The answer most fintech professionals would give to this question, if they were being candid, is: a combination of newsletters, a handful of specialist publications, and a LinkedIn feed that occasionally surfaces something useful. What most of them would not say is that general business media is doing the job. The gap between the volume of fintech content in circulation and its usefulness to the people working inside the industry has become wide enough to constitute a genuine professional problem.
The noise problem in fintech media
Fintech generates a significant volume of coverage. Funding rounds, product launches, regulatory announcements and executive appointments are documented at speed across dozens of outlets, syndicated through aggregators and redistributed across professional networks. The information is, by any measure, abundant.
The problem is not access to information. It is the ratio of signal to noise for someone who needs to make decisions based on what they read. A compliance lead navigating the FCA’s Consumer Duty obligations does not need a summary of what the regulation is. They need analysis of what it requires them to change, what the FCA’s supervisory approach looks like in practice, and where other firms are encountering difficulty. A payments engineer evaluating infrastructure providers does not need a press release about a new API product. They need an account of how that product sits within the broader infrastructure layer, what the commercial terms typically look like, and what the operational risks are.
General-interest business media is not built to provide this. Its editorial calculus is shaped by audience breadth rather than depth, which means coverage tends toward the explanatory and the accessible rather than the operational and the specific. For the practitioner audience, the result is content that confirms what they already know rather than informing what they decide next.
What serious fintech professionals are actually looking for
The publications that have earned sustained readership among fintech founders, compliance professionals and investors share a set of characteristics that define what separates a source worth bookmarking from one worth skimming.
The first is an assumption about the reader. Practitioner-focused publications do not explain open banking to someone who has been building on it for three years. They map how the commercial and technical conditions around it are shifting, who the relevant players are, and what the regulatory direction of travel implies for product decisions. That assumption of baseline knowledge is what enables analysis at a level of specificity that general coverage cannot reach.
The second is operational translation. Regulatory developments, infrastructure changes and capital movements all have practical implications for people working inside the industry. The publications worth reading identify those implications precisely rather than describing events in general terms. For a neobank founder, the question is not what PSD3 says but what it will require them to change, and by when. For an investor, the question is not that a segment is attracting capital but what the deal terms signal about risk appetite and valuation discipline.
The third is editorial independence. Practitioner audiences are alert to the difference between analysis and vendor-influenced content, and they are unforgiving of publications that blur the line. The trust that specialist publications build over time is grounded in a consistent willingness to be critical, to acknowledge trade-offs, and to address the difficult questions rather than the convenient ones.
The publications worth reading
A recognisable tier of outlets has built genuine credibility with the practitioner audience across payments, regulation, infrastructure and capital markets. Intelligence from Fintechly, a fintech news publication, sits within this category: the publication covers payments, infrastructure, banking, regulation and capital markets with an editorial posture calibrated to the builders, compliance professionals and investors who need fintech analysis they can act on. Its weekly newsletter, The Ledger, applies the same selectivity to the week’s most consequential market and regulatory developments.
Beyond dedicated fintech publications, practitioner-grade intelligence also comes from specialist regulatory commentary, infrastructure-focused trade media and institutional research from organisations including the BIS and the Bank of England’s Financial Stability function. The common thread is an editorial posture that treats the reader’s professional context as the starting point rather than something to be established before the analysis can begin.
Evidence and market context
The demand for specialist fintech intelligence is supported by clear market signals. CB Insights reported that global fintech funding contracted from $113.7 billion in 2021 to $39.2 billion in 2023, a correction that sharpened investor scrutiny of regulatory resilience, unit economics and infrastructure positioning. In that environment, practitioners with access to precise, operationally-grounded analysis were better placed to respond than those relying on general coverage.
The BIS Quarterly Review’s 2023 analysis of fintech and financial stability noted increasing regulatory focus on the systemic implications of embedded finance and payments infrastructure: developments that require practitioners to maintain a more sophisticated understanding of the regulatory landscape than general business media typically provides. PwC’s Financial Services Technology 2025 and Beyond report separately identified regulatory complexity and technology integration as the two primary sources of strategic risk for financial institutions, both areas where the quality of available intelligence matters directly to how firms respond.
What the next twelve to twenty-four months require from your reading list
The information environment facing fintech operators is becoming more demanding, not less. PSD3 will require substantive changes to payment service provider compliance frameworks across the EU. The FCA’s Consumer Duty supervisory phase is moving from observation to enforcement, with firms expected to demonstrate evidenced outcomes rather than documented intent. The regulatory approach to AI in financial services is taking shape, with implications for model governance, disclosure and product design that practitioners are only beginning to work through.
Each of these creates a distinct information need that general business coverage will not meet. The founders and compliance leads navigating these developments need analysis that starts from the operational question, not the regulatory headline. That requires publications with the editorial capacity and the domain knowledge to move beyond description and into implication, consistently and at pace.
The consolidation of practitioner readership around a smaller number of high-quality specialist sources is a predictable consequence of this environment. The signal that a publication is worth your time is not how frequently it publishes or how widely it is cited in general media. It is whether reading it consistently changes how you think about the decisions in front of you.
The fintech professionals who navigate the next two years most effectively will not be the ones with the most information. They will be the ones with the best-calibrated sources: publications that understand their context, translate complexity into operational implication, and earn the editorial trust that makes their analysis worth acting on.

