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The brand new set of aspiring American dreamers are touchdown on the shores of the Atlantic.
However these digital-first visionaries printed in enterprise capital inexperienced aren’t on the lookout for a white picket fence. As a substitute, their sights are locked on a federal banking constitution.
Final week Europe’s most beneficial fintech firm Revolut grew to become the newest in a boat-load of the area’s brightest scale-ups to lodge a bid for a US banking allow.
Revolut’s commander-in-chief Nik Storonsky described the transfer as a “main milestone” because the neobank units its sights on the 100 million clients mark.
Storonsky – who is not any stranger to the UK’s regulatory paperwork – places his $75bn on the crusing route acquainted to numerous Europe’s prime corporations.
Europe’s second-largest neobank Bunq, which boasts over 20 million clients, kicked off the 12 months with its play for a US allow.
And extra expertise is poised to observe. Starling’s finance boss Declan Ferguson mentioned the technique marked an “attention-grabbing alternative to personal and function” a regulated financial institution within the US while Monzo has lengthy been tipped to be plotting a bid for a US licence.
Fintechs pounce as Trump tears up regulation
Trump’s sweeping deregulation of the Dodd-Frank Act of 2010, which was enacted after the monetary disaster to spice up monetary stability and enhance accountability, helped open the floodgates to contemporary lenders trying to seize a slice of the US’ banking market.
And it wasn’t simply Europe, with funds big Paypal, Brazilian fintech Nubank and crypto big Coinbase all lodging licence bids in 2025.
The contemporary reforms hiked the first asset threshold at which corporations face harder prudential requirements to $250bn from $50bn beforehand, that means fewer firms had been topic to stringent requirements.
In addition they eased the ‘Volcker Guidelines’ for lenders with property of lower than $10bn, that means banks had been much less restricted from sure speculative investments.
John Cronin, banking analyst at Seapoint Insights, informed Metropolis AM whereas the transfer “makes a variety of sense” there was some scepticism over the lenders’ capability to “disrupt mainstream US banks”.
For Revolut, its bid to crack the US marks a second chew of the cherry after a state-level pursuit in California in 2021 was derailed by regulatory friction and a staggering $20m loss because of a flaw in its US fee system and considerations over its inner monetary controls.
The agency would go on to hit pause on that try in late 2023, citing its intentions to deal with the worldwide licensing roadmap.
However the cost again into the US from the London-born fintech juggernaut will likely be sure to set off alarm bells in Whitehall, not least as a result of the US deregulation endeavour mirrors the outcomes the Treasury had hoped to unleash throughout the UK.

Will itemizing hopefuls be lured away?
Rachel Reeves touted her Leeds Reforms – a deregulation bundle for the banking trade – as a bid to “rewire the monetary providers trade” final July.
However the efforts have up to now fallen flat, with Moody’s analysts telling Metropolis AM the reforms had been “unlikely to be transformative, both for the banking system or as a driver for close to time period UK financial development”.
Although much more regarding for the Metropolis, the speed of accelerated enlargement from European fintech expertise into the US provides to the rising fears corporations will likely be sure for a US itemizing.
“There are query marks concerning the specified itemizing location for these banks anyway,” Cronin mentioned.
“Whereas the Chancellor can roll out the pink carpet all she likes, it’s my view that these banks are US-bound regardless in the event that they do proceed with an inventory in some unspecified time in the future.”
Reeves has courted the UK’s fintech expertise in hopes of strumming up enthusiasm for a London itemizing. Within the Treasury’s monetary providers development technique final July, she additionally made a bid to galvanise listings with the launch of the brand new scale-up regulator and listings taskforce.
However as soon as extra, efforts look like limping to any significant impression. Metropolis AM revealed final month Starling’s billionaire majority backer Harald McPike had soured on ambitions for an IPO in London because of frustrations with regulation,
Describing Starling’s enlargement into the US, one supply mentioned: “Issues should transfer quite a bit quicker or it’s out the door sharply”.
Nonetheless, the itemizing candidates of tomorrow have all remained coy on the place they intend to land, with Revolut, Monzo and Starling all insisting no resolution has been made.
Although the spectre of Smart does dangle over any resolution. The UK fintech darling introduced it was ditching its major itemizing on the London Inventory Trade in favour of New York final 12 months in a bruising transfer to these hoping a fintech-powered Metropolis markets revival.
The boss of 1 European fintech unicorn informed Metropolis AM “undoubtedly” extra fintechs would observe this path.
Smart introduced its plans final June and a month later launched its play for a US banking licence, placing the wind beneath the sails on the cash switch agency’s American dream.
The transfer whipped up uneven waters for the London inventory market and should but point out that – for fintech giants – the American dream may turn out to be a UK nightmare.











