a16z Podcast - The Rise, Fall & Reset of The Fintech Industry
Episode Date: December 19, 2025Fintech went from a full-blown surge to a near standstill in just two years. At its peak, about 25 percent of all venture dollars were pouring into the category. By late 2022, that number had collapse...d to almost zero. In this conversation, a16z General Partner David Haber and Plaid cofounder and CEO Zach Perret unpack what actually happened during that cycle and why the market is heating up again.We explore how the industry moved from the explosive growth of 2020 and 2021 into a deep freeze, and why we are now seeing real momentum return. We also dig into the forces reshaping fintech today: AI’s outsized impact on fraud and underwriting, incumbents finally embracing external software, the renewed importance of deposits, and the rise of embedded finance across entirely new categories.Zach shares how Plaid has navigated these shifts, what the company is building now, and how he sees the next phase of fintech taking shape. Resources:Find Zach on X: https://x.com/zachperretFind David on X: https://x.com/dhaber Stay Updated:If you enjoyed this episode, be sure to like, subscribe, and share with your friends!Find a16z on X: https://twitter.com/a16zFind a16z on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/a16zListen to the a16z Podcast on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5bC65RDvs3oxnLyqqvkUYXListen to the a16z Podcast on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/a16z-podcast/id842818711Please note that the content here is for informational purposes only; should NOT be taken as legal, business, tax, or investment advice or be used to evaluate any investment or security; and is not directed at any investors or potential investors in any a16z fund. a16z and its affiliates may maintain investments in the companies discussed. For more details please see http://a16z.com/disclosures. Stay Updated:Find a16z on XFind a16z on LinkedInListen to the a16z Show on SpotifyListen to the a16z Show on Apple PodcastsFollow our host: https://twitter.com/eriktorenberg Please note that the content here is for informational purposes only; should NOT be taken as legal, business, tax, or investment advice or be used to evaluate any investment or security; and is not directed at any investors or potential investors in any a16z fund. a16z and its affiliates may maintain investments in the companies discussed. For more details please see a16z.com/disclosures. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
2018, 2019 in Fintech was late spring.
You get into 2020 and COVID,
and that was utter insanity of a story.
Like 25% of all venture dollars in that period
went into Fintech, Richard.
Wow, 25%.
The stat after that is not a good stat,
which is starting in like the second half of 2022,
like basically zero percent of venture dollars.
That's the drought maybe.
Yeah, yeah.
Fintech winter was the second half of 2022.
Most of 23 and 24 things started to thaw a little bit.
And like now we're very much back in the spring.
It turns out the biggest use case for AI is fraudsters committing fraud against financial services companies.
Financial fraud is growing at like 18 to 20% a year, which is insane.
And it's already a huge market.
I mean, the cattle win long term, but the mouse is winning right now.
At the peak of the boom, roughly 25% of all venture dollars were flowing into fintem.
Two years later, that number was close to zero.
Today, with A16Z general partner David Haber and Zach Perrae, co-founder and CEO of Plaid,
we trace what happened between those extremes and why the market is heating up again.
We look back at how the industry moved through its boom and bus cycle
from the explosive growth of 2020 and 2021 to the freeze that followed,
and where things stand now as activity returns.
We dig into the biggest forces shaping fintech today.
AI's impact on fraud and underwriting,
the shift towards deposits and full-sack financial products,
incumbents finally adopting outside software and embedded finance showing up far beyond traditional banking.
Zach, David, we did this podcast, I believe, seven years ago.
And it's great to have the gang back together.
Thanks for joining.
Thank you for having us.
Great to be here.
Of course, a lot has happened since the last conversation in our personal lives.
And a lot has happened in FinTech more broadly.
I was listening to the episode that we did the last time we spoke,
and we were talking about what has changed in FinTech from early 2010s to just before 2020.
And I'm curious if we could just sort of check in or reflect back since the last time we spoke to now,
would have been some of the major themes in FinTech.
Catch us up if someone was in a coma
after listening to the last episode
and just woke up and said,
hey, what's changed in FinTech?
What would we say?
Let's see.
So last time we talked to was called it 2018, 2019.
Is that right?
Yes.
Yeah.
So let's see.
A lot.
There's been like a bunch of different areas
or like maybe we can think of it as like almost seasons in some sense.
2018, 2019 in FinTech was I guess kind of late spring.
A lot of really good growth.
Like the industry had a name.
The name probably came about.
I actually think that, David, you created the name.
But no one will give you credit, but I will give you credit.
I think you created the name in, like, 2015.
But we now had a name for this industry.
We had gone past, like, oh, some people are maybe building financial services products to, like, it is an industry,
and there are a lot of things being built.
We started to see the million flowers bloom, to really overextend this analogy.
The million flowers bloom from, call it, like, 2014, 2015, up until 2019, 2020.
Like, zillions of first time, hey, can I take this thing outside of.
of a physical bank branch and deliver it to a consumer digitally.
So you saw applications like Robin Hood come up and grow incredibly well.
You see all sorts of neobank, neobank for X or Y or Z submarket.
Those were everywhere.
You saw crypto, like the first crypto apps really start to emerge and grow a lot.
And then kind of from 2019, you get into 2020 and COVID.
And that was just utter insanity of a story.
The first few months of 2020 were totally normal.
Then you get into early COVID where everything froze basically every business.
kind of locked up, including all the fintech companies. But within two, two and a half months,
you then had this total inversion of fintech. So you went from late spring to like big
EDM pumping summer really fast. Like the edm music turned on very loudly, very quickly.
So you just had this insane growth period for fintech from kind of mid-2020 through kind of like
the end of 2021 and even into early 2022. And yes, a lot of new companies formed. But every
investor, whether venture or public markets or whatever it was, wanted to push.
money into fintech and so you had just this huge boom in funding tons of new stuff grew
it was like really fun and very chaotic time honestly a hard time to manage because the feature
chase the things that we had to build it were going so rapidly i think like 25% of all venture
dollars in that period went into fintech which is what i didn't say 25% it's a crazy stat
actually i think it's a great stat the stat after that is not a good stat which is starting in like
the second half of 2022 like basically zero percent of venture dollars went into the drought maybe
yeah yeah so summer went into a very very short fall so that was kind of like mid-20s
22 and then immediately into winter and FinTech winter was the second half of 2022 most of
23 and 24 things started to thaw a little bit and like now we're very much back in the spring
different format but it's been a fun cycle of the seasons totally I think even to describe maybe
what drove some of the seasons the rate cycle was a big part of that as like a from like a macro
perspective having very low rates you know kind of drove zero obviously not unique to fintech but a lot
of technology broadly, but certainly a lot of lending volume in the space grew massively
in those periods. The one benefit that I think has shown up more recently in FinTech in the
thought period is that rates went up, and it sort of shifted the mix of revenues for many
of these fintech companies from lending-driven kind of origination-oriented stuff to deposits.
So many of these fintic companies decided, I forget the exact timing, but to go kind of full
stack. So you saw fintic companies like, So-Fi, you know, buy banks, lending club, I think
Square got an ILC charter, Robin Hood,
Mercury, many of these companies are generating very significant percentages of their revenue and
profits today from deposit flows as rates have gone up. And so that I think has helped thaw the
market to some degree more recently. Usually, yeah. In 2018, 2019, FinTech was a startup industry.
Having gone through this entire cycle, yeah, some ups, some downs, but a lot of maturation,
a lot of expansion. We've ended now with FinTech is, in my opinion, synonymous with financial
services. And it goes beyond just financial services as well. So you've seen a few themes
emerge. One thing that we said for a long time that Andreessen Horvus also likes to say is that every
company's fintech company. And that was kind of quite common from 2018 onward. Now you see
the emergence of embedded finance. So some apply customers are like Ford and John Deere and these
companies that like, yes, they do have captive financial services embedded within them, but you do
not think of them as financial services companies or large billers or it's expanded quite
a lot. And then you see the banks themselves, historically they said, oh, we need to be fintech
companies too. Now they're saying we are the biggest fintech companies. Like we invest heavily
in technology. And so you've seen this startup industry now become mainstream and the firmament
of financial services, but also powering experiences well beyond financial services.
Let's go deeper into where we are today and where we're going, given that we're kind of
in an exciting period. Like, is it still early in terms of a lot of things to be built and some
spaces you're excited about. Maybe Zach, you take the person that. Platt ourselves
have gone through a few phases, and we're lucky that we have this really broad view of what's
happening in fintech. I'm going to keep calling it fintech, but at this point, realize that I mean
financial services plus plus. So we have this really broad view of what's going on in fintech.
And like the things that we're seeing today are very different and much more varied than
they were before. So V1 of plaid was how do we create access for everyone? And I would say
largely the fintech industry was focused on the same thing.
So instead of making you walk into a bank branch to open a bank account,
how can you open a bank account on your mobile app?
Instead of making you carry money and go to an exchange,
when you're trying to cross a border,
how can we create a digital way to do remittances
so you can actually move money across a border a little bit more easily
and apply that across kind of every subset,
basically every product that banks were building at the time.
We've solved the access problem.
Not completely, not in every little niche,
but for the most part, we as a collective industry
have solved the access problem. So I grew up in a small town, only one bank in our town.
And if you didn't happen to be a member of that bank, you couldn't get a loan easily.
Now, if you live in that same town, you just go online. You apply for a mortgage and you
get 30 mortgage offers in an hour where you can do it with Rocket and be done in five minutes.
And these are awesome experiences. That said, what we've done is we've taken traditional financial
services and we've made it digital. We haven't necessarily made it excellent. That's like the next
horizon for us. And so a lot of things that we've been investing in now are things like credit
scoring. How do we make credit scoring more logical in something that a consumer can understand?
If you get a new job and your income goes up, but your expenses don't go up, you were a better
loan risk. However, that doesn't show up in your credit file for like many, many years because
your credit file is a long history of your repayments. It's not necessarily indicative of
your free cash flow. And so that is the next horizon that a lot of the fintech companies that
I'm seeing are starting to solve. So that's kind of one big area. It's kind of solving those
endemic problems that are long-lasting, things like fraud, things like credit scoring, so
and so forth. The second is making financial services really easily available in places that you might not have otherwise thought it to be. So putting BNPL on kind of everything. Yeah. Or issuing a card kind of everywhere or issuing a wallet, kind of everywhere. And so now we're entering this like FinTech is everywhere. Not every company is a fintech company, but like every consumer is surrounded by fintech and all the places they might want to go. And the future horizons are always looking at the next few things that are happening. We look at AI and agentic financial services. And right now it's mostly high.
been people talking about it. And there are a few interesting use cases, but fast forward
two years. And the way that you get a mortgage is going to be talking to your AI application
because that is just the most efficient fastest way to do it. So that's been a fascinating one
to watch. And then seeing what's going on with Stables is, of course, fascinating as well. So
lots more to come. On that note, is crypto basically just Pintech? Or, you know, people said that
is the new version of the new internet, maybe hopefully it still happens. But in terms of where it is
right now, is it mostly just a subset of fintech? Well, David, you're an investor.
so you probably know better than me, my take is
sometimes. Ultimately, I don't think that
consumers change all that
much over time. And so the
kind of things that a consumer would want to
do five years ago are similar
to the kinds of things that they might want to do
today, but the form factor in which they can
do it is very different.
So, you know, five years ago
a consumer might want to speculate. And
you can speculate on gold, you can speculate on a few
of these other things. And Bitcoin and other
coins made it very simple for a consumer
to speculate. So great, you can pull up an app, you can speculate on things. Speculation
continues. The form factor has changed. Another thing that consumers like to do is make
predictions. So, you know, in the past, you might make a bet with some friends. Now you
might go on CalShare Polymarket and, you know, enter prediction markets, or you might do
that via Robin Hood or whatever it is. Other things that consumers like to do are like, you know,
spend money, save, invest, so and so forth. And inasmuch as consumer behavior doesn't change,
is a question of like how and where does crypto and fintech
fit into the existing set of consumer behaviors.
So I think if you look at, again, what a bank does,
like they're roughly tailored to what consumers want.
Consumers want to save money, invest, get loans, so and so forth.
And I think the wisest product development strategy
is to kind of like take the things that consumers already do
and just like make them newer, easier, more accessible, so on and so forth.
And so I suspect that there will be a convergence of one side of crypto
and core financial services be that exchanging, you know, like checking accounts with dollars in them
for checking accounts with USDC in them, wallets with USDC in them, or similar.
Like I think there's a convergence that will likely happen there.
But then also crypto does some crazy out there stuff and really pushes the balance on innovation.
And like, I'm not sure that that's necessarily going to end up merging with banks, but who knows?
Totally.
Yeah, I mean, I totally agree with what Zach was saying.
I think part of it is, you know,
culture, right, and how people, to Zach's point, you know, want to interact with financial
services. I think part of this has been driven from a regulatory perspective. And I think maybe
the more meta theme, as I've sort of watched FinTech evolve, and I think this is permeating
into crypto is just how the large incumbent financial institutions are embracing this innovation
and technology writ large. I think a lot of the, you know, I'd defer to my, you know,
crypto colleagues who are much deeper in this space than I am, a lot of the enthusiasm, I would
say here is about, you know, the existing kind of financial system, adopting.
things like stable coins or
maybe even tokenizing kind of real world
world assets and
I think that's different
from a lot of the more frontier stuff
that I think the team had talked about internally
which was kind of more purely decentralized
and kind of owning the internet
but I think for crypto to go very mainstream
and kind of plug into the broader financial system
that probably is and will continue to happen
with Zach and the team had planned
done over the last
14 years 13 years
is remarkable
I mean, you know, you, you know, from my vantage point, like, you won the hearts and minds of the developer community.
You built this sort of foundational infrastructure that really catalyzed, like, you know, I can't take credit for creating the fintech term.
You, like, created the enabling infrastructure to, like, create the industry in many ways.
You know, now have, I don't know, hundreds of millions of accounts, you know, connected.
And to your point, now bringing kind of this whole ecosystem of kind of value-added services in analytics, you know, to make financial products better.
And I think while we saw different seasons kind of over that period, you know, hay fever and long winters and, you know, euphoria in some moments, you know, many of these companies are now bigger than ever.
I mean, Robin Hood is now, I don't know, a hundred billion dollar public company.
You know, I looked up so-fi stock price.
You know, there are $35 billion public company.
A firm is a $20 billion company.
Like these are outcomes that you couldn't even imagine.
Revolut.
Yeah, I mean, Revolut, $75 billion.
dollars, you know, or for new investors. And that phenomenon is not just U.S. centric to that point.
It's become a global one. I mean, New Bank, you know, $100 billion, you know, company, you know,
in Brazil, you know, my good friend, Pierre Paulo, who runs Walla in Argentina, you know,
Colombia, Mexico. You know, so these companies have worked and they've kind of proliferated
and it brought access of financial products, you know, everywhere. And I think that trend will continue.
You know, I think while they started often with point solutions and they kind of perfected whatever their wedge product was, you know, many of them have now re-bundled, right?
They want to become kind of the full, you know, financial picture for their, for their customers, whether that's their cards or accounts or lending.
Again, many of them have gone full stack and actually bought banks and actually hold deposits and are generating significant revenue, you know, from that float.
I think the other meta theme
which has been
interesting and I think
it's accelerating now with AI
is just, again,
the posture of a lot of the
incumbent financial institutions
to fintech and technology broadly.
You know, I saw this kind of firsthand
certainly, you know, as an investor back at Spark,
as a founder, and then inside of Goldman,
just even their own sort of evolution
and posture to technology,
you know,
for a long time, many of these institutions, like,
if the technology wasn't built there,
they weren't interested.
I mean, Goldman had literally created their own email client.
Like, they didn't operate on Outlook or on Gmail.
They had this thing called Orbit.
I don't know why Goldman Sachs needs to create their own email client,
but, you know, that was, like, a window
into the psychology from a technology perspective.
Don't they still use, like, SECDB internally?
Like, they have their own database that they built?
That makes more sense to me because it was, like,
a centralized risk system for managing all their trades.
But Outlook equivalents, like, makes no sense.
You know, then I think there was this period where, you know,
many of the large institutions were like,
we want to be the fintech companies ourselves.
And, you know, Goldman went very aggressively into Marcus and,
and others followed suit.
I think there's a bit of a humbling that has happened.
You know, maybe I'm using them as one lens.
But more broadly, I think the positive impact of that experience
made them more open to adopting the best technology that exists in the market.
and no longer are building everything in-house.
And so a lot of where I've been spending time
the past several years has been in, you know,
fintech companies that lead with software
that, you know, ideally have the potential
for a network effect
and are selling into these financial,
you know, larger financial institutions
and solving, you know, real workload challenges for them.
And I think we're at this interesting moment
where because the software itself
can actually do the work, you know, with AI,
there's sort of this bottoms up momentum
and top-down pressure that's happening
that I think is accelerating this cultural change.
You know, many of these institutions
are beginning to adopt products like Cursor
or, you know, even GitHub co-pilot
or a broader ecosystem of kind of AI products
in their employee base
and people are seeing the productivity gains.
And then unlike, I think, prior periods
of kind of product cycle or platform shifts,
if you were the CEO of a big bank
and you said, you know, do I need to begin the cloud?
Like, that was sort of an esoteric
question. Now it's like any CEO, any board member can plug a prompt into one of these models
and sort of intuitively understand the impact that it could have on their business. And so I think
that's broadening the aperture, at least from my advantage point, of what fintech is. And it's
really, I think, to your point, just financial services. And I think software in large part
sold into financial services as well. Yeah. And David, see more about sort of that, that change
around when, you know, it went from 25% to, you know, is going to less than that.
what was changing in these businesses that that caused that you know you mentioned that sort of
the macro environment but is there anything else we could learn from it and and more around now
where are you particularly excited to to invest or what are the sort of different you know sort
sub spaces that you're you know looking at are excited to I think 2021 period was sort of wild for
lots of reasons I think you know financial services is and remains obviously one of the
biggest parts of our global economy and so I think people you know often
get over-excited maybe by Tam, you know, and so every venture firm created a fintech
team, you know, was deploying a lot of capital, you know, to that market, you know,
and again, many of these companies have continued to succeed, but I think it was probably
too much euphoria going into that space relative to the amount of dollars.
No, no, I think it was the exact right amount of euphoria, just the pullback afterwards.
Exactly, exactly. You know, again, part of that was that companies, you know, when rates are zero,
lend money and grow very quickly, and there's a lot of, you know, margin to capture there.
I think when rates go up, your cost of capital goes up and that margin, you know, shrinks.
And there's a natural ceiling on borrowing that people, you know, both from a regulatory perspective
and a kind of consumer appetite perspective.
So the business model, a lot of on the lending side, I think, you know, kind of compressed.
But you also have to look at, like, the underlying growth rates of these apps were insane.
Totally.
Like, you look at the number of consumers that were, you know, signing up to invest or signing up to take a loan
or signing up to buy a Bitcoin or whatever it was.
Totally.
Like, we just looked at the charts
and, like, you know,
if the app was growing at, what, 25% a month,
it was actually a great venture investment.
I mean, yes, you might know that the music at some point
is going to slow down or stop,
but 25% a month's growth is insane.
Totally.
Yeah, totally.
I mean, and this was like stimulus,
and there was a lot of...
Helicopter money everywhere.
Yeah, there were a lot of reasons
they were growing that fast.
100%.
And look, I think, like, from a, I don't know,
industry health perspective, like I think things have normalized, but the companies continue to
grow and succeed. I mean, again, now they're, you know, bigger than they've ever been.
The great ones. There was a washout. And there were a lot of fintech companies that died or shut
down in the second half of 22, in the first half of 23. There were a lot that, you know,
kind of went sideways for quite a while. And a lot of lenders especially who just like basically
closed up shop or merge or things like that. But the ones that succeeded,
coming out of it, across all of the fintech,
they were much, much stronger for it.
So as you said, like,
if you started off with a neobank
and all they did was have a checking account
and a savings account and maybe a card,
well, in this period,
if they wanted to survive,
they needed to build the lending side of their offering.
And so, you know, they expanded there
or build the investment side of their offering,
so they expanded there.
And so now you come out with these,
like, much more full-fledged,
like long-lasting companies.
So the winners became even more so the winners.
And, yeah, there was an unfortunate number of companies that also didn't make it totally.
David, I'm curious how you, or how we look at the sort of investable universe or sort of divide.
Is it, you know, that there's a certain type of form factors and each region is going to have their new banks, so to speak,
or is it, you know, buy sort of form factor or value prop to the, how do we think about the universe and how do we map it?
You know, it's been interesting.
I mean, I would say from our vantage point,
we haven't made as many consumer fintech investments in recent years
as we have historic.
I think part of that is just, it's more expensive to acquire customers
and hit the kind of scale you need to really be in a kind of venture scale outcomes.
And I think that's a function of, you know, just, you know,
consumer acquisition channels getting more expensive.
And some of these companies starting early and it was easier to acquire
and then build massive LTV with their existing customer bases.
That does change around the world.
I think, you know, in some markets, people were entering the formal financial economy
for the first time.
And so offering a fee-free, mobile first, you know, bank account and a debit card, you know,
literally gave them access to, you know, e-commerce and things like Netflix and Spotify and Amazon
for the very first time.
Credit doesn't exist, you know, equally in every market around the world, nor do credit
bureaus and credit data.
So there's, I think, still, you know, tons of interesting kind of macro opportunity.
from a financial product perspective, I think, especially in emerging economies, I think AI could be an interesting, you know, kind of catalyst for a new resurgence of consumer fintech. I mean, there's always been this promise of, you know, kind of self-driving money or, you know, PFMs that actually do the work for you and help you make, you know, not just give you advice, but actually, you know, help you earn, you know, save and spend better. And I think, like, we've yet to see as many of those companies today, but I think there's
the technology might be ripe.
I'm curious if you're seeing this, you know, on your side,
like to actually deliver on that promise.
Yeah.
You know, it's funny.
When we think about prospective apps, like, you know,
the app that I wish that existed,
you know, I wish that there was a self-driving money app
that I could just say, hey, you know,
my paycheck goes in here, like, you know,
sweep enough money into my checking account
so that I can pay my daily expenses
but put all the rest into this, like, high-yield savings account
and invest this percent of it in the market.
And, you know, I wish that this thing existed.
I don't actually know
that that's necessarily
a very good app to build
because I'm a weird power user
I have insane trust
in FinTech companies
to do all this stuff for me
like I understand
all the actions
that the agent would take
and I have
enough background in the space
that like the actions
seem logical to me
but if I gave that to my mom
she'd be like
I always my buddy
what's going on
like I don't trust this thing
like wait why did it move buddy
over there
I have all these questions
and so
you know I
I'm not sure
that I'm necessarily the best of this.
Like, so I have all these visions of like the, the prospective apps that should exist out there.
But then, you know, for us as Plaid and in a lot of senses for you as an investor, like, certainly
for us as Plaid, like, our job is like we need to build the platform and then figure out what
emergent behavior starts to exist on it and then go optimize for that emergent behavior
as, as new interesting companies start to emerge.
And so that's how we think of our job.
So, like, our job as it relates to AI is like,
let's build tools that allow consumers safely
to link their data with agents.
Then let's build tools that allow those agents
to take the proper actions,
be that just analyzing data
or be that actually moving money or something else.
Let's build tools that allow those agents
to take those actions.
And then let's see what happens
and have a team that's just constantly looking at
the emergent behavior and figuring out,
oh, is that a good thing?
Do we want to optimize for that?
Oh, has that enabled some new vector of risk
that we need to avoid?
And that's kind of the thought process
that we take across all the things that we do.
So a lot of it is like if you build it, they will come.
You just don't know who will come
and what they'll look like
and what exactly is going to be the next big thing.
But we have to be very prepared to react when we see it.
Yeah.
And I think as a result, like we've been focused on maybe more known problems.
Like there's so many, there's so much work that happens
inside of all these large financial institutions
that it's just done manually by expensive people, you know, frankly,
across risk, compliance, legal, you know, vendor onboarding, treasury management.
I mean, you know, I can go on and on and on.
And now you have, again, AI to actually, you know, solve many of those problems.
And so that's, I think, you know, largely where we've been spending time, you know, companies like, you know, moment that had built, you know, fixed income trading infrastructure.
If you're a wealth management client of JPMorgan today, you know, building a bond ladder is still a manual process.
You're picking, you know, individual securities one by one.
that's insane.
Like, it hasn't existed for, you know, at least a decade in equities.
And so, you know, there's a ton of opportunity to solve, you know, kind of basic problems like that.
And I would argue, build, you know, very large, you know, kind of software and kind of platform-style businesses on the back of that.
And so whether it's, you know, things like, you know, a company like Salient, which is doing, you know, bringing voice agents to loan servicing and collections, right?
the idea that, you know, a voice agent can speak in 50 languages, you know, fully
compliantly, track UDEP, you know, do welcome calls and payment reminders, you know,
and actually deliver on a better customer experience because it can speak their native language
and get better results.
It's infinitely patient, right?
You know, that is a really interesting opportunity for the moment, you know, in large part
because it's unlocking markets that were never particularly interesting to suffer into because
IT budgets were small, and now, you know, the TAM is largely labor. And so that's been, I think,
kind of one of the reorientations that we've seen the last few years from kind of financial
product-led companies largely to, you know, software-led businesses and kind of financial
services were at large. Zach, you wrote about your predictions for 2026. Maybe you share one we haven't
gotten to yet around where things are going or where you're particularly excited. I was at a dinner
a couple weeks ago. And so this might not be a prediction. This might just be a recognition of
of current truth.
But I was at a dinner recently
and someone asked the table a question
and the question was,
what's the biggest use case of AI
in financial services?
And some people had answers
and then I got to me
and I kind of flippantly
said doing fraud.
It turns out the biggest use case for AI
is fraudsters committing fraud
against financial services companies.
And I said it jokingly
and then realized, like as I was saying,
oh no, this is actually the correct answer.
The entire table was like,
Yeah, okay, that's the correct answer, sadly.
And so, you know, we're at this point in the ecosystem where AI has so much potential to change things.
And he was using it the most, it's the fraudsters.
And right now we're at a point where financial fraud is growing at like 18 to 20 percent a year, which is insane.
And it's already a huge market.
And so I guess in that vein, one of my predictions for 2026 is unfortunately financial fraud is going to continue.
continue to accelerate in a way that we don't quite understand and probably can't quite feel
out and predict yet. Because, you know, it's a cat and mouse game, but the mouse is winning
right now. I mean, the cat will win long term, but the mouse is winning right now. And so
it's kind of a depressing prediction, but I think likely. What are you guys doing about it?
Well, so we build an anti-fraud product suite. I promise this would not me teeing up
bragging about what, but I will
go out. I'm curious because it's a hard
it's a hard problem to solve, but if anybody can
kind of try to figure it out. Well, we can't solve it all.
We can solve pieces of it. So we build an anti-fraud
product suite that's called Protect.
Within that we have this analysis of
every user and every user action that
we can assign a score or two to say what's the trustworthiness
of this user, this account,
this user action that they're taking.
And we pull this data and build
it based on looking at every user action that's
taken across every FinTech company that we work with,
plus the data that's coming from
bank account plus device data plus a zillion other data sets that we that we match it all with.
And so it's the first kind of network linked like cross-fintech, cross-bank type of anti-fraud
tool. And it's awesome. And it adds some amazing signal to the companies that we work with.
But this is like one of very many solutions that need to exist. We're starting to get good at
fighting deepfakes as well. I mean, like as an industry and plot specifically, but like still very
early there. But, you know, the stuff that freaks me out is, you know, have you heard of pig
butchering? For those listening on a podcast, I'll explain it briefly because it's kind of a
gruesome term. But it is basically, when you get a text message that says, hey, how you doing?
And that, and you respond to it, don't ever respond to those. But if you do get one of those
and you were to respond to it, they would then strike up a conversation with you. And eventually
they would find some complex way to, like, ask you to give them money. And when you,
you go up and execute that transaction, you have just sent money to a total stranger
on the internet, and yes, they've stolen the money. That is, like, in 100% of cases, what
happens. That used to be done based on these, like, human factories in, like, Malaysia, where they
would, like, have these people, like, locked in rooms sending text messages to, to unassuming
people in the U.S. mostly, but around the world. Now that's all AI. You don't need these human
factories anymore. The AI can do all that. And the I is just getting better and better and better.
And, like, how do we fight that? Like, because it's,
it's a human taking an action that they think is sending money to a friend and they've been tricked,
but it is fraud, but it's very hard to fight that kind of fraud.
And so, I mean, there are so many more tools that we need to build as an industry collectively,
and of course, as Platt specifically, totally.
We were talking about the different eras of FinTech.
I'm curious what have been sort of the different eras of Platt.
Of course, there was the, you know, sort of the acquisition that didn't go through with Visa,
sort of the ups and downs that you guys have had.
alongside the macro
and obviously you're in an incredible position right now
is the talk more about
the different eras of Plaid or how the Plaid vision
has evolved or you know
stayed true to the original
So started Plaid
started working on a thing that wasn't Plaid
but pivoted into Plaid in the very end of 2012
we launched
we pivoted into what we were doing in kind of mid-late
2013 and launched to the world in 2014
so you know
it's been a good 11 to 13 years
depending on how you count that
series of bad products that we built first.
David actually was a friend and knew us then.
But I'm going to actually brief aside.
David, I don't know if you know this.
David found Plaid.
He was the first investor, led the seed round at Spark.
Actually, like, sourced the deal as like you were an associate, I think at Spark at the time.
Then he went to Goldman, around the time that Goldman invested it.
You weren't involved in the investment specifically, but you were at Goldman at that time
and probably helpful in the background.
and then came to Andresen, and then Andresen invested.
And he's been like a huge friend and supporter of Platt over the year.
So we owe a lot to David and a huge amount of thinking.
And he also creates all the important industry terms.
So, you know, the fintech industry owes a lot to David.
I don't know.
Anyway, so Platt started, started, let's say 2014, we launched.
And then 2014 to like 2019, that was all about linking bank accounts.
Like how do we able you to link a bank account so that you can gain more access to financial
products broadly. So link a bank account so you can pay a friend on
vendment. Link a bank account so you can get a loan on lending
club. That was kind of
phase one. Kind of
2019, 2020
we called this
like late
like late spring, like blooming
spring, continuing to grow in that
vein. In 2020
January
2020, we signed paperwork to sell the company
to Visa and
still late spring. We didn't know that COVID was coming.
We didn't know that the EDM music would turn on.
I remember chatting with you.
I think it was like February or March.
You know, like it was probably March right when COVID was just beginning.
I was like, wow, you really timed that well.
You know, and then the business starts ripping.
And it was like, oh, that's a very expensive free call option.
Yeah.
You know, on the business.
And so walking away from that is pretty.
In an acquisition, like at least in our acquisition, you sign paperwork that says we're in exclusivity.
And as soon as everything is cleared, like all the checkboxes are.
are checked, then the deal will close.
And so we had a year of exclusivity.
And it started in January of 2020.
And yeah, like in, call it like late March of 2020 or maybe early April, we were talking
and it was like, yeah, we have this deal to sell the company for just over $5 billion.
And it's a fixed price.
Visa stock price is going down.
So like all of the stock compensation that we're going to get out of this deal, man, that's
worth a whole lot more.
percentage of visa. Like, we don't know a large chunk of visa. That seems interesting.
And then we looked it through the docs and, like, they have this things called like material
adverse event. Um, uh, so you can get out of a deal with something crazy happens. And there was
a provision in there that says you cannot get out of the deal, even in the case of a global
pandemic. And like some lawyer somewhere in some room had like come up with like, oh, let's just like
add this in. And I don't know, we were like, oh, man, this is great. We got, we got everything
said. They can't get out of it in a case of a pandemic. Like, we're going to get a huge truck
visa. We're going to be off to the races. And then like the deal took forever to close because
the DAJ was investing in a visa for being a monopolist and like all of this overhead. And like
kind of the next phase, the EDM music just like started getting louder and louder and louder
and like summer started happening and like FinTech started growing and people were stuck at home.
They needed to use digital finance to live their financial lives. And so at the end, a year
later, we looked at and we said for a large variety of reasons, it makes sense for us to part
as friends with Visa, and we'll go our own way.
We'll keep running a partisan independent entity.
And then we raised a big upround and, you know, off to the races.
But, you know, through that, you tell the company, hey, we're selling.
Okay, great.
That's a really hard thing to convince everybody to still be excited even though you're selling
the company a year later.
Hey, we're not selling.
And another very, very hard thing because you're telling everybody, you know,
you're not going to get all that cash that you thought you're going to get,
that you can't buy the house.
sorry, but we'll try to do a secondary soon so maybe you can buy a car.
And you have to like really change the culture.
It's like almost a refounding moment at that point.
Then you go through the rest of the summer and that was great, lots of growth.
But then into like FinTech Winter and that's another like we got all come together.
Like our customers are growing more slowly.
Yes, we're producing great products.
Yes, like Platt is growing.
But like, you know, it's not the growth that we're used to because we're in FinTech winter.
And then it's nice to finally be back in spring,
but there's definitely a lot of ups and downs on that journey.
Like, I think it was like multiple, like, re-founding
or like multiple crucible moments along the way.
Was there a period in that where you found your,
maybe you always had it, but like your second win?
Because at least from the outside,
it's felt like your product velocity really increased
at some point in the last like, you know, two and a half years.
Yeah, yeah, it has.
I mean, I shifted my role quite significantly.
So, like, I'm my chief product officer.
like I am in all of the product stuff
and a lot of it was like
for us really it was like building the
data set to the size that we can actually run analytics on it
so we build fraud scores that look at
your actions relative to every other user
that we see in our platform and identify if you're anomalous
if we didn't have enough data
to identify if you were anomalous then it wouldn't be a relevant score
for us to build so we got to one enough data
and then two we finally figured out how to like build
and launch products would be
and so that's been like one of the most
fun things for me. Actually, weirdly, like, I think I was, like, not as happy in the period
of, like, EDM pumping, like, fast growth. Everybody's, like, throwing money at fintech.
Like, that industry, I think I was, like, a little less happy because it was, like,
I don't think I'm adding differential value. I think I'm just, like, you know, running as fast
as, like, possibly can. And, you know, maybe I make some good decisions, but, like, you know,
it all doesn't matter because everything's up into the right.
Like, I think I was, like, happier in that, like, winter period. So I'm like, oh, man,
like this is this is where we become an amazing company long term like this is where like you know we
prove ourselves and we really step up and help our customers we launch the next next next
products that really matter um but i think i felt similarly to to be honest like you know
having done fintech since i don't know 2011 like people you know that felt early you know to
to be investing then and then it's like okay everybody like you know found out that this thing
existed everybody became a fintech investor from you know 2019 to you know 2021 and then
everybody's, you know, some of the best fintech investors in the world, like, came out on
podcasts and we're like, fintech is dead.
Yeah.
I'm like, I...
Fintech is dead.
Everyone should go home except for, it's better building fintech.
Right.
Exactly.
Like, you guys can leave and just stop investing in fintech.
We will continue.
The fintech team is still here, you know, despite the, uh, the naming conventions.
The rebrand.
The brand.
The brand experience.
And, uh, I think that's, that's actually benefited us, you know, and, I mean, selfishly,
but, but I think it's, it's tested the people like the true believers.
And, um, in some ways, it's brought the community.
brought the community together, I would argue.
Yeah, and, you know, the tourists go home.
Like, and we saw it on our team even.
Like, there were people that joined Vlad in 2020
when the music was loud, and it seemed like the industry to be in.
And, you know, then they've gone and chased the next trend
and the next trend.
Well, we'll miss them, and they're nice people.
The people now that are focused on it,
are like, these are the people who really want to be here in the long term.
Like, they deeply believe in the mission.
And, you know, they're in it in the way
that we all want to be in.
It feels great.
Where are we now in the cycle?
How should we think about this moment?
Early to mid-spring.
I would say we see green shoots, like lots of emergence.
It's been a pretty good year for many parts of fintech,
and it's been a shaky year for others.
I mean, if you look at the lending markets,
you know, it's not as bad as last year,
but it's not as good as it was.
And there are elements of the economy
that are pretty scary in parts of,
like a large part of,
of consumer spending is being propped up
by a small number of people
and so there are all these things that are scary
but for the most part
you continue to see companies
that are building very solid products
you do see great startups emerging
but they look a little different
than they used to
like they're thinking more responsibly
about markets in the long term
like they're more thinking about
profitability and growth
and you're also seeing like
the insanity of AI funding
go on kind of like in AI land
and some of it's starting to bleed
into fintech because you're seeing these like fintech AI
product short to come. So
I would say spring, like lots of green shoots, lots of exciting
stuff. Still some, you know,
still some snow in the background.
That's snow melt is still happening.
But looking pretty optimistic right now.
Also, okay, so let's wrap on just
what does 2026 and the near term future look like?
David, how we're approaching an AISZ.
It still feels like we're in early innings,
you know, even spring in AI land as well.
You know, so just incredibly excited and enthusiastic by the momentum we're seeing, you know, for, again, largely software companies selling into financial institutions. That's kind of been our orientation in the fintech ecosystem. You know, again, I said on the board of a company called Moment, which we, you know, described earlier that is now bringing some largest wealth management platforms online. You'll see them, you know, they announced LPL. We have another, a number of other large institutions that we'll be announcing early next year.
You know, companies like Modern FI, which have built, you know, bank-to-bank deposit marketplaces
that are really starting to grow and see significant volume in that network.
And again, just more broadly, you know, really excited by the opportunity for AI to actually do the work, you know, within these institutions and the momentum and excitement, you know, there to adopt, you know, new products.
And I know are you excited, David, because they're such great customers or because they're so undiserved because they're finally transitioning.
or why have we narrowed in on that focus
is one that we're particularly excited about?
I mean, look, the industry is still massive, right?
Like if I look back at even just Goldman Sachs
and I now use them as an example often,
but like the entire firm was, you know,
they called the kind of middle and back office,
the federation.
You know, again, these were folks living in Excel largely,
not using Excel as a modeling tool,
but using Excel to track work.
And so there's just such opportunity
to build amazing software products to solve
everything from, you know, compliance to payments, to treasury management, to, again, all of the
kind of, you know, manual work that goes into making the financial services industry tick.
And I think AI is, again, creating kind of a new window and wedge opportunity for entrepreneurs
to kind of, you know, build software companies that couldn't have existed years ago. And,
and again, I think the appetite, you know, for adopting new products and new software to solve
some of those problems is more real than ever. Because, again, the most senior people at these
institutions, you know, can intuitively understand the impact that AI is having on their
business. And so I think there's just a lot more conversation and momentum happening at the
board level, you know, and it's making the enterprise sort of sales cycles, you know, for many
even our early stage companies happen a lot faster than, than I've seen in, you know, my
experience, you know, investing in this space. Zach, how about you and how you think about
things that plaid and more broadly? We, this past year launched, as they said, the anti-fraud suite
on protect, called protect in tons and tons of acceleration behind that. We launched a credit score,
a modern consumer credit score that's based on your income, your expenses, the things that you do
in your daily life. So your score goes up. If you have a higher income, your score goes down.
If you start having way higher personal expenses, like the logical credit score. So we launched
that. It's called Lenscore. We launched that last year. These two things are going to be major
drivers for us in the coming year. So distributing this new version of a credit score into all the lenders,
and then, of course, on the protect side,
like helping fight this, this AI-driven financial fraud that we're seeing.
And then for us, like, you know, we're back to,
back to, like, hiring and recruiting and growing.
And so, you know, despite the fact that fintech has been through these waves,
like, I still think that plot is, like, one of the most amazing places to work.
Please tell all your friends.
If you want to work with big data, if you want to have a huge impact on consumers' lives,
again, financial freedom is their core focus of what we do.
And then you want to have an opportunity.
We try to think of ourselves as like the most consumer, sorry, the most customer-centric employer where, you know, we put engineers in the customer so that they're actually talking to them.
Like, we think it's an incredibly fun way to work.
So like not forward-deployed engineering, but forward-deployed company.
So, you know, tell all your fans, we're hiring lots of people and I think it's going to be a great 2026.
Zach, David, you guys are pioneers in the space in the category.
and I can't wait to have you both back in 2030
and we can talk about how the space is evolved.
Thanks so much.
Let's do it sooner.
That's so far away.
Exactly.
We don't even wait.
That's true.
We don't have to wait every five years.
Zach David,
thanks so much for coming to the podcast.
Great.
Thanks for you're both.
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