Artificial intelligence was broadly discussed at Singapore FinTech Festival 2025, where banks, payment companies, and infrastructure providers showcased a new generation of AI-driven systems reshaping financial operations. Across panels and exhibitor booths, AI was positioned as the emerging “control layer” for risk management, compliance, and large-scale transaction flows.

Major financial institutions presented models designed to monitor behavior patterns, detect anomalies, and predict fraud with unprecedented granularity. Several Asian and European banks said that real-time AI-powered transaction scoring has begun reducing false positives across AML and fraud monitoring, while enabling regulators to review model outputs more transparently.
Payment providers highlighted AI-optimized routing engines capable of lowering costs across international corridors by selecting the most efficient liquidity path dynamically. With cross-border payments rising sharply across Asia and the Middle East, AI-based FX and settlement optimisation became one of the most discussed operational innovations at the event.
Regulators, meanwhile, focused on supervisory AI — tools used to analyze systemic risks in real time. Authorities from Singapore, Japan, and the UAE presented early-stage frameworks for model governance, accountability layers, and the auditing of AI-driven financial decisions. Industry participants broadly agreed that AI is moving from a competitive differentiator to an expected standard for high-volume financial institutions.
A recurring topic was the convergence of AI and blockchain. Speakers pointed to automated settlement controls, real-time reconciliation on tokenized rails, and the ability for AI agents to execute predefined compliance checks on-chain. This combination, many argued, will define the next cycle of financial-infrastructure upgrades.
SFF 2025 made clear that AI’s role in finance is entering a new phase — one where automation governs core processes rather than assisting them. As institutions proceed with implementation, 2026 is set to be a year of large-scale adoption and regulatory standardisation around AI-native infrastructure.