KPMG: Fintech funding rebounds in 2025 as exits reopen, crypto rises
After three straight years of shrinking checks, global fintech investment turned the corner in 2025, rising to $116 billion from $95.5 billion in 2024, according to KPMG International’s Pulse of Fintech H2’25. The catch: investors did it with fewer bets. Deal count fell to 4,719, the lowest annual number in eight years, as capital concentrated into fewer, larger, more “prove it” deals.
KPMG: fintech money is flowing again — and crypto was one of 2025’s biggest rebound stories
For crypto and blockchain, the headline is even clearer: KPMG says digital assets attracted $19.1 billion in 2025, up from $11.2 billion a year earlier — its third-highest year on record. In KPMG’s framing, improving market conditions and “increased regulatory clarity” helped bring investors back to the category.
The bigger engine behind the mood shift was liquidity. KPMG says fintech exits surged to $104.4 billion across 486 exits in 2025, a reopening that tends to change investor psychology fast: when exits work again, early-stage risk looks less like a prison sentence.
Bigger checks, fewer deals — and a split market by region
KPMG’s data paints a market that’s moving again, but still picky.
- Americas led with $66.5 billion in fintech investment (up from $55.4B). The U.S. accounted for $56.6 billion, while Brazil more than doubled to $1.9 billion.
- EMEA rose modestly to $29.2 billion. The UK stayed the largest market in the region but fell to $10.96 billion from $13.35B, while France and Germany saw sharp slowdowns.
- Asia-Pacific slipped to $9.3 billion from $11.7B, with KPMG calling out a sharp drop in risk capital deployment even as exits improved.
Under the hood, the mix shifted too: global M&A value rose to $55.4 billion, and venture capital climbed to $56.7 billion, while private equity softened. Corporate venture capital stood out, rising to $29.7 billion even as the number of CVC deals fell — another sign of capital concentrating into higher-conviction bets.
Why KPMG says digital assets bounced
KPMG calls digital assets a “central focus” for fintech investors in 2025 and links the rebound to improving conditions and regulatory clarity, noting the passage of the GENIUS Act in the U.S. in H2’25 as part of that backdrop. It also says momentum strengthened through the year, driven by stablecoin interest, rising participation from traditional institutions and corporates, and a broader mix of VC, M&A and public market activity.
Payments, meanwhile, stayed steady by dollars ($19.2B vs $20.4B in 2024) but saw deal volume fall to a nine-year low — a “fewer, bigger, proven platforms” pattern that matches the broader report.
Why it matters for crypto
- A real funding rebound changes the builder climate. If capital deployed is rising even as deal counts fall, the winners are platforms that can show scale, compliance readiness, and a path to profitability.
- Digital assets are back on the “serious” menu. KPMG’s $19.1B figure and “third-highest year on record” framing signals institutional appetite returning — not necessarily mania, but renewed underwriting.
- Exits reopening is the quiet catalyst. IPO windows and M&A liquidity are what let venture ecosystems breathe; KPMG’s $104.4B exit value suggests a healthier market structure heading into 2026.
- Region matters more than narratives. Americas grew strongly while Asia-Pacific slowed, which impacts where crypto infrastructure and fintech distribution can scale fastest in the near term.
What to watch next
- Whether exit strength holds through 2026. KPMG ties renewed confidence to reopened exit markets — if that window narrows again, funding momentum typically cools fast.
- Regulatory clarity translating into deal flow. KPMG explicitly links digital assets momentum to clearer rules; watch if that becomes more stablecoin and infrastructure M&A/late-stage raises rather than early-stage spray-and-pray.
- AI valuation scrutiny. KPMG flags “growing investor scrutiny” around sustainability of AI valuations as a risk — important if crypto and AI narratives continue to overlap in fundraising.
- Capital concentration in crypto. With fewer deals overall, the next signal is whether crypto funding also concentrates into a handful of regulated, scalable players — or broadens again as risk appetite returns.
Source: KPMG International — “Global fintech investment rebounds in 2025, supported by stronger exit activity”