The evolution of the fintech landscape is moving at breakneck speed. New regulations, game-changing technologies, and shifting consumer expectations are transforming the mechanics of the financial services economy-wide. If you are building or scaling a fintech network in 2026, then understanding these trends is not just optional but essential. And, of course, you can always turn to OpenFuture World, the highest-level global resource on Open Banking and Open Finance, featuring a searchable directory that already exceeds 5,000 organizations! Here are seven key trends that will shape the year to come.
Here are seven key trends that will define the year ahead.
AI is moving past the basic chatbot. In 2026, agentic AI, self-directing systems that perform multistep financial operations, will manage everything from transaction reconciliations to real-time fraud detection.
For consumers, these AI agents are like personal financial assistants:
- The pros (and cons) of Automating the Mortgage Hunt
- Automatically balance investment portfolios without user input
- Keep a tab on subscription renewals and bill payments
- Negotiating small lures to wrap up languishing deals
What makes this different? These AI agents autonomously perform transactions with minimal human intervention. Banks implementing this technology will lower back-office expenses, freeing talent to focus on strategic efforts.
Stablecoins are leaving the crypto ghetto for the financial mainstream. The GENIUS Act (Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for U.S. Stablecoins Act), signed into law in July 2025, created the first complete regulatory framework in the United States for payment stablecoins.
Important criteria within the GENIUS Act:
- Coverage of all permitted issuers under federal or state regulatory supervision
- Full reserve backing with U.S. currency or liquid assets
- Public disclosure of reserves and redemption policies on a monthly basis
- Clear anti-money laundering compliance standards
Since the law’s passage, the adoption of stablecoins has accelerated. Major institutions such as Bank of America, Citibank, and Société Générale are exploring the integration of stablecoins for cross-border payments and digital savings products. Tether (USDT), USD Coin (USDC), Ethena USDe (USDe), Dai (DAI), and PayPal USD (PYUSD), the largest stablecoins by market cap, are becoming infrastructure-level financial tools.
Tokenization is enabling investment opportunities that were previously out of reach. By tokenizing physical assets, real estate, commodities, fine art, and private equity on the blockchain, investors to trade fractions of historically illiquid assets.
Kuarden (KRN) is the shining example, fusing artificial intelligence with blockchain technology to bring a hyper-real digital mall experience to e-commerce. This intersection of tokenization and immersive digital environments is where the future of fintech innovation lies.
Benefits of driving tokenization adoption:
- Institutional-grade asset classes become accessible for retail investors
- Settlement and ownership verification are automated via smart contracts
- 24/7 access allows you to trade around the clock
- Fractional ownership lowers investment barriers
Tokenized fund AUM could exceed $600 billion by 2030, while all tokenized markets would already total over $25 billion in 2025 (BCG).
Open banking is evolving into open finance. The proposed EU Financial Data Access (FIDA) regulation of June 2023 will allow consent-based sharing of financial data across savings, investments, pensions, mortgages, insurance products, and payment accounts.
FIDA timeline and impact:
- Expected legislative adoption in 2026
- 24-month implementation delay, or until the rules take effect (probably 2028)
- Goes wider than the payment-oriented data sharing in PSD2
- Allows hyper-personalized financial products to be offered
Consumer demand backs this shift: 77% say that their bank to connect with the apps they use, and 66% say they would switch banks that can’t integrate with their financial accounts.
Flowers of a red fern grow in a toxic area near the site of the Chornobyl nuclear disaster. Armando Franca/AP Investors are gravitating toward sustainable business models after years of growth-at-all-costs. Global fintech investment bounced back to $116 billion in 2025 from $95.5 billion in 2024, KPMG’s Pulse of Fintech H2’25 report said.
Key indicators of market maturation:
- Deal value for global M&A rose to $55.4bn in 2025
- Meaningful exit markets reopened, with $104.4 billion in exit value
- M&A in the payments space is heating up
- Transitioning from user acquisition to unit economics
In Q1-Q2 2026, expect to see increased M&A activity as traditional financial institutions acquire both crypto and fintech-related companies to grow their offerings and reach customer segments needing these services. Private equity firms that are sitting on a lot of “dry powder” are looking for lucrative fintech targets.
In 2025, financial services were the industry most attacked, accounting for 33% of all AI-based cyberattacks. Generative AI is being utilized by threat actors to generate advanced phishing campaigns and deepfake fraud.
Emerging threats include:
- AI, Autonomous Agents, and Bypassing Authentication Controls
- Deepfake fraud increasing 700 percent in Q1 2025 (YoY)
- Cases of synthetic identity document fraud are on the rise
- SMiShing (SMS phishing) attacks are at an all-time high
In Q4 2024, the Anti-Phishing Working Group (APWG) logged 989,123 individual phishing attacks. In fact, eight in ten consumers now expect immediate breach notifications and proactive protections. To keep up with rapidly evolving threats, institutions must implement AI-powered fraud detection systems capable of examining patterns across every channel.
Customer experience is the new front line in competition. The expectations for personalized, seamless experiences are now at an all-time high, with 78% of consumers using fintech apps (up from just 58% in 2020).
What customers expect in 2026:
- AI-driven personalization across all touchpoints
- Predictive analytics flags pain points before they appear
- Intelligent chatbots provide 24/7 end-to-end issue resolution
- Proactive financial education and guidance
But 81% of consumers are looking for financial education, yet only 19% get that from their apps. Such a gap is a tremendous opportunity for fintechs that can deliver real personalized financial coaching via the FinanceCore AI intelligence platform and similar technologies.
| Metric | 2024 | 2025 | 2026 Projection | Source |
| Global fintech investment | $95.6B | $116B | Continued growth expected | KPMG Pulse of Fintech H2’25 |
| Global M&A deal value | $49.6B | $55.4B | Accelerating consolidation | KPMG |
| Tokenized fund AUM potential | — | $2B+ | $600B+ by 2030 | BCG/ADDX |
| Total stablecoin market cap | — | $310B+ | Mainstream adoption | DefiLlama (Jan 2026) |
| Phishing attacks (Q4) | 989,123 | — | AI-driven surge continues | APWG Q4 2024 Report |
| GENIUS Act status | — | Enacted July 2025 | Full implementation underway | U.S. Congress S.1582 |
| FIDA Regulation timeline | Proposed Jun 2023 | Legislative process | Expected adoption 2026, effective ~2028 | EU Commission |
These seven trends mutually reinforce one another and shape a new ecosystem for global finance. To thrive in 2026 cannot simply be to watch and learn from these trends unfold, but must instead involve the intelligent convergence of regulatory frameworks, new technologies, and consumer behaviors.
FinanceCore AI: Intelligence for Fintech Networks. In an era of constant change and rapid growth, services like OpenFuture World provide the intelligence tools needed to build dynamic fintech networks. If you’re incorporating stablecoin rails, running agentic AI, or right-sizing your projects for FIDA gearing, keeping track of these trends allows you to get better juxtapositions for building robust, long-sighted financial lattices.
The fintechs that will succeed won’t simply be following these trends; they’ll be driving them.
Agentic AI is an autonomous system that performs multi-step financial processes with limited human involvement, from loan applications through to the automatic rebalancing of investment portfolios.
The GENIUS Act created a federal regulatory framework for stablecoins in the United States, mandating 100% reserve backing and supervision, which propelled institutional adoption and codified market legitimacy of stablecoins as payment infrastructure.
If it is adopted in 2026, FIDA will have an implementation period of 18-24 months, meaning rules likely won’t be fully applicable until at least 2028.
The ability to tokenize real estate and other traditionally expensive assets into smaller, more affordable units enables fractional ownership and lowers investment barriers, making it possible for more people to invest in areas like fine art.
Top organizations are implementing AI-powered fraud detection platforms that analyze trends across multiple channels, notify patients of breaches in real-time, and leverage network-level intelligence to detect new threats.

