The only reason why a dollar or a euro is worth what it’s worth is because of trust and perception. Philosophically, it’s very logical that we have found another abstraction layer by introducing stablecoin, which is not much else than a byte number that has a denomination currency as a backing asset that itself doesn’t have anything as a backing asset. A lot of people might ask, ‘Why would you need a stablecoin? We have euros. I go get a coffee, pay with Apple Pay or cash.’ But there are many countries on this planet where the local currency is not stable. If your country has an inflation rate of 30,000% like Zimbabwe, you would really love to use a different currency. The US dollar has been the currency of choice, but as a normal person, you cannot access the US dollar. A US dollar stablecoin that you can access by simply having a mobile phone – that’s going to be transformational for large groups of people.”

Innovating When Regulation Can’t Keep Up: Lessons from NASA 

Lisa Valencia covered an array of topics, from her 35 year career at NASA and Guinness World Record to the rise of private entities like SpaceX, which has launched 180 missions this year, and the increasing role of public-private partnerships in space exploration. The speaker also touched on international collaborations, particularly with the European Space Agency and the Italian Space Agency, and the potential for space tourism and colonization of the moon.

Lisa Valencia, Programme Manager/Electrical Engineer – Pioneering Space, LC (ex NASA)

“Back in the day, NASA got 4% of the national budget. Now it’s down to just 0.1%, so we’ve had to get creative with private partnerships. SpaceX is the perfect success story. They came to us in 2007 needing money after some rocket mishaps, and look at them now! From my balcony, I see their launches every other day. They’re planning 180 launches this year alone.Talk about a return on investment!” 

“We’re planning to colonise the South Pole on the moon. The idea is to extract water and hydrogen from the regolith—both for living there and for fuel.”

Scaling Internationally in 2025: Funding, Innovating, and Breaking into New Markets

The conversation focused on the growth and strategy of fintech companies, particularly those with a strong presence in Europe and the US. The panel featured Ingo Uytdehaage, CEO and co-founder of Adyen, and Alexandre Prot, CEO of Qonto. Both leaders expressed a preference for organic growth over acquisitions, emphasizing the importance of scaling efficiently before pursuing an IPO.

Ingo Uytdehaage, CEO and co-founder of Adyen

“I think an important part of scaling a company is not just thinking about your product, but also considering the markets you want to address, and how you ensure you become local in each country.”

“We realised over time that if we really want to bring the customers, we need to have the best licenses to operate. A banking license gives you a lot of flexibility.” 

“Being independent from other companies, other financial institutions, that gives you flexibility to build what your customers really want.”

“I think it’s very important, also in Europe, that we continue to be competitive. If you think about regulations and AI, we shouldn’t try to do things completely differently compared to the US.”

Alexandre Prot, CEO of Qonto

“We need to be very strict about tech integration and avoiding legacy which slows us down.”

“We still need to scale a lot before we have a successful IPO. A few team members are working on it and getting the company ready for it. But, the most important thing is just scaling efficiently in the business, and maybe an IPO would be welcome in a couple of years.”

Putting The F in Fintech

The panel discussion focused on the role of women in FinTech based on personal experiences.

Iana Dimitrova, CEO, OpenPayd

“At times, being underestimated is helpful, because if you’re seen as the competition, driving an agenda is becoming more difficult. So what I found, actually, over a period, is that bringing your emotional intelligence, leaving the ego outside of the outside of the room, and just focusing on execution is is incredibly helpful.” 

Megan Cooper, CEO & Founder, Caywood

“The moment we start defining ourselves as like a female leader or a female entrepreneur, you almost kind of put yourself in a bit of a box. And so I think just seeing yourself on an equal playing field and then operating it on an equal playing field and interacting in that way is quite advantageous.”

“We can’t just want diversity and hope it happens. We actually have to be intentional about creating it.”

Valerie Kontor, Founder, Black in Fintech

“Black women make up 1.6% over the FinTech workforce, but when we look at the financial reality of black women by the age of 60, only 53% of black women have enough money in their bank account to retire. We need to start marrying people in FinTech and the people that we need to serve.”

Money20/20 Europe 2025 closed its doors but the next edition of the conference will return to Amsterdam from June 2–4, 2026, promising to continue the tradition of shaping the future of financial services…

  • Artificial Intelligence in FinTech
  • Blockchain & Crypto
  • Cybersecurity in FinTech
  • Digital Payments
  • Embedded Finance
  • Host Perspectives
  • InsurTech
  • Neobanking

Day two of Money20/20 Europe 2025 at RAI Amsterdam continued the momentum with a focus on digital assets, stablecoins, and…

Day two of Money20/20 Europe 2025 at RAI Amsterdam continued the momentum with a focus on digital assets, stablecoins, and the evolving regulatory landscape. The event attracts over 8,000 attendees, including FinTech leaders, investors, and policymakers, all eager to explore the future of finance.

Money20/20 Conference Themes & Tracks

Money20/20 Europe 2025 is structured around four thematic content tracks:

  • Digital DNA – Exploring core infrastructure, platform strategies, and foundational technologies.
  • Embedded Intelligence – AI, machine learning, data strategies, and real-time analytics.
  • Beyond Fintech – Partnerships between fintechs and other sectors like retail, health, and climate.
  • Governance 2.0 – Regulation, digital identity, privacy, and ESG compliance.

Day two featured more impactful sessions across all four pillars, offering attendees further valuable insights and strategies for innovation.

Highlights from Key Sessions at Money20/20 Europe:

Digital Wallets and Co-opetition

A standout session featured industry leaders from Fluency, Curve, PayPal, and BLIK discussing the competitive yet collaborative nature of Europe’s digital wallet ecosystem. The panel delved into how traditional financial institutions and FinTech startups are navigating partnerships and competition to enhance user experiences and expand market reach.

Africa’s Fintech Innovation

Another significant discussion spotlighted Africa’s role in global fintech innovation. Representatives from 500 Global, Tech Safari, and Moniepoint highlighted how African startups are leveraging technology to drive financial inclusion and create scalable solutions that could influence global markets.

Digital Assets

A standout session featured Waqar Chaudry, Head of Digital Assets for Financing & Securities Services at Standard Chartered. In a fireside chat titled “The Digital Assets Opportunity: How Banks Can Win at Web3,” Chaudry, alongside Sygnum Bank’s Aliya Das Gupta, delved into the evolving landscape of digital assets.

Chaudry highlighted Standard Chartered’s initiatives in digital asset custody, tokenisation, and the launch of tokenised money market funds. Furthermore, he discussed the development of stablecoin solutions aimed at improving liquidity and settlement times. Chaudry underscored the importance of banks adopting robust digital asset strategies to meet growing client demands and navigate the complex regulatory environment. Drawing from his regulatory background at the Abu Dhabi Global Market, Chaudry provided a unique perspective on balancing innovation with compliance.

WealthTech Evolution

Leaders from Raisin, Upvest, and PensionBee explored the transformation of wealth management through AI and APIs. The panel emphasised the importance of personalised financial services and the integration of technology to meet the evolving needs of consumers.

Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs)

A fireside chat with officials from the European Central Bank and the Bank of England provided insights into the development of the digital euro and pound. The discussion covered technical challenges, regulatory considerations, and the potential impact of CBDCs on the financial ecosystem.

Navigating the Evolving Cyber Threat Landscape

The financial services sector faces an unprecedented convergence of threats with sophisticated cyber attacks and the rise of new technologies… Recorded Future CEO Christopher Ahlberg assessed the evolving threat landscape and strategies for building secure digital ecosytems. He was joined by In Security CEO Jane Frankland and Mastercard EVP Johan Gerber

Networking, Partnerships, and Brand Activations at Money20/20

Notable Announcements:

  • Money20/20 and FXC Intelligence Report: A collaborative report titled “How Will Europe’s Money Move in the Future?” was released, offering insights into the future of European cross-border payments and the impact of emerging technologies.
  • Policy Exchange Roundtables: Money20/20 introduced focused roundtable discussions involving central banks, regulators, and industry leaders to address critical regulatory challenges in the digital financial landscape

Day two of Money20/20 Europe 2025 underscored the dynamic interplay between traditional financial institutions and emerging FinTech innovations. Discussions on digital assets, stablecoins, and regulatory frameworks highlighted the industry’s commitment to embracing change while ensuring stability and compliance. The second day underscored the event’s role as a catalyst for innovation, collaboration, and growth within the fintech industry. As the conference progresses, stakeholders remain focused on shaping a resilient and inclusive financial future.

  • Artificial Intelligence in FinTech
  • Digital Payments
  • Embedded Finance
  • Host Perspectives
  • Neobanking

Money20/20 Europe 2025 opened its doors to a full-capacity audience at the RAI Convention Centre in Amsterdam. Bringing together the…

Money20/20 Europe 2025 opened its doors to a full-capacity audience at the RAI Convention Centre in Amsterdam. Bringing together the world’s leading innovators, institutions, investors, and influencers from across the fintech and financial services spectrum. With more than 8,000 delegates from over 2,300 companies in attendance, the opening day set a high-energy, insight-rich tone for the rest of the week.

“Money Morning Live”

The day kicked off with “Money Morning Live”. A signature fast-paced keynote session hosted by Tracey Davies (President of Money20/20), Scarlett Sieber, and Zachary Anderson Pettet. The morning show served as a pulse check for the industry. Combining thought leadership with entertainment to engage both newcomers and veterans.

Rahul Patil, CTO of Stripe, delivered a keynote on AI’s role in payments infrastructure. Highlighting how machine learning is now essential for fraud detection, customer service, and onboarding. He emphasised AI should not merely be viewed as an efficiency tool, but as a strategic pillar to create personalised user experiences. And deliver scalable innovation across markets.

David Sandstrom, CMO at Klarna, reflected on the Swedish FinTech giant’s evolution, particularly its use of generative AI for customer engagement and internal operations. Sandstrom noted Klarna’s AI assistant, which now handles two-thirds of its customer queries globally, has dramatically improved both customer satisfaction and cost efficiency.

Money20/20 Conference Themes & Tracks

Money20/20 Europe 2025 is structured around four thematic content tracks:

  • Digital DNA – Exploring core infrastructure, platform strategies, and foundational technologies.
  • Embedded Intelligence – AI, machine learning, data strategies, and real-time analytics.
  • Beyond Fintech – Partnerships between fintechs and other sectors like retail, health, and climate.
  • Governance 2.0 – Regulation, digital identity, privacy, and ESG compliance.

Day one featured impactful sessions across all four pillars, offering attendees valuable insights and strategic foresight.

Highlights from Key Sessions at Money20/20 Europe:

Open Banking & Payment Rails

“Putting the Bank Back in Open Banking Payments”, saw speakers from Token.io, Santander, and BNP Paribas examine how banks are reclaiming relevance in the open banking conversation. While FinTechs initially led the charge, the panel noted banks now play a crucial role in building trusted, interoperability, and high-volume “pay by bank” solutions. The debate touched on customer adoption hurdles, PSD3’s role in shaping future APIs, and the monetisation challenges still plaguing the open banking model.

Card Issuance at Scale

In a fireside chat led by Thredd’s President Jim McCarthy, representatives from Railsr, Worldpay, Flagship Advisory, and Caxton discussed the complexities of issuing card programs globally. The group addressed fragmentation across regulatory environments. Especially in regions like LATAM and Asia-Pacific. They urged the need for programmatic flexibility, local compliance, and better BIN management. The panel agreed that the future of card issuing lies in seamless orchestration between platforms, banks, and third-party fintechs.

Agentic AI: Ready for Prime Time?

A standout session focused on the concept of Agentic AI — autonomous agents capable of completing financial tasks without manual prompts. Industry leaders from NVIDIA, bunq, and Visa debated how ready the financial services sector truly is for deploying such systems. While the technology is progressing rapidly, concerns around regulatory clarity, model interpretability, and risk frameworks remain.

NVIDIA’s Head of Financia Technology, Jochen Papenbrock, stressed the need to democratise access to compute infrastructure. And bunq’s AI evangelist, Ali El Hassouni, showcased how the challenger bank is testing semi-autonomous agents in customer support workflows. Meanwhile, Visa SVP for Products & Solutions, Mathieu Altwegg, emphasised the importance of embedding guardrails in agentic systems to ensure ethical AI practices. Especially in credit scoring and wealth advisory roles.

Scaling AI Across the Enterprise

A collaborative session featuring leaders from Stripe, Starling Bank, AWS, and Swift delved into the challenges of scaling AI initiatives beyond prototypes. The discussion spotlighted the importance of clean, real-time data pipelines, strong governance structures, and cross-functional collaboration between engineering, data science, and compliance teams.

Networking, Partnerships, and Brand Activations at Money20/20

Notable announcements:

Beyond the conference rooms, the exhibition floors buzzed with product demos, startup pitches, and impromptu huddles among VC firms, banks, and emerging FinTechs. Exhibitors such as Plaid, Adyen, Marqeta, and Fireblocks showcased new tools for embedded finance, real-time treasury management, and blockchain settlement.

  • Wise teased a new enterprise FX tool tailored for SMEs.
  • Checkout.com introduced an AI-enhanced fraud prevention dashboard.
  • Avalanche Foundation launched an initiative to bring blockchain-based micro-insurance products to underserved markets in Eastern Europe.

Stablecoin News: Institutional Interest Accelerates

A particularly significant development emerged around stablecoins, with clear signals that regulated, bank-issued digital currencies are entering a new phase of maturity:

  • U.S. Megabanks Signal Joint Stablecoin Initiative
    Executives from JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, Bank of America, and Citigroup confirmed that initial groundwork has begun on a joint U.S. dollar-denominated stablecoin, subject to the passage of the pending GENIUS Act (Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for U.S. Stablecoins).
    The stablecoin aims to offer faster, cheaper cross-border settlement and programmable liquidity for enterprise clients. Bank leaders emphasized that this would complement, not replace, traditional banking rails.
  • Ripple Expands in the UAE
    In a regional announcement, Zand Bank and fintech firm Mamo revealed a partnership with Ripple, using its blockchain infrastructure to enable real-time, low-cost cross-border remittances. This move, anchored in the UAE’s pro-digital asset stance, aligns with broader ambitions to make the country a hub for regulated digital currencies.
  • Institutional Stablecoin Custody
    Panels featuring speakers from Fireblocks, Anchorage Digital, and Circle addressed the evolving role of stablecoins in treasury operations and FX management. There was widespread agreement that tokenised cash equivalents, including USDC and EURC, are increasingly being used for short-term settlement and yield farming, particularly in Asia and Europe.

These discussions signalled a broader institutional acceptance of stablecoins, with an emphasis on compliance, transparency, and integration into traditional finance rather than bypassing it.


Day one of Money20/20 Europe 2025 delivered on its promise of convening the brightest minds to create the future of finance. From headline-grabbing keynotes and deep-dive panels to global product launches and off-stage networking, the conference created a rich mix of thought leadership, practical innovation, and human connection.

Whether it was the evolution of AI in banking, the future of programmable money, or the balance between innovation and regulation, the discussions revealed a clear consensus: collaboration will define the next chapter of FinTech. Day two at Money20/20 promises even more, with upcoming sessions on decentralised finance, digital identity, and CBDCs.

  • Artificial Intelligence in FinTech
  • Digital Payments
  • Embedded Finance
  • Host Perspectives
  • Neobanking

Paul O’Sullivan, Global Head of Banking & Lending at Aryza, on how Open Banking is reshaping the financial ecosystem

As Open Banking continues to gain momentum, it is poised to fundamentally reshape the financial ecosystem. Not only regarding how institutions operate but also in how individuals understand, manage, and trust their money. With secure data sharing at its core, Open Banking represents more than just a technological shift. It signals a transformation in the relationship between people and their finances.

This piece explores five key areas where Open Banking is set to make its mark in the years to come…

Transforming Society’s Relationship with Money

Open Banking has the opportunity to reshape society’s relationship with money by providing greater transparency and enabling a more comprehensive view of personal finances. This heightened visibility is made possible by securely sharing financial data with trusted third-party providers. And empowering individuals to monitor spending habits, track expenses, and compare financial products and services more easily.

Providing greater transparency and access to financial data will improve financial education for all by enabling a deeper analysis of trends across various activities. As a result, consumers can make more informed decisions. This can improve overall financial education and help to foster a healthier, more sustainable relationship with money.

Additionally, Open Banking paves the way for more personalised financial solutions, as institutions compete to offer tailored services that meet the unique needs of customers. This increased choice not only boosts consumer confidence in managing their finances but also catalyses innovation within the financial sector. Ultimately, the shift toward Open Banking is poised to create a more dynamic, customer-centric financial services landscape. Moreover, one that will significantly enhance how individuals and businesses manage their money.

The Convergence of Open Banking and AI

The data provided by Open Banking should work hand in hand with AI to offer consumers advice on managing their finances. Whether that means making changes to their habits or finding more affordable products, in turn transforming financial guidance and creating a more personalised and efficient financial ecosystem.

By enabling the secure sharing of consumer data, Open Banking provides the foundation for AI-driven solutions to analyse real-time information and offer tailored recommendations. This coule be suggesting improvements to spending habits or automating routine processes. Such AI-enabled tools will empower individuals to make more informed, data-driven decisions about their money.

This synergy will go beyond surface-level insights, delivering hyper-personalised services that address each customer’s unique financial needs and preferences. The resulting efficiencies, such as automated account management, transaction processing, and even customer support, free human resources to focus on more complex issues. Ultimately, this combination of Open Banking and AI promises to enhance the overall customer experience. It can provide actionable, real-time support that helps individuals navigate their financial journeys more confidently and effectively.

Evolving the Role of Traditional Banks

While it’s still early to say for certain, traditional banks could indeed evolve into more utility-like services in an Open Banking world. We’re already seeing indications of this shift, with more consumers increasingly switching their banking services and using multiple accounts. Open Banking is a disruptive force that fosters greater competition and choice, enabling consumers to pick and choose the financial solutions that best meet their needs.

To remain relevant, traditional banks are urged to embrace Open Banking rather than resist it. By securely leveraging customer data and collaborating with FinTechs and other third-party providers, they can create more specialised, value-added products and services. In doing so, banks can move beyond mere utility status. They can position themselves at the forefront of innovation while enhancing the overall customer experience in an increasingly competitive landscape.

Redefining Financial Trust and Identity

Open Banking is not only transforming technology infrastructure; it’s also redefining core principles such as trust, identity, and control. It will increase transparency by giving individuals a holistic view of their financial data. In turn, empowering them to track spending patterns, compare financial products, and make more informed decisions. Secondly, it enhances consumer control over personal data, as customers can grant or revoke access to trusted third-party providers. Therefore strengthening accountability and fostering greater confidence in the system.

Furthermore, digital identity solutions replace traditional verification processes, enabling expanded access to financial services. This will ensure more people can participate in the banking system with ease. Underpinning these developments are trust frameworks, which establish standardised measures for data sharing, allowing banks, FinTechs and other providers to collaborate while maintaining consistent protection for users.

A key emerging factor is the use of advanced cryptography and multi-factor authentication so that both individuals and financial institutions can operate confidently in a secure environment. This heightened focus on security and privacy can help mitigate concerns around data breaches and identity theft. Further strengthening consumer trust.

By introducing new layers of transparency, giving consumers control over their data, and leveraging digital identity and robust security measures, Open Banking shifts our collective understanding of financial trust and identity. It moves us toward a future where trust is shared among various stakeholders. Security is paramount and individuals play a more active role in shaping their financial journeys.

Harnessing Open Banking Data for Monetary Policy

While often discussed through the lens of consumer empowerment, Open Banking may also prove to be instrumental in supporting smarter economic decision-making at a national level. Financial data through open banking could play a significant role in creating new tools for monetary policy. Particularly as the global financial system becomes increasingly interconnected. By providing governments and regulators with real-time insights into consumer spending patterns and business creditworthiness, Open Banking allows for more precise and targeted policy interventions. This data-driven approach can enable policymakers to respond swiftly to economic shifts. They could tailor interest rates, liquidity measures, and other monetary policy tools to specific sectors or demographics.

Having access to comprehensive, standardised data can enhance the accuracy of economic forecasts and models. This leads to more informed decisions that can foster stability and growth in the economy. However, implementing these advanced tools requires robust data protection measures and regulatory frameworks to ensure the privacy and security of financial information. When managed responsibly, the fusion of Open Banking data and monetary policymaking promises to bolster both economic resilience and consumer trust.

Charting the Path Ahead for Financial Innovation

Open Banking is not just a new chapter in financial services, it’s a complete rewrite of how we engage with money, institutions, and technology. From personalised advice and AI integration to regulatory impact and redefined trust, the changes ahead are both profound and far-reaching. The next decade will be shaped by how institutions adapt, how consumers respond, and how effectively we harness data to deliver meaningful, secure, and transparent financial experiences.

  • Embedded Finance
  • Neobanking

Join 25,000 attendees for Seamless FinTech, the Middle East’s biggest FinTech event, at the Dubai World Trade Centre May 20-22

FinTech Strategy is proud to be a media partner for Seamless FinTech 2025.

Register for your free event pass here.

Why attend Seamless FinTech?

Welcome to the Middle East’s biggest fintech event for 25 years. Seamless Fintech brings together big tech, government, banks, financial institutions, fintechs, investors, and media. Perfect for anyone passionate about the Middle East’s fintech and payments landscape. This event allows you to explore the fast-evolving ecosystem and engage with top industry players and innovators. And visit the Identity Showcase to discover cutting-edge solutions.

“If I wanted to take a pulse of the vibrancy of the region, then look around at Seamless. The amount of interest and intent people are showing in us and FinTech in the region is very visible at Seamless Middle East.”

Managing Director, Amazon Payments Service

Furthermore, whether you’re presenting your latest payment innovations or showcasing impactful demos, this is your opportunity to foster connections and accelerate business growth. Join 25,000 attendees and 800 exhibitors gaining insights from a stellar line up of 750+ expert speakers from the likes of Revolut, J.P. Morgan, Monzo, Citi and more.

Seamless Digital Commerce

Seamless Fintech will be co-located with Seamless Digital Commerce. This event caters to payments companies seeking to connect with merchants, SMEs, retailers, and e-commerce platforms. The event offers valuable insights into revolutionising in-store experiences, optimising e-commerce strategies, and mastering digital marketing techniques. It provides unmatched opportunities for growth and collaboration in the digital commerce space.

This event is perfect for those looking to forge new partnerships, gain valuable insights from industry trailblazers and drive innovation to stay ahead in the ever-evolving digital landscape. Moreover, whether you’re a startup, an established player, or an SME, Seamless Digital Commerce is designed to push the industry forward.

Register for your free event pass here.

  • Artificial Intelligence in FinTech
  • Digital Payments
  • Event Newsroom
  • Neobanking

Join FinTech’s greatest event when Money20/20 Europe returns to Amsterdam’s RAI Arena June 3-5

FinTech Strategy is proud to be a media partner for Money20/20 Europe 2025.

Launched by industry insiders in 2011, Money20/20 is the heartbeat of the global FinTech ecosystem. Some of the most innovative, fast-moving ideas and companies have found their feet (and funding) on its show floor. From J.P. Morgan, Stripe, and Airwallex to HSBC, Deutsche Bank, and Checkout.com.

Furthermore, this is where you’ll find new connections, business-critical insights from inspirational speakers, innovation, and partnerships you need to ensure your business succeeds for whatever comes next in money.

The Agenda for 2025

Come and create the future for financial services at Money20/20 Europe… This year’s agenda tracks cover Beyond FinTech, Digital DNA, Embedded Intelligence and Governance 2.0. Expert speakers include leaders from Mastercard, Monzo, Bank of England, Visa, IBM, Starling Bank, Revolut and more offering key insights on everything from agentic AI and cross-border payments to open banking and embedded finance.

Why Money20/20?

FinTech Strategy spoke with a host of leaders from across the FinTech spectrum. They all agreed on one thing, Money20/20 Europe is ‘the’ place to make connections and build your business.

Gurdeep Singh Kohli, Founder, SC Ventures

“It’s the first time I’ve attended Money 20/20 and, we’ve had some fascinating impromptu conversations that will lead to great opportunities. All the big names are here and it’s clearly a popular event from a thematic perspective – payments is a big theme this year. I have a very high regard for the quality of what’s on offer and the way the event has been organised – it’s a great customer experience, the way it’s all been structured, at scale, is actually one of the best I’ve ever seen. The response has been fantastic…”

Stephen Everett, MD Payables & Receivables, Lloyds Banking Group

“The majority of people at Money20/20 genuinely get up in the morning with a growth and innovation mindset. Therefore, you have to balance and recognise that when you walk into this big venue that there will be some wacky ideas. From my experience, I have seen many infant ideas turn into successful ventures, whereas I have also seen some ventures becoming unsuccessful despite having great innovation ideas. Fintechs will fail. Innovation will fail. Experiments will fail. And that’s fine. That’s what Money20/20 is all about.”

Michelle Prance, CEO, Mettle (NatWest Group)

“It’s good for Mettle to come here because we are a fintech that was incubated inside a large bank (NatWest) for fintechs. Quite often their route to market, route to capitalisation, is by going into a main bank being acquired. So, it’s that marriage between a big organisation and the small nimble fintech. People are really interested in what we’re doing because big incumbents want to be fast and nimble. They don’t always have the capital to invest in something like we’ve been able to do with Mettle. So, they’re interested to know the right route to go down. Do they incubate in house? Or do they buy it in? And what’s the right way to do that without killing the culture? These are the types of interesting conversations we’ve been having here.”

Ryan O’Holleran, Head of Sales, AirWallex

“The great thing about Money20/20, here in Europe, and in Asia and the US, is the good division between buyers and sellers. So, you have all these service providers like AirWallex, Amex, Stripe… And then you have the Heads of Payments from companies like Booking.com, Minted and Summit who are coming here with their team to meet with providers. If you think about that from a sales perspective, those meetings are very hard to get outside of this environment. But over a week you get 15 different meetings each day with that would normally take months to arrange. So, the ROI from this week is really powerful just from being able to have these conversations.”

Merusha Naidu, Global Head of Payments, Paymentology

“Paymentology is homegrown out of the UK so it’s important for us to make sure we’re representing the business across Europe. This is the centre of the world for banking innovation. We have customers here from Singapore, Dubai, Saudi Arabia, Ghana and beyond. People look to this event to really learn about what’s happening in the industry globally and discover what trends are going to come up. What should we be doing? How can we innovate together and learn from each other? That’s one of the things I really love about Money20/20; the talks in all of the panels are so interesting and I always leave knowing more. Being in the payments industry, and especially being an issue processor, it’s important for us to learn from the industry and understand where we need to move so that we can stay at the forefront of developments.”

Zak Lambert, Product Lead & Europe Lead, Plaid                                                                            

“This is my sixth straight Money20/20 and it gets busier every year! It’s great to learn more about the ecosystem at large. You can see developing trends each year, and it’s always a little bit different. You build relationships at Money20/20 that stay with you for the rest of your life. And it’s a perfect opportunity to meet people in the flesh that you might normally only see on screen. You can get a pretty direct read on what they’re working on and it’s exciting to be here making new connections.”

Book Your Money20/20 Europe Pass Now

To get a flavour of what you can expect from next year’s conference check out our review of Money20/20 Europe 2024.

Book your pass now and save €200 with the code FTS200.

  • Artificial Intelligence in FinTech
  • Digital Payments
  • Event Newsroom
  • Neobanking

Dave Murphy, Head of Financial Services EMEA & APAC at Publicis Sapient, on why retail banking is at an important crossroads and must react

Retail banking stands at a pivotal juncture. As digital-first generations reshape customer expectations and competitive pressure from FinTechs and neobanks intensifies, traditional banks face a critical choice: modernise now or risk obsolescence. Publicis Sapient’s latest Global Banking Benchmark Retail Banking Report underscores that “digital by default” is no longer an aspiration. It’s an immediate necessity.

Drawing on insights from 600 retail banking executives across 13 countries, the report highlights a convergence of transformative forces… The accelerated adoption of Gen AI, the decline of legacy IT infrastructure, and an urgent need to reimagine customer engagement for a younger, mobile-first demographic.

Digital or Die: A Defining Moment

Retail banking has been evolving for over two decades, but the stakes have never been higher. In Q1 2025, JPMorgan Chase reported a net income of $14.6 billion, up 9% year-over-year. This was driven by robust trading revenues and investment banking fees. Meanwhile, UK neobanks are making significant strides. Revolut achieved a net profit of $1.0 billion in 2024, marking its first billion-dollar annual profit, with revenues soaring 72% to $4.0 billion. Monzo also reported its first full year of profitability, posting a pre-tax profit of £15.4 million and doubling its revenue to £880 million.

Despite these advancements, 62% of retail banking executives admit their pace of transformation lags behind competitors. This isn’t a minor delay – it’s a strategic disadvantage in a market where 44% of new currents accounts are already being opened with digital banks and FinTechs.

Gen AI: Catalyst and Compulsion

Among all the changes underway, generative AI has emerged as the most powerful and potentially disruptive force. According to the benchmark study, data and AI are the top investment areas for digital transformation over the next three years. Executives are betting big on AI not only to improve customer engagement but also to modernise operations and accelerate core transformation. The impact of Gen AI in banking is tangible. It can:

  • Personalise customer journeys at scale
  • Accelerate software development lifecycles
  • Write code and automate data management
  • Deliver hyper-relevant product recommendations
  • Power AI agents with human-like customer service abilities

In short, Gen AI makes what was once prohibitively expensive and time-consuming not only possible but scalable.

The banking customer has changed

The report makes it clear: retail banks must stop building for yesterday’s customer. Gen Z, who will make up one-third of the workforce by 2030, already prefer mobile-first, always-on banking. They value immediacy, customisation, and authenticity. A staggering 83% of Gen Z consumers say they are frustrated with current bank processes.

Compounding this generational shift is the growing irrelevance of traditional customer segmentation. Today’s consumers defy linear categorisation. The same individual can be a small business owner, a parent, and a new homeowner. Yet banks often treat them as three separate customers because of product-centric data silos.

The core problem with legacy thinking

Legacy systems continue to be the biggest barrier to meaningful transformation. 70% of banking executives say their legacy infrastructure is hindering their ability to deliver the digital experiences customers expect. Many core systems are COBOL-based and nearing end-of-life. Yet banks are reluctant to modernise due to perceived risk and complexity.

The irony is clear: the risk of maintaining outdated systems now outweighs the risk of change. With Gen AI, banks finally have the tools to confront the 800-pound gorilla in the room – core modernisation.

Why Core Modernisation is the linchpin

Modernising the core is about more than infrastructure. It’s the key to unlocking the full value of AI, data, and digital transformation. A modern, cloud-native core enables:

  • Real-time access to first-party and third-party data
  • Agile delivery through microservices
  • Better governance and regulatory transparency
  • Faster go-to-market with new apps and services

Retail banks that modernise their core can stop building costly middleware just to access data. Instead, they gain a unified view of the customer and the agility to respond to banking market shifts in real time.

The virtuous cycle of AI and Core

What’s truly powerful is the feedback loop between Gen AI and a modernised core. Gen AI helps accelerate the core transformation by generating code, automating testing, and streamlining documentation. Once modernised, that core then enhances Gen AI’s capabilities with clean, structured data. This virtuous cycle creates exponential value, making digital transformation faster, cheaper, and more sustainable.

Retail banks are already allocating 35% of their customer experience digital transformation budgets to Gen AI. Furthermore, many are embedding AI across the entire software development lifecycle using tools like Sapient Slingshot to reduce human error, increase test coverage, and ship better code faster.

From Product-Centric to People-Centric banking

Ultimately, the report urges retail banks to shift from a product-centric to a people-centric mindset. That means designing experiences around life moments, not product categories. It means knowing that the mortgage customer is also a small business owner and a parent, and offering solutions that reflect that reality.

With modern core systems and Gen AI, banks can personalise outreach, tailor financial advice, and meet customers where they are. This holistic view is essential not only for growth but also for loyalty.

The era of deferral is over. Banks can no longer afford to delay core transformation. Gen AI has lowered the cost, reduced the complexity, and increased the speed of change. The only question left is whether banks are ready to lead or risk falling behind.

Publicis Sapient is working at the intersection of Gen AI and core modernisation every day… Helping banks link strategy to execution and deliver on the full promise of digital transformation. The future of retail banking isn’t coming – it’s already here. The time to act is now.

  • Artificial Intelligence in FinTech
  • Neobanking

Sprout, the creator of a smarter mortgage payment platform to drive financial freedom, has been named the winner of of…

Sprout, the creator of a smarter mortgage payment platform to drive financial freedom, has been named the winner of of Pitch360 at Level39 during UK FinTech Week.

Sprout’s Co-Founder, Asis Tewari, thanked the judges and organisers for running an inspiring session and offered praise for fellow finalists. “It was a privilege to pitch alongside such passionate and innovative founders. We learned a lot… Thank you also to London Business School and Jeff Skinner for helping validate our journey, and to Sir Andrew Likierman for giving us the confidence to kick off. And for introducing us to Professor Joao F. Cocco and his white paper on Portfolio Choice in the Presence of Housing.”

Sprout

Sprout empowers homeowners to build lasting wealth by making smarter mortgage decisions. With AI-driven insights, smart automation, and a user-friendly interface, it can simplify homeownership – aligning your mortgage with long-term financial goals and future flexibility.

Tewari was inspired to launch Sprout after a dinner with Anil Agarwal, billionaire industrialist and Chairman of Vedanta… “He told me: The only way to build real wealth is through investing in markets — and every generation needs to start as early as possible.”

Why Use Sprout?

  • Do you know the true return of your property? Sprout tracks the real costs and value of your property to give an accurate return.
  • Are your mortgage repayments really building wealth? Sprout makes it simple to allocate your payment wisely, giving you the ability to pay down your mortgage smarter.
  • Is your money working hard for you? Sprout gives you exclusive access to best-in-class funds.

Pitch360

Innovate Finance’s flagship pitching competition, Pitch360, is taking place across the UK in 2025. There are six regional pitch events across a 12-month campaign, featuring live events in the North, South West, Midlands, Scotland, Northern Ireland and Wales. Pitch360 shines a spotlight on the best FinTech talent and emerging technologies the UK has to offer. It’s aim is to showcase how FinTech innovation can help drive the growth agenda and transform financial services.

Find out about future events, and apply to pitch, here.

About Innovate Finance

Innovate Finance is the independent industry body for UK FinTech. It’s mission is to accelerate the UK’s leading role in the financial services sector. It does this by directly supporting the next generation of technology-led innovators to create a more inclusive, more democratic and more effective financial services sector that works better for everyone.

  • Embedded Finance
  • Neobanking

Ozone API launches industry-first tool that enables US banks to calculate the cost of building and maintaining their own open banking APIs 

Ozone API, the global leader in open banking technology, has launched an industry-first tool. It forecasts an accurate estimated cost for US banks planning on building their own API infrastructure. It comes in response to the recent Section 1033 rulemaking under the Dodd-Frank Act. This means that American consumers will have the right to access and share their financial data.  

API Build It Calculator

The “Build It Calculator” can estimate the cost to a US bank of building and maintaining its own API infrastructure. It does this by analysing data points including, but not limited to, the desired length of time for project completion, the financial institution’s hosting costs and the value of a bank’s deposits. This information is then fed into a formula built according to Ozone API’s extensive experience delivering open banking infrastructure globally.

Moreover, the final cost even includes the salaries of employees required to support the project. This is calculated in line with the proportion of their annual working hours that would be spent on the API build, implementation and maintenance. 
 
Having already been tested and validated by banks in the US, the tool helps financial institutions understand the complexity and cost involved in building APIs. Furthermore, it also reveals the hidden costs of maintenance, which can often be as much as half the cost of initial implementation every single year.  
 
Using the Build It Calculator, banks of all sizes can estimate both the up-front cost and maintenance costs of building their own open banking APIs in a single phone call with Ozone API. This brings significant clarity to initiatives that often reach eight-figure budgets. 

Open Banking with APIs

“Open banking technology brings huge benefits to financial institutions as well as businesses and consumers, but building API architectures does require significant investment. We are making this tool available to help banks understand the scale of the undertaking and effectively prepare to comply with Section 1033. It’s crucial that banks are armed with accurate data to help them make the best decision, whether that is to build their own infrastructure or work with partners that can offer off-the-shelf or bespoke solutions.”  

Eyal Sivan, General Manager, North America, Ozone API
 
The tool has been rolled out in the US already and is set to expand into new regions globally, including the UK, MENA, LATAM and APAC.   


About Ozone API

Ozone API empowers banks and financial institutions around the world to deliver high performing, standards-compliant open APIs.  
 
As open banking and open finance sweep the world, Ozone API helps banks and financial institutions to adapt and thrive in the new era of open data, by providing the technology to unlock the power of open finance globally.  
 
The UK-based FinTech is the leading standards-based open API platform, supporting all global standards and providing the tools and expertise to help banks and financial institutions comply with regulation and create real commercial value.  
 
With a founding team that led the development of the UK open banking standards, Ozone API continues to shape open finance globally helping regulators, banks and technology platforms to accelerate open finance. Learn more: https://ozoneapi.com/

  • Digital Payments
  • Neobanking

MoneyLIVE Summit is coming to London’s Business Design Centre March 10-11. Book your tickets now!

Hosted in the FinTech capital of the world, MoneyLIVE Summit is the global payments and banking event bringing together industry leaders at the top of their game. This is where ground-breaking partnerships are forged, where innovation is accelerated and where the brightest ideas are born.

MoneyLIVE Summit sets the agenda for the future of banking and payments

For over 30 years, MoneyLIVE has brought together the movers and shakers of the banking and payments industry. Through impactful conferences, webinars, reports, roundtables and digital content.

Join 1500+ attendees and hear from 200 expert speakers across five stages. Revolut’s UK CEO Dr Francesca Carlesi, Lloyds Banking Group COO Ron van Kemenade, Standard Chartered UK CEO Saif Malik, ABN-AMRO’s CDO Jorissa Neutelings and Groupe Crédit Agricole Group COO Philippe Coue are among the baking leaders sharing insights across Payments Infrastructure, Digital ID, AI & Operations, CX, Digital currencies and Blockchain, Open Banking and much more.

“An unmissable event for those serious about banking and payments transformation.”
Global Head of Strategy & Innovation, ING

Startup City

Welcome to Startup City, the innovation epicentre of MoneyLIVE Summit 2025. This designated hub is designed to accelerate start-up and scale-up growth, featuring a dynamic stage, exclusive networking zone, and high-impact deal booths.

If you’re on the hunt for funding, seeking scaleup opportunities, or looking to forge distribution partnerships, you’ve found your ultimate arena.

AI-powered Networking at MoneyLIVE Summit

4000+ QUALIFIED MEETINGS & CONNECTIONS

Benefit from:

The AI matchmaking tool

Search, sort and filter the full attendee list

Instant messaging

Book and accept meetings

Build your own personal agenda

Book your ticket now!

  • Digital Payments
  • Event Newsroom
  • Neobanking

Brendan Thorpe, Customer Success Manager at Auriga, on how banks can gain valuable insights from ATM data

Everyday customer interactions with ATMs or ASSTs to withdraw cash or check their account means these touchpoints emit hundreds of thousands of data points per day. This data holds the answers to how customers interact with those end points and how they are performing. However, currently this data is not being fully analysed or harnessed at all.

Data Analytics

This is surprising when you consider how better data analytics is widely understood to be crucial to enable banks to stay ahead of the competition. Indeed, one major study found that nearly half (48 percent) of banking executives globally agreed on this. However, many do little with it. The data which is harvested from the self-service banking network, including ATMs and ASSTs, is a critical way for banks to lower their operational costs. At the same time it can improve their offerings and increase their bottom line.

Real-time data collection and analysis is more than just critical for managing operational costs. It also plays a significant role in how banks realise their omnichannel ambitions to improve customer engagement and experience. For this to be successful, banks must leverage tools which provide actionable insights into performance across a number of channels including in-person services, ATMs, online and apps. The insights which are collected on these channels provide a complete and integrated picture of banking performance across all touchpoints.

Actionable Insights from Data

No matter how a customer interacts with the bank, every touchpoint provides large amounts of data which can be collected, sorted, and analysed for actionable insights. However, taking this information from raw data and transforming it into valuable insights is a challenge for many financial services organisations.

To do this, it involves strong data management and analytics processes and end-to-end mapping of all self-service banking channels, in-person and online. Real-time insights are also key to understanding how the network is performing and how customers are interacting with the endpoints. Importantly, this information must be easily accessed throughout the organisation. Doing this will enable the bank to identify if there are any inefficiencies or issues throughout the network which can be fixed swiftly, with minimal disruption to services.

Significantly, with real-time monitoring, banks can see any attacks on their services or endpoints from threat actors. The sensors are not only on the ATM. Those around the machines will be able to collect any interactions with the endpoints and in the surrounding area. For the most part, the sensors will pick up harmless interactions, but other times this may be an indicator that a threat actor was trying to take money out of the machine. As such, collecting, sorting, and analysing real-time data from the sensors can protect the bank and their customers and mitigate any harmful threats.

Furthermore, predictive analytics and continuous monitoring will enable banks to forecast the future performance of each touchpoint. Banks are able to apply specific parameters. Depending on their current business objectives they can better understand how each service channel is forecasted to perform in a specific situation.

How advanced analytics is transforming banking

As budgets tighten with rising costs, banks need to approach their ATM networks in a smarter way to optimise cash management and data forecasting. Real-time data tracking gives banks a greater understanding into customer behaviour. This is key to service performance improvements, including knowing in real time whether the ATM self-service interface is working or not. However, banks must get their data right, before they lean on the insights.

From real-time monitoring of customer interactions, financial services institutions can collect data based on the transaction flow, which can indicate if there is a better way for customers to complete their transaction. This will allow banks to see where network inefficiencies lie and then drive a culture of continuous improvement. The ATM is a vital touchpoint for a full omnichannel service, so banks leveraging data in the right way will ensure that the endpoint and the network are more user friendly.

Moreover, real-time tracking will also enable banks to predict when cash cartridges need to be replenished. As such, this will ensure there is enough cash in the machines for customers, and be able to better forecast how much cash the endpoint will need. This creates efficiencies around how banks deliver cash to the machines that need it. It reduces their Cash-In-Transit (CIT), security, interest and insurance costs.

Digital Transformation

To make sure that banks are making the most out of the data, they should leverage a dynamic, industry-specific banking business analytics platform. This should be available to all in the business and be able to seamlessly integrate into their current systems. The platform must collect and analyse the data in real-time from all key touchpoints in a bank’s network. Importantly, this data should be converted into usable insights for customer behaviour and performance metrics for the ATM. This will enable banks to adapt their offerings to changes in customer needs and market conditions. This will place banks on the front foot so they can focus investment in the up-and-coming areas.

The banking industry shows no signs of slowing down when it comes to digital transformation and development. The key here is to understand how all service channels, in-person and online, are performing to ensure customer demands are met. The way to do this is through leveraging real-time insights and data analytics. Financial services organisations must transform their approach to self-service banking strategies as data analytics is not only a driver of competitiveness, but also of long-term success.

Learn more at https://www.aurigaspa.com/en/

  • Neobanking

Stuart Cheetham, CEO at MPowered Mortgages, on how AI-powered technology allows mortgage lenders to fully underwrite loan applications in minutes

AI technologies are about to have a huge impact on the mortgage market… In November last year the founders of Revolut announced plans to launch a “fully digital, instant” mortgage in Lithuania and Ireland in 2025. Details were sketchy but the company said that mortgages will be part of a “comprehensive credit offering” it intends to build.

Neobanking progress with AI

Digital only banks, like Revolut and Monzo, are renowned for using the power of technology and data science to create efficiencies and improve customer experience. The reason neobanks have been so successful is because they provide a modern, convenient and cost-effective alternative to traditional banking. This is done a transparent way, through fast onboarding, 24/7 app access and instant notifications. All with a user-friendly interface.

While many financial services sectors have embraced financial technology in the way Revolut and Monzo have for the retail banking sector, the mortgage sector has struggled to make a real breakthrough here. Why hasn’t the mortgage industry caught up one might ask? Mortgages are complex financial products, existing at the intersection of justifiably stringent regulation. They represent the single biggest financial commitment people make in their lifetimes. Financial advisors who source mortgages on behalf of borrowers are hindered at every stage by outdated systems and inadequate or commoditised product offerings.

Disrupting the Mortgage Market

The mortgage industry is one financial services sector that has been yearning to be shaken up by the FinTech industry for some time. While it’s encouraging to see a successful brand like Revolut enter this market, what is less known is that huge progress is being made already by smaller and less well known FinTech disruptors.

For example, the mortgage technology company MQube has developed a “new fast way” of delivering mortgage offers using the cutting edge of AI technology and data science. Today, it still typically takes several weeks to get a confirmed mortgage offer. This is one of the major reasons the homebuying process can be so time consuming and stressful for brokers and borrowers. The mortgage process is characterised by bureaucracy, paperwork, delays and often frustratingly opaque decision-making by lenders. This leads to stress and uncertainty for consumers, and their advisors. And at a time when they have plenty of other property-purchase related challenges to contend with.

Our proprietary research shows us, and this will come as no surprise, that the biggest pain point for borrowers and brokers about the mortgage process is that it is time consuming, paperwork heavy and stressful. Imagine a world where getting a mortgage is as quick and as easy as getting car insurance. This is MQube’s vision.

MQube – AI-powered Mortgages

MQube‘s AI-powered mortgage origination platform allows mortgage lenders to fully underwrite loan applications in minutes. MPowered Mortgages is MQube’s lending arm and competes for residential business alongside the big banks. It uses MQube’s AI-driven mortgage origination platform and is now able to offer a lending decision within one working day to 96% of completed applications.

The platform leverages state-of-the-art artificial intelligence and machine learning to assess around 20,000 data points in real-time. This enables lenders to process mortgage applications in minutes, transforming the industry standard of days or weeks. It automates the entire underwriting journey, from application to completion. This helps to provide a faster service, reduce costs, mitigate risks, and to make strategic adjustments quickly and effectively. By assessing documents and data in real-time during the application, it is able to build a clearer and deeper understanding of a consumers’ circumstances and specific needs. Applicants are never asked questions when MQube can independently source and verify that data, leading to a streamlined and paperless experience. Furthermore, this whole process reduces dependency on human intervention.

The benefits of AI

More and more lenders are seeing the benefits AI and financial technology can bring to their business. They are beginning to adopt such AI-driven financial systems which are scalable and serve to address systemic problems in this industry. The mortgage industry is still some way behind the neobanks, but what’s hugely exciting to see is the progress that has been made so far. Moreover, if FinTechs continue to innovate this sector and if lenders continue to embrace financial technology and use at scale, then getting a mortgage could genuinely become a quick, easy and stress free process. At this point, the mortgage industry could begin to see a shift in consumer perception and change in consumer behaviour. A new frontier for the mortgage industry is upon us.

  • Artificial Intelligence in FinTech
  • Neobanking

Plumery, a digital banking experience platform for customer-centric banking, today announced it has launched Digital Lending. The fully end-to-end digital…

Plumery, a digital banking experience platform for customer-centric banking, today announced it has launched Digital Lending. The fully end-to-end digital loan origination journey allows bank customers to go from application to disbursement in 180 seconds.

Digital Lending

Plumery Digital Lending offers market-leading speed with banks, digital lenders and other financial institutions who are able to launch their new lending products in as little as 18 weeks. Moreover, allowing firms to triple their loan portfolio and capacity while maintaining the same staffing levels.

Many financial institutions are still unable to offer a fully digital loan origination process to customers. This forces them to partially complete a process online before finalising with human intervention. Yet, firms need to move quickly to stay competitive in today’s fast-paced world and benefit from the highest interest rates in a decade. 

Transforming the loan process

“By transforming the loan origination process into a fully digital experience, banks and other financial institutions can meet the demand for seamless and efficient customer journeys. Firms can configure every aspect of the process, safe in the knowledge they are on top of bank-grade security and infrastructure.”

Ben Goldin, Founder and CEO of Plumery

Digital Lending includes:

  • Digital application through web and mobile interfaces
  • Secure capture and storage of customer information
  • Streamlined, compliant onboarding experience
  • Automated application processing and data collection
  • Integration with external data sources for accurate scoring and vindication
  • AI/machine learning driven credit decisioning with customisable rules
  • Digital document generation and e-signatures
  • Loan disbursement and integration with core banking or loan management systems

With customer journeys built on the Plumery platform, firms can align with their unique workflows or adapt to changing regulatory requirements – and continue making rapid improvements from there. Plumery offers tools which both developers and business users can employ to make final adjustments, ensuring fast and affordable automation.

About Plumery

Headquartered in the Netherlands, Plumery’s mission is to empower financial institutions worldwide, regardless of size, to craft distinctive, contemporary, and customer-centric mobile and web experiences.

Plumery operates with a diverse team that embodies a unique combination of seasoned expertise and vibrant innovation. This blend has been cultivated through years of experience at start-ups, scale-ups, and established financial institutions, and most notably at globally leading financial technology companies, where they were instrumental in creating disruptive digital banking solutions and platforms that now serve 300+ banks globally. 

Plumery’s Digital Success Fabric platform provides banks with the foundation for success beyond fast-time-to-market by expediting the development of their digital front ends while significantly cutting costs compared to in-house initiatives or solutions with high total cost of ownership (TCO).  

  • Neobanking

Ben Goldin, Founder & CEO of Plumery, on how Digital Banking innovations are reshaping the financial landscape, creating a greener future and new opportunities for millions

Digital banking is making waves in emerging markets, evolving beyond simple transactions to deliver rapid access to credit, broaden economic inclusion, and support sustainable solutions. As smartphone adoption rises and AI reshapes lending processes, digital banking is significantly expanding in underbanked regions, enhancing financial inclusion for people and businesses while minimising environmental impact.

According to McKinsey, several trends have accelerated this Neobanking evolution in emerging markets. The pandemic drove a shift from cash to contactless and digital payments. E-commerce grew significantly – global transaction volumes increased by 25% from 2019 to 2020 and are expected to continue growing at 12-15% annually. Governments introduced cashless payment systems like Wave in Côte d’Ivoire, UPI in India, and Pix in Brazil to enhance interoperability and improve aid distribution. Furthermore, investor interest surged, with payments-focused fintechs receiving nearly 40% of the $5.2 billion in tech startup capital in Africa in 2021.

Together, these factors have fuelled innovation in digital finance. This has helped meet rising demand and enabled AI-driven, mobile-first platforms to deliver fast access to capital, fostering financial empowerment in underserved communities.

Additionally, smartphone penetration is set to reach 88% in Sub-Saharan Africa by 2030. Setting the stage for even greater financial inclusion. Combined with a growing focus on sustainability, digital banking in these regions is positioned to offer services that are both inclusive and environmentally conscious. Here’s a look at how digital banking is breaking down barriers, expanding financial empowerment, and building a greener future across emerging markets.

The evolution from basic transactions to fully-fledged Digital Banking

Digital banking initially gained traction by providing essential services like balance checks, peer-to-peer (P2P) transfers, and bill payments. This bridged gaps left by limited banking infrastructure. However, with evolving needs, digital banks and fintech companies now offer advanced products such as digital lending. This is among the most transformative aspects of digital banking in emerging markets.

Traditional access to credit was often challenging due to strict requirements, physical infrastructure, and extensive documentation. Digital lending platforms eliminate these barriers, enabling users to apply for loans directly through mobile devices, often receiving decisions within minutes.

AI-driven credit assessment models leverage alternative data points like mobile usage, purchase history, and digital wallet activity. This allows customers to secure funds without a formal credit record. Quick access to capital can be a lifeline for small business owners. Allowing them to act on opportunities as they arise. Digital lending thus meets immediate financial needs and supports broader economic growth by empowering local businesses.

Banking on a sustainable tomorrow

As digital banking expands, the need for environmentally sustainable operations becomes critical. The infrastructure supporting digital banking requires significant energy, especially as usage grows. To address this, financial institutions in emerging markets are adopting cloud-based platforms and energy-efficient data centres, reducing resource consumption while scaling services.

Cloud-based solutions are not only more scalable but also more energy-efficient, enabling banks to expand their reach responsibly. Automated processes further enhance energy efficiency, allowing Neobanking providers to serve more customers while minimising their environmental impact. This focus on sustainability aligns with broader goals of economic development and environmental stewardship, especially in regions vulnerable to climate change. For instance, Nubank in Brazil has achieved significant milestones by focusing on digital-only services, reducing the need for physical branches and their associated environmental impact.

Bridging gaps and expanding reach

Financial inclusion remains at the heart of digital banking’s impact in emerging markets. Digital platforms provide an entry into the formal financial system for millions. This allows them to save, invest, and plan for their futures. For small businesses, mobile applications and digital wallets offer essential tools for growth, empowering them to compete and contribute to local economies.

Digital platforms are also helping bridge the documentation gap by offering digital identity verification. This allows individuals without formal identification to open accounts and access financial services. Moreover, this approach is critical in regions where many people lack traditional IDs, which has historically excluded them from banking. By incorporating digital identification and security measures, financial institutions extend their reach, supporting resilience and inclusion.

Pioneering financial access through Digital Banking innovation

Emerging technologies like Blockchain, AI, and Biometrics are another factor in redefining digital banking in emerging markets. Blockchain provides a secure and transparent transaction method, which is particularly valuable in regions with less stable financial systems. AI enables credit assessment using alternative data, while biometrics and electronic Know Your Customer (e-KYC) simplify account creation. This makes it easier for individuals in remote areas to access financial services without physical documentation.

These technologies not only broaden financial access but also ensure that digital banking systems are efficient, secure, and scalable. By integrating these advanced tools, banks and fintech companies can provide reliable services to underserved populations, raising the standard for accessibility and security. An example of this in action is Moniepoint, a Nigeria-based FinTech. It has secured significant funding to enhance digital payments and banking solutions across Africa. By applying advanced technologies it reaches many who still lack access to banking services.

The future: Empowerment, Inclusion, and Sustainability

The future of digital banking in emerging markets holds great potential. With rising smartphone and internet connectivity, even remote areas gain access to financial services, breaking down traditional barriers to inclusion. This evolution goes beyond technology, creating pathways for financial empowerment and economic resilience.

A new generation of digital banking solutions is enabling financial institutions to extend their reach into emerging markets with a comprehensive range of services. From account management to lending. Designed with flexibility in mind, these platforms support customisation, allowing banks to tailor services to local needs through open APIs and modular infrastructure. By embracing sustainable practices and sustainable technology, these solutions not only broaden financial access but also foster growth in underserved regions in an environmentally responsible manner.

  • Neobanking

Nick Merritt, Executive Director at Designit, on six developments shaping the future of banking in 2025

Retail banks are entering 2025 with a heady mix of ambition and trepidation. A bewildering blend of technological wizardry and ever-shifting customer expectations has forced banks into a relentless cycle of adaptation. To stay ahead, six key areas are emerging as the lodestars guiding their strategies for the coming year.

Digital Transformation and Automation – Predicting Your Needs Before You Have Them

Imagine a world where banks predict your needs before you’ve even realised them. From AI-driven chatbots that never sleep to robo-advisors whispering bespoke investment tips into your ear, automation is rewriting the rulebook on customer interaction. But the magic isn’t confined to the shiny front-end; back-office systems are also getting a makeover. Robotic Process Automation (RPA) is busy in the engine room, banishing inefficiencies and sidestepping human error with quiet efficiency.

And then there’s the matter of personalisation—a concept that banks are finally treating as more than a marketing buzzword. Armed with advanced data analytics, banks are no longer just responding to customer needs—they’re predicting them. Pre-approved loans or a savings plan tailored to your Friday night wine habit? No problem.

Cybersecurity: Evolving as Fast as the Threats

With this digital power comes a greater need for vigilance. Cybercriminals are evolving just as quickly, turning cybersecurity into a battlefield. AI-driven fraud detection tools now scan for anomalies with hawk-like precision, while biometric authentication methods—fingerprints, faces, even voices—transform our bodies into passwords.

Cyber resilience has become essential, ensuring banks bounce back swiftly from attacks. Trust, in banking as in life, remains hard-won and easily lost.

Sustainability: ESG as a Competitive Advantage

Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) criteria have transitioned from being a footnote to taking centre stage. Customers are no longer content with bland promises of responsibility—they’re demanding action. Enter green loans with their tempting interest rates, ESG investment funds that let you save the planet while saving for retirement, and carbon-neutral pledges that make you feel virtuous about your overdraft.

It’s not just a moral imperative; it’s good business sense. In a world increasingly attuned to sustainability, ESG is a differentiator. Banks that can convincingly wear the green badge of honour are more likely to attract eco-savvy customers and forward-thinking investors alike.

Embedded Finance & Partnership Models

Embedded Finance might sound like jargon, but it’s quietly reshaping how we interact with money. Why go to a bank when the bank can come to you—disguised as a “Buy Now, Pay Later” button on your favourite shopping app or as a seamless payment option in your rideshare app? Banks are waking up to the fact that ecosystems, not high-street branches, are where the action is.

Partnerships with fintech firms are unlocking new avenues for growth. Whether it’s integrating loans into car dealership platforms or powering payments for subscription services, embedded finance is giving banks a chance to slip into customers’ lives in ways they barely notice—but deeply appreciate.

Cryptocurrencies: Cautiously Testing the Waters

And then there’s the crypto conundrum. Once the domain of tech evangelists and speculative investors, cryptocurrencies are elbowing their way into the mainstream. Bitcoin ETFs have made it easier for traditional investors to dip a toe into the crypto waters, while Ethereum and Ripple (XRP) are offering solutions that align with real-world banking needs.

Ripple’s laser focus on cross-border payments could revolutionise international money transfers, slashing costs and speeding up transactions. Ethereum’s smart contracts, meanwhile, promise to simplify complex processes like loan approvals. And Bitcoin, the poster child of the crypto world, is slowly gaining traction as a viable payment method.

Yet, it’s not all smooth sailing. Volatility, scalability issues, and a regulatory environment that can best be described as “uncertain” are significant hurdles. Still, with pro-crypto voices gaining ground, 2025 might just be the year retail banks cautiously dip their toes into the digital currency pool.

Personalisation: The Age of “Me”

Customers expect their banks to understand more than just account numbers; they want personalised interactions that anticipate their ambitions. Advanced analytics are turning this into reality, moving banking from transactional to relational.

Imagine a bank that adjusts your credit card rewards for your travel habits or nudges you toward your dream car before you even start shopping. Personalisation isn’t just a service upgrade—it’s a survival strategy.

Looking Ahead to 2025 and Beyond…

The opportunities for retail banks in 2025 are as immense as they are complex. Digital transformation is reinventing customer experiences, ESG is aligning institutions with the values of an increasingly conscientious public. Meanwhile, Embedded Finance is quietly rewriting the rules of engagement. Cryptocurrencies, for all their challenges, are becoming harder to ignore, while data-driven personalisation is making banking feel more like a partnership than a transaction.

For banks willing to embrace these shifts, the rewards are clear: deeper customer loyalty, stronger revenue streams, and a reputation for innovation. Standing still is no longer an option.

  • Digital Payments
  • Neobanking

Join FinTech’s greatest event when Money20/20 Europe returns to Amsterdam’s RAI Arena June 3-5 2025

FinTech Strategy is proud to be a media partner for Money20/20 Europe 2025.

Launched by industry insiders in 2011, Money20/20 is the heartbeat of the global fintech ecosystem. Some of the most innovative, fast-moving ideas and companies have found their feet (and funding) on its show floor. From J.P. Morgan, Stripe, and Airwallex to HSBC, Deutsche Bank, and Checkout.com.

Furthermore, this is where you’ll find new connections, business-critical insights from inspirational speakers, innovation, and partnerships you need to ensure your business succeeds for whatever comes next in money.

Why Money20/20?

FinTech Strategy spoke with a host of leaders from across the FinTech spectrum. They all agreed on one thing, Money20/20 Europe is ‘the’ place to make connections and build your business.

Gurdeep Singh Kohli, Founder, SC Ventures

“It’s the first time I’ve attended Money 20/20 and, we’ve had some fascinating impromptu conversations that will lead to great opportunities. All the big names are here and it’s clearly a popular event from a thematic perspective – payments is a big theme this year. I have a very high regard for the quality of what’s on offer and the way the event has been organised – it’s a great customer experience, the way it’s all been structured, at scale, is actually one of the best I’ve ever seen. The response has been fantastic…”

Stephen Everett, MD Payables & Receivables, Lloyds Banking Group

“The majority of people at Money20/20 genuinely get up in the morning with a growth and innovation mindset. Therefore, you have to balance and recognise that when you walk into this big venue that there will be some wacky ideas. From my experience, I have seen many infant ideas turn into successful ventures, whereas I have also seen some ventures becoming unsuccessful despite having great innovation ideas. Fintechs will fail. Innovation will fail. Experiments will fail. And that’s fine. That’s what Money20/20 is all about.”

Michelle Prance, CEO, Mettle (NatWest Group)

“It’s good for Mettle to come here because we are a fintech that was incubated inside a large bank (NatWest) for fintechs. Quite often their route to market, route to capitalisation, is by going into a main bank being acquired. So, it’s that marriage between a big organisation and the small nimble fintech. People are really interested in what we’re doing because big incumbents want to be fast and nimble. They don’t always have the capital to invest in something like we’ve been able to do with Mettle. So, they’re interested to know the right route to go down. Do they incubate in house? Or do they buy it in? And what’s the right way to do that without killing the culture? These are the types of interesting conversations we’ve been having here.”

Ryan O’Holleran, Head of Sales, AirWallex

“The great thing about Money20/20, here in Europe, and in Asia and the US, is the good division between buyers and sellers. So, you have all these service providers like AirWallex, Amex, Stripe… And then you have the Heads of Payments from companies like Booking.com, Minted and Summit who are coming here with their team to meet with providers. If you think about that from a sales perspective, those meetings are very hard to get outside of this environment. But over a week you get 15 different meetings each day with that would normally take months to arrange. So, the ROI from this week is really powerful just from being able to have these conversations.”

Merusha Naidu, Global Head of Payments, Paymentology

“Paymentology is homegrown out of the UK so it’s important for us to make sure we’re representing the business across Europe. This is the centre of the world for banking innovation. We have customers here from Singapore, Dubai, Saudi Arabia, Ghana and beyond. People look to this event to really learn about what’s happening in the industry globally and discover what trends are going to come up. What should we be doing? How can we innovate together and learn from each other? That’s one of the things I really love about Money20/20; the talks in all of the panels are so interesting and I always leave knowing more. Being in the payments industry, and especially being an issue processor, it’s important for us to learn from the industry and understand where we need to move so that we can stay at the forefront of developments.”

Zak Lambert, Product Lead & Europe Lead, Plaid                                                                            

“This is my sixth straight Money20/20 and it gets busier every year! It’s great to learn more about the ecosystem at large. You can see developing trends each year, and it’s always a little bit different. You build relationships at Money20/20 that stay with you for the rest of your life. And it’s a perfect opportunity to meet people in the flesh that you might normally only see on screen. You can get a pretty direct read on what they’re working on and it’s exciting to be here making new connections.”

Book Your Money20/20 Europe Pass Now

To get a flavour of what you can expect from next year’s conference check out our review of Money20/20 Europe 2024.

Book your pass now and save €200 with the code FTS200.

  • Artificial Intelligence in FinTech
  • Digital Payments
  • Event Newsroom
  • InsurTech
  • Neobanking

Waheed Mahmood, Financial Services Lead at Rackspace Technology, on how cloud is elevating CX in the financial services industry

The importance of customer experience (CX) in financial services is growing. In July 2023, the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) published its Consumer Duty guidelines, designed to set clearer standards of protection for consumers of financial services. The Consumer Duty was created to ensure that financial institutions (FIs) act fairly, while preventing customers from making poor financial decisions.

Despite the guidelines being implemented over a year ago, some FIs are still struggling to meet customers’ needs and are not working hard enough to protect them. In October 2024, for example, the FCA fined TSB Bank Plc £10,910,500 for failing to ensure that customers in arrears were treated fairly between 2014 and 2020.

According to Forrester, there has also been a significant decline in EU bank customer experience (CX) quality in 2024. This matters, because as CX quality declines, so does customer loyalty. Financial service executives must step up their game if they want to stay competitive and earn this loyalty. FIs that leverage technology can increase customer satisfaction, reduce the cost to serve and boost conversion rates and profitability. As we look ahead, here are some ways FIs can harness technology to drive customer satisfaction in 2025 and beyond.

Driving CX through the Cloud

The Consumer Duty’s objective was to guide individuals toward sound financial decisions. To achieve this, FI’s must leverage data and analytical insights. However, legacy systems often hinder effective data sharing and analysis, limiting the ability to provide personalised guidance.

Private cloud technology empowers banks to modernise their legacy systems. This can increase agility with the delivery of new services and products, enabling them to create and deliver enhanced CX. This includes offering seamless digital experiences, from smart self-service options and instant transaction tracking to tailored financial guidance and decision-making. Banks can also use cloud analytics to spot user pain points and service disruptions early, directly improving both customer satisfaction and profitability.

The integration of cloud services with existing banking systems also enhances data flow and interoperability. Real-time analytics platforms, such as Azure Stream Analytics help process and analyse vast amounts of data. This can reveal valuable insights into customer behaviour and preferences. Banks can then offer personalised advice and services, boosting customer satisfaction and interaction.

To maximise these benefits, FI’s need to ensure these customer insights are shared across departments. Eliminating departmental silos can drive improvements in product development, marketing strategies, and customer service protocols. Success requires integrating design expertise and data capabilities – involving teams from every business function to build a data framework and platform. This integration will help convert customer insights into actionable improvements.

Double down on service innovation for CX

Before leveraging cloud technology, FIs must evaluate their current technology stack to identify weak points before embarking on digital transformation initiatives. Legacy systems, which many FIs still depend on put them at a disadvantage as customer demands and expectations grow. This outdated infrastructure is particularly vulnerable, leaving sensitive customer data exposed to risk.

By updating their technology stack, FIs can improve customer interactions while streamlining critical systems for transaction handling and personalisation. These work together to deliver an experience that aligns closely with individual customer needs. 

FIs are also leveraging machine learning to gain insights into customer spending patterns, enabling them to offer personalised financial advice and recommendations. Additionally, GenAI is reshaping CX; AI-driven chatbots, for example, offer instance guidance and assistance, freeing up human staff to focus on more complex issues. However, to maximise the benefits of GenAI, FIs need robust infrastructure in place. GenAI models require high-quality, well-structured data for training and precise forecasting.

A cloud-based platform is particularly well-suited for FIs with specific demands around control, security and workload customisation. By adopting this approach, institutions can meet the high storage and encryption requirements of GenAI, thereby, enhancing both system performance and data security – key factors in scaling these technologies.

To respond to a continued decline in customer experience quality, financial service providers must make this a strategic priority. Delighting and engaging customers on a personal level has become vital and institutions that satisfy these expectations will be best equipped to attract new clients and build enduring loyalty.

  • Neobanking

Ozge Celik, Head of Product at Turkey’s largest FinTech Papara, on how personalisation is making everyday financial transactions more manageable and embedded into our lifestyles

With unlimited choice from a global marketplace, customer expectations are continuing to reach new heights. Undeniably, we are seeing financial services – being led by the FinTech sector – undergoing a seismic shift towards personalisation and catering to this new form of demand. Users are no longer content with generic services. Furthermore, they want tailored, hyper personalised experiences that reflect their individual needs and preferences. This is particularly true for their banking experiences. Yet, many traditional banking institutions are struggling to keep up with these demands due to their legacy systems and traditional cookie-cutter approach. Whereas the FinTech industry, with its agile frameworks and state-of-the-art technologies, is demonstrating its capability to rapidly position solutions that cater to this demand.

The growing trend for personalisation

Personalisation in consumer services is not a novel concept, but its application within the financial sector is a relatively recent development. Despite its infancy, its impact on the industry is profound. Banking has always been a cornerstone of our daily lives, from withdrawing cash to transferring funds. As such, it is unsurprising that users increasingly view their financial services as an extension of their personal identity.

Over the past decade, we have seen the introduction of customisable physical bank cards, personalised digital tools on mobile banking apps and instant messaging services. Banks and fintechs are striving to meet users’ needs, reshaping the loyalty landscape that has traditionally favoured established banks. These institutions, with their often rigid and cumbersome systems, are being compelled to re-evaluate their user engagement strategies and the solutions they offer.

Leading the customisation charge

Startups and FinTechs are riding the crest of this wave of customisation. Traditional financial institutions frequently overestimate the costs associated with data collection and the development of meaningful personalised tools. FinTechs, on the other hand, harness their technological capabilities to sift through vast amounts of data, identifying individual preferences and behaviours. This insight enables them to better create personalised products and services that resonate with consumers on a deeper level. Offering such tailored experiences is not merely a competitive advantage; it is quickly becoming essential to attract and retain users.

The rise of the super app

The emergence of the super app epitomises this new paradigm. The inconvenience of managing multiple mobile banking apps is becoming a thing of the past as consumers increasingly favour a unified platform that addresses all their financial needs. This demand extends beyond financial services. The success of super apps like Alipay and WeChat Pay, which integrate services from ride-hailing to grocery shopping, illustrates how this model has become ingrained in everyday life. While the same level of adoption may not be universal due to various market factors, FinTechs are taking note and developing intuitive apps that combine financial and non-financial functions to deliver a seamless and efficient user experience.

FinTech’s personalisation extends to every facet of the financial journey. From customised budgeting tools and investment portfolios, to personalised insurance products and bespoke lending solutions, providers are redefining what it means to have a financial service that truly fits the individual.

The implications for personalisation in traditional banking

To stay relevant, banks must embrace digital transformation and consider partnerships with FinTechs or face the risk of further falling behind. Collaboration between established financial institutions and FinTech disruptors can yield the best of both worlds: the trust and scale of traditional banks combined with the innovation and agility of fintech.

As FinTechs continue to meet and exceed the hyper-personalised needs of consumers, they are establishing a new benchmark in the financial services industry. By making everyday financial transactions more manageable and integrated into our lifestyles, they are not merely responding to consumer demands but are also anticipating them. As this trend progresses, we can expect to witness further disruption, with fintechs at the helm, steering us towards a more personalised and accessible financial future for all.

About Papara

We are not a Bank; we are Papara, we are here for you.

We are a financial technology company that offers a new financial application experience. Keeping the user in mind against the traditional financial solutions, we strive to build the next generation financial super app. Our amazing community always suggest features and gives us constant feedback.

We integrate the most innovative technology to help our users control their money while being completely transparent.

In 2015,we started our services with the permission we received from the Banking Regulation and Supervision Agency to operate as an “Electronic Money Institution”.

Papara is the first non-bank to issue a Mastercard logo prepaid card in Turkey and currently a Mastercard, Visa, and Interbank Card Center member. In our seventh year of operation, we have acquired 21 million users and expanded our team to 1.000 happy people dedicated to creating the best financial experience.

Today, millions of our users choose Papara’s innovative products to make millions of transactions every month.

Image credit: www.dubaisims.com

  • Neobanking

FinTech Connect shapes the future of financial services with the UK’s only full FinTech ecosystem event at London’s Excel December 4-5

Join us as FinTech Connect welcomes world leading Fintechs, Financial Institutions, Challenger Banks, Merchants, Scale-Ups and StartUps, Investors, Accelerators and Media to The ExceL, London. 

FinTech Connect

Each year we welcome visionaries from the UK, Europe and beyond all looking to innovate within the market, expand their footprint and drive businesses forward. The event brings all this under one roof, over two insight-packed days, sparking ideas, forging partnerships and accelerating change. 

Tackling the hottest topics and biggest challenges in the fintech market. Including: embedded finance, Web3, cross-border payments, investment, scaling, Gen AI, crypto, regulation, digital innovation and customer experience (CX).

Our mission is to connect the global thought leaders across the FinTech ecosystem in an event like no other. Set yourself up for a strong 2025 by signing up for the UK’s only full FinTech ecosystem event and join 2,000+ fintech leaders in London.

Insights from FinTech’s biggest names

We’ll be asking the big questions… What AI elements do financial institutions need to follow? Build, buy or partner? What opportunity works best in the modern ecosystem? How are banks advancing their digital transformations in 2024? Who owns the CX?

Gain insights on these topics and more from some of the biggest names in financial services. Speakers include Victoria Cleland, Executive Director – Payments, Bank of England; Rory Tanner, Head of UK Government Affairs at Revolut and Nick Kerrigan, Managing Director, Swift. Thought leaders will also be taking to the stage from HSBC, DZ Bank, Lloyds Banking Group, BT and a host of other leading institutions.

Keep up to date with the latest speakers, discussions and more. Download the full agenda here.

Book your place now!

Visit Fintech Connect to book your place at The Excel now.

For a 20% discount use the code: FS20

The Global FinTech Ecosystem. Connected.

  • Artificial Intelligence in FinTech
  • Event Newsroom
  • Neobanking

Ozone API has provided Open Banking Limited (OBL) with an updated model bank as the model bank provider for OBL to reflect v4.0 of the Open Banking standards 

The global open banking leader, Ozone API, has launched an updated platform for Open Banking Limited (OBL) in line with the UK’s latest standards. It is the first major update since the introduction of VRPs. 

Ozone API has successfully updated the model bank to support the rollout of the UK’s Open Banking Standards v4.0. This positions Ozone API as the first provider to deliver fully compliant APIs, facilitating the transition for financial institutions and third-party providers (TPPs) operating in the UK. 

Open Banking Standards

The changes were announced by OBL in early July. OBLv4 introduces some mandatory updates for the UK’s CMA9 banks, with some required to be completed by as early as 31st December 2024. Additionally, ISO 20022 is set for implementation by 31st March 2025. Alongside the Bank of England’s publication of mandatory updates to payment regulations. These proposed changes have been driven by several significant factors, including the deprecation of key security standards such as FAPI 1 Implementers Draft 2.  

While the UK open banking standard was initially mandated just for the CMA9 banks, it has become the de facto standard for the UK market. However, many UK banks remain on old versions of the standard.   

The OBL model bank serves as a critical testing ground for banks and financial institutions, enabling them to experiment with and refine their API implementations in a controlled and secure environment. It will serve as a vital resource for banks, fintechs, and other TPPs by providing a safe space to develop and test their APIs in alignment with the new OBLv4 standards. It is designed to help institutions comply with the regulatory changes. 

Ozone API 

“We’re delighted to confirm that we’re the first provider to launch a platform that reflects v4.0 of the Open Banking Standards for Open Banking Limited. We’re excited to work with our partners to support fast and high-quality API changes, ahead of the first legislative deadlines coming into force later this year. Ensuring a smooth transition to the updated standards is critical for banking players who want to stay at the forefront of open banking industry changes into 2025 and beyond. We are extremely proud that our market-leading platform is ready to support our customers and partners as they transition to v4.0. I’m pleased that we’re able to support the entire UK financial ecosystem to start their OBLv4 journey by providing the OBL’s model bank. Our founding team were closely involved during their time working with the Open Banking Implementation Entity in the development of the UK Open Banking Standards, and we remain committed to enabling UK banks to make the most of open banking now and into the future.”  

Huw Davies, CEO of Ozone API

Open Banking Limited

“Open Banking Limited is not only committed to maintaining the open banking standard, but also supporting the ecosystem by helping participants with their journey to version 4. This includes upgrading the model bank to v4 to provide as much support and coverage to participants as possible including the FCS, Standards and technical guidance.” 

Henk Van Hulle, CEO, Open Banking Ltd

Ozone API has launched a comprehensive guide and a series of educational resources to accompany the new OBLv4 standards, aimed at helping banks and FIs navigate the changes smoothly and efficiently. The guide and resources provide actionable insights and best practices for institutions of all sizes.   

Since the UK Government announced it would revisit the Data Protection and Digital Information Bill in July 2024, it is anticipated that the UK will see more regulatory changes related to open banking, smart data and the open data economy.   

Ozone API is also supporting banks in the US market this year, following the US Government announcing new open banking legislation regulations under Section 1033 of the Dodd-Frank Act.  

  • Neobanking

New collaboration between Plumery and Payment Components
will enable financial institutions to adopt instant payments without overhauling existing core banking infrastructure

Plumery, a digital banking experience platform for customer-centric banking, has announced a new partnership with Payment Components, a leader in payments and open banking solutions. By decoupling digital experience and payments processes from legacy systems, institutions can now innovate more flexibly and efficiently. They can streamline operations while maintaining their existing core banking frameworks.

Progress for Payments

By leveraging Plumery’s innovative approach and Payment Components’ expertise, this partnership allows clients to accelerate time-to-market and future-proof operations against regulatory shifts such as the Instant Payments Regulation (IPR). Financial institutions can offload the burden of implementing new digital channels and instruments, such as real-time payments, without altering their core systems.

The IPR aims to make instant payments fully accessible to consumers and businesses across the EU. Currently only a minority of service providers support instant payments. While such regulatory changes usually impact core banking infrastructure, the Plumery and Payment Components partnership ensures these systems remain unaffected.

“This partnership is crucial for institutions needing to rapidly modernise without overhauling their entire infrastructure. Together, we offer a powerful, flexible solution that enables our clients to embrace innovation while staying ahead of regulatory changes like the IPR. Adding Payments Components to our partner ecosystem solidifies our commitment to creating cutting edge solutions that embrace digitisation.”

Ben Goldin, Founder and CEO of Plumery 

This global partnership offers a streamlined path to modernisation, enabling financial institutions to stay compliant, competitive and responsive to ongoing market shifts with solutions ready to support firms as they navigate the evolving financial landscape.

“Our collaboration with Plumery will empower financial institutions to seamlessly adopt modern payment technologies, addressing the complexities of regulatory changes, all while minimising disruptions to existing systems. We wanted to work with Plumery because both our company’s share a similar approach, work ethic and most importantly because of the compatibility of our products.”

Sotirios Nossis, Founder and CEO of Payment Components

Plumery

Headquartered in the Netherlands, Plumery’s mission is to empower financial institutions worldwide, regardless of size, to craft distinctive, contemporary, and customer-centric mobile and web experiences.

Plumery operates with a diverse team that embodies a unique combination of seasoned expertise and vibrant innovation. This blend has been cultivated through years of experience at start-ups, scale-ups, and established financial institutions, and most notably at globally leading financial technology companies, where they were instrumental in creating disruptive digital banking solutions and platforms that now serve 300+ banks globally.   

Plumery’s Digital Success Fabric platform provides banks with the foundation for success beyond fast-time-to-market by expediting the development of their digital front ends while significantly cutting costs compared to in-house initiatives or solutions with high total cost of ownership (TCO). 

Payment Components

At Payment Components, we’re reshaping the fintech landscape on a global scale. Today, our solutions are essential for more than 65 banks and financial institutions across 25 countries. We provide componentized solutions in a range of domains, including AI banking, open banking, account-to-account payments, and financial messaging technology. We achieve this through continuous innovation, building software components that help financial institutions become digital champions and deliver richer payment services to their clients. Our name reflects our belief: complicated processes in the financial industry will be replaced by AI-assisted dedicated components. We stand for simplicity, speed, and constant innovation

  • Digital Payments
  • Neobanking

Money20/20, operates the world’s leading fintech events in Europe, Asia and USA and is “the place where money does business”….

Money20/20, operates the world’s leading fintech events in Europe, Asia and USA and is “the place where money does business”. Money20/20 USA has unveiled seven startups poised to transform the financial sector. The selected startups are Brightwave, Casap, Eisen, Footprint, NALA, Ntropy, and Zumma. They were revealed during the Startup Media Session on October 29th in Las Vegas. The Startup Media Session was designed as part of the event’s goal to support startups at the intersection of finance and business.

“Money20/20 USA is focused on what drives the conversations most relevant to the FinTech industry. From economic and regulatory uncertainty to the future of payments and the impact AI will have on money moving forward. We are proud to highlight the work these startups are doing to move this industry forward.”

Scarlett Sieber, Chief Strategy and Growth Officer at Money20/20

Brightwave

Brightwave is the leading AI platform for financial services. It delivers accurate and insightful financial research enabling finance professionals to make better decisions faster. Its purpose-built AI systems synthesize insights across thousands of pages of primary sources. It can automate the most tedious parts of investing workflows and help users spot opportunities others have missed.

“Being named one of the Top 7 Startups at Money20/20 is a strong acknowledgment of the strides we’ve made in transforming how investment research is done. We’re also excited to announce our $15 million Series A funding at the world’s premier show for financial innovation. At Brightwave, we’re tackling one of the hardest problems in finance. We’re making sense of vast amounts of data to uncover deeper insights and relationships that others miss,” said Mike Conover, Founder and CEO at Brightwave.

Casap

Casap is an AI-powered disputes automation and fraud prevention platform. With built-in regulatory expertise and network integrations, Casap’s intelligent automation identifies fraudulent claims early. It delivers fast, frictionless dispute and chargeback resolution at a fraction of today’s cost.

“Money20/20 was the first conference I attended after starting Casap last year and it played a pivotal role in validating our vision. The connections, conversations, and insights I gained were invaluable. Exactly a year later, we’re back and launching out of stealth with live customers. We’re addressing some of the most pressing challenges in scaling payments. We’re starting with automating chargebacks and combating first-party fraud. We’re deeply grateful to Money20/20 for this opportunity to reach so many in the industry and help drive meaningful change in how payments are operated at scale,” said Saisi Peter, Co-founder of Casap.

Eisen

Eisen is the first escheatment automation solution that proactively manages the offboarding of dormant accounts, stale checks, wind-downs, and more. Financial institutions rely on Eisen to simplify the complex landscape of regulatory outreach, disbursement, and escheatment requirements. It ensures compliance while reducing operational risk.

“Money20/20 has been a cornerstone for Eisen since 2021, where the very idea for our company first sparked in the halls of the Venetian. It all started with conversations about the hardest challenges in FinTech. Each year, it’s helped us refine our vision and better serve our customers. For us, Money20/20 isn’t just about growth — it’s where Eisen began,” said Allen Osgood, CEO of Eisen.

Footprint

Footprint is a Series A identity company that has raised $20M from funds such as QED and Index Ventures. The company provides a single SDK that automates onboarding – KYC/KYB, fraud, security, and authentication – into an easy-to-integrate solution. Footprint works with leading companies across the Banking, Auto, and Real Estate sectors. Its technology portabalises identity, creating a centralised database of de-duplicated authentic identities.

“Money20/20 is at the vanguard of innovation. We’ve tried to be different at Footprint. Whether that be through our recent fraud indemnification program or our approach to labeling good actors. Some may think these are crazy ideas. But it is great to see Money20/20 continue to be where crazy can get a spotlight. That is how I would like to think true innovation happens,” said Eli Wachs, Co-founder and CEO of Footprint.

NALA

NALA is a global cross-border payments fintech company based in the US doing cross-border payments to emerging markets like Africa and Asia. It has two products, a consumer FinTech product enabling migrants to send money home and an infrastructure business called Rafiki, building payment rails for Africa. NALA recently became profitable and raised a $40m series A after achieving 10x revenue growth in 12 months.

“At NALA, we are on a mission to build payments for the next billion. Emerging markets are often overlooked but shouldn’t be underestimated as these regions have seen the fastest economic growth in the world. We have big ambitions for what we would like to achieve and have exciting plans in the pipeline in the coming years,“ said Benjamin Fernandes, Founder and CEO of NALA.

Ntropy

Ntropy is on a mission to organise the world’s financial data. 80% of the world’s financial data is unstructured and locked in transactions, documents, PDFs, and images. This means it is under-leveraged and cannot be used by models at scale. Ntropy was founded to solve this problem for any type of financial data, in any language, any geography, powering humans and more recently agents and agentic workflows in finance.

“Ntropy is processing hundreds of millions of transactions and documents weekly with over 98% accuracy, in under 100ms, 1000x faster, and cheaper than any other provider on the market. You can access Ntropy via our API-s directly, and more recently via NVIDIA NIM-s. This collaboration enables flexibility in deployment and allows our customers to scale immediately. This year’s Money20/20 has been about demonstrating the real value of GenAI and we have been very fortunate to have this exposure together with our partners at NVIDIA, Oracle, and AWS, who are accelerating Ntropy’s mission,” said Naré Vardanyan, Co-founder and CEO of Ntropy.

Zumma

Zumma is a financial copilot that automates and simplifies financial processes for Latin American businesses by leveraging existing tools they already use such as WhatsApp to save them time and money. The company is starting with automating expense management and expense invoicing processes, saving their customers more than $4,000 per employee per year in tax deductions.

“Being part of Money20/20’s Startup Media Session helps us spread the word about our product to the fintech community. The Money20/20 team has been key in our growth by connecting us to key players in the industry,” said Daniela Lascurain, COO and Co-founder of Zumma.

Launched by industry insiders in 2012, Money20/20 is the heartbeat of the global fintech ecosystem. Moreover, some of the most innovative, fast-moving ideas and companies have found their feet (and funding) on its show floor. From J.P. Morgan, Stripe, and Airwallex to HSBC, Deutsche Bank, and Checkout.com, Money20/20 is the place where money does business.

  • Digital Payments
  • Event Newsroom
  • Neobanking

Finch Capital report shows UK FinTech sector dominant across Europe

The latest annual State of European Fintech report by FinTech growth capital firm Finch Capital has been published. It shows the UK dominating Europe with 65% of deals in H1 2024. The UK is maintaining its dominance amid declining funding across the continent.

Highlights include:

  • Funding in UK FinTech increased 3% year-over-year to £2.3bn, highlighted by Monzo’s £500m deal.
  • UK sectors such as insurance set to gain from AI adoption, with 80% of actuaries using it for improved risk analysis.
  • FinTech sector beginning to see jobs market recover in Europe, up 10% YoY.

“The next wave of fintechs is shifting from unicorns to ‘half-a-corns,’ with £500m valuations becoming the new benchmark” Aman Ghei, Partner at Finch Capital

The UK has increased its dominant role in Europe’s FinTech sector. It now accounts for two thirds of the total volume of deals reached across the continent in the first half of this year. According to a new annual report analysing the sector, with investment and M&A anticipated to grow this year and into 2025. 

The annual State of European Fintech 2024 report found the UK is strengthening its position at the forefront of the European FinTech sector, despite an overall decline in funding across the continent. 

The report highlights the ongoing challenges faced by the sector. It notes that higher interest rates, a focus on cost efficiency and increased scrutiny on the sustainability of business models have driven the UK to account for around 65% of fintech deals in Europe.

Funding in the UK FinTech sector rose 3% YoY to £2.2bn compared with £1.9bn in H1 of last year. The largest deal done in Europe in H1 was UK’s Monzo, which raised £500m in equity. 

The European FinTech Picture

Overall, the 9th edition of the annual report,  authored and compiled by leading fintech growth capital firm Finch Capital, found that although it remains a challenging  environment for European FinTechs, there are clear signs of brighter prospects ahead.  

While the UK leads the way, the Netherlands showed resilience, with investment volumes holding steady. Meanwhile, Ireland, Germany, and France all saw major government-backed initiatives aimed at fostering growth through 2025. Signalling strong long-term commitment to the local technology ecosystems. 

Despite a notable contraction in funding across Europe, some key sub-sectors helped by higher interest levels, such as  challenger banks like Revolut and Monzo, are beginning to show profitable growth. 

Higher Rates and Boosted Profits

The report revealed that total capital invested in European fintechs in the first half of 2024 fell by 25% YoY, from £3.2 billion in H1 2023 to £2.4 billion in H1 2024. 

However, profitability in sub-sectors like banking is driving larger funding rounds. The top challenger banks are generating close to £600m in profit in 2024 compared to a £125m loss in 2023. 

As these banks emerge as success stories, the UK has become a hub for profitable growth, while other European nations work to adapt, the report found. 

Mid-Market Fintech M&A Thrives

The report also highlighted the increasing activity in the mid-market M&A space across Europe. Particularly in the UK, which is benefiting from consolidation in the sector. 

Funding rounds for fintech unicorns have slowed, the findings show, with investors prioritising companies with solid financial fundamentals and avoiding overly ambitious valuations based on hyper growth and unproven profitability.

European exits under £500 million now account for 32% of global M&A activity, although the market remains 2-3x smaller than the US for larger deals, according to the report.  

AI Creating Efficiency 

The report also found that, as a leader in fintech innovation, the UK is expected to benefit significantly from the adoption of AI technologies in the coming years, particularly in the insurance sector.

According to research, 4 out of 5 actuaries are now using AI to improve risk analysis and  pricing models and 65% of executives say they will invest more than $10 million in AI in  the next 3 years, making the industry more efficient. 

Commenting on the findings, Aman Ghei, Partner at Finch Capital, said:

“The challenges that fintech faced in 2023 were necessary for the sector to mature and become more sustainable. While funding may be down overall, and unicorn chasing has  slowed, there is plenty of opportunity for companies that are capital efficient and have a clear path to profit. With AI transforming the industry and significant dry powder still available, the next 12-18 months will mark a turning point for fintech in Europe. The next wave of fintech success stories will likely be built on sound financials rather than rapid revenue growth alone.”

  • Digital Payments
  • Neobanking

Will Rolph, Business Development Manager at Clear Junction, takes a closer look at the tech making digital remittances possible

Digital remittances are one of the main forces driving financial inclusion. Over 200 million migrant workers send money home every year. FinTech as a force for good can create positive changes for individuals and businesses; remittances are a prime example. Their role in facilitating financial inclusion cannot be underestimated. By increasing people’s purchasing power, raising per capita incomes, and feeding into local and national economic growth.

By 2027 remittances could reach $1.2 trillion, with the potential to unleash profound transformations in their recipient societies. Many factors are driving this growth. These include increasing waves of migration, none are as influential as the proliferation of innovative technology making remittances easier to send and receive. And at much lower cost than traditional money transfer channels beset by high FX fees and sluggish settlement times.

For decades, remittances were dominated by a few players including Western Union and MoneyGram. They have enviable global reach and networks. However, recipients – especially those in rural and remote locations – were faced with a lack of physical offices on the ground where they could collect their remittances. It was common for recipients to have to travel long distances to get their money. The loss of time and convenience is obvious. These often arduous journeys also came with increased risk of theft or loss of funds along the way.

The lack of physical infrastructure soon became a problem that tech was perfectly placed to solve. It did so in a way that allowed mobile payments to leapfrog legacy infrastructure issues with ease.

What’s powering digital remittances?

The tech behind digital remittances is a complex ecosystem that has evolved significantly over time. Furthermore, the pace of innovation shows no sign of slowing down. There are several key technologies and methods involved in advanced remittance solutions.

Electronic Funds Transfer (EFT) is a method of transferring money from one bank account to another electronically. Remittance services often utilise EFT to move funds between the sender’s bank account and the recipient’s bank account or designated payout location.

Payment gateways are another crucial component. These online platforms facilitate the transfer of funds between parties. They securely process transactions, verify payment information, and transfer funds between the sender and the recipient.

Remittance providers often integrate with banks, payment gateways, and other financial institutions via APIs (application programming interfaces). This facilitates access to banking infrastructure and fund transfers. The APIs enable real-time transaction processing, status updates, and seamless connectivity between the remittance platform and other financial services.

Security is paramount when it comes to remittance transactions. Remittance platforms employ encryption tech to secure data transmission and storage. This protects sensitive financial information and prevents fraud. Secure Socket Layer (SSL) encryption, Transport Layer Security (TLS), and multi-factor authentication are commonly used to safeguard transactions and user data.

These technological advances have all played their part in helping remittances to proliferate. People who were out of reach can now access a wide array of sophisticated financial services all from their phone thanks to the neobanking revolution.

Super Apps

The main innovation that has sent remittances skyrocketing is the phenomenal adoption of smartphones, which has paved the way for the rise of money transfer super apps.

The importance of the smartphone in the global remittance market cannot be understated. By necessity, apps need to be user-friendly and easy to navigate to succeed. Apps play a crucial role in improving the remittance process. They offer the speed, cost efficiency, and security that users have come to expect. Furthermore, remittance apps often provide features that allow users to track their transfers in real-time and manage their transaction history easily. This helps in budgeting and financial planning, especially for those who send remittances regularly.

Most importantly, 4G or 5G networks mean such apps can reach users in remote or underserved areas where access to broadband internet infrastructure or traditional banking services is limited or non-existent. This accessibility is in turn driving inclusivity and promoting financial participation and empowerment among a broader segment of the population.

Eastern Europe serves as a good example of where this technology is particularly life changing. Across the continent, banking penetration rates range between 44% in Albania to 92% in Croatia. So, a key challenge and focus for banks, governments, and tech solution providers is driving greater financial inclusion, and improving remittance flows are key to this.

Blockchain

Just as cryptocurrencies use blockchain technology to track assets, some remittance providers are now leveraging the same technology to streamline the transfer process and enhance security.

Blockchain technology enables secure, transparent, and immutable record-keeping of transactions. This reduces the risk of fraud, enhancing trust between parties. Cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin and stablecoins are sometimes used for remittance purposes, leveraging blockchain technology for fast and low-cost digital cross-border transfers.

It’s easy to see the attraction of blockchain technology for remittance providers. Moreover, it is a fully encrypted, decentralised, and immutable ledger, and as such cannot be altered in any way. Also, because blockchain technology is decentralised, no intermediary bank or financial institution can get involved. For these reasons, blockchain could become crucial to the remittance industry in the coming years.

Artificial Intelligence & Machine Learning

There are few industries not being impacted by AI and ML technologies. Both are increasingly being employed in remittance services to detect fraudulent activities, improve compliance with regulatory requirements, and enhance user experience. Furthermore, these technologies analyse transaction patterns, identify anomalies, and provide insights to prevent fraudulent transactions and ensure regulatory compliance.

Why all of this digital transformation matters

Remittances play a vital role in both individual livelihoods and broader economic development efforts. This makes them an essential aspect of global economic relations and poverty alleviation strategies. Additionally, we can see the tangible, life-changing differences that payment technology evolution can achieve. Moreover, through increased household purchasing power, accessing formal and cheaper financial services, and indirectly through increased revenues for remittance service providers and the businesses people buy from.

Clear Junction is a global payments solutions provider that was established in 2016. The company was founded by a veteran team of financial professionals with many years of experience in cross-border payments and banking. Over the years, we have worked tirelessly to build and develop our own proprietary technology to facilitate an end-to-end regulated payments solution. We are licensed and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority and have offices in multiple locations across the UK and Europe, including London, Poland and Latvia.

  • Neobanking

Luke Gall, Product & Engineering Director at Access PaySuite, part of the Access Group, on the open banking opportunity for FinTechs


In the rapidly evolving landscape of financial services, Open Banking is no longer a futuristic concept but a present-day reality. Recent findings reveal that the adoption of Open Banking payments has surged, with 32% of financial services businesses and an impressive 58% of fintechs now offering this innovative payment method to their customers.

This uptake signifies a noteworthy shift for fintechs. Open Banking payments have overtaken Direct Debits (54%) and card payments made over the phone (4%) in terms of availability. The sector continues to expand at a remarkable pace. There are over 26,000 startups currently in operation globally. Understanding and leveraging Open Banking has become an increasingly crucial consideration for organisations to stay ahead in a competitive market.

The rise of Open Banking

Open Banking allows third-party financial service providers to access banking data and initiate digital payments on behalf of customers, provided they have explicit consent. This model not only enhances convenience for users, but also fosters greater competition and innovation within the financial sector. The growing adoption rates reflect a broader acceptance of this technology. It is driven by the potential to streamline payments, enhance user experiences, and offer personalised financial services.

In the UK, FinTech adoption is particularly robust – 84% of individuals use FinTech services daily. The push towards Open Banking is both a response to consumer demand and a strategic move for FinTechs to differentiate themselves. The rise in Open Banking adoption is a signal that financial services must adapt swiftly. For FinTechs, staying ahead involves more than just adopting new technology. It’s about leveraging tech to redefine and enhance service offerings.

Why FinTechs must embrace Open Banking

Today’s consumers demand seamless and efficient financial transactions in order to complete their purchases. Open Banking meets these expectations by enabling quicker and more secure payments. FinTechs can provide this to their customers by integrating Open Banking into their services. This significantly enhances customer satisfaction and fosters loyalty.

The rapid adoption of Open Banking by FinTechs highlights its growing importance. Those that hesitate or overlook this trend risk falling behind. Early adopters of Open Banking have the opportunity to leverage its capabilities to introduce distinctive features. These include instant account verification, real-time payments, and enhanced financial insights. It’s a crowded marketplace for FinTechs, but these advancements can deliver a competitive edge.

By granting access to banking data, Open Banking creates the possibility for FinTechs to work with other financial service providers in a collaborative environment. Around 82% of FinTech startups say this helps them to innovate more quickly and effectively. The ability to partner with others in the industry can encourage the development of novel solutions and services. These can be pecifically tailored to evolving consumer needs.

The role of third-party payment providers

Third-party payment providers play a crucial role in helping FinTechs adopt Open Banking. They do this by offering the infrastructure and expertise needed to integrate with banks and other financial institutions. These providers facilitate secure access to customer data through APIs. This enables FinTechs to deliver innovative services like personalised financial management and account aggregation. And all without the need to build costly systems from scratch.

By leveraging the established networks and compliance frameworks of third-party providers, FinTechs can more easily meet regulatory requirements. Such as those outlined in the Revised Payment Services Directive (PSD2). This allows them to scale faster and focus on enhancing the customer experience. By prioritising simplicity and convenience, FinTechs can not only improve user satisfaction but also ensure their Open Banking offerings meet the high expectations of today’s consumers.

However, FinTechs must recognise not all customers are familiar with the nuances of Open Banking. To ensure a smooth transition and maximise the benefits of this technology, financial service providers, including FinTechs, should invest in educating their customers about its advantages and functionality. This will empower users to confidently engage with Open Banking and fully leverage its potential.

At the same time, safeguarding sensitive financial data is critical to building and maintaining this trust. Robust security measures, such as strong encryption protocols like Advanced Encryption Standard (AES) and Data Encryption Standard (DES), are essential to protect data during transmission and storage. Regular security audits help identify and address vulnerabilities. Meanwhile, transparent privacy policies demonstrate a commitment to data protection.

The future of Open Banking

The trajectory of Open Banking is set to continue its upward trend, as more financial institutions and FinTechs embrace its potential. For FinTechs, this is an opportunity to lead the charge in transforming financial services. By understanding and addressing the key factors associated with adoption, FinTechs can not only stay relevant, but also drive the future of financial technology.

Embracing Open Banking is not just about keeping up with industry trends… It’s also about positioning yourself at the forefront of a financial revolution. The ability to offer innovative, secure, and user-centric services will define the next wave of FinTech success. In this dynamic environment, staying ahead of the curve requires foresight, adaptability, and a commitment to leveraging technological advancements. FinTechs that navigate these considerations effectively will not only thrive but also shape the future of financial services.

Why Access PaySuite? Getting paid should be simple – and that’s where we come in! Backed by The Access Group a top 5 UK software company, Access PaySuite is led by a team of payments experts with over 20 years’ of experience in the industry. Access PaySuite is a reliable, resilient solution that helps your business thrive with every payment.

  • Neobanking

Neobanks are transforming the financial sector as digital-only institutions that offer a comprehensive range of banking services through mobile apps…

Neobanks are transforming the financial sector as digital-only institutions that offer a comprehensive range of banking services through mobile apps and online platforms. These services encompass current and savings accounts, payments, loans, and investments — all managed seamlessly through digital channels.

With cutting-edge financial technology, neobanks provide faster, more affordable, and more convenient solutions for both customers and businesses. The surge in mobile phone use, cloud computing, and artificial intelligence has fuelled rapid growth. 

The neobanking market is even expanding rapidly, with a projected market volume of $10.44 trillion by 2028, according to Statista. This represents a 13.15 percent growth rate from 2024 to 2028.

Innovative Business Models

To offer a broader range of services and better customer experiences, neobanks leverage application programming interfaces (APIs). This model involves integrating various financial applications and services using APIs. It will allow them to manage Know Your Customer (KYC) verifications, do instant refunds, and arrange collections efficiently.

Then, the significant source for neobanks is interchange fees. This model involves charging transaction fees for every transaction and earning a portion of the fees from payment networks like Visa.

Furthermore, credit card business models use credit as a foundation, generating revenue from transaction fees and interest on carried balances to drive growth and profitability. This model starts with credit card services and later offers a bank account. 

Other models allow neobanks to offer high-yield savings accounts and certificates of deposits (CDs). Revenue will come from earning interest on the assets and charging fees for services related to these accounts, such as maintenance fees.

Technology Integration

Neobanks have redefined the banking landscape through a digital-first approach, prioritising customer experience, and leveraging technology to deliver innovative financial services. This combination sets them apart from traditional banks and allows them to offer unique and competitive financial services.

A core characteristic of neobanks is their digital-only operations. By eliminating physical branches, they significantly reduce overhead costs. These savings translate into lower fees for customers and increased competitiveness.

Furthermore, neobanks harness the power of cloud computing, data analytics, and artificial intelligence to deliver personalised financial solutions. These technologies enable them to gain valuable insights into customer behaviour, allowing for tailored product offerings and improved operational efficiency.

Neobanks have also pioneered innovative revenue streams. Unlike traditional banks heavily reliant on interest income, they generate revenue through various channels, including interchange fees and partnerships.

Finally, many neobanks embrace open banking principles. This collaborative approach allows third-party developers to create new financial products and services that complement the neobank’s offerings. By collaborating with third-party developers, neobanks create additional value and broaden their reach.

The Global Neobanking Innovators

Advapay expected the total number of neobanks users to increase to 3.6 billion worldwide by 2024. Moreover, they spread relatively evenly across the main regions. For example, neobanks in North America, LATAM, APAC, and the UK each now accumulate a total price tag of 50 billion dollars or more per region. 

Revolut, a UK-based neobank, stands as a leading example of digital banking innovation. Expanding its services to over 30 countries, Revolut offers multi-currency accounts, currency exchange, stock trading, and insurance.

The neobank employs various innovative business models including API integration, transaction fees, credit card services, high-yield savings, and certificates of deposit. Revolut’s software as a service (SaaS) approach enhances flexibility, scalability, and rapid product development.

Beyond Revolut, Nubank from Latin America showcases innovation through robust security features, diverse financial products, and blockchain-based loyalty programs. Meanwhile, WeBank in China excels in digital lending, mobile payments, and alternative credit scoring.

Future Prospects

The neobanking industry is rapidly evolving, with 278 neobanks operating globally as of March 2023. This intense competition forces neobanks to continuously innovate to differentiate themselves. 

As a result, traditional banks face increased pressure to adapt to these new market dynamics. Neobanks have the potential to drive financial inclusion, foster creativity, prioritise customer needs, and expand globally.

Looking ahead, neobanks can expect a surge in competitors. This will force incumbent banks to either adapt their strategies to defend their market share or become digital attackers themselves to stay competitive in the evolving market.

With competition growing and attention spans shrinking, innovative product launches aren’t something neobanks should do once. Instead, creating agile solutions that are in tune with current consumer needs must be an essential part of their growth strategy.

  • Neobanking

Neobanking is different from traditional banking which is operated through physical intermediaries. By implementing an interface and various advanced features,…

Neobanking is different from traditional banking which is operated through physical intermediaries.

By implementing an interface and various advanced features, this type of bank can change people’s views on managing finances by keeping up with rapid technological advances.

In the US, many people have been underserved by traditional banks, facing high fees and a lack of branches. To help, some companies offered prepaid debit cards with checks for bill payments, but these were limited.

The 2010s fintech revolution introduced mobile-first banking through neobank apps. These apps allowed quick account signups with no minimum balance or overdraft fees and offered small, interest-free loans to keep people away from payday lenders.

This model attracted millions of customers, with neobanks profiting from higher interchange fees. However, they also faced challenges such as higher fraud and disputes, impacting their profitability.

In this article, we will discuss the five main benefits of neobanks: convenience, lower fees, a better user experience, faster transactions, and innovative financial products. These advantages will explain why customers are switching to this type of bank.

Convenience

One of the main advantages of neobanks is their ease of access. Customers do not need to visit the bank physically and can carry out all banking transactions anytime and anywhere.

This convenience extends to all processes, from opening an account to transferring money to the destination account. These tasks can be completed in minutes via a mobile phone.

Lower Fees

Apart from accessibility advantages, neobanking offers a competitive fee structure with relatively lower admin fees than traditional banks. This is because traditional banks incur overhead costs to maintain physical branches, while neobanks do not.

As a result, neobanks can pass on savings to customers through lower service rates. Additionally, neobanks save on costs by not requiring workers to operate physical branches.

Enhanced User Experience

Neobanks prioritise user experience by designing intuitive interfaces—making banking straightforward and accessible. They also offer personalised financial insights for each customer.

Neobanking’s mobile applications simplify financial management with budget tools and real-time transaction notifications. These features empower consumers to make informed financial decisions and maintain better control over their finances.

Faster Transactions

Neobanking offers convenience and lower costs while speeding up transactions with advanced technology. This allows users to manage their finances in real time.

For example, customers can quickly transfer money between local and international banks, thanks to the efficient systems deployed.

Innovative Financial Products

Not only are neobanks useful for fast transactions, but they also provide innovative financial products. One such innovation is automatic investment, which allows users to allocate and manage portfolios via a mobile app.

Additionally, neobanks offer unsecured loan products with a quick and transparent application process. This approach not only provides efficiency but also aligns with consumer behaviour in interacting with financial services.

Conclusion

The advantages of neobanking go beyond convenience and cost savings; they also include a consumer-oriented banking approach. By leveraging powerful digital innovations, neobanks offer an accessible and customisable banking platform.

This approach enhances the consumer experience with more innovative financial products and alternative solutions. Neobanking also implements financial transparency policies, allowing consumers to explore and benefit from various banking options.

In the future, neobanks may have a significant opportunity to attract high-value customers who manage large deposits. A mobile app could integrate all their accounts from different banks into one, simplifying deposit management. Additionally, neobanks could use AI to deliver personalised customer service and a premium experience.

  • Neobanking

A revolutionary trend has emerged and revolutionised the banking sector. Neobanking has changed market demand and become a consumer favourite….

A revolutionary trend has emerged and revolutionised the banking sector. Neobanking has changed market demand and become a consumer favourite.

Neobanks, or digital banks, offer banking services without physical presence. Unlike traditional banks, which require customers to access services on-site, neobanks can process all services online.

These solutions address the challenges of extensive physical infrastructure and aim to offer more user-centric services. Neobanking offers 24/7 operational access, lower fees, higher interest rates, enhanced customer service, innovative features, and more.

One of the many advantages is seamless digital wallet experiences. Customers can use international payments with competitive exchange rates and lower fees than traditional banks. Another advantage of neobank services is instant loans. This feature makes credit more accessible, including to those traditionally underserved.

Cryptocurrencies and blockchain adoption are growing in neobanking. Digital banks integrate blockchain for secure transactions and smart contracts. Cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin and Ethereum enable global transactions without intermediaries. As regulators adapt, neobanking harnesses blockchain’s potential for decentralised finance (DeFi) and offers access to lending, staking, and yield farming.

Technological Advancements

Neobanks apply the latest technological developments to enhance their services, utilising advancements like Artificial Intelligence (AI) to create personalised systems. Through machine learning, neobanks leverage algorithms for credit scoring, risk assessment, and fraud detection, improving their decision-making processes.

These technologies also strengthen customer service through chatbots, enhance risk assessment and credit scoring, and provide personalised financial advice. Furthermore, AI-driven insights enable neobanks to offer more relevant products and services, boosting customer satisfaction and loyalty.

Market Dynamics

The neobanking market is expected to grow at a CAGR of 35.8 percent during 2023-2030 due to increasing financial digitalisation, as predicted by UnivDatos. The neobanking market is expected to grow at a CAGR of 35.8 percent during 2023-2030 due to increasing financial digitalisation, as predicted by UnivDatos.

The growth can be attributed to the convenience neo-banks offer, such as 24/7 access to services through mobile apps, allowing customers to manage their finances anytime, anywhere. Neobanks have lower operating costs, due to the lack of physical branches, also contribute to their appeal.

Furthermore, supportive government regulations and investor confidence are crucial to this growth. Governments have introduced regulatory sandboxes to foster fintech innovation, encouraging entrepreneurs and investors to enter the market. The success of companies like Stripe, Chime, and Revolut highlights the potential of neobanks to meet the demand for efficient and cost-effective financial solutions.

The market is characterised by dynamic and rapidly evolving trends driven by technological advancements. For instance, some neobanks are exploring blockchain technology for secure transactions and offering cryptocurrency services. This technology caters to the growing interest in digital assets.

Future Directions

The future of neobanking is poised for transformative growth. Neobanks will increasingly target international markets, adapting services to local regulations and consumer preferences. Moreover, this expansion is set to broaden financial inclusion and capture diverse customer bases.

Machine learning algorithms optimise product recommendations and credit assessments. This technology will also grow the adoption of advanced security measures such as biometric authentication, multi-factor authentication (MFA), and real-time fraud detection systems.

Partnerships and ecosystem expansion will become key to sustained neobanking. Collaborations with fintechs, e-commerce platforms, and traditional banks will broaden offerings. Additionally, this ecosystem integration will offer customers access to various financial and non-financial services.

Conclusion

Neobanking is a disruptive force in the financial industry. It enhances financial management by providing a seamless system. Customers can quickly meet their various needs within reach, from transactions in diverse payments to cryptocurrencies and blockchain. These banks utilise the latest technology to provide data-driven services and products to ensure customer satisfaction.

The market is rapidly evolving, driven by technological advancements and changing consumer preferences. Therefore, as neobanks continue to innovate and adapt, they make financial services more inclusive and accessible.

  • Neobanking

Cost-effectiveness and digital-first strategies are positioning neobanks as genuine challengers to established financial institutions.

The financial services industry is experiencing a seismic organisational shift. Increasingly, growth is moving away from traditional brick and mortar banking and towards digital-first banking experiences. Neobanks, financial institutions that operate entirely online and forego physical branches, are at the forefront of this shift.

Catering to a tech-savvy generation, these institutions prioritise convenience and user-friendliness. They focus on providing innovative features, often powered by the latest technological advancements. 

How Neobanks work

Neobanks are financial technology companies that provide banking services entirely through mobile apps and websites. 

They prioritise a user-friendly experience with features like real-time transaction alerts, budgeting and investment tools, and faster account opening.  Neobanks may also offer access to a wider range of trading markets, including cryptocurrencies and stock exchanges.

Their cost-effective model is a key driver of their growth. Consumers benefit from lower or nonexistent monthly fees on core banking services and potentially faster loan approvals with lower interest rates, all managed through user-friendly mobile apps. These factors are fueling the significant growth of neobanks within the financial market.

Current State of Neobanks

Over the past decade, neobanks have carved a significant niche in the financial services industry. Their growth shows no signs of slowing down.

Statista predicts a user base of 376.9 million globally by 2027. This represents a remarkable twenty-fold increase from the 18.95 million users reported in 2017. While the full impact on traditional banking remains to be seen, these trends highlight a shift in the financial services sector.

Successful neobanks typically offer low or no fees on essential banking services like account maintenance, deposits, and withdrawals. They often stand out with faster loan approvals and funding compared to traditional banks, along with competitive interest rates. Additionally, these digital banking features are conveniently accessible through user-friendly mobile apps.

The outlook for neobanking is promising, driven largely by its core strengths – a fully digital experience and streamlined services. Neobanks empower customers to manage their finances entirely online and eliminate the need for physical branches. 

While traditional banks have embraced digitalisation to an extent, neobanks offer a more comprehensive online-only solution that attracts a growing customer base.

Several factors are fueling this growth. The massive adoption of smartphones has created a mobile-first generation comfortable with managing finances through apps. Moreover, collaborations between traditional banks and fintech companies are blurring the lines between the two sectors, potentially leading to a more dynamic and competitive banking environment.

Opportunities for Growth

Neobanks are poised to disrupt the financial services industry with their innovative technology and focus on customer-centricity.  These new financial institutions offer an attractive alternative to traditional banks. However, success in this competitive environment requires a smart strategy.

For neobanks to gain traction, it’s important for them to maintain strong customer acquisition and retention plans. Offering appealing account opening incentives and rewarding loyalty programs can encourage customers to switch or make neobanks their main financial partner.

Ultimately, neobanks that prioritise security, transparency, and excellent customer service while providing innovative digital banking features are best positioned for long-term success in the neobanking industry.

Challenges Ahead

Despite their emergence, neobanks face several challenges that could hinder their future growth. Cybersecurity remains a top concern, as the financial sector is a prime target for cyberattacks due to the sensitive information it handles. Data breaches can have severe consequences for both neobanks and their customers.

Building brand recognition is also a hurdle for new neobanks. Many consumers are unfamiliar with these digital banking options, therefore it’s hard for new players to establish themselves in a crowded market.

Additionally, relying too heavily on third-party partnerships can introduce risks. Conflicts of interest and less control over the customer experience can arise. This lack of control further hinders brand recognition efforts. 

Conclusion

Neobanks are no longer a futuristic concept, but a defining feature of the present financial landscape. This is evident in two key trends. First, mobile apps are becoming increasingly sophisticated. Second, traditional banks are witnessing a global decline in branch networks as they shift focus to online services.

Looking forward, the future of neobanks appears promising. Grand View Research predicts a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 47.7 percent for the neobanking industry between 2021 and 2028. 

However, a key obstacle to wider adoption lies in the varying levels of technological comfort among different age groups. While younger demographics readily embrace mobile applications, older generations may require more time to adapt.

  • Neobanking

Sage, the leader in accounting, financial, HR, and payroll technology for small and mid-sized businesses (SMBs), has announced an expansion…

Sage, the leader in accounting, financial, HR, and payroll technology for small and mid-sized businesses (SMBs), has announced an expansion of its partnership with a leading neobank. What’s more, Stripe offers a financial infrastructure platform for businesses, to help improve cashflow management and payment processing for SMBs. The partnership is key to helping businesses to move money easier and faster

Sage partners with neobank Stripe

Stripe is trusted by millions of businesses around the world, ranging from startups to enterprises. The partnership with Stripe provides Sage customers with more options to pay and get paid quickly. Additionally, leveraging Stripe’s financial infrastructure, Sage will offer its customers a trusted solution to help ease cashflow and simplify financial processes. From streamlined checkout and payment processing, to Tap to Pay contactless payments, and auto-reconciling bank transfers.

Also, in partnership with Stripe, Sage intends to expand its payments ecosystem. Therefore, ensuring that a growing number of its customers have access to services that will help them to manage their cashflow.

“This partnership signifies a shared vision between Sage and Stripe. To transform how SMBs pay and get paid, helping our customers to simplify cashflow management,” said Walid Abu-Hadba, Chief Product Officer, Sage. “Furthermore, we are committed to harnessing the power of technology to drive innovation, enhance efficiency, and pave the way for growth.” 

Addressing cashflow problems

Supporting customers globally, Stripe’s integration into Sage is currently available in the UK through Sage Accounting, Sage 50 and Sage 200. Also, Stripe is fully integrated into Sage Network, enabling customers to easily plug into the broader Sage ecosystem. Moreover, they can choose additional applications and features such as Sage Connect, automating AR and AP processes to help manage their cashflow and payments.

The expansion of the partnership will see customers benefits including:

Streamlined checkout and payment processing: SMBs with cash trapped in outstanding invoices can make it easier for customers to review their accounts. They can pay with Sage Connect’s customer account portal and Stripe Checkout.

Multiple payment methods: Accept payments from customers through different methods including digital wallets, cards and bank transfers. Additionally, Stripe uses machine learning to surface the most relevant payment methods for customers depending on their location.

Unified payments experience: Collect payments online and in person through Tap-to-Pay, for seamless, in-person, contactless payments No terminal hardware required.

A safe and secure payment experience: Leveraging Stripe’s advanced security protocols and compliance with global financial regulations. Customers can be assured transactions are protected against fraud and data breaches. Providing peace of mind for both businesses and their clients.

Auto-reconciling bank transfers: Saving time with automatic reconciliation. Finally, bank transfers enable customers to pay invoices via bank transfer, streamlining the payment and reconciliation process.

“Sage understands the importance of innovating for its customers. We’re thrilled to be part of its journey,” said Eileen O’Mara, Chief Revenue Officer at Stripe. “Stripe is building a suite of software-defined financial services. Ultimately, we can enable leading platforms like Sage to provide integrated features that make their customers’ lives easier.”

Lastly, this partnership adds to the broad range of payments and banking partners within Sage’s ecosystem.

  • Neobanking

The financial services industry is witnessing a shift towards digital-first solutions. Advancements in technology and infrastructure have fuelled the rise…

The financial services industry is witnessing a shift towards digital-first solutions. Advancements in technology and infrastructure have fuelled the rise of neobanking. It offers convenient, cashless transactions through digital banking features.

From just 12 neobanks operating globally in 2015, the number has skyrocketed to 300 as of 2023. Juniper Research expects neobank users to reach 850 million by 2030.

Introduction to Neobanking

Neobanks are digital-only banks. They rely on mobile apps and web interfaces to deliver their services. Customers access and manage their accounts, conduct transactions, and receive support from their devices. This approach allows neobanks to offer lower fees and greater convenience compared to traditional banks. There are ten key features differentiating successful neobanks.

Feature 1: User-Friendly Interface

Neobanks prioritise user-friendly and intuitive interfaces within their core platform—the mobile app. The app lets customers conduct all essential banking functions directly from their smartphones.

Neobanks eliminate traditionally time-consuming processes. Account openings are conducted entirely digitally. They also offer near-instant identity verification, funding, and activation of debit cards and accounts.

Feature 2: Personalised Services

Neobanks leverage artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML). This data-driven approach helps them understand their customers better. They analyse spending habits and financial behaviours to provide personalised financial advice. This empowers customers to make informed decisions about their money.

Neobanks also use customer data to create targeted marketing campaigns. These campaigns align with individual interests and financial goals. Neobanks’ real-time, personalised approach enhances customer satisfaction and strengthens customer retention and loyalty.

Feature 3: Robust Security Measures

Security is essential for neobanks, as they handle sensitive customer data and countless transactions. Neobanks embrace advanced technologies like AI-powered fraud detection and blockchain encryption. Multi-factor authentication (MFA), encryption protocols, and biometric identification form the first line of defence against cyberattacks.

By prioritising robust security, neobanks can offer the innovative digital banking features customers expect from financial technology. This also ensures they stay ahead of constantly evolving threats and vulnerabilities in the digital banking sector.

Feature 4: Innovative Products

Traditionally, launching new banking features took years. Now, with ML models analysing large amounts of customer data, neobank teams can develop and launch new digital banking features in just weeks. Moreover, this allows them to stay ahead of market trends and meet customer demands quickly.

Feature 5: Seamless integration with other services

According to PYMNTS, consumers are increasingly interested in super apps, with nearly 70 percent wanting a one-stop platform for managing digital finances. This demand pushes banks to embrace open banking.

Neobanks can collaborate more effectively by sharing their APIs with financial technology companies, digital payment providers, and other platforms. Open APIs grant access to a wider customer base, fostering partnerships between banks and e-commerce firms. This integration allows them to meet consumer demand for a more comprehensive digital banking experience.

Feature 6: Low Fees

One key advantage of neobanks over traditional institutions is their cost structure. Without the burden of physical branches, neobanks benefit from lower overhead expenses. This translates to a competitive edge in terms of fees and rates.

Neobanks can charge zero fees for services that typically incur charges at traditional banks. Additionally, they can also provide more attractive interest rates on savings accounts. These factors can be appealing to cost-conscious consumers.

Feature 7: 24/7 Customer Service

The use of AI and chatbots helps neobanks deliver 24/7 customer support. Customers do not have to wait on hold or schedule branch appointments. Instead, they can receive prompt answers to inquiries or resolve issues at any time.

Feature 8: Hassle-Free Account Onboarding

Neobanks are known for their swift account opening experiences. This is achieved through leveraging advanced technology. Intuitive mobile apps and web platforms let customers open accounts remotely within minutes. Also, technologies like AI-powered identity verification and digital document submission expedite the onboarding process.

Feature 9: Automated Saving Feature

One of the unique features offered by many neobanks is automated savings functionality. This functionality allows customers to set up automatic transfers from their checking accounts to their savings accounts. Additionally, these transfers can be triggered by various events, such as on payday or when a certain balance is reached in the checking account.

Feature 10: Cryptocurrency Services Integration

To expand their offerings and cater to a growing interest in digital assets, some neobanks are integrating cryptocurrency services into their platforms. Also, customers can manage their cryptocurrency holdings directly within their neobanking app and simplify the process of buying, selling, and sending these digital assets.

Case Studies

A successful example of neobanks is Revolut. The bank that allows users to buy, sell, and transfer cryptocurrency directly within their app. Revolut also removes any hidden fees associated with traditional cryptocurrency exchanges.

Conclusion

Neobanks’ core strength lies in its focus on flexibility and user convenience. Furthermore, designed specifically for the digital age, they prioritise a seamless user experience. Their focus on mobile-first design and intuitive interfaces makes banking easier and more convenient. This approach allows neobanks to offer a wider range of digital banking features compared to traditional banks’ online platforms.

  • Neobanking

Neobanks, the digital-first financial institutions operating without physical branches, have emerged as a potent force in the financial services industry….

Neobanks, the digital-first financial institutions operating without physical branches, have emerged as a potent force in the financial services industry. Leveraging cutting-edge banking technology and a laser focus on customer experience, they are challenging traditional banks’ dominance.

Neobanks operate entirely online, offering a suite of financial services—from current accounts and debit cards to money transfers and budgeting tools—all seamlessly integrated through user-friendly mobile apps. Their core value proposition lies in:

  • Convenience: With their 24/7 access to banking services, they eliminate the need for physical branch visits.
  • Lower Fees: Decreased overhead charges for maintaining accounts and conducting transactions.
  • Seamless User Experience: Intuitive mobile apps prioritise user experience with streamlined account management and personalised financial tools.
  • Financial Inclusion: Neobanks can foster financial inclusion by offering services to those with limited access to traditional banking.

Neobanking benefits

Compared to traditional banks, neobanks excel in user experience and fees. Neobanks offers quick and paperless online applications and a mobile-first approach, allowing customers to access services quickly anytime, anywhere. Their services incur lower fees, with transparent pricing structures.

Consumers, particularly the tech-savvy generation, are increasingly drawn to neobanks due to the accessibility and convenience they bring to the table. The ability to manage finances anytime, anywhere resonates with nowadays on-the-go lifestyles. They are also cost-efficient, offering lower charges that result in direct savings for consumers.

Neobanking in numbers

In 2020, the global neobank market was valued at US$ 18.6 billion, according to a report by Mordor Intelligence. It is expected to record US$ 333.4 billion in 2026. This figure represents a CAGR of 50.6 percent. With a user penetration of 3.89 percent in 2024, the average transaction value per user is US$21,110 in 2024, according to Statista. In 2028, it is predicted that there will be 386.30 million neobank users worldwide.

Some of the biggest neobanking names include Chime. Serving 14.5 million users in 2022, around nine million relied on Chime as their primary bank., as reported by Forbes. In 2024, the number of users grew to 22 million, more than that of SoFi, Dave, MoneyLion, Varo Bank, and Current combined, also as reported by Forbes.

The aforementioned names are not small players either. Varo, for example, managed over 7 million accounts in 2023. Likewise, SoFi recorded 8.1 million users using its services in the first quarter of 2024, a 2.5 million, or 44 percent, increase from 2023’s last quarter.

Another big player is Revolut. The neobank had 40 million users per March 2024, a massive increase from 1.5 million customers in February 2018. It ticked the 30 million mark in 2023.

Impact on Traditional Banks

The rise of neobanks has forced traditional banks to re-evaluate their strategies. Many banks have undergone a digital transformation, investing in mobile banking platforms and improving user experience to compete with neobanks’ digital agility. Traditional banks are also securing partnerships and acquiring neobanks to absorb expertise and expand service offerings.

Future Outlook

The future of financial services may see a more collaborative landscape between neobanks and traditional banks. Neobanks may find value in partnering with established institutions for broader reach and access to a wider range of financial products. Conversely, traditional banks may leverage neobanks’ technological expertise and customer focus to enhance their offerings.

  • Neobanking

Neobanking, the fusion of technology and financial services, is reshaping the banking landscape. As we look towards the future, neobanks may bring transformative changes that will impact financial institutions worldwide.

Neobanking emerged around 2017 as a new model in banking, offering fully online services without physical offices and branches. It has rapidly evolved, attracting a growing customer base with its convenience and accessibility. As we enter a new banking era, several predictions will shape the future of neobanking.

There are several key trends and predictions for the future of neobanking, such as the growth of AI-powered services, the increasing focus on cybersecurity, the expansion of neobanking services, and more. These insights are essential for financial leaders facing the evolving financial technology landscape.

1. AI-powered Services

Artificial intelligence (AI) is set to transform neobanking. Financial institutions are increasingly using AI to enhance their services. AI-driven features, such as personalised financial advice, automated customer support, and advanced fraud detection, will become standard offerings. These technologies will enable neobanks to provide more accurate risk assessments and deeper insights, allowing human operators to focus on strategic improvements.

2. Integration with Existing Tech

Integrating emerging technologies such as blockchain, Internet of Things (IoT), and 5G also opens new possibilities for neobanks. These technologies can enhance transaction security, provide real-time data insights, and enable more efficient banking operations, further driving the evolution of neobanking.

3. Expansion of Neobanking Services

Neobanks should diversify their service offerings to meet the evolving needs of their customers. Beyond traditional banking services, we can expect innovations in areas such as personal finance management, investment advisory, and integrated payment solutions. These expanded services will position neobanks as comprehensive financial hubs that fulfil various financial needs.

4. Focus on Cybersecurity in Neobanking

As neobanks operate entirely online, cybersecurity becomes increasingly important. Protecting customer data from cyber threats is critical to maintaining trust. They should anticipate a significant investment in advanced cybersecurity measures, including encryption, multi-factor authentication, and continuous monitoring. They must ensure strong security protocols to prevent data breaches and protect their reputation.

5. Strategic Partnerships

To remain competitive, neobanks will likely form strategic partnerships with traditional banks. These collaborations are a win-win: neobanks gain access to established infrastructure and a broader customer base, while traditional banks benefit from cutting-edge technology. Ultimately, such partnerships will enhance customer experiences by combining the strengths of both banking models.

6. Regulatory Adaptation

The shift in the landscape requires regulatory frameworks to adapt. Governments and regulatory bodies will be crucial in ensuring fair competition and consumer protection in this evolving environment. We can expect new regulations that address the unique challenges posed by digital banking, promoting innovation while safeguarding financial stability.

7. Enhanced Customer Experience

The future of neobanks hinges on their ability to deliver a seamless digital experience and bridge the gap in customer service. Building trust and replicating the human touch, strengths often associated with traditional banks, will be crucial in converting users into primary customers. The shift in focus will be vital for driving long-term profitability.

8. Banking-as-a-Service (Baas)

Beyond their core offerings, neobanks may disrupt the financial landscape further through Banking-as-a-Service (BaaS). Using their expertise and technology, they can empower other businesses to offer embedded financial services, creating a win-win situation for both parties.

9. Green Banking Initiatives

Sustainability will become a priority for neobanks. We expect to see an increase in green banking initiatives, such as offering eco-friendly financial products and investing in sustainable projects. They can leverage their digital platforms to promote environmentally responsible banking practices.

10. Global Expansion

Neobanks will expand their reach globally, entering new markets and catering to an international customer base. The expansion will be driven by the increasing demand for digital banking services and the universal appeal of innovative financial solutions.

A neobanking future

The future of neobanking is bright, with a dynamic and evolving landscape supported by AI, advanced security, and broader financial product offerings. As the model matures, the most successful players will likely be those who can adapt to changing economic conditions, solidifying their position as the industry leader.

  • Neobanking