Despite growth in broader venture funding, fintech funding continued to slide in Q1’24, declining 16% quarter-over-quarter (QoQ%) to $7.3B.
Fintech deal volume, on the other hand, increased for the first time since Q1’23.
Based on our deep dive below, here is the TL;DR on the state of fintech:
- Fintech funding falls 16% QoQ to its lowest quarterly level since 2017. Quarterly funding declined to $7.3B in Q1’24, counter to the 11% rebound in the broader venture market. That said, fintech deals increased by 15% QoQ as investors focus on writing smaller checks.
- Average deal size YTD in fintech is $11.1M, down 18% vs. $13.6M in full-year 2023. A dearth of blockbuster deals is driving the decline: In Q1’24, there were just 12 mega-rounds (deals worth $100M or more) representing 26% of total funding — the lowest share since Q2’23, when it hit 23%. Nevertheless, these rare deals can reach a massive scale: the biggest fintech round in the quarter was UK-based challenger bank Monzo‘s $431M Series I deal — worth 6% of the global funding total.
- Mid- and late-stage deals make up 20% of deals YTD, up from 18% in full-year 2023, as investors look to startups with more established track records. So far this year, investors are favoring later-stage companies to a greater degree than the past 2 years. The shift is most pronounced within specific sectors. In payments, for instance, mid- and late-stage deals make up 29% of deals YTD, vs. 21% in 2023. In digital lending, mid- and late-stage deals make up 40% of deals YTD, nearly double the 2023 total.
- Banking startups have a billion-dollar quarter. Banking funding doubled in Q1’24 to reach $1B across 38 deals. Five of the top 10 banking deals in the quarter were late-stage, and 2 were mega-rounds of $100M+. Besides the Series I deal for Monzo, Germany-based banking-as-a-service company Solaris raised a $104M Series F round.
- Europe fintech funding increases 22% QoQ to $2.2B. Europe was the only major global region to see fintech funding increase in Q1’24. The continent also led all regions with 37% of exits in the quarter. Meanwhile, funding declined 11% QoQ to $3.3B in the US, which still led all regions in total fundraising.