Fintech IPOs made a major comeback in 2025 after waiting through a capital markets freeze, early year tariff uncertainty and a fintech slump in 2023.
Processing Content
A report from
Fintechs also boosted an overall IPO increase this year.
The
Here are American Banker’s top five fintech IPO stories of 2025:
Chime
Victor J. Blue/Bloomberg
Chime’s initial public offering tested the waters for other fintechs considering going public in 2025. Chime Financial’s shares surged 59% in its Nasdaq debut in June, valuing the digital bank at $18.4 billion. Chime’s stock opened at $43 compared with the IPO price of $27. It has since gone back to
“We are excited to see Chime tap the public markets at a pivotal moment after weathering the capital markets deep freeze that has paralyzed fintech IPOs,” Pitchbook senior analyst Rudy Yang told American Banker at the time of Chime’s initial filing. “The timing is undoubtedly bold, but it is a strategic play that balances opportunity with calculated risk. A strong reception may help catalyze a long-awaited revival in fintech liquidity.”
Fintech venture capital exit value from IPOs dropped from $222.4 billion in 2021 to $29.1 billion across the subsequent three years and through the first quarter of 2025, Yang said.
Read more about Chime’s IPO
Klarna
Michael Nagle/Bloomberg
The Swedish buy now/pay later payments company Klarna confidentially listed with the SEC in November 2024 and made its
Investors anticipated Klarna’s IPO for several years, and the listing could signal a recovery in the broader payments technology market, which slumped in 2022 and 2023 following a fintech bubble during the Covid-19 pandemic’s rush to digital commerce.
After a five-month delay, Klarna began trading on the New York Stock Exchange on Sept. 10 under the ticker KLAR. Shares were priced at $40 per share, netting the company a $15 billion valuation. The listing cemented the return of a healthy IPO market beleaguered by
Read more about Klarna’s IPO
Circle
Bloomberg
Blockchain and digital currency company Circle
The share price put Circle’s valuation at around $6 billion, larger than the $5 billion price tag that Coinbase and Ripple were seeking to pay to acquire the company,
On the day of the stablecoin issuer’s public debut on the NYSE under the ticker CRCL, shares of Circle tripled in value to
Read more about Circle’s IPO
Wealthfront
Michael Nagle/Bloomberg
The wealth management fintech Wealthfront filed a
The shutdown impacted the company’s IPO timeline, as the SEC was affected by Congress’ failure to meet the deadline of midnight on Oct. 1 to approve a new budget for federal funding.
“The shutdown has the immediate impact of damaging investor sentiment now and the longer-term effect of clogging the IPO pipe,” Samuel Kerr, head of equity capital markets for Mergermarket, told American Banker at the time. “This shutdown could hardly have come at a worse time for the IPO market.”
Read more about Wealthfront’s IPO
Lendbuzz
The auto lending fintech Lendbuzz filed for an IPO in September of this year, but has not yet announced the amount of common stock to be offered or the price range. Lendbuzz is targeting a valuation of
Lendbuzz underwrites auto loans for “underserved consumers” with limited to no traditional credit history as well as for consumers with FICO scores, according to its filing, and mentioned immigration policy concerns among its potential risk factors. The company did not disclose how many of its customers are not U.S. citizens, but it did state that “as of December 31, 2024, 83% of our consumers have no credit file or a thin credit file.”
Lendbuzz’s IPO came into the auto lending market shortly after a different auto lender, Tricolor,
Read more about Lendbuzz’s IPO