Working in fintech over the years has taught me one thing: this industry never stands still. We’ve moved from paperwork to mobile apps, from manual verification to real-time transactions, and now we’re standing at the edge of a different kind of shift; one that is less about speed and more about intelligence.
For a long time, automation was the benchmark. If a task could be automated, it was seen as innovation. But in 2025, that feels incomplete. The conversations I’m having with teams, partners, and founders reveal a new expectation: the need for systems that can think alongside us.
This is where Agentic AI comes in.
Agentic AI isn’t just another upgrade; it’s a step toward systems that behave more like collaborators. They plan, adapt, and improve with use. McKinsey’s data showing up to 40% productivity gains reflects what we’re seeing in our own workflows at FlashChange. That is, less time spent on repetitive processes and more time freed for strategic decisions.
Gartner’s prediction that autonomous agents will soon handle 20% of business workflows doesn’t sound far-fetched. In many ways, the foundation is already being laid.
The real question for leaders like me is how to prepare teams, processes, and ethical frameworks for systems that begin to take initiative.
Where Banking Happens is Changing
Another shift happening quietly is how financial services blend into daily life.
We’re seeing banking move out of traditional spaces and into the platforms people use every day. Embedded finance is projected to reach $7.2 trillion by 2030, and that trajectory feels very real when you look at how people transact today.
In Africa, especially, digital ecosystems have become central to trade and community. With over 180 million mobile financial users, everyday platforms are effectively becoming financial access points.
Trust is Becoming the Core Advantage
As fintech becomes more interconnected, so does its responsibility. Cyberattacks in the financial sector have risen 130% in the last two years, and regulatory clarity remains a challenge, with only 35% of fintech leaders saying they feel confident about it.
Trust has become the foundation. Users don’t always see how much work goes into security and privacy, but they feel it when something fails.
This is why the next decade won’t just reward the most innovative companies; it will reward the most dependable ones.
What Will Matter Most in the Next 3–5 Years
From my perspective, fintech’s next phase will favour organisations that invest in three things:
- Intelligence: Not just AI, but AI that supports fairness and accountability.
- Integration: Financial services that meet people where they already are.
- Integrity: Systems that put security and transparency at their core.
Africa has a unique chance to lead this movement. We’re mobile-first, adaptive, and unburdened by the legacy systems that slow down other regions. There is room here to shape financial infrastructure that serves both emerging needs and global standards.
About the Author
Gabriel Olayiwola is the chief technology officer at Flashchange, where he leads the company’s technology vision, product execution, and innovation strategy. Known for his ability to coordinate cross-functional teams and manage end-to-end development lifecycles, Olamide plays a pivotal role in shaping FlashChange into a trusted platform for digital asset trading in Africa and beyond.

