The financial services sector has re‑established itself as one of the most active arenas for global M&A, closing 2025 with 3,944 transactions worth $606.6 billion, marking double‑digit growth in both deal value and volume. This performance positions the industry for a transformative year ahead as we enter 2026.

But beneath the headline figures lies a structural shift: fintech is no longer the insurgent challenger, it is now the strategic conduit through which incumbents modernise, scale and compete.

Incumbents Seek Fintech Partnerships to Drive Efficiency

With banks strengthening their balance sheets and regulatory pressures easing, M&A has increasingly been used to acquire fintech capabilities that accelerate digital transformation. The wave of bank consolidation, exemplified by the acquisitions of Comerica for $10.9B and Cadence Bank for $7.4B, is not just about scale. It is about achieving the operational resilience and technology bandwidth needed to compete with both fintech natives and big‑tech entrants.

Insurers Double Down on Tech‑Enabled Growth

The insurance market saw some of the year’s most strategic transactions, including AIG’s acquisition of a 35% stake in Convex Insurance for $7B and JAB’s $6.6B acquisition of Utmost Life & Pensions. These transactions highlight insurers’ continued migration toward data‑rich, analytics‑driven underwriting models.

This has direct implications for UK‑based providers in Insurtech, RegTech, and AI‑driven risk analytics – a segment where UK firms traditionally excel.

Fintech in 2026: Positioned for Consolidation and Growth

As interest rates fall and capital becomes more accessible, we expect fintech M&A to accelerate across payments, cybersecurity, digital identity, and infrastructure‑as‑a‑service. UK firms, already recognised for their innovation-friendly regulatory environment, are poised to attract both domestic and inbound cross‑border investment.

If you’d like to discuss how we can support you, reach out to Andrew Gordon.