UK fintech funding reached $7.2billion within the first six months of 2025, down from $7.6billion a 12 months earlier as geopolitical uncertainty and market volatility weighed on deal exercise, KPMG’s newest Pulse of Fintech report reveals.
The full was bolstered by a string of enormous transactions, together with BlackRock’s $3.1billion acquisition of personal markets information group Preqin and $500million raises by each Rapyd Monetary Community and FNZ.
Whereas deal quantity edged as much as 216 transactions, exercise slowed sharply within the second quarter, signalling a extra subdued market than the post-pandemic highs of 2021.
In accordance with KPMG’s Pulse of Fintech report, a bi-annual report on fintech funding developments, the UK nonetheless stays the centre of European fintech funding, with British fintechs attracting extra funding than their counterparts in the remainder of the Europe, Center East and Africa (EMEA) area mixed.
EMEA was the one main area to see fintech funding develop – from $11.1billion throughout 780 offers in H2’24 to $13.7billion throughout 759 offers in H1’25. The biggest EMEA offers outdoors of the UK included the buyout of cloud platform Esker for $1.6billion by the funding group Bridgepoint.
Hannah Dobson, companion and UK head of fintech at KPMG UK, stated: “Though UK fintech funding skilled a slight decline within the first half of the 12 months in comparison with 2024, it’s encouraging to watch the continued resilience of the UK fintech sector regardless of the difficult macroeconomic surroundings.”
“Key initiatives to keep watch over within the UK’s fintech scene within the subsequent few months embrace the FCA’s partnership with Nvidia. The brand new sandbox will permit banks to tinker with computing and AI enterprise software program, primarily for testing and analysis previous to deployment.”
KPMG’s H1’25 highlights
- International fintech funding hit $44.7billion throughout 2,216 offers, the slowest half-year since H1 2020
- International M&A fell from $26.7billion to $19.9billion; PE from $4.4billion to $1.3billion; VC edged up from $23billion to $23.4billion
- EMEA was the one area to develop, from $11.1billion (780 offers) to $13.7billion (759 offers)
- The Americas led total with $27billion (1,093 offers), down from $35.7billion (1,150 offers)
- ASPAC noticed $3.9billion (362 offers), down from $7.3billion (444 offers)
- Crypto drew $8.3billion vs $10.7billion in all of 2024; AI $7.2billion vs $8.9billion; regtech additionally surged forward of 2024’s tempo.