8 February 2022, Singapore – Singapore’s fintech industry hit a five-year high at 191 deals transacted in 2021 according to the KPMG's Pulse of Fintech H2’21 report. This is a 37% increase compared to 2020’s deal count (139 deals) and a 91% increase from 2019’s figures (100 deals). Total transaction value in Singapore also surged by 59% year-on-year at US$3.94 billion, across venture capital (VC), private equity (PE) and merger and acquisition (M&A) deals in 2021, up from US$2.48 billion in 2020.
In total, global fintech funding across M&A, PE and VC reached US$210 billion across a record 5,684 deals in 2021, of which fintech funding in H2’21 accounted for US$101 billion — down slightly from H1’21’s US$109 billion. One significant deal involved Singapore tech group, Grab, which listed a special purpose acquisition company (SPAC) deal in the United States at US$500 million, resulting in a post-money valuation of US$39.6 billion that made it among the top four fintech investments in Asia Pacific in 2021.
Payments continued to attract the most funding among fintech subsectors, accounting for US$51.7 billion in investment globally in 2021 — up from US$29.1 billion in 2020. A continued surge in interest in areas, like ‘buy now, pay later’, embedded banking and open banking aligned solutions, has helped keep the payments space very robust. Blockchain and crypto was also a very hot sector, attracting a record US$30.2 billion in investment — up from US$5.5 billion in 2020 and more than three times the previous record of US$8.2 billion seen in 2018. Cybersecurity (US$4.85 billion) and wealthtech (US$1.62 billion) also saw record levels of investment.
Notably, transaction volumes for fintechs in Singapore jumped close to twofold year-on-year to US$2.98billion in H2’21, up from US$1.04 billion in H2’20. Total number of deals in Singapore also rose by 36% to 95 deals in H2’21, up from 70 deals in H2’20. This surge can be attributed to Singapore’s measures to boost the capital market, such as its SPAC listing framework to position the country as a choice location for fast-growing companies and unicorns to go public in.
Overall, fintech funding in the Asia Pacific region grew to US$27.5 billion in 2021 (US$17.4 billion in H2’21). VC funding also bounced back — rising from US$11.5 billion in 2020 to US$19.6 billion in 2021. India (US$7.2 billion) and South Korea (US$3 billion) both saw record high fintech investments during 2021, while investment in Australia (US$2.6 billion) remained very robust.
“2021 has been an incredibly strong year for the fintech market globally, with the number of deals soaring to record highs across the board,” said Anton Ruddenklau, Global Fintech Leader, KPMG International, who is based in Singapore. “We’re seeing an incredible amount of interest in all manner of fintech companies, with record funding in areas like blockchain and crypto, cybersecurity and wealthtech. While payments remain a significant driver of fintech activity, the sector is broadening every day.”