The 2025 Asian Financial Services Congress (AFSC) and Financial Insights Innovation Awards (FIIA) were more than just industry events. They reflected the rapid pace of financial services transformation and spotlighted the technologies and strategies that help institutions respond to constant change.
One truth came out clearly this year: Resilience and innovation are essential for success in 2025 and beyond. At AFSC, financial services leaders explored the emerging technologies and real-world AI use cases that are driving competitive advantage—and discussed how institutions can respond to increasing complexity, from geopolitics to talent shortages.
In adapting to the new landscape, two powerful forces are shaping transformation in 2025:
- Technology suppliers accelerating innovations, setting benchmarks, and raising the bar for performance.
- Financial institutions navigating shifting demand, geopolitical pressure, and execution risks.
Staying competitive requires clarity. It’s no longer just about adopting technology—it’s about applying it with precision.
Three strategies to strengthen financial services
These three proven strategies emerged as critical for leaders navigating digital transformation and rising expectations.
- Responding to geopolitical risk with five key levers
To stay agile, financial institutions are aligning technology and operating models to address:
- Technology decoupling and regional sovereignty
- Intraregional trade and its impact on growth
- Cybersecurity threats intensified by AI and automation
- De-dollarization trends in global finance
- Procurement changes in a shifting supply chain
- Closing the financial services skills gap
The challenge isn’t technology, it’s execution. Despite a surge of more than 8 million new STEM graduates in Asia and the release of over 70 new large language models (LLMs) within three years of first launch, many projects failed before delivering value.
To realize ROI, institutions must evolve their workforce. That means reskilling technically trained professionals into financial services experts who can connect innovation to business goals.
- Prioritizing high-impact AI use cases
Leaders are no longer experimenting—they’re scaling what works. IDC identified 12 AI use cases delivering measurable value across banking and insurance, including:
- SME lending automation
- Customer onboarding optimization
- Fraud detection
- Risk modeling and forecasting
Each use case was validated by case studies from top Asian financial institutions, demonstrating operational gains and business impact.
Throughout the event, CXOs and digital transformation leaders reinforced these strategies during expert panels. Technology suppliers brought critical perspective, showcasing how successful AI implementations are creating repeatable models for the industry.
Real use cases. Real results.
Execution matters. The FIIA Awards honored institutions that turned their ideas into action. Ten awards were presented to eight financial institutions, including five full-service banks, one digital-only bank, and two insurers.
Winners were selected based on clear, outcome-oriented criteria:
- Demonstrated scalability and ROI
- Customer-centric innovation promoting inclusivity and access
- Forward-looking initiatives with industry-wide implications.
Congratulations to all the winners for showing how innovation can move from pilot to proof.
What comes next for 2026 onwards
As 2025 enters its final quarter, the direction is clear—financial services institutions must act on proven strategies, invest in execution, and double down on AI use cases that deliver value.
Chart your Agentic AI future! Attend these IDC AI webinar series to dive deeper into the Agentic AI and its use cases: