Women in Fintech: A Conversation About Loyalty Ecosystems in Financial Services with Becky Hill

Women in Fintech: A Conversation About Loyalty Ecosystems in Financial Services with Becky Hill

How can banks and financial services providers ensure that their loyalty programs are in sync with consumer behaviors and preferences? What is a loyalty ecosystem and how can financial institutions benefit from being a part of one?

We caught up with Becky Hill, President of Vanson Technology Services and former Senior Vice President of Loyalty at U.S. Bank. In our extended conversation – in partnership with William Mills – we discuss the power of loyalty in fostering long-term relationships and better customer engagement in financial services.

We also discuss loyalty when it comes to relationships between companies and their employees, and how engagement and sales incentive programs can help them retain top talent and develop greater organizational resilience.

Founded in 1997, Vanson Technology Services specializes in technology and software solutions for loyalty, channel incentive, and employee engagement programs. The Minneapolis, Minnesota-based company offers capabilities in points earning technology, fulfillment catalog management, email communications, site and data management, customer service and support, reporting, and more.


Tell us more about your professional experience. What were some of your major accomplishments and career highlights while working at U.S. Bank?

Becky Hill: Before joining Vanson Technology Services last summer, I spent most of my career in U.S. Bank’s payments division. Initially, I supported the credit card acquisition strategy for the bank’s consumer and small business programs. This gave me a solid understanding of the credit card profit and loss (P&L), which helped me gain insights into what drives consumer behavior and how to capture their interest. I learned that people expect banks to simplify complexities for them and that offers need to clearly show their value and benefits.

Later, my responsibilities included managing all aspects of the bank’s Rewards platform for internal and co-branded credit card programs that included a variety of cards like Cash+, FlexPerks, Fidelity and Harley-Davidson. I would partner with program managers to support acquisition, attrition, benefit, and redemption strategies to keep the bank’s cards top-of-wallet.

Why is it important to shape your loyalty programs around consumer behaviors and preferences?

Hill: Understanding consumer behavior is key to designing effective loyalty programs because people value convenience and consistency. Loyalty programs work best when they’re simple and easy to navigate, especially when it comes to redeeming rewards. Over the years, these programs have become more sophisticated but keeping them clear and straightforward is still the key to success.

How would you define a loyalty ecosystem?

Hill: A loyalty ecosystem brings together programs, technology, and partnerships to engage and reward customers and employees. It’s about simplifying the process while delivering meaningful value. For Vanson, this means offering an easily configurable rewards platform that helps companies transform their incentive programs into formal campaigns that drive employee motivation, enhance performance and longevity, and build brand loyalty. We believe a successful loyalty ecosystem is built on understanding behavior and providing clear, flexible incentives. It’s not just about rewards — it’s about fostering long-term relationships through transparency, simplicity, and thoughtful execution.

How can financial institutions be part of the loyalty ecosystem?

Hill: Financial institutions can play a key role in the loyalty ecosystem by partnering with loyalty platform providers to offer their clients Prepaid Rewards cards. These cards give consumers the flexibility to spend as they choose, while financial institutions can capitalize on revenue opportunities, such as interchange fees.

How is this ecosystem evolving in the near future?

Hill: Technology is always evolving, and loyalty programs will continue to focus on streamlining the end user experience for ease and convenience.  Loyalty platforms will need to be flexible and have the capabilities to provide a variety of offerings from redemptions selection, gamification, educational lessons, experiences, and personalized communication strategy.  Customer-centricity will continue to be a big part of the loyalty program technology evolution, especially as the industry starts to utilize AI-driven analytics to engage members. 

Let’s talk about within companies. What does an effective employee and sales incentive program entail?

Hill: An effective employee engagement and sales incentive program requires the right technology. The technology should be straightforward, flexible, and tailored to support the specific needs of the program. It should be easy to implement, quick to deploy, and designed to drive engagement and performance without unnecessary complexity. Vanson offers a technology platform with configurable tools that provides self-administer options to drive results.

Equally important is having the right partner. A good partner provides valuable support throughout the journey, helping companies configure rewards to fit their unique needs and assisting with add-ons like developing email campaigns and enhancing engagement strategies. Together, the right technology and partnership can create a successful program.

Why should a company consider offering employee engagement and sales incentive programs?

Hill: Offering employee engagement and sales incentive programs is critical for retaining top talent and ensuring the resilience of your organization. People are motivated by more than just salary — they value recognition, work-life balance, and meaningful benefits. Incentive programs don’t have to be complex; even simple, day-to-day recognition can go a long way. It’s about creating a program that works for all employees, not just a select few. However, implementing these programs requires a cultural shift within the organization, combining both a change in mindset and the right technology to support it. Focusing on your employees’ needs and making them feel valued is key to long-term success.

You joined Vanson Technology Services less than a year ago. What tips and guidance can you provide other professionals who are transitioning industries?

Hill: I’ve had the unique opportunity to work on both the client side and now the vendor side of Loyalty programs across multiple industries. Being on this side — with firsthand knowledge of client expectations — has pushed me to think differently about what we deliver and how we meet client expectations. It’s also opened the door to more strategic conversations, like helping other loyalty companies within CORA Group’s portfolio expand into new verticals. At the end of the day, it’s about maintaining strong networks and staying open-minded to new opportunities.

What is your biggest piece of professional advice?

Hill: Always stay true to yourself and uphold your integrity. Take the time to identify the key decision-makers and those who truly understand what’s happening within your organization. Knowing who can make decisions and offer support is crucial — otherwise, you risk getting caught in unnecessary red tape. Building strong relationships and trust with your peers is essential, as effective leadership relies on the two-way flow of information. Above all, remain focused on what will move the business forward.


Photo by Louis Droege on Unsplash

FinovateEurope 2025 Sneak Peek Series: Part 7

A look at the companies demoing at FinovateEurope in London on February 25. Register today using this link and save 20%.

AQ22

AQ22 is an agentic banking orchestration platform automating financial workflows, from credit assessment and compliance to investment management and debt collection, helping banks streamline decision-making.

Features

  • AI-driven automation: Streamlines credit, investment, and compliance.
  • Seamless integration: Connects with any banking system.
  • Agentic intelligence: Enhances financial decision making.

Who’s it for?

Banks, credit unions, and financial institutions.

Deriskly

Deriskly helps financial services firms improve customer experience, automate compliance, and enhance trust through better communication and complaint analysis with safe and explainable AI.

Features

  • Enhances customer experience by improving communication clarity
  • Automates compliance with regulatory and brand guidelines
  • Identifies complaint patterns to drive better product decisions

Who’s it for?

Banks, financial services firms, insurers, and fintech companies.

Homely

Homely is an end-to-end, AI-powered digital journey for first-time buyers, empowering them to realize the dream of home ownership.

Features

Homely offers a unique, hyper-personalized AI-powered journey to realize home ownership.

Who’s it for?

Retail banks, businesses offering Homely to their employees, and individuals.

Neural Defend

Neural Defend is an AI-agentic deepfake detection startup founded by MIT researchers combating the $10.5 trillion global financial fraud problem with their patent pending algorithm.

Features

  • Delivers AI Agentic deepfake detection
  • Offers a multi-modal solution with audio, video, image, and expression detection
  • Provides real-time detection

Who’s it for?

Digital banks, fintechs, EKYC, verification companies, onboarding companies, insurance companies, media channels, dating companies, and government agencies.

Tweezr

Tweezr is an AI-powered surgical code assistant that pinpoints where developers should make changes across millions of lines of legacy code without breaking critical functionality.

Features

  • Delivers faster time-to-market for changes in legacy systems
  • Produces higher developer productivity in legacy environments
  • Obviates the need to launch the next ~$1B modernization program

Who’s it for?

Any financial institution with a complex legacy IT estate.

Fintech Rundown: A Rapid Review of Weekly News

Fintech Rundown: A Rapid Review of Weekly News

Partnerships and collaborations in the payments space lead fintech headlines at the beginning of this holiday-shortened week. Be sure to check Finovate’s Fintech Rundown all week long for the latest updates in fintech and financial services.


Payments

Account-to-account (A2A) payment infrastructure provider Token.io teams up with payment orchestrator Fabrick.

InComm Payments collaborates with Mastercard to offer Mastercard “Give Hope” gift cards in support of the American Red Cross.

Real-time payments framework Payfinia partners with B2B2C SaaS embedded finance solutions provider TAPP Engine.

Card issuer and processor Paymentology forges strategic partnership with UAE-based fintech Mamo.

Transaction management software company Redpin opens new payments corridor to Brazil.

Open banking

Moldova-based digital wallet and electronic money institution (EMI) Paynet partners with open banking services provider Salt Edge.

Digital identity

OneID and Adobe announce partnership to enhance identity verification for Adobe digital signatures.

Lending, credit, and underwriting

TransUnion Kenya and FICO team up to offer two new risk solutions to help expand access to credit.

Digital banking

SaaS cloud banking platform Mambu announces strategic partnership with Spain’s Ibercaja Banco.

Armalytix unveils its bank statement scanning tool.


Photo by May Guo

Finovate Global: Fintechs Representing 13 Countries to Demo at FinovateEurope 2025

Finovate Global: Fintechs Representing 13 Countries to Demo at FinovateEurope 2025

This year at FinovateEurope 2025, our 32 demoing companies represent a baker’s dozen of countries from around the world. Of the 32 companies, nine are headquartered in the UK, and seven of them are making their Finovate debuts this year.

Last year, FinovateEurope featured companies from 15 different countries. This year, we’re thrilled to see a similarly diverse group. Here’s where the rest of our FinovateEurope 2025 demoing companies are based.

FinovateEurope is right around the corner: 25-26 February at the Intercontinental O2 in London. Friday, 14 February is the last day to take advantage of big, early-bird savings on the price of your ticket. If you haven’t registered yet, visit our FinovateEurope hub today and save your seat!


Here is our look at fintech innovation around the world.

Middle East and Northern Africa

  • Tabby, a financial services and shopping app in MENA, announced a $160 million Series E funding round that brought the company’s valuation to $3.3 billion.
  • Qatar-based Islamic financial institution Al Rayan Bank partnered with financial software application provider Finastra to launch its new Islamic core banking solution.
  • Israel fintech BitStock raised $400,000 in seed funding.

Central and Southern Asia

  • The Banker featured Golomt Bank and the rise of open banking in Mongolia.
  • Indian digital payments firm ToneTag secured $78 million in new funding.
  • TBC Uzbekistan announced successful deployment of its AI-based, proprietary Uzbek language models.

Latin America and the Caribbean

  • Ripple teamed up with Portuguese currency exchange provider Unicâmbio to support cross-border payments between Portugal and Brazil.
  • Brazilian payments and banking technology provider Dock introduced new Chief Technology Officer Thiago Teixeira.
  • Latin American global collections firm Takenos launched its Spicy Card, enabled by Pomelo, in Argentina.

Asia-Pacific

  • Malaysian Earned Wage Access (EWA) specialist Payd raised $400,000 in an extension of its seed funding round.
  • New Zealand’s Inland Revenue service issued a Request for Information (RFI) as part of an effort to influence the growth of open banking in the country.
  • Bangladesh-based commercial bank Trust Bank teamed up with TerraPay to help students pay tuition fees.

Sub-Saharan Africa

  • Nigeria-based multi-currency accounts platform Raenest secured $11 million in Series A funding in a round led by QED Investors.
  • South African fintech Stitch acquired ExiPay, a company that enables brick-and-mortar stores to securely accept in-person payments via point-of-sale (POS) terminals.
  • Advanced Television looked at the evolution of South African fintech marketing.

Central and Eastern Europe


Photo by Suzy Hazelwood

TransUnion Teams Up with Credit Sesame to Launch  Direct-to-Consumer Experience

TransUnion Teams Up with Credit Sesame to Launch  Direct-to-Consumer Experience
  • TransUnion is partnering with Credit Sesame to launch a freemium credit education platform.
  • The new platform will give U.S. consumers daily access to their credit score, tailored financial offers, and premium credit monitoring services.
  • By leveraging Credit Sesame’s expertise in the freemium credit space, TransUnion expects to increase consumer engagement and grow its direct-to-consumer business.

Credit protection platform TransUnion and consumer credit management company Credit Sesame have teamed up this week. TransUnion has tapped Credit Sesame to launch a direct-to-consumer, freemium credit education solution for US users.

TransUnion is positioning the new credit education solution as an “experience” that will be integrated with premium credit monitoring services. The new tool will bring consumers their daily credit score and report from TransUnion and offer them access to third-party financial offers that are tailored to their individual goals and credit profile.

TransUnion’s US consumers will have access to the new platform beginning in the first half of 2025. 

“Personal empowerment is a key component of our commitment to Information for Good,” said TransUnion President of US Markets Steve Chaouki. “By providing a free-first experience that includes financial offers, we engage with more consumers, enabling them to better understand their financial situations and take action to manage their financial futures. By integrating our freemium offering with our enhanced premium credit and identity monitoring services, we expect to deliver a more expansive product offering to consumers and position our direct-to-consumer business for sustainable growth.”

Credit Sesame was founded in 2010 to show consumers their daily credit score, credit report summary, and credit monitoring alerts. In 2020, the California-based company launched Sesame Cash, digital banking tools, including a pre-paid debit card and credit builder solution.

Headquartered in Chicago, Illinois, TransUnion provides tools to help businesses and consumers assess creditworthiness, detect fraud, and make informed financial decisions. The company operates in more than 30 countries, helping organizations manage risk and empowering consumers with access to credit and wealth-building tools.

“We’re committed to empowering consumers to take charge of their financial health,” said Credit Sesame CEO Adrian Nazari. “We have a track record of success in the freemium credit space, helping millions of Americans effectively manage their credit and create better opportunities for themselves and their families. By leveraging our Sesame platform, we expect that TransUnion will be able to deeply engage consumers and support them in achieving their financial goals.”


Photo by RDNE Stock project

Corpay Launches Multi-Currency Accounts

Corpay Launches Multi-Currency Accounts
  • Corporate payments company Corpay launched multi-currency accounts.
  • The new multi-currency accounts allow businesses to receive, hold, and pay in 12 currencies through dedicated accounts.
  • Corpay joins a long list of fintechs, including Wise and Revolut, that offer multi-currency accounts.

New York-based corporate payments company Corpay announced it has added multi-currency accounts to its business offerings. The new offering will enable businesses to expand globally and manage their foreign currency from a single place.

Corpay offers accounts payable automation tools, commercial card solutions, and cross-border tools such as multi-currency risk management and global invoice automation. The company serves 800,000 businesses and organizations across a range of industries. Today’s launch will help businesses transacting in foreign currencies simplify their treasury management in a single place instead of opening and managing multiple foreign bank accounts.

“Our goal is to continuously develop solutions that transcend borders, allowing for seamless international operations,” said Corpay Cross-Border Solutions Chief Product & Digital Innovation Officer Tim Watson. “After meticulous development that integrates our customers’ feedback and industry insights, our centralized account solution caters to the needs of businesses engaging in overseas markets across diverse jurisdictions and currencies. It streamlines account opening and management across multiple currencies and countries, simplifying complexity and allowing our customers to focus on their business first.”

The multi-currency accounts allow companies to receive and pay out in 12 currencies via a dedicated account in their business’ name. On the backend, the business will see a unique account assigned to each currency that the accountholder trades. This simplifies the payments and receivables process and lowers the barriers to enter global markets.

Corpay is launching the new multi-currency accounts after completing pilot testing and adjusting the tool based on customer feedback. “The development of Multi-Currency Accounts has been a collaborative effort with our customers, and their buy-in and willingness to provide feedback has been instrumental,” said Corpay Cross-Border Solutions Group President Mark Frey. “Through our ongoing commitment to client centricity and addressing their needs, we have dedicated ourselves to continuous industry research and competitor analysis, while also constantly gathering invaluable feedback from our customers. Ultimately, our goal is not only to create a best-in-class product, but also to enhance the future success of our clients.”

Launching multi-currency accounts places Corpay in the company of Wise, Revolut, Payoneer, Airwallex, Finzly, and others who also offer multi-currency accounts. Unlike many of the competitors, however, Corpay differentiates itself by offering a wide range of treasury management solutions.

Founded in 1992, Corpay is publicly traded on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker CPAY with a market capitalization of $25.5 billion. In addition to its corporate payments arm, the company also offers products and services in vehicle payments and lodging payments.


Photo by Karthikeyan Perumal

ION Commodities Announces Strategic Partnership with Avalara

ION Commodities Announces Strategic Partnership with Avalara
  • ION Commodities and tax compliance automation company Avalara have forged a strategic partnership.
  • The partnership will integrate ION Commodities’ commodity management platform with Avalara’s AvaTax for Energy tax engine solution.
  • Headquartered in Durham, North Carolina, Avalara made its Finovate debut in 2015 at FinDEVr Silicon Valley.

Energy and commodity management solutions provider ION Commodities and tax compliance automation innovator Avalara announced a strategic partnership this week. ION Commodities has joined Avalara’s Partner Program to standardize integration of its technology with Avalara’s AvaTax for Energy tax engine solution.

“Tax compliance is one of the most onerous factors impacting energy and commodities enterprises, and their ability to scale and operate efficiently,” Avalara Vice President and General Manager Steve Lacoff said. “Our partnership with ION gives mutual customers in these sectors a greatly simplified path to compliance automation, with reduced compliance risk, and greater operational efficiency.”

Avalara’s AvaTax for Energy tax engine solution helps firms manage the complexities of tax compliance in energy trading and logistics. The energy markets typically feature complex and dynamic tax rates and rules across multiple jurisdictions. Keeping pace with regulatory requirements — including monthly filing requirements — is operationally costly. What’s worse is that attempts to shortcut these costs “can lead to tax errors and risk significant fines and penalties,” Avalara noted in a recent whitepaper, Fuel Tax Compliance Best Practices.

AvaTax for Energy calculates energy excise taxes for firms ranging from the smallest fuel distributors, energy traders, and mobile refuelers to the largest oil, gas, and chemical companies. The integration between Avalara’s compliance automation and ION Commodities’ commodity management platform will give energy companies an automated, scalable tax compliance solution that improves accuracy, reduces reliance on manual processes, and enables real-time tax calculation.

“Collaborating with Avalara aligns with our mission to deliver comprehensive, integrated solutions for the energy and commodities industry,” ION Corporates CEO Sunil Biswas said. “This partnership enhances our offering with advanced tax compliance capabilities, empowering our community to navigate the complexities of tax regulations with confidence.”

With more than 1,200 clients, ION Commodities provides data-driven energy and commodities trading and risk management solutions across the supply chain. The company’s Energy Trade and Risk Management (ETRM) and Commodity Trading and Risk Management (CTRM) solutions give customers real-time risk analytics and reporting and automate critical business processes to enable faster, more informed decisions. Headquartered in New York, ION Commodities is a division of London-based financial data and software company ION Group.

Avalara introduced itself to Finovate audiences in 2015 as part of Finovate’s developers conference, FinDEVr Silicon Valley. Headquartered in Durham, North Carolina, and founded in 2004, Avalara offers automated tax compliance solutions that boost efficiency and accuracy, streamlining the experience for customers and simplifying tax management for businesses. According to a study by Forrester Consulting, Avalara customers have benefitted from a 90% increase in tax research efficiency, a 50% reduction in time spent on exemption certificate management, an 85% increase in audit preparation efficiency, and an 85% reduction in time spent managing tax returns. Scott McFarlane is co-founder and CEO.


Photo by Nataliya Vaitkevich

Finovate Webinar: Secrets of Successful Financial Services CFOs

Finovate Webinar: Secrets of Successful Financial Services CFOs

Discover the best practices top financial leaders use to become more impactful in their firms.

Financial services Chief Financial Officers (CFOs) are navigating a complex landscape of rapid technological advancements, increasing regulatory demands, and the necessity for agile financial strategies.

As their roles evolve into Chief Financial Growth Officers (CFGOs), leveraging cutting-edge technology to drive innovation and efficiency has never been more important.

Watch this webinar with Kirsty Scotland and Ruhul Moksud to learn about:

  • The impact of AI and machine learning on financial leadership specifically in financial services firms
  • Driving efficiency through automation and process improvements
  • Making data-driven decisions with confidence

Full House: Finovate Announces 32-Company Demo Roster for FinovateEurope

Full House: Finovate Announces 32-Company Demo Roster for FinovateEurope

If you are a subscriber to Finovate Weekly, our LinkedIn-based newsletter of top stories from the Finovate blog, then you’ve already heard the news. But if not, then we’re thrilled to share it with you right here today: FinovateEurope 2025 will feature a full, 32-company roster at our upcoming fintech conference in London, on 25-26 February.

“Our FinovateEurope conference will feature a diverse lineup of startup companies,” Finovate VP and Demo Director Heather Stowell said. “A key commonality among them is AI. But expect to see a number of different AI and automation use cases nested within core banking, wealth management, payments, fraud, and compliance.”

Finovate’s signature, live fintech demonstrations continue to be a much-imitated hallmark of Finovate conferences. With only seven minutes at their disposal and a hard and fast “no videos, no slides” rule, Finovate’s live demos are a unique opportunity for innovative fintechs and financial services companies to show — not tell — our audience of professionals exactly how their innovations help banks and other businesses solve critical problems, grow revenues, and access new markets and customers.

“This is an exciting year for demos at Finovate,” Stowell added. “Over 80% of the FinovateEurope demoing companies are less than five years old and are demoing at Finovate for the first time. We’re looking forward to seeing their latest innovations live on stage.”

To learn more about the companies that will be demoing at FinovateEurope this month, Finovate’s Sneak Peek series is a great place to start. Find out about the challenges being solved, key features, what businesses stand to benefit from their innovations, and more.

This Friday is your last chance to take advantage of early-bird savings of up to £200.00 when you register to attend FinovateEurope. Don’t delay! Visit our FinovateEurope hub today and save your spot!

FinovateEurope 2025 Sneak Peek Series: Part 6

A look at the companies demoing at FinovateEurope in London on February 25. Register today using this link and save 20%.

Dimply

Dimply is an intelligent customer experience and personalization solution for financial institutions.

Features

  • Provides an intelligent customer experience
  • Offers a UX/UI solution
  • Delivers personalization

Who’s it for?

Banks and wealth managers.

Intuitech

Intuitech’s GenAI agents automate 95% of the most complex banking and insurance workflows, cutting loan origination time from weeks to minutes.

Features

  • Process and create any unstructured documents
  • Route and draft emails autonomously
  • Automatically validate information, taking necessary actions while providing full transparency

Who’s it for?

All banks, insurance providers, financial institutions seeking ROI on digital investments in 2025, using Agentic AI to reduce OPEX and boost customer satisfaction.

Primer

Primer is an AI platform that provides superhuman analysis of earnings calls and filings with unbiased, contextualized insights at speed, helping investment professionals make better decisions.

Features

  • Delivers earnings call/filing analysis to analysts within minutes of release
  • Generates key insights at depth and speed that human teams cannot replicate
  • Provides more accurate and relevant peer analysis

Who’s it for?

Investment banks (especially equity research and sales teams), asset managers, wealth managers, and hedge funds.

Stack AI

Stack AI delivers proven, enterprise-grade AI solutions that streamline operations, enhance decision-making, and deliver measurable outcomes for sustainable, scalable growth.

Features

  • Accelerates secure data analysis for faster decisions
  • Automates workflows for consistent, accurate results
  • Scales seamlessly with expanding enterprise requirements

Who’s it for?

Established enterprises.

Experian Selects ValidMind to Help Banks Manage AI Compliance

Experian Selects ValidMind to Help Banks Manage AI Compliance
  • Experian is integrating ValidMind’s AI governance and risk management tools into its Ascend Platform to help banks automate and streamline AI compliance.
  • The collaboration enables financial institutions to automate model validation, risk tracking, and audit readiness.
  • The combined solution will not only simplify AI adoption in financial services, but will also ensure compliance with key regulations like SR 11-7, E-23, SS1/23, and the EU AI Act.

Today’s environment of ever-changing regulations and technological developments in AI is making it difficult for banks to stay on top of AI compliance. To help banks manage these challenges, Experian is integrating its Ascend Platform with AI governance and risk management platform ValidMind.

Experian Ascend helps organizations make better decisions by providing them with access to extensive data and advanced analytics tools. The tool combines information from various sources, including credit and market data, and leverages AI and machine learning to offer insights to help firms better understand their customers, manage risks, and identify new opportunities.

Integrating ValidMind will help Experian automate model development and validation documentation using customizable, pre-built templates for credit, fraud, and other models. It will also enhance risk governance with robust racking, monitoring, and audit readiness features, ultimately enhancing regulatory compliance.

“Our collaboration with ValidMind complements our Ascend Platform and offers our customers innovative technology to automate and accelerate their model risk management processes,” said Experian Software Solutions President Keith Little. “This partnership empowers financial institutions, insurance companies, and fintech organizations to meet regulatory challenges with confidence and agility.”

The new combined solution, which meets compliance requirements including SR 11-7, E-23, SS1/23, and the EU AI Act, integrates AI into templates to ensure that banks generate consistent, high-quality documentation organized to streamline regulatory submissions.

“This partnership is poised to establish a new industry standard for scalable, automated model risk management,” said ValidMind CEO Jonas Jacobi. “Together, we can help financial institutions reduce risk, improve efficiency, and accelerate the adoption and implementation of AI, Gen AI and statistical models.”

California-based ValidMind was founded in 2022. The company’s enterprise platform helps organizations document, validate, and govern models at scale. ValidMind also offers statistical models, AI models, and GenAI models to streamline documentation, simplify compliance, future-proof existing models, and unlock new business models in a transparent way. The company raised just over $8 million in its first funding round last year.


Photo by RDNE Stock project

Navigating the Shift: Four Key Financial Policy Changes Under the New Administration

Navigating the Shift: Four Key Financial Policy Changes Under the New Administration

Is anyone else having difficulty keeping up with all of the changes that have taken place since the new administration took office last month? Over the course of the last 18 days, sweeping shifts have reshaped regulations, agency leadership, and key financial policies— creating both uncertainty and opportunity for businesses navigating this evolving landscape.

While many of these changes will have broad implications for U.S. citizens and organizations operating in the country, I’ve distilled the most significant updates on the White House’s website impacting financial services. Below, I break down the four most critical developments that banks, fintechs, and other financial institutions need to watch closely.

Imposing a regulatory freeze

On January 20, President Trump signed an executive order to halt new rulemaking and review pending regulations across federal agencies. It also calls for the withdrawal of any rules that have been sent to the Office of the Federal Register but not published yet. The administration plans to use the pause to reassess both existing and proposed regulations so that they align with its policy objectives.

For banks and fintechs, this makes it challenging to prepare for future regulatory requirements. It may impact firms’ compliance timelines and will likely confuse financial services companies’ strategic planning efforts.

Strengthening hold on digital assets

On January 23, President Trump issued an executive order titled “Strengthening American Leadership in Digital Financial Technology.” The order prohibits the establishment of US central bank digital currencies (CBDCs). It also establishes a working group to propose a regulatory framework for digital assets within 180 days and allows individuals and entities to access and use open public blockchain networks.

This may present opportunities for banks and fintechs to engage in the stablecoin economy, especially when it comes to cross-border transactions and digital payments. Additionally, governmental protection of an open blockchain may spark the creation of new blockchain-based products and services.

Removing barriers to AI

Also on January 23, President Trump issued an Executive Order titled Removing Barriers to American Leadership in Artificial Intelligence that aims to enhance the US’s position in AI. The order removes existing AI policies and directives that are considered barriers to innovation. Within 180 days, officials are tasked with creating a plan to sustain and enhance America’s global AI dominance.

This emphasis on reducing regulatory barriers may lead to both banks and third party fintechs adopting AI technologies at a faster rate. However, as AI is a double-edged sword, the relaxed regulatory environment may create uncertainty as organizations wait for new guidelines to develop.

Implementing the DOGE workforce optimization initiative

On February 11, President Trump issued an Executive Order titled Implementing The President’s ‘Department of Government Efficiency’ Workforce Optimization Initiative, which intends to streamline the federal workforce and enhance operational efficiency. Controversially, the order gives Elon Musk and his team direct access to data held at the US Treasury Department. As a result, a coalition of more than a dozen US states is planning to file a lawsuit to block access in order to protect the personal data of US citizens.

By reducing staffing at federal agencies that oversee financial institutions, the order may impact the efficiency and thoroughness of regulatory examinations and compliance enforcement. The instability could also cause uncertainty for banks, disrupting strategic planning and compliance efforts.

Other actions

There are two other actions not yet listed on the White House’s official news release page, but each is significant.

Earlier this week, the Associated Press unveiled that the Trump administration ordered the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) to suspend all of its activities. Finovate Analyst David Penn reported on the details of the situation, including what the CFPB can still do and who may take over the agency if it continues to exist.

Today, the Wall Street Journal exclusively reported that the Trump administration is also considering folding the FDIC into the Treasury Department. Experts cited that this is unlikely to transpire, however, as Congress is unlikely to pass such a measure. “This idea would pose an enormous risk of terrifying Americans about the safety of their deposits and triggering bank runs,” Former Federal Regulator Patricia McCoy told CNN.


Photo by René DeAnda on Unsplash