- Key insight: Finastra’s new Atlanta office aims to localize engineering and product for U.S. clients.
- What’s at stake: U.S. focus may shift competitive power among payment processors and fintech hubs.
- Expert quote: Consultant Tyler Brown says Atlanta provides rich fintech talent pools for expansion.
Source: Bullets generated by AI with editorial review
The U.K.-based financial software provider Finastra is adding to its footprint as it attempts to improve its appeal to international clients.
The fintech is opening a new Atlanta office, along with expanded offices and an innovation center in India.
Processing Content
“Atlanta has emerged as one of the world’s leading fintech hubs,” said
The new Atlanta office will house employees across engineering, product, data and corporate functions. The office will also serve as Finastra’s U.S. leadership base, with Walters splitting his time between his home residence in Atlanta and the company’s global headquarters in London.
The new offices and expanded facilities support the company’s broader expansion goals by creating additional physical proximity to its existing U.S. customers.
“Our focus is on being closer to customers, attracting top talent and building the capabilities banks need right now,” Walters told American Banker. “The Atlanta office supports all three: It gives us a strong presence in a major tech and financial hub where we can attract top talent.”
Tyler Brown, an independent fintech and payments consultant, told American Banker that the Atlanta area hosts several large fintech providers as major employers, and that attracts potential employees that Finastra’s new office would be able to access.
“I would be surprised if they had much of a pipeline in Orlando or Portland,” he said, referring to two of Finastra’s other U.S. office locations. “There are plenty of vendors to poach from; Fiserv, Global Payments and NCR’s descendants come immediately to mind. If they want to expand in payments, Atlanta is certainly where they’ll find the people to do it.”
Finastra reports it has 3,500 U.S. commercial clients in financial services and that figure has “largely held steady over the years” due to consolidation in the U.S. small bank and credit union market.
Finastra was formed from a
Finastra has slimmed down its product offerings this year by
“Finastra could have a transformative transaction that would narrow its geographic focus and give them a good reason to invest in an Atlanta hub,” Brown said. “If, as rumored,
Finastra
“Now that Fiserv has its own stablecoin and is pitching a digital asset platform, any large payment processor that doesn’t have a stablecoin strategy will slip behind peers as traditional and decentralized payment systems merge,” Brown said.