Fintech Ecosystem Report: Blockbuster Deals to Stripe and AlphaSense Buoy a Flat Quarter for Fintechs

Blockbuster deals to Stripe and AlphaSense buoy an otherwise flat quarter for the Fintech sector, according to an extensive update from CBInsights.

On the surface, Q2’24 was a return “to growth for fintech, with funding increasing 19% quarter-over-quarter (QoQ) to $8.9B,” the CBInsights report revealed.

However, two huge deals — for market intelligence firm AlphaSense and payments juggernaut Stripe — obscured the reality “that it was another tepid quarter for the sector as a whole.”

Based on CBInsights’ detailed analysis/report, here are the key takeaways on the state of fintech:

  • Funding increases by 19% quarter-over-quarter (QoQ), buoyed by 2 blockbuster deals.
  • Quarterly funding rose in Q2’24 to $8.9B. But if it weren’t for 2 late-stage deals for Stripe ($694M) and AlphaSense ($650M), funding would have remained flat QoQ. A 16% decline in deal volume also indicates fintech investors remain cautious.​Q2’24 fintech funding gets a boost from 2 $650M+ deals
  • Average deal size decreases to $12.8M, down 4% vs. 2023. The slight decline in average deal size YTD highlights broad stagnation in fintech deal sizes. Yet, when looking at the median, deal size has ticked up from $3.1M in 2023 to $4M this year. The 29% increase could signal strength in the long tail of smaller fintech deals.
  • Mid- and late-stage deal share is at 20% YTD, up from 18% in 2023. In a more favorable operating environment, investors are showing greater confidence in later-stage companies than they did in the past 2 years — especially in areas like payments and lending. In payments, mid- and late-stage rounds make up 27% of deals YTD, vs. 21% in 2023. In digital lending, mid- and late-stage deals make up 35% of deals YTD, compared to 20% in 2023.
  • 30% of the biggest early-stage deals are for digital asset companies. Crypto and blockchain-focused fintechs are receiving renewed focus, as the crypto winter thaws.
  • Digital asset companies accounted for nearly one-third of the top 10 seed/angel and top 10 Series A rounds. The two largest early-stage deals in the crypto space went to digital asset infrastructure platforms TradeDog ($75M seed) and Biton ($44M Series A). Crypto winter thawing for early-stage companies
  • US-based funding increases by 45% QoQ to $4.8B. In addition to the funding increase, the US led the world across a few metrics in Q2’24, including share of equity deals (40%) and exits (36%). Mega-rounds led the way: Nine of the 10 biggest deals in the US were worth $100M or more, the most since Q2’22. LatAm was the only other major global region with a funding increase, up by 22% to $442M.


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