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Fintech Firms Turn the Corner with 21% Revenue Surge in 2024: Report

Fintech Firms Turn the Corner with 21% Revenue Surge in 2024: Report

Entrepreneur5 days ago

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After years of turbulence and cautious recovery, the global fintech sector is entering a new phase—one defined by scale, innovation, and sustained profitability. A new report from Boston Consulting Group (BCG) and QED Investors titled Fintech's Next Chapter: Scaled Winners and Emerging Disruptors reveals how the industry has emerged from a volatile funding environment stronger, leaner, and poised for continued growth.
The report captures the momentum behind fintech's revival. In 2024, revenues jumped by 21%—a substantial leap from 13% the previous year and over three times the growth rate of traditional financial services. Notably, public fintechs achieved an average EBITDA margin of 16%, with nearly 70% now operating profitably.
"A class of scaled fintechs is coming of age," said Deepak Goyal, Managing Director and Senior Partner at BCG. "Investors are demanding greater maturity, and regulators want more accountability."
These scaled fintechs—defined as companies with more than USD 500 million in annual revenue—now account for about 60% of total industry revenue. This marks a significant shift toward consolidation and performance-driven leadership.
The report highlights standout growth across several fintech sub-sectors:
Deposits : Challenger banks like Nubank, Revolut, and Monzo drove 23% growth.
: Challenger banks like Nubank, Revolut, and Monzo drove 23% growth. Trading and Investment : Revenues rose 21%, led by crypto platforms such as Coinbase and a rebound in equity markets.
: Revenues rose 21%, led by crypto platforms such as Coinbase and a rebound in equity markets. Insurance: Service providers and brokers propelled an impressive 40% revenue increase.
These figures illustrate a broader trend of fintechs outpacing their traditional counterparts in core financial services categories.
Profitability is no longer just a target—it's becoming the standard. EBITDA margins improved from 12% in 2023 to 16% in 2024, a 25% year-over-year gain. In contrast to the previous year, when fewer than half of all public fintechs were profitable, 69% are now in the black.
Meanwhile, agentic AI is set to be the next disruptor, especially in software development, commerce, and personal finance. Early-stage fintechs are often outpacing larger players in AI adoption, signaling a reshaping of competitive dynamics.
Challenges and Optimism
The sector still faces regulatory scrutiny. In 2024, Chime was fined USD 2.5 million for delayed fund returns, while Block incurred an USD 86 million penalty for AML failures. The collapse of Synapse added to industry tension, risking USD 96 million in customer funds. However, late 2024 and early 2025 brought optimism: equity funding in Q1 2025 rose 34%, and revenue multiples increased 10%.
Despite a 13% decline in equity funding in 2024, this was a marked improvement over the 51% plunge in 2023. Fintechs are also more IPO-ready than ever, with 150 privately held firms—such as Stripe and Revolut—sitting on over USD 500 million in equity funding, yet waiting for favorable market conditions.
"It is hard to read the tea leaves on IPOs," said James Loftus, Managing Partner at PayPal Ventures. "Everyone wants the market to open, but tariffs are roiling the market… The best candidates are happy and able to sit on the sidelines until there is more certainty."
Looking Ahead
The report outlines key imperatives:
Fintechs should embed AI deeply, focus on core markets, and pursue strategic M&A.
should embed AI deeply, focus on core markets, and pursue strategic M&A. Investors must target underpenetrated regions like the Middle East and Africa, and promote AI-led, disciplined growth.
must target underpenetrated regions like the Middle East and Africa, and promote AI-led, disciplined growth. Regulators are urged to provide clarity and speed, particularly on AI and digital assets, to avoid stifling innovation.
are urged to provide clarity and speed, particularly on AI and digital assets, to avoid stifling innovation. Banks should forge alliances with fintechs and embrace AI as a strategic differentiator.
Nigel Morris of QED Investors concluded, "Fintechs are growing three times faster than incumbents… It's easy to see why there's an appetite for IPO-ready companies that deliver profitable growth. Fintech is ushering in a new era in financial services."

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After its data was wiped, KiranaPro's co-founder cannot rule out an external hack
After its data was wiped, KiranaPro's co-founder cannot rule out an external hack

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After its data was wiped, KiranaPro's co-founder cannot rule out an external hack

Indian grocery delivery startup KiranaPro's recent data loss story has more holes than Swiss cheese, as the startup remains unclear whether the incident was an internal breach or an external hack. Last week, the Bengaluru-based startup discovered that it could not access its back-end servers and that all its data, including its app code, had been deleted from GitHub. The startup on Friday blamed a former employee for the breach. However, in an interview, KiranaPro co-founder and CEO Deepak Ravindran conceded that the company had not deactivated the employee's account after they departed the company and cannot rule out the possibility of subsequent malicious misuse of their account. 'If we go deeper, we have to do a real forensic investigation. We are going to talk [about] this with our board, the investors, and we are going to get a formal opinion on that also with our legal advisers,' Ravindran told TechCrunch. Earlier on Friday, Ravindran claimed in a post on X that the incident that affected its data was an internal breach. 'After careful investigation, we conclude that this was not a hack. No external party penetrated our ordering or payment systems, exploited vulnerabilities, or bypassed security protocols,' he wrote. The co-founder also explicitly shared a screenshot of a LinkedIn profile of one of KiranaPro's former employees on X on Thursday, alleging that they had deleted the startup's code. (TechCrunch is not sharing the post's link, as the startup has yet to offer concrete proof supporting its position.) '[T]his was an internal data breach. Specifically, it was the result of actions taken by a trusted internal employee who had legitimate access to our systems,' the co-founder wrote in his post on Friday. 'This individual intentionally deleted critical server logs while they were being tested and/or edited, an action that goes directly against our policies, our principles, and the trust we place in our team.' When TechCrunch asked if KiranaPro could rule out whether any third party had maliciously gained access to the former employee's account, Ravindran could not. 'We have to do a complete forensic check on the company. We have to do the entire IP scan. We have to look at where the tracks happened. We have to check the computers, MacBooks, and whatever is used. Everything has to be done. Then we have to spend money … so, that's why we decided not to,' he told TechCrunch. Then what was the basis of Ravindran's allegation? It was a GitHub response, a copy of which he shared with TechCrunch. The response included a username, which Ravindran said was associated with the former employee. 'All we have is the emails that we got from GitHub, stating that [the former employee's username] as an individual is the one who deleted the account. We haven't done the investigation further,' Ravindran told TechCrunch. Former employee's account was never offboarded Launched in late 2024, KiranaPro operates as a buyer app on the Indian government's Open Network for Digital Commerce. The startup allows more than 55,000 customers in 50 cities to purchase groceries from their local shops and nearby supermarkets using its voice-based interface. The company also supports local language inputs, including English, Hindi, Malayalam, and Tamil. Ravindran stated that they decided to call out the former employee based on the company's 'belief system,' as they claim the former employee deleted the data after their sudden termination. However, the startup said it is not aware if there were enough protections on the former employee's devices, such as multi-factor authentication, to restrict malicious third-party access, like malware. The company confirmed it did not remove the employee's access to its data and GitHub account following his departure. 'Employee offboarding was not being handled properly because there was no full-time HR,' KiranaPro's chief technology officer, Saurav Kumar, confirmed to TechCrunch. Company restores AWS account and GitHub data Alongside its code saved in GitHub, KiranaPro also lost access to its Amazon Web Services (AWS) account, which included its customer data and their transaction details. Ravindran told TechCrunch that the GitHub data was restored after getting its backup from one of their employees. The startup also regained access to its AWS account along with its customer data. 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The startup counts Blume Ventures, Unpopular Ventures, and Turbostart among its institutional venture backers, as well as Olympic medalist PV Sindhu and Boston Consulting Group managing director Vikas Taneja among its angel investors. It has 15 employees located in Bengaluru and Kerala.

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