There was just one fintech unicorn minted in the first quarter

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Global fintech funding totaled $15 billion in the first quarter of this year, growing 55% from the fourth quarter, according to CB Insights’ latest State of Fintech report

While this generally may seem like a win, it’s important to note a few things. First, 2020 and 2021 were unique years where investment in fintech broke records. By comparison, fintech funding amounted to $75.2 billion in all of 2022, down 46% compared with a staggering $131.5 billion raised in 2021. From the numbers for the first quarter, it’s clear that the market is working on a correction. 

Second, of the $15 billion raised during the first quarter of this year, $6.5 billion of that was all Stripe. Without that raise, CB Insights said funding would have amounted to $8.5 billion, or a 12% drop in funding from the fourth quarter of 2022.

And third, if we remove Stripe’s round and stick with the $8.5 billion, when comparing this quarter to first quarters of previous years, funding is the lowest it has been since 2019.

Meanwhile, the number of deals is also down. There were 983 deals made in the first quarter, a decrease from 1,007 in the fourth quarter of 2022 and 1,629 in the first quarter of 2022.

A bright spot in the market was “megarounds,” which are deals valued at $100 million or more. These deals accounted for 61% of total funding in the first quarter, a whopping 179% increase quarter over quarter across 16 deals and a total of $9.2 billion, CB Insights reported. Following Stripe’s deal was Rippling, which raised $500 million in mid-March as Silicon Valley Bank was melting down. Notably, deal count was down, dropping 24% quarter over quarter.

Early-stage funding continued to dominate in fintech, however; for the first quarter, it hit a new high, accounting for 72% of deal share in the three-month period, CB Insights reported. Since 2019, that number has been around 65% and rising to 69% in the first quarter of 2022. 

Though the United States led across all stages during the quarter, it’s worth noting that six of the top 10 fintech seed and angel rounds were invested outside of the U.S. United Kingdom–based Carbonplace, a carbon credit settlement startup, raised a whopping $45 million seed round during the quarter.

Speaking of the U.S., the region grabbed $10.5 billion in overall funding for the first quarter, which is triple the amount of funding from the fourth quarter of 2022, which was $3.5 billion, and coincidentally a five-year low. The number of deals also rebounded from the fourth quarter, up 23% to 434. 

CB Insights notes that excluding Stripe’s round (recall it was $6.5 billion), funding in the U.S. was $4 billion and would have still eclipsed the fourth quarter. Drilling down into deal stage, early-stage deal share in the U.S. increased to 68%, which is a five-year high, according to CB Insights.

Meanwhile, following a steady decrease in funding dollars going into the payments sector, Stripe’s megaround helped turn this around to the tune of a 200% jump to $8.1 billion in the first quarter compared to $2.7 billion in the fourth quarter of 2022. Looking quarter to quarter, it is slightly down from the first quarter of 2022’s $8.3 billion. Meanwhile, the number of deals continued its decline, falling to 161, down from 195 in the fourth quarter. That marked the ninth straight decrease in deal volume, according to CB Insights. The increase in investment dollars was seen most prominently in early-stage deals, which accounted for 74% of the overall deals and a five-year high, up from 66% in 2022.

Other highlights of the report include:

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