
From the $25 billion tokenized assets market to quantum computing breakthroughs at major institutions, these seven trends will reshape how consumers and businesses interact with money in ways that seemed impossible just years ago.
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Banking and financial services are industries where being on the bleeding-edge of technology is essential.
Global players in these markets must hone their competitive edge, taking every opportunity to shave seconds off transaction times, boost back-office efficiency, and make more profitable trading decisions.
At the same time, consumers in 2026 will be looking towards new technology that gives them more control and insight into their financial affairs.
As in every sector, AI will continue to be the driving force of this transformation over the next 12 months, but other technologies, including blockchain and quantum computing, will also create opportunities for innovation.
So here are what I believe will be the most significant trends impacting banking, financial services and fintech in 2026.
1. AI Agents In Banking And Finance
Agents are the next leap forward for AI from generative chatbots, capable of performing actions and carrying out more complex, multi-step tasks with minimal human involvement. In financial services, they will be the key to unlocking the potential of AI to automate routine tasks, including reconciling transactions, compliance checks, flagging anomalous transactions in real time and processing applications. From a customer’s point of view, they will act as personal financial assistants, shopping for the best rates and balancing investment portfolios by interacting with third-party apps and services on our behalf.
2. The Customer Experience Revolution
In a marketplace where it’s increasingly easy for customers to switch providers, banks and insurers understand that customer experience (CX) is now key to winning and retaining our business. AI-driven personalization is being integrated into apps and in-person banking to enable frictionless access to our money and interactions across customer touchpoints. Predictive analytics can anticipate customer pain-points before they arise, and chatbots evolve from answering frequently-asked questions to resolving problems end-to-end without keeping us waiting on hold. In 2026, more than ever, CX is the battleground where businesses compete to win loyalty and drive growth.
3. Bridging The Fintech Skills Gap
Without humans to implement these new technological solutions, the leaps in efficiency and growth that fintech will provide for financial services will remain a pipe dream. In 2026, the skills shortage is becoming more acute than ever; despite stratospheric salaries on offer, banks, hedge funds, and insurers are still finding it difficult to find enough people with the expertise they need. This year, the World Economic Forum said that the talent gap is currently the biggest challenge many businesses are facing. Over the next 12 months, AI and ML engineering, data science, cybersecurity and blockchain development will be among the most in-demand skills, as well as people with the skills to manage the human impact of digital transformation on industries.
4. Tokenized Assets
By tokenizing real-world assets — from commodities and real estate to fine wines and spirits — institutions and retail investors can invest and trade without the need to deal with the complexities of handling and storing those assets, or dealing with middlemen. Smart, blockchain-based contracts are used to automate transactions and settlements as well as record ownership. In 2025, the market for tokenized assets surged to $25 billion, representing a 245x increase on 2020 figures. Financial assets like bonds, securities and debt are also increasingly tokenized, allowing smoother institutional trading and investment. This acceleration is likely to continue into 2026 and beyond as both retail and institutional investors look to diversify into new asset classes.
5. Further Breakthroughs In Quantum Finance
As predicted last year, application of quantum computing in financial services began to take place in 2025, with institutions including JPMorgan, Goldman Sachs and HSBC applying the technology to risk analysis and portfolio optimization. Excitement over the technology’s potential within the industry has continued to grow, and in 2026, we can expect to see scaling and operationalizing of this mind-bending technology, harnessing the bizarre properties exhibited by matter at the sub-atomic level. This will involve building hybrid compute workflows combining classical and quantum processing, with quantum compute directed at the most complex calculations and optimization problems.
6. Stablecoins Go Mainstream
Stablecoins are cryptocurrencies, but rather than yo-yoing in price like Bitcoin, they’re pegged to the value of a traditional currency like the U.S. dollar. In theory, this means they have the benefits of cryptocurrencies, such as being easily traded across borders and without the need for middlemen, while acting as a more stable store of value. Thanks largely to legislative overhaul in the U.S., they’ve become a hot topic in 2025 with institutions including Bank of America, Citibank and Societe Generale announcing plans or investigating the space. In 2026, we can expect this to accelerate as more countries pass crypto-friendly legislation and more institutions understand their use.
7. Building Resilience In Uncertain Times
Uncertainty persists across economies and the geopolitical landscape as we enter 2026. Shifting trade alliances, tariffs, and the threat of conflict continue to disrupt the supply chains underpinning industries as well as the flow of capital that powers business, banking and investing. Because of this, governments and financial service providers will continue to focus on developing resilience. This will include simplification of regulation, as already seen in the U.S., and likely to be adopted more globally in the next 12 months, as well as innovations in fields like dynamic cross-border payments.
As we navigate through 2026, the convergence of AI, blockchain, and quantum technologies is fundamentally rewriting the rules of finance. The institutions that embrace these changes while maintaining focus on customer experience and building resilient systems will be the ones that thrive in this new era.



