2024 was another difficult year for fintech, with just $95.6 billion of investment globally across 4,639 deals. Both global fintech investment and the number of deals fell to levels not seen since 2017, according to the Pulse of Fintech H2’24—a bi-annual report published by KPMG highlighting fintech investment trends globally and in key jurisdictions around the world. The report is based on data provided by PitchBook Data Inc. A perfect storm of factors combined to soften investor appetite, including macroeconomic challenges, geopolitical conflicts and tensions, a year of elections in major jurisdictions, and concerns about valuations and the lack of exits.
The second half of the year was notably slower than the first, with investment falling from $51.7 billion in H1’24 to $43.9 billion in H2’24. A closer look at the results offered some optimism, however; between Q3’24 and Q4’24, global fintech investment rose from $18 billion to $25.9 billion. Both M&A deal value and VC investment also rose quarter-over-quarter, from $7.4 billion to $14.2 billion and from $9.7 billion to $11.2 billion, respectively.
Regionally, the Americas attracted the largest share of fintech investment in 2024—$63.8 billion across 2,267 deals, including $50.7 billion across 1,836 deals in the US. The EMEA region attracted $20.3 billion across 1,465 deals, while the ASPAC region saw $11.4 billion across 896 deals. At a sector level, the payments space attracted the largest share of investment ($31 billion), followed by digital assets and currencies ($9.1 billion), and regtech ($7.4 billion).