Cloud, AI maturity, quantum edge, and payment rails look set to redefine financial services resilience this year.
Five pivotal technology trends are creating opportunities and challenges for financial institutions in the year ahead, according to one financial software firm.
Cloud computing, component-based modernization, AI and advanced cybersecurity are reshaping the delivery of financial services with advances in quantum computing also on the horizon, according to the firm’s Chief Technology Officer, Mike Stawchansky.
The firm offers forecasts for the payments landscape, too, that are driven by advances in real-time processing and AI-driven efficiencies that redefine how banks serve their customers.
- Acceleration of cloud migration
Cloud computing supports the need for increased flexibility, scalability, and speed, enabling banks to integrate value added services through secure APIs and to be more agile in innovating to meet customer needs. As cloud uptake accelerates, and in the wake of recent industry infrastructure outages, financial institutions will increasingly prioritize risk mitigation through diversified cloud strategies to ensure maximum resilience for mission-critical services.
Greater cloud reliance favors fintech vendors offering software compatible with hybrid and multi-cloud deployments. - Increase in component-based modernization
Replacement of legacy core banking systems remains difficult, yet modernization is essential in today’s fast-changing landscape. Breaking complex systems into self-contained modules that upgrade, scale, and manage independently accelerates innovation aligned with business objectives.
Microservices can integrate with legacy solutions via APIs, enabling incremental upgrades component by component. - Turning of AI hype into real returns on investments
While AI already accelerates individual productivity, the pressure in 2026 will be to deliver tangible enterprise returns on investments through strategic, measurable implementations aligned with business objectives.
Data integration challenges persist: undiscoverable or unusable enterprise data, combined with suboptimal team AI expertise, risks project failure. Success requires governed, securely accessible data for selected tools. Financial services leaders must modernize infrastructure for AI applications while upskilling staff to build competitive edge.
Success requires governed, securely accessible data for selected tools. Financial services leaders must modernize infrastructure for AI applications while upskilling staff to build competitive edge. - AI will boost greater digital payments momentum
We expect to see banks increasingly embracing generative AI (GenAI) not just as a tool for automation, but as a strategic capability that enhances decision-making and drives operational efficiency.
The use of conversational interfaces within payments operations will be more common. The ability to interact with systems using natural language offers the potential to speed up payment investigations significantly, enabling staff to pinpoint anomalies and conduct repairs using real-time insights. Over time, further improvements in contextual understanding and predictive analytics can help operations teams not only identify issues but anticipate them before they escalate.
As GenAI evolves, its role in payments will shift from reactive support to proactive orchestration. Analyzing transaction patterns, spotting irregularities and suggesting alternative payment routes are among a range of benefits that will help banks deliver faster, more transparent, and more personalized experiences. - The AI-powered threat landscape takes no prisoners
Just as threat actors get faster and more sophisticated utilizing AI tools that can work across large data sets autonomously, so security professionals must deploy their own AI tools designed to detect and neutralize threats before they can compromise sensitive financial systems.
Investing in cloud security solutions and scrutinizing the actions of all identities (including all members of the extended supply chain) will support a robust security posture.
A continuous cycle of simulation, refinement, and strengthening creates a dynamic security posture capable of adapting to a rapidly evolving threat landscape in 2026. - Quantum computing readiness ramps up
2026 could be the year we start to see “quantum advantage”, where quantum computers will demonstrably outpace classical machines for certain tasks. Critical factors for success in this area include organizational readiness, alongside tech maturity, as well as using investment in quantum and AI to amplify each other’s impact and maximize value.
Overall, financial institutions cannot afford a piecemeal approach to technological transformation. An appetite to embrace continuous innovation and develop the organizational agility to pivot rapidly is key, along with allocating resources strategically, building technical capabilities incrementally, and fostering strategic technology partnerships. - Payment platforms shift to modular cloud-native architectures
A shift towards modular, cloud-native platforms will offer greater flexibility, resilience, and scalability to the industry.
It is not just about replacing outdated systems, but about enabling smarter, more agile operations. Decoupling core payment functions such as routing, validation, and compliance from the underlying technology layer gives financial institutions the ability to upgrade specific components without disrupting the entire stack. Modern, modular, API-based platforms will be better equipped to scale, respond to regulatory shifts, and lead in the next phase of payments evolution. - Rise in real-time and cross-border payments
Governments around the world have been on a mission to deploy real-time payments to meet demand for 24×7 resilient, mission-critical payments.
Today more than 80 countries across the globe have deployed instant payment schemes, and it is estimated that by 2028, one in every four payments sent globally will be real-time. In parallel, the rise of alternative payment rails alongside SWIFT is rapidly reshaping the way money moves across borders.
Stablecoins are moving from the fringes of cryptocurrency to mainstream finance, offering increased flexibility, transparency, and speed, with 24×7 secure settlement for fiat currency.


