Singapore’s fintech funding has hit a three year high for first-half-year (H1) performance snagging a combined deal value of US$2.14 billion across venture capital (VC), private equity (PE) and mergers & acquisitions (M&A), according to KPMG’s Pulse of Fintech H1’22 report. Compared to the same period last year, funding shot up 64 percent from the combined deal value US$1.31 billion achieved in H1’21, signalling continued confidence in the potential of fintech developments in driving growth and innovation for financial services.
On a half-yearly basis, Singapore’s fintech funding saw a 15 percent drop in H1’22 compared to the US$2.51 billion achieved in H2’21 due to greater caution by investors in reaction to market developments. Cryptocurrency funding in Singapore dipped by more than half its value from US$1.3 billion in H2’21 to US$539.1 million in H1’22 – this comes after record crypto investment inflows in 2021. Crypto attracted smaller deal sizes but a larger number of deals with a significant amount of startup funding (two thirds from seed and early-stage VC funding). The crypto space also saw a small amount of consolidation with seven exit or merger deals. Regtech also saw a drop in funding from US$66.63 million in H2’21 to US$23.34 million in H1’22. Investors chose to channel funds into payments – an area that has been demonstrating stable growth and developments, alongside more cross-border initiatives being forged. Hence, cumulative deal value for payments in Singapore close to tripled from US$263 million in H2’21 to US$946.61 million in H1’22.
H2’21 was the high watermark for funding and while H1’22 saw a lower cumulative deal value, funding in Singapore still remains healthy. Furthermore, H1’22 saw a modest increase in the number of fintech deals funded across payments, cryptocurrencies, insurtech, wealthtech and cybersecurity as compared to H2’21 (see Figure 1).