SumUp IPO, France–UK Crypto Clash, and Saudi Fintech’s Big Stage


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In this edition we dive into Europe’s payments sector, the diverging paths of crypto regulation in France and the UK, and a defining moment for MENA fintech at Money20/20 Riyadh.
SumUp Prepares $10–15B IPO #
SumUp, once a scrappy startup focused on micro and nano-businesses, is preparing for an IPO valued between $10–15 billion. Today, it dominates point-of-sale (POS) terminals across Europe and has expanded through acquisitions into banking, invoicing, and online payments.
- Growth factors:
- Merchant network spanning over 4 million businesses.
- Expansion into banking services via acquisitions.
- Strong foothold in underserved SMEs.
- IPO significance:
- A major benchmark for European fintech valuations.
- Proof that SME-focused fintechs can scale globally.
- Potential inspiration for other payments players eyeing the public markets.
Crypto Regulation: France vs. UK #
Two leading European economies are heading in opposite directions on crypto policy.
- France: pushing back against EU passportisation of crypto licenses, citing consumer protection and national security.
- UK: loosening rules to attract investment and position London as a post-Brexit crypto hub.
Implications:
- Companies face a patchwork of regulatory regimes across Europe.
- Investors may prefer the UK’s openness but face higher risk.
- France’s stance reflects a broader EU push for stricter compliance.
For crypto founders, this means careful jurisdictional strategy — growth potential in the UK, but greater stability in France.
Saudi Fintech Rise: Hala and Money20/20 Riyadh #
Saudi Arabia is rapidly emerging as a fintech growth hub. At the first Money20/20 Riyadh, local payments startup Hala announced a $157 million Series B round, joining the ranks of MENA unicorns like Tamara and Tabi.
- Why this matters:
- Saudi’s Vision 2030 strategy is accelerating fintech adoption.
- The UAE’s new token service regulations add regional momentum.
- Capital and regulation are increasingly shifting fintech gravity from Dubai toward Riyadh.
MENA’s fintech ecosystem is no longer peripheral — it’s becoming a core driver of global fintech growth, especially in payments and digital banking.
Key Takeaway #
This episode reflects fintech’s global divergence and regional acceleration:
- Europe: legacy payments players like SumUp prove scale is possible.
- Crypto policy: fragmented regulation demands adaptive strategies.
- MENA: Saudi Arabia is positioning itself as the next big fintech hub.
For founders and investors, the signal is clear — opportunities lie not just in mature markets, but in regions and regulatory frameworks on the move.