The Fintech sector has not been spared from the “sweeping” downturn in the venture market, according to an extensive update shared by CBInsights.
In fact, in 2023, funding to fintech startups “dropped off more severely than broader venture funding,” the CBInsights report noted.
Based on CBInsights’ deep dive below, here are the main takeaways from the state of fintech research report:
- Global fintech funding nosedived to $39.2B in 2023 (down 50% YoY), while deal volume slipped 38% to 3,801 — the lowest levels since 2017. On a quarterly basis, Q4’23 saw the fewest fintech deals in 7 years.
- The US increased its dominance of fintech, drawing 41% of deals in 2023 — its highest share since 2016. Meanwhile, Asia’s deal share fell to a recent low of 20%. The uptick in US deal share came as investors shifted toward early-stage companies: early-stage deal share in the US climbed to its highest level in more than a decade.
- At 612 deals, annual M&A exit volume remains higher than it was any year prior to 2021. Quarterly M&A deals saw a modest gain in Q4’23, rising to 149. Europe saw 34% of these deals — more than any other global region — but the top 3 M&A exits in Q4’23 all went to US fintechs.
- Eight fintech unicorns were born in Q4’23 — a 6-quarter high, but far below 2021’s quarterly average. Asia contributed half of the new unicorns — 3 of which are based in Gulf States. This was the first time since 2019 that more fintech unicorns were born in Asia than in the US in a given quarter.
- Investment to banking startups has evaporated, with funding falling 72% in 2023 — the biggest YoY decrease across fintech sectors. Payments startups saw funding decline just 30% YoY — the least of any fintech sector — though the annual funding total was propped up by 2 massive rounds to Stripe ($6.5B) and Metropolis ($1B). Payments remains the most well-funded fintech sector by a wide margin.