Singapore Fintech Festival 2025: Top Highlights and Announcements
Taking place from November 12 to 14, the 2025 Singapore Fintech Festival (SFF) drew a massive crowd of 65,000 participants in one of the world’s biggest fintech gatherings. This year’s annual event, which marked its tenth edition, explored the theme “Technology Blueprint for the Next Decade of Finance”, delving into how the emerging technology stack, including artificial intelligence (AI), tokenization, and quantum technologies, are reshaping global finance.
Discussions centered on the industry’s major challenges and opportunities, with some 800 distinguished speakers taking part in 400 sessions to highlight how advanced technologies are advancing sustainable growth and inclusion across emerging markets and the Global South.
More than 40 international pavilions and 600 exhibitors showcased the latest innovations from governments, financial institutions, technology providers, and startups, providing a global perspective on the future of financial services.
A major theme this year was tokenization, which is steadily moving from experimentation toward commercial applications. The government also reinforced its commitment to accelerate AI adoption, announcing new initiatives to foster collaboration and integration, in addition to proposed guidelines for the responsible use of the technology in financial services.
Like previous editions, SFF 2025 featured numerous announcements from public authorities, corporates and startups, reflecting rapid innovation and increased partnerships across the sector. Companies like Visa, Mastercard, and Ant International, rolled out new solutions designed to reduce friction, tap agentic commerce opportunities, and enhance cross-border payment capabilities, while governments across Europe, Asia, and the Middle East unveiled new collaborations to explore opportunities across AI, digital assets, and payment linkage.
Singapore: a leading fintech hub
Speaking on November 13, Chia Der Jiun, Managing Director of MAS, highlighted Singapore’s progress as a global fintech hub.
Over the past decade, MAS has fostered an ecosystem where innovation can flourish by supporting innovative projects and centers, enabling experimentation with emerging technologies and business models, and applying regulation in the right proportion, at the right time, to the right risk.
Today, Singapore is home to a vibrant fintech sector comprising more than 1,800 fintech firms in a range of domains. Robo-advisors are broadening access to wealth management, multi-currency mobile wallets are reducing the complexity and costs of cross-border payments, fintech firms are using data-driven underwriting to give small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) access to small loans with flexible terms and tenor, and startups are leveraging cutting-edge technologies to enhance efficiency across fraud prevention, customer support, risk assessment, and more.
Financial institutions are also active stakeholders in the fintech ecosystem, having set up over 50 innovation centers across Singapore. More than 30 financial institutions have established AI competency centers in the country, working on solutions that serve not just the local market, but also their global operations.
Supporting AI development and adoption
To further support the adoption of AI across financial services, MAS has launched a number of initiatives for the industry to share resources, co-develop, and implement effective solutions. Its latest initiative, called BuildFin.ai and announced at SFF 2025, is a platform that brings together tech providers and research institutes to work with financial institutions on complex problems of common interest.
This builds on PathFin.ai, a collaborative initiative launched in July 2025 on which financial institutions and tech companies share their AI adoption experience and successful use cases to accelerate development and implementation. Examples include an AI solution to optimize multi-currency cash management for corporate treasuries, and an agentic AI solution for end-to-end insurance claims processing. PathFin.ai has already grown to more than 100 participants.
Guidelines for AI risk management
To ensure that Singapore’s rapidly expanding and increasingly sophisticated fintech and AI ecosystem continues to grow in a safe and sustainable way, MAS is proposing a set of guidelines on AI risk management to guide financial institutions on the responsible use of AI in the financial sector.
The proposed guidelines, issued for public consultation on November 14, set MAS’ supervisory expectations across three key areas:
Oversight of AI risk management;
Key AI risk management systems, policies and procedures; and
AI lifecycle controls, capabilities and capacities.
Tokenization moves towards commercial use
After AI, tokenization was another major theme at this year’s SFF. The tech is steadily moving from experimentation toward early commercial use, promising faster settlement, fewer intermediaries, smarter automated transactions, and the possibility of making financial markets more efficient and accessible.
However, to advance this transition, three essential building blocks are needed for asset-backed tokens to scale: standardized tokens and interoperable networks; safe and reliable settlement assets; and institutional-grade networks.
MAS is working with global policymakers and major financial institutions to build this foundation by developing standards, promoting network interoperability, and exploring the use of different settlement assets, Chia said. The central bank is also finalizing the features of its stablecoin regulatory regime and will be preparing draft legislation, he added.
Expanding cross-border use cases
At the Layer One Summit, on November 12, Leong Sing Chiong, Deputy Managing Director of Markets and Development at MAS, shared updates on the central bank’s digital asset initiatives. He noted that MAS is expanding Project Guardian to support cross-border applications of tokenized assets.
One initiative, dubbed Les Gardiennes and jointly led by the Banque de France and MAS with UBS and Société Générale-FORGE, is testing repo transactions using tokenized assets and digital money.
In payments, Leong highlighted BLOOM (Borderless, Liquid, Open, Online, Multi-currency), launched in October. This project brings together over 16 global banks, financial institutions and fintech companies to advance tokenized deposits and regulated stablecoins for wholesale settlement, and create shared compliance and settlement frameworks.
He said MAS is considering a hybrid model that would give financial institutions access to wholesale central bank digital currency (wCBDC) while ensuring interoperability between distributed ledger and traditional systems.
Leong also described the Global Layer One (GL1) initiative, a public-private collaboration supported by MAS, the Bank of England, Banque de France, the European Central Bank, and global financial institutions. This initiative aims to develop interoperable infrastructures to facilitate cross-border financial transactions, all the while meeting regulatory compliance.
Domestically, MAS is also advancing with its wCBDC experimentations, successfully testing the use of a wholesale digital Singapore dollar for settling overnight loans between banks. DBS, OCBC, and UOB took part in this first live issuance of wCBDC, and the transactions were officially recorded just like real-world financial activity.
MAS now wants to expand on this work by running another trial in 2026 that will involve tokenized MAS Bills settled using the same type of digital currency.
Supporting instant cross-border payments
Cross-border connectivity was also prominent in payments topics.
Singapore and Cambodia officially launched the first phase of a new cross-border QR code payment system, allowing Cambodian travelers to use their local bank accounts for real-time transactions in Singapore.
Cambodia and Singapore Launch Phase One of Their QR Payment Linkage
Separately, the Cambodian central bank has agreed to link KHQR, the country’s official QR code payment standard, with Weixin Pay, setting a framework to connect Cambodia’s Bakong system with the Chinese mobile payment platform to facilitate faster, more seamless remittances and payments between the two markets.
In the corporate sector, Liquid Group and TerraPay are exploring a shared framework that could enable QR payments to flow between their global networks, including key corridors in Africa and Asia. The agreement, signed at SFF 2025, will examine how Liquid Group’s RoamQR network can connect with TerraPay’s global payment infrastructure to enable real-time QR acceptance and settlement.
RoamQR is an industry-led QR interoperability network developed under MAS’s SGQR+, Singapore’s interoperable payment QR code standard.
Bilateral partnerships
Like previous editions, SFF 2025 served as a platform for Singapore to announce several significant bilateral fintech collaborations.
MAS and the UK’s Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) launched the UK-Singapore AI-in-Finance Partnership, an initiative aimed at promoting trustworthy AI innovation and helping financial institutions and tech providers scale solutions across both markets. The two authorities will jointly test AI applications, share regulatory insights, and host discussions on responsible adoption.
Singapore and UK Regulators to Advance AI in Finance
Singapore is also collaborating with German on tokenized cross-border settlement. The cooperation aims to improve international financial transactions, including flows between both countries, and will see the two countries promote common standards for payments, foreign exchange (FX), and securities flows involving tokenized assets to support interoperability across digital asset platforms.
Finally, MAS, the Bank of England and the Bank of Thailand are jointly exploring the technical and policy implications of settling FX transactions using synchronized settlement mechanisms. Building on insights from Project Meridian FX, this collaboration will use simulated versions of participating central banks’ real time gross settlement systems (RTGS) and distributed ledger technology (DLT)-based settlement environments to examine interoperability between the central banks’ systems and complex, multilateral scenarios involving different settlement infrastructures, and jurisdictions.
GFTN launches ALFIN and expands partnerships
At SFF 2025, GFTN, one of the organizers of the event, announced several major initiatives, including the beta launch of ALFIN, a research intelligence platform providing trusted and explainable AI applications for finance. ALFIN integrates three data layers: GFTN’s proprietary insights from global innovators, investors, and regulators; publicly available financial and regulatory data; and user-referenced inputs for real-world context.
GFTN also added five new platform partners, namely Finternet, the Linux Foundation, Mojaloop Foundation, RegGenome, and Universal Pensions, to expand its suite of digital solutions. In addition, it expanded its impact efforts, forming a strategic alliance with Accion to mobilize capital for digital finance and inclusive fintech companies targeting financially underserved communities.
Established by MAS, GFTN is a not-for-profit organization that connects policymakers, financial institutions, and technology providers to build more resilient and inclusive financial systems. Through its subsidiaries GFTN Services and GFTN Capital, the organization provides advisory and technology solutions, and invests in growth-stage fintech companies.
Payment networks focus on stablecoin, agentic commerce
SFF 2025 also featured several corporate announcements, with payment networks in particular focusing on integrating stablecoins, enabling agentic commerce, and removing friction. Visa launched a new pilot program, allowing businesses and platforms to send payouts using Visa Direct directly to recipients’ stablecoin wallets. This initiative aims to improve the speed and accessibility of global payouts, particularly in regions with currency volatility or limited banking infrastructure.
The pilot is being launched with select partners, including Nium, with a broader rollout planned for the second half of 2026 as client demand and regulatory frameworks develop.
Visa also rolled out its Scan to Pay feature for QR payments across Asia-Pacific (APAC). The feature is supported by digital wallets like Samsung Wallet across the region, LINE Pay in Taiwan, VNPT Money in Vietnam, and Woori Card and Hyundai Card in South Korea, and works with QR payment providers including Lakala in Mainland China, FOMO Pay in Singapore, VNPAY and NextPay in Vietnam, and OpenRice in Hong Kong.
Visa is also advancing its agentic commerce strategy with the rollout of Intelligent Commerce across APAC and pilots planned for 2026. Visa Intelligent Commerce combines APIs and a partner program to enable AI agents.
Like Visa, Mastercard is also advancing stablecoin integration, expanding its payout network through a partnership with Thunes that enables direct transfers to stablecoin wallets. The collaboration will integrate Thunes’ Direct Global Network with Mastercard Move to support near real-time payouts using regulated stablecoins.
Mastercard also outlined its goal to eliminate passwords and manual card entry for online shopping across APAC by 2030, aiming to make online transactions more secure and seamless through tokenization and biometric authentication. Early adoption is focused on Singapore, Malaysia, and Vietnam, with full tokenization and password-free payments expected by 2027.
Other corporate announcements
Ant International CEO Peng Yang outlined the firm’s next-stage AI priorities, naming the Falcon TST and SHIELD models as its focus for the next 18 months.
CEO Peng Yang Outlines Ant International’s Core AI Strategy at SFF
The firm also expanded its partnership with DBS to integrate Ant International’s Alipay+, Antom, WorldFirst, and Bettr Platform Tech.
Meanwhile, Ant International’s merchant payment and digitization services arm Antom introduced EPOS360, an application integrating point-of-sale (POS) systems, payments, banking, lending, and business support designed for micro, small and medium-sized enterprises (MSMEs).
Thunes, a Singaporean cross-border payment infrastructure, launched new account top-up and withdrawal solutions for digital asset platforms. These enterprise-grade tools enable exchanges, infrastructure providers, networks, and issuers to offer instant, compliant on- and off-ramp transactions in local currencies and payment methods.
China’s XTransfer, another cross-border payment specialist, teamed up with Maybank and Kasikornbank (KBank) to collaborate on cross-border financial solutions for SMEs, and Shariah-compliant solutions.
Crypto exchange Coinbase launched Coinbase Business in Singapore, its first international expansion outside the US. The all-in-one financial platform supports crypto trading, instant payment settlement, and lower transaction fees using stablecoins. It operates in partnership with Standard Chartered.
Revolut Business rolled out Flexible Cash Funds in Singapore, offering companies a way to earn daily returns on idle balances through low-risk money market funds. It supports up to 100 funds across GBP, EUR, and USD with no minimum or maximum investment limits.
Boku, a network for localized payment solutions, launched its Innovation Hub in Singapore. This hub includes a team focused on building new payment capabilities to solve merchants’ cross-border money movement challenges. It will collaborate with regional fintech startups and merchants to design, prototype, and validate capabilities.
Finally, a Google executive confirmed plans for Google Pay to expand its footprint across Southeast Asia, with a launch in the Philippines expected shortly. Currently, the mobile wallet service is available in Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand, Cambodia, and Vietnam.
Winners of the 2025 Global Fintech Hackcelerator and SFF Fintech Excellence Awards
MAS and the Singapore Fintech Association unveiled the winners of this year’s Global Fintech Hackcelerator and the SFF Fintech Excellence Awards.
The Global Fintech Hackcelerator recognizes the most innovative, market-ready solutions to address problem statements centered on “AI for Financial Services”. This year’s three winners are:
ActuaViz, from Taiwan, which transforms insurance product management by converting complex documentation into structured, machine-readable formats;
Claimsio, from Poland, which provides AI-native debt collection services designed for SMEs, replacing traditional collection agencies with automated workflows; and
Oxford Risk, from the UK, which enables banks to deliver hyper-personalized financial services by training AI models with insights into investor decision-making processes.
The SFF Fintech Excellence Awards, supported by PwC Singapore, celebrate innovative fintech solutions by corporates and individuals. In the Corporate category, these winners are Fennech Pte Ltd (Emerging Fintech Award), WeeFin (Financial Inclusivity Award), Cynopsis Solutions Pte Ltd (Regulatory Leader Award), ESGpedia Pte Ltd (Sustainable Innovator Award), and LexisNexis Risk Solutions (Thematic: AI).
In the Individual category, the winners are Alice Liu, Digital Treasures Center Pte Ltd, CEO and Co-Founder; Jeeta Bandopadhyay Tookitaki Holding Pte Ltd, COO and Co-Founder; andLouis Liu, FOMO Pay, CEO and Founder.
Featured image: Edited by Fintech News Singapore, based on image by EyeEm via Freepik
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