AI has collapsed the time it takes to go from idea to working fintech product. A two-person team can now ship a lending app, a payments rail, or a crypto on-ramp in weeks using off-the-shelf models, no-code infrastructure, and a handful of APIs. What hasn't collapsed is the regulatory floor underneath them. If anything, it's rising: the EU's new Anti-Money Laundering Authority (AMLA) became operational in mid-2025, the EU's crypto Travel Rule now applies to every transaction with zero minimum threshold, and MiCA-driven licensing is pushing crypto-asset service providers toward the same compliance bar as traditional financial institutions. Founders who treat identity verification and AML as a "we'll bolt that on before the Series A" problem are building on borrowed time.
Why "Move Fast" Breaks on Regulated Rails
The move-fast-and-ship playbook works well for consumer apps and horizontal SaaS, where the worst-case failure mode is a bad review. It works badly for anything that touches money movement, custody, or cross-border payments, where the worst-case failure mode is a frozen account, a blocked banking partner, or a regulator asking hard questions about your onboarding logs. Investors and banking partners have gotten sharper about this too, due diligence on fintech and crypto startups now routinely includes questions about KYC coverage, sanctions screening, and Travel Rule readiness well before it includes questions about model architecture.
