2024 proved to be another challenging year for the global fintech market as both total investment ($95.6 billion) and the volume of deals (4,639) fell to seven-year lows. Ongoing macroeconomic challenges, geopolitical conflicts and tensions, and a number of high-profile elections in major jurisdictions around the world kept the level of uncertainty very high, leading to a pullback in fintech investment particularly on the M&A and PE fronts.
H2’24 was more subdued than H1’24 by a fair margin. Total global investment fell from $51.7 billion to $43.9 billion between the first and second halves of the year, driven by M&A deal value and VC investment falling from $28.1 billion to $21.6 billion and from $22.5 billion to $20.9 billion, respectively. But these numbers only tell a part of the story, as Q3’24 and Q4’24 saw wildly different results; M&A deal value nearly doubled from $7.4 billion to $14.2 billion quarter-over-quarter, while VC investment rose from $9.7 billion to $11.2 billion over the same period.
The Americas accounted for the largest share of fintech investment in H2’24 ($31 billion), including the only $1 billion+ deals (Nuvei — $6.3 billion, Envestnet — $4.5 billion, Candescent — $2.45 billion, Transact Campus - $1.6 billion, Bridge - $1.1 billion). Comparatively, the EMEA region attracted $7.3 billion — led by the $561 million acquisition of Netherlands-based Knab Bank, while ASPAC saw $5.5 billion — led by a $788 million raise by Philippines-based Mynt. The payments space remained the hottest fintech subsector over 2024 by far, attracting $31 billion in investment, followed by digital assets and currencies ($9.1 billion) and regtech ($7.4 billion).