I was just sent a press pre-release copy of The Pulse of Fintech , the quarterly global report on Fintech VC trends published jointly by KPMG International and CB Insights. The findings are quite interesting this quarter and show that, after a significant pullback in funding in Q4 2015, mega funding rounds have lifted quarterly investment into VC-backed fintech companies by over 150 percent in the first quarter of 2016.
Key highlights from the Pulse of Fintech include:
North America sees funding bounce back
North America saw both fintech funding and deals rebound following a major drop in Q4 2015, as VC-backed fintech companies raised US$1.8B across 128 deals, an increase of 80 percent in funding quarter-over-quarter. Deal activity to VC-backed fintech companies in North America is on pace to reach a new high in 2016 at the current run rate, as the 128 fintech deals registered over the three-month period was the largest quarterly total since Q2 2015.
Chinese mega-rounds propel Asia fintech funding
Following a drop off in Q4 2015, fintech investment in Asia reversed course in Q1 2016 to hit a new high of US$2.6B. China accounted for $2.4B of Asia fintech funding and 49% of fintech funding across all geographies, primarily as a result of $1B+ funding rounds to JD Finance and Lu.com .
Europe fintech deals rise; no spike in funding
Europe saw VC-backed fintech deals reach a five-quarter high, rising from 37 in Q4 2015 to 47 in Q1 2016. European Fintech funding remained almost level with Q4 2015’s total at US$0.3B. UK funding rounds to WorldRemit and LendInvest pushed UK funding to account for over half of Europe’s fintech funding total.
Corporates participate in over 20 percent of deals for fifth straight quarter
Corporate investors continue to play a large role in the fintech ecosystem, with global deals to VC-backed Fintech companies standing at 24%+ in three of the past five quarters. Of note, Europe saw an upswing in corporate Fintech investment during Q1 2016 as corporate participation in deals to VC-backed fintech companies rose from 8% in Q4 2015 to 21% in Q1 2016.