Close Menu
Invest Intellect
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Invest Intellect
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • Home
    • Commodities
    • Cryptocurrency
    • Fintech
    • Investments
    • Precious Metal
    • Property
    • Stock Market
    Invest Intellect
    Home»Fintech»QED Investors Shares AI And Fintech Outlook For 2026
    Fintech

    QED Investors Shares AI And Fintech Outlook For 2026

    December 30, 20255 Mins Read


    QED Investors, a venture capital firm based in Alexandria, Virginia, that is focused on investing in Fintechs, has shared some end-of-year insights with CI. QED Investors, which also invests in financial services initiatives in the U.K. and Europe, Latin America, India, and Southeast Asia, has commented on a range of developments it expects in 2026.

    As covered, QED Investors aims to help build businesses through a hands-on approach that leverages its partners’ operational experience, assisting companies to achieve steady growth.

    Some of QED Investors‘ investments include: AvidXchange, Betterfly, Bitso, Caribou, ClearScore, Creditas, Credit Karma, Current, Flywire, Kavak, Klarna, Konfio, Loft, Mission Lane, Nubank, QuintoAndar, Remitly, SoFi, Wagestream, Wayflyer, and more.

    QED team’s predictions are shared below.

    QED Investor’s Predictions 

    Nigel Morris | Co-founder and Managing Partner:

    “Expect the rise of dynamic credit scoring. As underwriting models become more capable of interpreting alternative data streams (such as banking & transaction data or rent & utility payment information), lenders will be able to assess borrower risk dynamically. This approach is already gaining traction in developing markets. We will be monitoring for the burgeoning of a “Streaming Credit Score” system, particularly for gig economy workers and borrowers with thin files, which updates continuously rather than quarterly or monthly.”


    Expect the rise of dynamic credit scoring. As underwriting models become more capable of interpreting alternative data streams

    Click to Share

    Bill Cilluffo | Partner, Head of global early stage investments:

    “There are many things I admire about the founders I meet today, one thing being the pace of change of what’s possible in the world is easily the fastest in my 30 years in business. AI is allowing things that weren’t possible three years ago, and the pace of that change is staggering. I am floored on how well most founders are able to stay on top of this, and leverage these new tools so well. And there is a lot more to come!”


    AI is allowing things that weren’t possible three years ago, and the pace of that change is staggering

    Click to Share

    Chuckie Reddy, Partner, Head of Growth:

    “The year 2026 will be an execution year. Companies are largely on solid footing. It will be about executing on growth, finding M&A / IPOs and being profitable enterprises. The macro environment remains largely benign, making this the best time to focus on pure execution. While there can always be wobbles, the industry as a whole has been well funded and stabilized/capitalized businesses that have a “right-to-win”.  Development is accelerating at the most rapid pace we’ve seen in recent history. The already ‘to ship’ code/product is tremendous.”


    Development is accelerating at the most rapid pace we’ve seen in recent history

    Click to Share

    Amias Gerety | Partner, Head of U.S. Investments:

    “VC investors are focused on the potential TAM expansion from using AI to automate the work of human operations teams, but the truth is that any cost savings can only create TAM in the short term. If a company replaces a business process outsourcing contract in year one, then an AI company that can replace that work only needs to be cheaper than that contract. But in years two and beyond, the competition is not between AI and a BPO; it’s between two AI companies. Put another way, VCs are missing the power of competition to drive margin down in the age of AI.”


    VCs are missing the power of competition to drive margin down in the age of AI

    Click to Share

    Yusuf Özdalga | Partner, Head of U.K. & Europe at QED:

    “Valuations will normalize: As the best (and worst!) use cases for AI at scale in Fintech become clear, AI valuations will also start to normalize. A full understanding of the all-in costs of using AI will become clearer, and AI valuations will be driven more by financial math than in 2025. The cost stack of inference, in terms of tokens, dollars and margins, will force increased discipline and clarity on AI unit economics. This will also be magnified by increasing LP pressure on GPs for returns and liquidity.”

    Laura Bock | Partner, U.S.:

    “Accounts Receivable (AR) and Accounts Payable (AP) are interesting because they sit right where money actually moves through a business. They touch every customer and vendor relationship, yet workflows remain painfully manual. That mix of volume and financial consequence makes them perfect for automation: a small improvement in how invoices are sent, collected, approved or paid can free up cash, reduce errors and meaningfully improve working capital.”

    Shruti Batra, Principal, U.S.:

    “Investors are mistaking early AI traction for durable advantage and overestimating how much value comes from ‘AI magic’ rather than owning the underlying workflow. AI compresses build cycles so quickly that categories fill with credible-looking entrants within months, meaning early revenue or user growth often signals category immaturity rather than true product-market fit. The real moat isn’t the model – it’s the workflow depth, data rights, integrations and compliance scaffolding required to run in production. In a world where anyone can build, winners will be those who can operate, integrate and earn institutional trust and, as such, investors should underwrite staying power over velocity.”

    Cole Lundquist, Principal:

    “We’ve seen whipsawing interest between horizontal and vertical solutions as founders and investors have digested the power of AI. When simple agents were cutting-edge, a wave of focused, vertical solutions came to market. Those solutions quickly became commoditized. As agents grew in sophistication and capital surged into the market, interest shifted to horizontal solutions that promised to be everything to everyone and required outrageous sums of capital to get there. While horizontal solutions are well-suited to addressing megafunds’ capital deployment needs, it’s unclear where the market equilibrium will settle. As it stands, horizontal solutions command the hype, while verticals attract more tepid interest.”





    Source link

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

    Related Posts

    Indonesia’s Fintech Lending Reaches Rp94.85 Trillion as Default Rate Rises

    Fintech

    Qatar for Canada: A Fintech Giant’s Move

    Fintech

    Why is Global Fintech Investment Rising?

    Fintech

    FinTech Wales Launches New Community Academy Alongside Leading Employers

    Fintech

    Global Fintech Funding Rebounds to $53B After Prolonged Downturn

    Fintech

    L&C and Haatch invest in Instamo to back launch of FastSubmit

    Fintech
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Picks
    Cryptocurrency

    New Cryptocurrency Releases, Listings, & Presales Today – AI Protocol, Sally A1C, SynthesizeAI

    Investments

    Kenton County School Board approves $25.7M bond for new admin office

    Commodities

    “They might just be the most essential live show in metal right now.” We’re not entirely sure we can do justice to just how epic Parkway Drive’s Wembley show was

    Editors Picks

    the star of the 90s, who fled to the USA, wrote a will — EADaily, October 25th, 2024 — Society, Russia

    October 25, 2024

    Antler, Kunal Shah-backed EV fintech startup Ohm Daily shuts down after 5-year run

    July 29, 2025

    Power utilities are built for the 20th century. That’s why they’re flailing in the 21st.

    September 9, 2015

    How the Fintech Company is Competing with Banks

    August 22, 2024
    What's Hot

    Algonquin Power & Utilities Corp. : BMO Capital neutre sur le dossier

    May 12, 2025

    Guitarist fired from metal band after saying he was leaving over ‘low pay’

    August 27, 2025

    Pi Network Cryptocurrency Crashes: 42% Down From Record High Ahead Of Mainnet Migration Deadline On March 14

    March 12, 2025
    Our Picks

    Silver Alert issued for 42-year-old Lawrence County man

    August 18, 2024

    Les pertes d’Australian Agricultural se réduisent au cours de l’exercice 2025

    May 21, 2025

    Starlight propose de fusionner ses mandats privés

    May 15, 2025
    Weekly Top

    Millions of households could get £255 energy bill refund by checking two-month rule

    January 9, 2026

    Indonesia’s Fintech Lending Reaches Rp94.85 Trillion as Default Rate Rises

    January 9, 2026

    Agricultural manufacturer set for comeback as new owners step in

    January 9, 2026
    Editor's Pick

    SA banks step up Africa drive amid fintech rivalry

    October 1, 2025

    Stats Dept introducing agricultural production index to aid national food security

    June 17, 2025

    Bitcoin surges after Trump’s JD Vance VP pick, BlockDAG network nears $60M amid US Presidential Election crypto buzz

    July 19, 2024
    © 2026 Invest Intellect
    • Contact us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.