Fintech & Banking Daily

Airwallex $11B, Ripple's Japan Win & Canada Open Banking Phase 1

5 min · 26. juni 2026
episode Airwallex $11B, Ripple's Japan Win & Canada Open Banking Phase 1 cover

Beskrivelse

(00:00:00) Airwallex $11B, Ripple's Japan Win & Canada Open Banking Phase 1 (00:01:18) Ripple RLUSD Japan Approval (00:02:14) Canada Open Banking Phase 1 (00:02:54) Goldman Sachs Backs Taktile AI (00:03:30) Uzbekistan Digital Payments Surge (00:04:01) Key Signals To Watch Today's fintech and banking daily briefing covers five high-signal developments reshaping the global payments and digital finance landscape. Airwallex closes a $320 million round at an $11 billion valuation, with the Australian cross-border B2B payments platform now openly targeting Stripe across its full product suite — cards, payments, and banking infrastructure. The comparison is earned, but so is the scrutiny: a pending AML audit and unresolved data allegations create real regulatory friction ahead. Ripple's RLUSD stablecoin becomes the first major stablecoin to clear Japan's Financial Services Agency, going live on SBI VC Trade with a $1.7 billion market cap. USDT and USDC hold dominant global share but lack FSA classification. The race now is whether RLUSD can embed enterprise settlement habits before MUFG, SMBC, and Mizuho launch their own stablecoins around March 2027. Canada formally enters Phase One of its open banking framework, enabling regulated read-only API data sharing in 2026, with payment initiation and account switching to follow in mid-2027. The framework is deliberate and federally coordinated — but Canada is years behind the UK and Australia, and federal-provincial harmonisation risk is real. Goldman Sachs Growth Equity leads a $110 million Series C into Taktile, an AI credit decisioning and underwriting platform. Goldman leading — not just participating — signals that major banks are treating AI-driven risk infrastructure as a category, not an experiment. Finally, Uzbekistan's digital payment adoption jumped from 39% in 2021 to 71% in 2025, driven by digital ID cutting onboarding from days to seconds — a compelling emerging-market proof point for policy-backed digital infrastructure. A YesWee production. This episode includes AI-generated content.

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49 episoder

episode India Fintech IPO Wave, Ripple's $16T Bet & NY Open Banking Split cover

India Fintech IPO Wave, Ripple's $16T Bet & NY Open Banking Split

(00:00:00) India Fintech IPO Wave, Ripple's $16T Bet & NY Open Banking Split (00:00:46) Ripple's $16 Trillion Payment Gap (00:01:36) Coinbase on Milder Crypto Corrections (00:02:32) India Fintech: CRED and Razorpay IPO (00:03:16) New York Open Banking Diverges from Federal Rules Annual stablecoin settlement volume has crossed forty-six billion dollars — surpassing Visa and PayPal combined. But the real story is the nine billion dollars in organic volume underneath that headline, a gap that tells us stablecoins have reached institutional scale without yet proving equivalent economic depth. That distinction will define how fast the payments narrative matures. Ripple's CEO Brad Garlinghouse is framing XRP as the settlement layer for sixteen trillion dollars in annual cross-border payment volume. Backing that claim is a live US-Mexico stablecoin corridor built on the XRP Ledger through Bitso, a platform with ten million users and two thousand institutional clients. SWIFT and emerging CBDC rails are competing for the same opportunity, making Ripple's execution window real but contested. In India, fintech is making a structural shift from growth capital to exit markets. CRED closed a nine hundred million dollar Series H — the largest fintech raise in Indian history — backed by Meta, whose founder connection adds a strategic layer. Razorpay has filed confidentially for an IPO, and Turtlemint has already listed, though modest oversubscription signals that public market investors are applying genuine valuation discipline. On the regulatory front, New York's proposed open banking bill AB 10640 would extend data-sharing requirements beyond federal CFPB rules — covering small business accounts and carrying ten-thousand-dollar-per-violation penalties. With federal open banking stalled, state-level divergence is accelerating compliance complexity for fintechs operating across jurisdictions. This is Fintech & Banking Daily — sharp, analytical coverage for finance professionals, investors, and fintech founders. A YesWee production. This episode includes AI-generated content.

29. juni 20264 min
episode MiCA Enforcement Begins, HK Stablecoin Window & Ripple's Bank Play | Ep. 1 cover

MiCA Enforcement Begins, HK Stablecoin Window & Ripple's Bank Play | Ep. 1

(00:00:00) MiCA Enforcement Begins, HK Stablecoin Window & Ripple's Bank Play | Ep. 1 (00:00:39) MiCA Enforcement Live, Binance Out (00:01:24) Germany Leads MiCA Licensing (00:02:04) Ripple's Bank Strategy Decoded (00:02:44) GameStop, FINMA AI, Margin Rules (00:03:17) SEC-CFTC Margin Harmonization (00:03:40) Key Signals to Watch MiCA enforcement is now live in the EU, Hong Kong has confirmed its stablecoin timeline, and Ripple is quietly building bank-grade infrastructure — today's episode covers the most consequential regulatory and institutional developments in fintech and banking right now. Starting in Hong Kong, the HKMA has confirmed a mid-to-late 2026 launch window for its stablecoin framework, with two bank-backed issuers already licensed. These aren't crypto-native startups — they're bank-backed institutions, and that distinction matters for credibility and risk assessment. In Europe, July 1st marked the hard end of MiCA's transition period. Two hundred and thirty firms secured CASP licenses; unlicensed platforms can no longer onboard new EU customers. Binance withdrew its Greek application and suspended EU services immediately — its founder CZ's criminal record is a structural disqualifier, not a paperwork problem. Germany has emerged as the leading MiCA licensing jurisdiction, outpacing France through faster, more predictable processing. Ripple's Federal Reserve master account application and trust charter pursuit are primarily designed to support its RLUSD stablecoin — a development that may offer XRP holders less upside than it initially appears. Elsewhere: GameStop's board approved Bitcoin and stablecoin treasury allocation, Switzerland's FINMA deployed generative AI for pre-inspection compliance analysis, and the SEC and CFTC opened a 60-day comment window on cross-product margin harmonization aimed at reducing institutional capital costs. The macro signal across all of it: licensing standards, reserve requirements, and supervisory authority are crystallizing simultaneously in Asia, Europe, and the US. The firms that built for this are ready. The ones that didn't are exiting markets. This episode includes AI-generated content.

I går4 min
episode Meta-CRED, Ripple's MiCA Win & the CLARITY Act's Collapse | Ep. 1 cover

Meta-CRED, Ripple's MiCA Win & the CLARITY Act's Collapse | Ep. 1

(00:00:00) Meta-CRED, Ripple's MiCA Win & the CLARITY Act's Collapse | Ep. 1 (00:01:02) Airwallex T:0 AI Finance Platform (00:01:54) Ripple Luxembourg CASP Approval (00:02:42) CLARITY Act Odds Collapse (00:03:15) TikTok Brazil Fintech Applications (00:03:42) EBA Green Reporting and Watchpoints This episode unpacks the most consequential fintech and banking developments of the week, starting with the $2.3 billion in funding that flowed across twenty-two deals — and why the headline number obscures a striking geographic concentration. Meta's $900 million Series H into CRED at a $4.5 billion valuation is the centrepiece: the company's largest emerging-market fintech anchor, and a clear signal about where the super-app model still has room to run. Airwallex follows with a $320 million Series H at an $11 billion valuation — triple its figure from six months ago — plus the launch of T:0, an AI-native finance platform targeting autonomous bookkeeping and compliance for SMBs. Goldman Sachs Alternatives leading the $110 million Series C into Taktile, an AI-agent platform for bank credit and fraud decisions, underscores that institutional capital is no longer just watching AI infrastructure — it's funding it directly. In Europe, Ripple's preliminary CASP license approval in Luxembourg under MiCA opens a regulatory pathway across thirty EEA countries. The dual-license structure it now holds is rare among non-bank entities and marks a meaningful shift in how crypto-to-fiat rails can operate at scale. Back in the US, the CLARITY Act's passage odds have dropped from 74% to 42% following a Senate procedural standoff over a CBDC-banning provision — with the August recess and a June 30 deadline closing in fast. Also covered: TikTok's formal applications for Brazilian central bank licenses in prepaid accounts and lending, and the EBA's updated green disclosure framework taking effect December 31, 2026. Sharp, analyst-level briefing. No filler. This episode includes AI-generated content.

27. juni 20264 min
episode Airwallex $11B, Ripple's Japan Win & Canada Open Banking Phase 1 cover

Airwallex $11B, Ripple's Japan Win & Canada Open Banking Phase 1

(00:00:00) Airwallex $11B, Ripple's Japan Win & Canada Open Banking Phase 1 (00:01:18) Ripple RLUSD Japan Approval (00:02:14) Canada Open Banking Phase 1 (00:02:54) Goldman Sachs Backs Taktile AI (00:03:30) Uzbekistan Digital Payments Surge (00:04:01) Key Signals To Watch Today's fintech and banking daily briefing covers five high-signal developments reshaping the global payments and digital finance landscape. Airwallex closes a $320 million round at an $11 billion valuation, with the Australian cross-border B2B payments platform now openly targeting Stripe across its full product suite — cards, payments, and banking infrastructure. The comparison is earned, but so is the scrutiny: a pending AML audit and unresolved data allegations create real regulatory friction ahead. Ripple's RLUSD stablecoin becomes the first major stablecoin to clear Japan's Financial Services Agency, going live on SBI VC Trade with a $1.7 billion market cap. USDT and USDC hold dominant global share but lack FSA classification. The race now is whether RLUSD can embed enterprise settlement habits before MUFG, SMBC, and Mizuho launch their own stablecoins around March 2027. Canada formally enters Phase One of its open banking framework, enabling regulated read-only API data sharing in 2026, with payment initiation and account switching to follow in mid-2027. The framework is deliberate and federally coordinated — but Canada is years behind the UK and Australia, and federal-provincial harmonisation risk is real. Goldman Sachs Growth Equity leads a $110 million Series C into Taktile, an AI credit decisioning and underwriting platform. Goldman leading — not just participating — signals that major banks are treating AI-driven risk infrastructure as a category, not an experiment. Finally, Uzbekistan's digital payment adoption jumped from 39% in 2021 to 71% in 2025, driven by digital ID cutting onboarding from days to seconds — a compelling emerging-market proof point for policy-backed digital infrastructure. A YesWee production. This episode includes AI-generated content.

26. juni 20265 min
episode 37 Banks, One Euro Stablecoin: Qivalis, HSBC, BMO & Africa's Payments Race cover

37 Banks, One Euro Stablecoin: Qivalis, HSBC, BMO & Africa's Payments Race

(00:00:00) 37 Banks, One Euro Stablecoin: Qivalis, HSBC, BMO & Africa's Payments Race (00:00:32) Yellow Card Swiss Approval Opens Emerging Markets (00:01:07) HSBC and BMO Enter Tokenized Cash (00:01:55) Africa Cross-Border Payments Battleground (00:02:49) Tokenized Assets Need On-Chain Cash (00:03:20) Regulatory Clarity Drives Deployment Thirty-seven European banks — including BNP Paribas, ING, and UniCredit — have coordinated behind the Qivalis euro stablecoin initiative, signalling that institutions have crossed an internal threshold: stablecoins are now infrastructure, not experiments. This episode breaks down every major move in the stablecoin and tokenized finance space this week. Yellow Card secured Swiss AML supervision, unlocking compliant access to stablecoin rails across fifty-plus emerging markets in Africa and Latin America — removing the compliance friction that had kept institutional treasury teams on the sidelines. HSBC announced a Hong Kong dollar-backed stablecoin for 2026, while the Bank of Montreal is targeting an institutional tokenized cash platform with 24/7 transfers and programmable finance capabilities. On the Africa front, Nairobi-based Daya raised $2.4M pre-seed to consolidate cross-border payment and treasury APIs for African businesses, joining Yellow Card in attacking the same fragmented correspondent banking problem from different angles. Total African blockchain funding recently hit $90.1M, with VC conviction shifting firmly toward B2B infrastructure. The structural driver behind all of it: tokenized assets need on-chain cash to settle against. Ondo Finance's expansion to 200-plus tokenized US stocks on Solana illustrates the demand. Stablecoins are the native liquidity layer that makes tokenization functional. Regulatory tailwinds — the GENIUS Act, MiCA, Hong Kong licensing, and Swiss approvals — have given institutions the certainty to move from pilots to production. The Fintech Regulatory Futures Index, from the Fintech Foundation and GFTN, adds benchmarking infrastructure as the sector scales. Sharp, analytical, and built for finance professionals and fintech founders. This episode includes AI-generated content.

25. juni 20264 min