If you want to understand how fintech is growing up, you don’t need another deck about Silicon Valley.
Just watch what’s happening between Dhaka and London.
On one side, bKash – Bangladesh’s mobile money giant – is quietly proving that a payments-led super app can turn serious profit. On the other hand, Revolut fintech company, just bought Swifty, an AI travel agent incubated at Lufthansa Innovation Hub, to turn its super app into a lifestyle concierge.
Put those stories together and you get a neat picture of fintech maturity:
First you bank the unbanked. Then you fix the unit economics. Then you start running more and more of your customer’s life.
This is exactly the kind of arc US fintech watchers should be paying attention to.
Act I – Dhaka: When “financial inclusion” starts printing profit
For more than a decade, bKash has been the default money app for tens of millions of Bangladeshis – paying bills, sending remittances, topping up phones, paying merchants – all from a simple mobile wallet.
That scale is now translating into real financial performance:
- A recent breakdown of its 9M’23 numbers shows net profit jumping to about Tk 881 million, up from just around Tk 40–41 million a year earlier.
- Reports on the business highlight double-digit top-line growth, higher gross profit margins, and higher interest income as key drivers of the turnaround.
That’s not just “oh, cool, they’re finally in the black.” It’s a signal that the classic emerging-market fintech story—
acquire a massive user base by solving cash and access problems
is entering a new phase:
prove you can make money on that base without breaking trust.
On top of that, bKash has been getting recognition specifically for how it uses data and technology. A Markedium piece notes it picked up a “Prestigious Award for Excellence in Real-Time Data Innovation”, positioning it as a leader in using live transaction data to improve services and infrastructure.
Put simply: bKash isn’t just a warm, fuzzy inclusion story anymore. It’s a profitable, data-driven infrastructure play. That’s what fintech maturity looks like in an emerging market:
- Reach the masses.
- Use data and product mix to fix margins.
- Turn the story from “number of users” to the quality of earnings.
Act II – London: When the Revolut fintech company app becomes a lifestyle OS
Now jump to Revolut Fintech Company.
In October 2025, Revolut announced it was acquiring Swifty, an AI-powered travel agent incubated at the Lufthansa Innovation Hub. The deal brings both Swifty’s tech and its founding team into Revolut.
Here’s what matters from a branding and strategy perspective:
- Swifty’s AI agent can autonomously handle the whole travel booking flow – flights, hotels, payments, invoicing – all through a conversational interface.
- Revolut plans to plug this into its Loyalty Programme and pair it with its upcoming AI financial assistant, explicitly framing the move as a way to strengthen its position at the intersection of finance, AI, and lifestyle.
- The company already serves more than 65 million customers worldwide, so any AI embedded here instantly has global reach.
If bKash is the story of getting the economics of payments right, Revolut is the story of what you do next once you already have scale:
- You stop being just a “cool debit card with an app.”
- You start becoming the place where travel, loyalty, everyday money, and AI agents meet.
This is fintech maturity at a different stage:
- Use financial services as the entry point.
- Layer on high-frequency lifestyle use cases (travel, subscriptions, perks).
- Use AI agents to tie it all together and quietly increase engagement and revenue per user.
Angle 1 – The fintech maturity ladder
Look at bKash and Revolut together, and a simple ladder emerges:
Step 1: Access & habit-building
- bKash: Bring basic financial services to tens of millions of underbanked people; make the app part of daily life.
- Revolut: Start as a slick alternative to traditional banks, especially for travel and multicurrency spending.
At this stage, the metrics everyone obsesses over are users, transactions, and GMV.
Step 2: Prove the model financially
- bKash’s 9M’23 numbers show the classic pivot from “we’re growing fast” to “we’re growing and profitable.” Gross margins improve, interest income and higher-value services kick in, and the scale finally shows up in the bottom line.
This is where you shift the story from “we’re changing lives” to “we’re building a sustainable business”—without abandoning inclusion.
Step 3: Become a lifestyle and AI platform
- Revolut’s Swifty deal is a textbook “Step 3” move. It doesn’t just add another feature; it adds a new vertical (travel) and a new capability (autonomous AI agent) that can drive loyalty, cross-sell, and daily relevance.
Here, the story becomes:
We’re not just where you store money; we’re where your life admin gets done for you.
Why US marketers and fintech folks should care
From a US perspective, it’s tempting to see these as “interesting foreign case studies” and move on. That would be a mistake.
Here’s why this matters if you’re sitting in New York, SF, or Austin:
- Emerging markets are running the full playbook faster
Bangladesh went from being overwhelmingly cash-based to having a mobile wallet unicorn that’s now posting serious profit and winning innovation awards—all in just over a decade. - The super app narrative is no longer just about China
bKash and Revolut show two sides of the same coin: one rooted in financial inclusion, the other in lifestyle convenience. Together, they hint at where US players like Cash App, PayPal, Chime, or even Apple might be headed:- fix profitability on the core money flows, then
- add AI-powered lifestyle services on top.
- Brand stories are shifting from “disruption” to “maturity”
- bKash’s story now is: We proved this model can make money while staying inclusive.
- Revolut’s story is: We’re building an AI-driven lifestyle layer on top of the money layer.
- AI isn’t a feature; it’s the glue
Swifty inside Revolut turns AI from a generic “assistant” into a specific agent that owns a high-value job: travel. Combined with a loyalty programme and a financial assistant, that’s the beginning of a true personal operating system for money and movement.
The Markedium takeaway
If we zoom out, Markedium’s coverage of bKash and Revolut sketches a simple but powerful idea:
- bKash shows that the era of “growth at all costs” is giving way to growth with discipline in fintech.
- Revolut + Swifty show that once that discipline is in place, the next wave of differentiation will be about how well you can blend money with everyday life through AI and lifestyle services.
For US readers, the message is less “look what Bangladesh and the UK are doing” and more:
This is what fintech looks like when it grows up: inclusive, profitable, and quietly running more and more of your life in the background.
The only real question for American fintechs and banks is:
Which step of that maturity ladder are you actually on—and what’s your Swifty moment going to be?
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