EtiAmmos – stock.adobe.com
Investments in AI and crypto drove equity fintech funding in the first quarter of 2025, according to newly released data from analyst firm
Global fintech funding had a comparatively strong quarter in the first few months of 2025, topping $10 billion for the first quarter in two years. However, 20% of that total came from a single deal: a
Without the Binance deal, the total amount of fintech funding for the first quarter of 2025 would have trailed behind the previous quarter.
Overall, big rounds made up a large share of fintech funding in the first quarter. Mega-rounds (deals of more than $100 million) made up 44% of all funding, their highest quarterly share since 2023. A
However, the total number of mega-rounds in the quarter still declined to 14 in the first quarter of 2025, down from 22 big-dollar funding rounds in the fourth quarter of 2024. The total number of global deals also declined for the fourth straight quarter by 3%, with a total of 777 deals.
In other words, fewer deals are happening, but the size of the ones that are getting done continue to push the industry numbers up.
A few key areas of momentum stand out amid the mixed results of fintech funding for the first quarter of 2025, especially crypto (as indicated by the Binance deal) and AI-focused fintechs.
More than half (52%) of the top early-stage deals in the first quarter of 2025 went to fintech companies developing crypto, blockchain and digital asset solutions.
Following the trends in the broader venture market, AI software fintechs are occupying a growing share of all fintech dealmaking. The share of fintech deals held by AI companies has more than doubled since OpenAI launched ChatGPT in late 2022, moving up from 7.7% to 15.7%, with AI-focused fintechs securing 122 deals in the first quarter of this year.
Investors say fintech funding may see a short-term slowdown in the coming months due to
“I would have predicted going into this year that funding would be slightly up in 2025, and that’s a statement I would have made two months ago or a month ago, but now all bets are off in the last three weeks,” Chris Sugden, a fintech investor at Edison Partners, told American Banker, referring to tariffs and other moves of the Trump administration. “I do think what’s going to happen, though, is that long-term, we’re still going to be up. We’re just going to see Q2 get hit, because in April everyone’s kind of like, ‘I’ll wait and see.'”
Sugden confirmed the strong crypto showing in the CB Insights report, but mentioned other strong areas of growth for the fintech space as well.
“A pretty bright line in terms of valuations is that profitable growth is still trading at a premium in fintech, especially around payments, in the fraud detection sector, and we’re getting a lot of activity all around crypto,” he said.
Overall, Sugden is not particularly worried about the long-term impact of tariff policy changes on early-stage fintech growth.
“You’re not overly worried about tariffs unless you’re right in the crosshairs,” Sudgen said, “and because fintechs generally don’t manufacture things, they’re helping commerce flow, they’re just not going to be impacted directly. I would say, as an investor, none of us should be overdoing it on the tariffs. These kinds of innovations take time. So I would say, personally, overdoing it on the near term noise is never a good idea, especially in fintech because there’s more adoption curves anyway.”
Matthew Alferi, an investment partner with Centana Growth Partners, advised fintechs to plan for longer, six-to-nine month funding cycles. “That will give them the opportunity to be more selective over who their equity or venture capital partner is and ensure they’re getting the right partner with the right amount of capital. My advice is maybe to brace for a bit longer in this market, where investors may be more skittish or maybe slower to make decisions for the record.”