Banking in 2026: The Charter Race, the Branch Race, and “The Squeezed Middle”

Banking

Fintech

Tech

Mar 12, 2026

Banking in 2026: The Charter Race, the Branch Race, and “The Squeezed Middle”

By  Christopher Cheetham, CEO of Ptera Technologies

Banking is re-fragmenting and re-consolidating at the same time.

On one side, fintechs are racing up the regulatory stack, moving from partnered programs to charters and (in some cases) national trust bank models, because distribution without regulatory durability is getting harder to defend.

On the other, bulge bracket banks (for example, JPMorgan Chase) are doing something the industry swore was over. They are expanding physical footprints (especially into smaller markets) because branches are still a deposit-gathering machine and a trust engine.

In the middle sit regional and community banks (for example, Truist or PNC). They are too large to be ‘local-only’ and too small to amortize a modern tech stack like a megabank, and are increasingly in competition with asset-light fintechs who have better UX.

That’s ‘The Squeezed Middle.’ It’s not a metaphor. It’s a business model problem. Bank-grade risk and compliance costs, megabank tech expectations, and fintech-speed competition.

Here’s everything you need to know about banking in 2026.

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Trend 1: Fintechs are racing to become (real) banks

For years, ‘fintech + sponsor bank’ was the winning formula: ship fast, outsource the heavy regulatory lift, and scale distribution. Now the incentives have changed:

Why the charter rush is back

  • Regulatory durability as a competitive moat. A charter (or a national trust bank structure, where applicable) can reduce dependency on partners, improve economics, and strengthen enterprise credibility, especially for custody, payments, and stablecoin-adjacent activities.
  • Regulators are processing more applications. Banking industry reporting points to a sharp increase in OCC charter applications and continued momentum into 2026.
  • Digital asset ‘trust bank’ models are gaining traction. The OCC’s conditional approvals and active pipeline for digital-asset-related trust charters are pulling crypto-native and fintech-native firms closer to the perimeter of regulated finance.
    All this implies fintech competition is becoming less ‘feature vs. feature’ and more ‘regulatory + balance sheet + distribution. That’s a different game and it compresses the room for mid-tier banks that relied on being the default regulated endpoint.

Trend 2: Bulge bracket banks are expanding their physical footprint

JPMorgan Chase plans to open 160+ branches across 30+ states in 2026 and renovate hundreds more.

Why branches still matter in a mobile-first world

  • Deposits are the cheapest strategic weapon when rates are volatile and competition for funding is intense.
  • Trust is still physical for many households and small businesses, particularly outside top metros.
  • Branches are distribution for higher-margin products (wealth, small business, treasury) that pure digital challengers still struggle to cross-sell at scale.

Now pair that with the megabanks’ tech budgets. JPMorgan alone is planning ~$19.8B in technology spend in 2026. This is far more than ‘digital transformation.’ That’s an industrial-scale advantage.

Big banks are attacking on two flanks, digital and physical, while smaller institutions are being told to ‘innovate’ on budgets that don’t match the mandate.

Trend 3: Fintech M&A is shifting from ‘growth at any price’ to ‘capabilities at a discount’

The headline deal that captures the moment is Capital One’s $5.15B acquisition of Brex.

Whether you love the deal or hate it, the message is clear:

  • Banks are buying modern software distribution (SMB expense + corporate cards + workflow) rather than building everything internally.
  • Fintech valuations are being repriced and strategic buyers know it. Commentary around Brex highlights the gap between prior private valuations and strategic clearing prices in 2026.
  • Owning the operating system beats owning another point product. M&A is increasingly about platforms, not features.

For fintech founders, ‘exit’ is back on the table earlier, especially if you have workflow, data, and distribution in a vertical where a bank can immediately drop funding, compliance and balance sheet leverage behind it.

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The Squeezed Middle: what happens to regional and community banks without scale?

Here’s the uncomfortable truth: you don’t “finish” “modern tech stack”. It’s not a project — it’s a permanent expense line. Industry research consistently points to massive tech spend across banking, and even large banks struggle to translate it into productivity.

So, what happens to banks that can’t make the ROI math work?

There are three outcomes

  1. Consolidate to scale (become a super-regional)
  2. Specialize hard (own a niche with defensible underwriting + distribution)
  3. Get hollowed out (become ‘a balance sheet with a charter’ and rent the rest)

The danger zone is #3. If your differentiation is primarily ‘we’re regulated and local,’ you’re exposed on both sides. Fintech UX on one side and bulge bracket balance sheet, tech and footprint on the other.

Will we see a wave of ‘super regional’ combinations and what scale is required?

The market is already answering ‘yes.’

Recent and pending examples underline the direction of travel:

  • Fifth Third + Comerica creating a larger national competitor (and already completed in early February 2026, per company and trade reporting).
  • PNC + FirstBank expanding geographic footprint and deposits, with the deal framed explicitly around competing more effectively at scale.
  • Additional large regional combinations have been announced across the market as boards reposition for a more consolidation-friendly window.

What ‘scale’ actually means in practice

It’s not one magic asset number. Rather whether you can sustainably fund:

  • A real tech roadmap (core modernization, data, fraud, onboarding, servicing, AI enablement)
  • Compliance & third-party risk at a level that regulators expect from ‘complex’ institutions
  • Distribution (digital acquisition and selective physical presence) without blowing your efficiency ratio

That said, recent deals are clustering around banks moving into the high hundreds of billions in assets (or at least materially up the curve) to compete for deposits, talent, and technology ROI.

My take: We should expect more super-regional tie-ups in 2026, but not a free-for-all. The winners will be the ones who can articulate a credible ‘why us together’ story beyond cost saves (especially around tech integration and deposit strategy).

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The tighter funding environment: what it means for niche fintechs still burning cash

Fintech capital didn’t disappear, but it got more selective. AI is absorbing a disproportionate share of attention and dollars.

  • Reporting on 2025 venture dynamics shows a major concentration of VC dollars into AI and mega-rounds, with fewer companies getting funded overall.
  • Fintech funding improved versus prior years, but the market narrative is ‘quality wins’: sustainable unit economics, diversified revenue, and distribution that isn’t purely paid acquisition.

What this does to fintech strategy in 2026

  • Niche fintechs without durable distribution will get squeezed first.
  • Single-revenue-stream models (especially those dependent on interchange or volume volatility) will face harsher terms.
  • ‘AI-washed fintech’ won’t clear unless it demonstrably lowers loss rates, increases conversion, or reduces operating cost in a measurable way.

Result: More fintechs will choose between (a) partnering deeper with banks, (b) pursuing charters, or © selling, often earlier than planned.

2026 outlook: fintech + bank M&A activity

I expect 2026 to be an above-trend year for both bank consolidation and bank–fintech M&A, driven by three forces:

  • Scale is back in fashion (deposits, compliance capacity, tech ROI)
  • Strategic buyers see discounted capability in fintech (Brex-style deals won’t be the last)
  • Regulatory posture appears more permissive relative to the recent past, opening a window that boards will try to use before it closes

Net:

  • More ‘super regional’ combinations where there’s a credible deposit plus tech plus footprint thesis.
  • More bank acquisitions of fintech platforms that own workflows (SMB, treasury, underwriting, identity, fraud, data).
  • More consolidation among fintechs themselves as growth-stage companies reprice and seek survival through combination.

The squeezed middle won’t vanish, but it will shrink. And the banks that survive won’t be the ones that ‘digitize.’ They’ll be the ones that pick a lane: scale up, specialize, or strategically buy their way into modern distribution.

For early-stage fintechs, this environment is both an opportunity and a minefield. The path from concept to scalable, bank-grade platform now runs through sponsor bank due diligence, third-party risk management, security audits, regulatory scrutiny, and increasingly complex vendor ecosystems. A misstep can delay launch by quarters or permanently damage a bank partnership.

That’s where Ptera Technologies sits. We help fintech founders architect products the right way from day one: aligning development with sponsor bank expectations, vetting and integrating best-in-class partners, and building scalable, compliant infrastructure without bloated burn.

In a market where capital is tighter and time-to-market is existential, execution discipline is a competitive advantage. If you’re building, or preparing to scale, in this rapidly shifting banking landscape, reach out to our team.

Let’s make sure you’re positioned to win, not just launch. Explore how Ptera can help: ptera.tech

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