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Fintech & Banking Daily

Podcast by YesOui

English

News & politics

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About Fintech & Banking Daily

Fintech & Banking Daily delivers sharp, concise news briefings on the financial technology and banking industries — keeping founders, investors, operators, and financial professionals ahead of the curve every single day. From venture capital raises and regulatory shifts to neobank expansions and payment infrastructure developments, this show distills the stories that matter most in modern finance into digestible, expertly curated episodes you can absorb on your commute or between meetings. Each episode cuts through the noise to cover the funding rounds reshaping the competitive landscape, the Federal Reserve and central bank policies redefining payment access, and the bold international bets being made by challenger banks like Monzo and their peers. Whether you're tracking the next breakout fintech startup, monitoring M&A activity, or simply trying to understand how digital banking is evolving across the US and Europe, Fintech & Banking Daily is your trusted daily source.

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15 episodes

episode Pivot's $40M Raise, Fed Payment Access & Monzo's European Bet artwork

Pivot's $40M Raise, Fed Payment Access & Monzo's European Bet

(00:00:00) Pivot's $40M Raise, Fed Payment Access & Monzo's European Bet (00:00:59) White House Fintech Regulatory Reset (00:01:50) Futu Holdings 31% Collapse (00:02:44) SoFi Acquires Peach Finance (00:03:21) UK Services Contraction & Monzo's European Bet (00:04:31) Treasury Prime's Branch-Free Deposit Play Today's briefing covers six high-signal developments reshaping fintech and banking strategy in 2026. Pivot closed a $40M oversubscribed Series B — bringing total capital to $70M — to scale its agentic AI procurement platform across 25+ countries. The investor thesis isn't about a better procurement tool; it's a direct bet that native AI-first architecture defeats legacy vendors like SAP and Coupa who are retrofitting AI onto decade-old codebases. The White House issued an executive order directing federal regulators to review fintech rules within 90 days, with the Fed specifically tasked to assess whether fintech firms should get direct access to Reserve payment accounts. A 90-day review doesn't guarantee access — but it makes the conversation official policy. Futu Holdings crashed 31% after Chinese regulators imposed a $1.85B penalty for unlicensed mainland securities activity. J.P. Morgan cut its price target from $300 to $87, a gap that reveals how badly analysts had underweighted geopolitical tail risk in dual-jurisdiction fintechs. SoFi acquired Peach Finance, a loan-servicing SaaS platform, adding a critical layer to its Galileo and Technisys infrastructure stack — further evidence of SoFi's strategic pivot toward enterprise infrastructure-as-a-service. In Europe, UK services posted one of its sharpest contractions in 13 years, threatening fintechs with SME lending exposure. Meanwhile, Monzo reported £1.7B in revenue and record profitability — then signalled a European expansion push into markets where 80% of consumers plan to cut spending. Finally, Treasury Prime launched Prime Cash, unlocking cash deposits at 90,000+ retail locations including Walmart and CVS — effectively decoupling deposit acquisition from physical branch networks entirely. This episode includes AI-generated content.

Yesterday - 5 min
episode Stablecoins Hit $322B, Moody's Rating Framework & the CBDC Quiet Track artwork

Stablecoins Hit $322B, Moody's Rating Framework & the CBDC Quiet Track

(00:00:00) Stablecoins Hit $322B, Moody's Rating Framework & the CBDC Quiet Track (00:00:37) Citi's $4T Forecast and Moody's Rating Move (00:01:32) U.S. CBDC Work Continues Covertly (00:02:18) Crypto Exchange Bifurcation Confirmed (00:02:54) Ripple's Institutional Puzzle (00:03:18) What to Watch Next Stablecoin supply has crossed $322 billion, and the growth engine has fundamentally shifted — from speculative crypto trading to payments infrastructure adopted by banks, fintechs, and corporate treasuries. Stripe, Brex, and Nium all launched stablecoin payment products in May 2026, signalling that this is no longer a crypto story. It's a structural payments story. Citi now forecasts stablecoin supply reaching between $1.9 trillion and $4 trillion by 2030, underpinned by regulatory clarity from the GENIUS Act and the CLARITY Act. Moody's this week launched the first dedicated stablecoin rating methodology, evaluating reserve quality and liquidity — a move that draws a clear line between experimental asset class and investable one. When Moody's builds a framework, institutional capital follows. Meanwhile, the U.S. CBDC picture is more nuanced than the headlines suggest. While the Trump administration publicly opposes a retail CBDC, former CFTC chair Timothy Massad has revealed that the U.S. is quietly engaged in Project Agora — a multilateral wholesale settlement experiment that keeps Washington inside the infrastructure being built for global cross-border payments. Elsewhere, crypto exchange volume data confirms a structural bifurcation: retail volume fell to $5.6 trillion in February 2026 while CME crypto futures surged 47% year-on-year. And Ripple's institutional partnerships with Santander, PNC, and Standard Chartered validate its rails — but XRP's price isn't moving until the SEC lawsuit resolves. This episode covers the gap between headline stablecoin numbers and the proof points that will determine whether institutional adoption holds at scale. This episode includes AI-generated content.

22 May 2026 - 4 min
episode OCC Charter Race, CBDC Paradox & Rising Mortgage Rates artwork

OCC Charter Race, CBDC Paradox & Rising Mortgage Rates

(00:00:00) OCC Charter Race, CBDC Paradox & Rising Mortgage Rates (00:01:03) Synapse Fallout Drives Charter Race (00:01:35) Trump EO Opens Regulatory Path (00:02:13) CBDC Paradox: Ban vs. Project Agorá (00:03:08) Mortgage Rates and Lending Outlook The biggest story in fintech right now isn't a funding round — it's a charter. Mercury's $220M raise at a 49% valuation step-up is being driven by conditional OCC approval, signalling that mature fintechs are now racing toward federal bank charters as a strategic imperative. Today's episode unpacks why the Synapse collapse in 2024 was the catalyst, and what Mercury's path to full bank status means for partner-bank dependency across the industry. We also examine the White House executive order directing the Fed and other regulators to review access barriers blocking fintech competition — and why broad policy language doesn't guarantee cleared runways. Implementation details remain undefined, and the Fed retains meaningful discretion. The sharpest contradiction in today's briefing is the US CBDC paradox. The Trump administration has publicly opposed a domestic retail digital dollar. Simultaneously, the Fed is participating in Project Agorá — a BIS-coordinated wholesale tokenisation initiative alongside the Bank of England, ECB, and Bank of Japan. A former CFTC chair disclosed the participation. Wholesale settlement rails and retail CBDC are being treated as separate policy questions. That distinction may not hold. Finally, the 30-year fixed mortgage rate has climbed to 6.5%, its highest since August 2025 — a direct headwind for any fintech moving into balance-sheet lending post-charter. Three threads to watch: Mercury's OCC timeline, how the Fed interprets the fintech executive order, and whether Project Agorá becomes a political liability. This episode is essential listening for fintech founders, banking investors, and anyone tracking regulatory strategy in financial services. This episode includes AI-generated content.

21 May 2026 - 4 min
episode Crypto at 10%, India's e₹ Scale & Agentic AI's 2026 Inflection artwork

Crypto at 10%, India's e₹ Scale & Agentic AI's 2026 Inflection

(00:00:00) Crypto at 10%, India's e₹ Scale & Agentic AI's 2026 Inflection (00:00:38) Unbanked Americans Leading Payment Use (00:01:15) Banks Treating Crypto as Standalone Business (00:01:52) India e₹ Crosses ₹34,000 Crore (00:02:40) EU Digital Identity and 2026 AI Shift (00:03:26) Private Markets and Closing Signals New Federal Reserve survey data puts crypto usage among American adults at ten percent — below the 2021 peak of twelve percent, and dominated by speculation rather than payments. Only two percent of adults used crypto to transact, while unbanked Americans did so at three times the rate of banked peers, exposing a structural gap traditional finance has failed to close. On the institutional side, banks are now treating crypto as a dedicated profit-and-loss line rather than an innovation experiment — a language shift that signals operational commitment and marks a new phase of mainstream integration. India's digital rupee crossed thirty-four thousand crore rupees in cumulative transactions by March 2025, distinguishing itself from UPI as sovereign currency held directly in a digital wallet with no intermediary — a meaningful CBDC milestone with global implications for remittances and financial inclusion. The EU's digital identity framework arrives in 2026, set to fundamentally reshape onboarding and payment authentication across financial services. Meanwhile, seventy fintech leaders converge on the same forecast: agentic AI moves into revenue-critical banking workflows in 2026 — executing core tasks, not just assisting decisions. Finally, European fintech Bunch closed a €30.1 million Series B targeting private markets infrastructure — fund lifecycle management, capital calls, compliance automation — in a sector projected to reach thirty-two trillion dollars in AUM by 2030 but still running on spreadsheet-era tooling. The throughline: adoption is real, but the infrastructure to support it at scale is still being built. Watch the infrastructure layer. This episode includes AI-generated content.

20 May 2026 - 4 min
episode TRIO's Regional Outage, T+0's Liquidity Math & ECB's Fragmentation Fix artwork

TRIO's Regional Outage, T+0's Liquidity Math & ECB's Fragmentation Fix

(00:00:00) TRIO's Regional Outage, T+0's Liquidity Math & ECB's Fragmentation Fix (00:01:19) T+0 Settlement Impossible Math (00:02:18) ECB Rejects Deregulation Case (00:03:10) Mortgage Rates Hit Year High (00:03:42) Key Watchpoints A routine security patch on May 18 took down TRIO — Harris Local Government's payment platform — across 24 Maine municipalities for most of a working day. Residents couldn't pay taxes. Clerks couldn't process registrations. It's not a cyberattack story. It's an architecture story: when dozens of local governments share a single vendor on shared infrastructure, one maintenance window becomes a regional outage. This episode opens with that quiet fragility and what it reveals about local government fintech. From municipal infrastructure to market infrastructure: the U.S. T+0 settlement debate is intensifying, and the math is uncomfortable. Moving from T+1 to real-time settlement could increase liquidity demands tenfold, gutting the netting efficiency that clearinghouses depend on. Smaller brokers and retail platforms absorb the most friction. Cross-border FX settlement remains unresolved. End-of-day T+0 is emerging as an interim compromise — but it isn't a solution. In Europe, ECB Supervisory Board member Patrick Montagner made a pointed argument on May 18: European banks aren't uncompetitive because of over-regulation — they're uncompetitive because of fragmentation across 27 national frameworks. Completing the banking union, not loosening rules, is his prescription. Meanwhile, U.S. mortgage APRs climbed back above six percent as the 10-year Treasury yield broke 4.5%, putting fresh pressure on homebuyers and lender volumes alike. The thread connecting all four stories: readiness gaps between ambition and infrastructure, whether at the municipal, market, regulatory, or monetary level. This episode includes AI-generated content.

19 May 2026 - 4 min
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