Janover’s 123% Leap and Robinhood’s Upgrades Lead FinTech IPO Index Higher

The first few trading days of 2025 saw the FinTech IPO Index log a 1.2% gain — where one notable triple-digit surge led the pack. Overall, however, a spate of declining names blunted the momentum of the Index as a whole.

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    Janover Leads the Pack

    Janover’s stock soared 123%. The company effected a one-for-eight reverse stock split, which bolstered its gains. The move was made in order to maintain compliance with NASDAQ listing requirements.

    In as separate announcement, the company said that it would begin accepting payments in bitcoin, ethereum and solana for select services, a move Janover said was “underscoring the company’s commitment to innovation within evolving market trends. This decision aligns with the increasing support for digital assets on both a domestic policy level and within broader financial markets, as seen in notable corporate strategies to leverage certain cryptocurrencies for long-term value creation.”

    Robinhood’s stock was 9.5% higher. As noted by sites such as Investors.com, JPMorgan upgraded Robinhood to neutral from underweight. Yahoo Finance excerpted the note, which mentioned that “our upgrade comes on a still constructive investment environment, a higher-for-longer interest rate environment and a more credible ability to better monetize its customer base,” per the commentary from JPMorgan analyst Ken Worthington. “Ultimately, we think Robinhood has made notable progress in legitimizing its operations vs. its primary reliance on meme-stock trading three years prior.”

    Several Names Declined

    Upstart shares slipped 3.8%.

    As reported this week, Sandia Area Federal Credit Union, a credit union based in New Mexico with nearly 90,000 members and over $1.2 billion in assets, has announced its partnership with Upstart to offer personal loans to more consumers. Sandia Area started lending as a partner on the Upstart Referral Network last year. As noted n the release, with the Upstart Referral Network, qualified personal loan applicants on Upstart.com who meet Sandia Area’s credit policies will receive tailored offers as they seamlessly transition into a Sandia Area-branded experience to complete the online member application and closing process.

    Riskified’s stock was off a slight 0.4%. In an announcement this week, the company announced a partnership with Ixopay to enhance payments orchestration, as the partnership will help eCommerce customers expand securely, through the leveraging of omnichannel payment orchestration with artificial intelligence-powered (AI) fraud detection. The companies said that the partnership combines Ixopay’s payment orchestration, tokenization and flexible payment optimization capabilities with Riskified’s AI-powered fraud and risk intelligence platform.

    “Businesses using this combined solution will have the opportunity to increase sales conversion by reducing false declines, enhance security to minimize fraud chargebacks, and optimize payment flows for a frictionless customer payment experience-enabling merchant growth while minimizing risk,” the companies said in the announcement.

    Open Lending shares were 8.5% lower.

    The company had said last month that it entered into an agreement with an unnamed “captive finance company of a premier automaker” to begin utilizing Open Lending’s flagship Lenders Protection program. The agreement will enable Open Lending’s newest OEM partner to access more near- and non-prime consumers with automated decisioning and default insurance coverage.

    FinTech IPO Index


    ACH Same-Day Q2 Volume Increases 15% to Nearly $1T

    The ACH Network says it has seen “significant” gains in same-day payments since last year.

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      Those transactions were up 15% during the second quarter compared to last year, helping drive overall growth of 5%, the payments network that underpins most U.S. payroll, bill pay and B2B invoices said Monday (July 21).

      “The continued robust growth of Same Day ACH shows how it is serving payments use cases for consumers, businesses, government agencies and other organizations,” Jane Larimer, president and CEO of Nacha, which operates the ACH network, said in a news release provided to PYMNTS. “As we enter the second half of the year, we expect to see this trend continue.”

      In all, ACH Network growth continued during the quarter, with 8.7 billion payments valued at $23.3 trillion, respective increases of 5% and 7.9% year over year. The network saw 336.4 million same-day payments, moving $980.3 billion in value, up 15% and 22% respectively. During the first half of this year, Same Day ACH handled 662.4 million payments valued at almost $1.9 trillion.

      “Business-to-business ACH volume grew apace, with more than 2 billion payments, up 10.6% from the same period in 2024,” the release added. “Claim payments to healthcare providers grew by 9.9% to 138.2 million payments.”

      The report follows a quarter in which the volume of Same Day ACH payments climbed 19.1% year over year to reach 326 million, with the value of those payments increasing 24.8%.

      In related news, PYMNTS explored the “speed-and-security paradox” surrounding faster payments in a recent conversation with Bill Wardwell, senior vice president of payments, treasury and supplier services at spend management platform Coupa, and Katie Elliott, senior risk and fraud officer at B2B payments network Bottomline.

      “I know it seems counterintuitive, but I’m going to say it: Slowing down is the best practice for faster payments,” Elliott said.

      She said her remedy is to introduce friction into high-risk moments like vendor onboarding or a change to routing instructions, while allowing an already vetted payment to proceed across real-time payment or same-day ACH rails. When urgency is not part of the equation, business email compromise schemes that rely on fear and deadlines lose their potency.

      The hidden enemy is fragmentation, Wardwell added. Pointing to a soon-to-be-published Coupa survey, he said that nearly 80% of the companies that suffered payment fraud were using multiple payment workflow systems.