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Have fintech stocks become Wall Street’s most resilient discounted play amid wider volatility?

As US markets continue to grapple with uncertainty in the Middle East and its far-reaching ramifications, inflated AI stocks are continuing to divide investor outlooks. Could the fintech sector offer the strongest level of long-term resilience? 

The fallout of the conflict in Iran has seen the US S&P 500 index slip around 4%. Although this downturn is less severe than other markets that are more exposed to Middle Eastern energy, with Europe’s STOXX 600 tumbling 9% and Japan’s Nikkei falling 12%, it has caused investors to think twice about speculative stocks. 

With a prolonged conflict expected to create a more sustained market downturn in the United States, investors are beginning to rethink what value looks like on Wall Street. 

By the end of Q1 2026, every member of the Magnificent Seven is trailing the S&P 500 in terms of losses, with their high price-to-earnings (P/E) ratios sinking faster as a turnaround in investor sentiment weighs on US markets. 

While much of the high-tech sector has been adversely affected by recent market volatility, we may see opportunities emerge within industries like fintech, which has more grounded valuations and countless emerging use cases globally. 

But which fintech stocks could offer the best long-term value for investors at a time when wider market volatility is presenting fresh risks and opportunities? Let’s take a look at three key fintech options and their long-term prospects: 

1. SoFi Technologies (SOFI)

It’s been a challenging year for SoFi Technologies (NASDAQ: SOFI), but unlike the company’s AI counterparts, this is a stock that has a relatively grounded market capitalization of $21 billion and plenty of high analyst expectations for the future. 

“Given that SoFi anticipates a 30% revenue growth and 34% EBITDA growth by 2026, it’s clear that the company expects to achieve big things in 2026,” said Vsevolod Smirnov, Head of Marketing at Just2Trade.

“However, the question mark over the stock is Muddy Waters Research’s accusations of account abuse and unrecorded debt, which has contributed to a seismic 34% decline for SOFI in 2026. The fintech firm rejects the accusations and could be well-positioned to rally towards a price target of $25 should it restore the faith of investors.”

Given that SoFi has suffered heavy losses, it could be particularly vulnerable to sustained market volatility, but the stock certainly presents an excellent buying opportunity for investors who have enough faith to back a recovery for the company.

2. Block (XYZ)

One of the biggest names in fintech, Block (NYSE: XYZ) has quickly grown from a payment processing platform into a globally renowned financial ecosystem for individuals and businesses alike. 

Block now processes payments for merchants at an annualized rate of more than $250 billion and has developed the ability to deliver its own banking services directly through Square Financial Services.  

Although the stock has also suffered losses in 2026, its 6% downturn is a smaller decline than all of its AI-heavy Magnificent Seven peers, and Block’s Cash App, which has 58 million active monthly users, is an example of how this fintech has already built thriving use cases that can help to support its resilience in the face of wider market pullbacks. 

The stock also recently gained two analyst upgrades in one day, with Truist Securities and Rothschild & Co raising their expectations for Block.

3. Nu Holdings (NU)

Another example of a stock that has access to higher levels of resilience, thanks to a strong addressable market, is Nubank (NYSE: NU). 

Although the stock hasn’t been immune to recent volatility, Nubank’s seismic adoption rates mean that the fintech is well insulated from long-term economic pressures and already counts around 60% of Brazil’s adult population as users, along with a growing market share in Mexico and Colombia. At its most recent count, the platform has 127 million users in Latin America. 

With a current market capitalization of $71 billion, Nubank has plenty of room for further growth should the platform continue to become a dominant force throughout the LATAM region, making the fintech giant a stock to watch when looking for long-term market resilience. 

Given that Nubank intends to secure a Brazilian banking license this year, its success in this pursuit could be the catalyst for far more sustained growth moving into next year, even if Middle East uncertainty continues to dampen global high-tech markets. 

The search for resilience

While Wall Street is still placing a high emphasis on the ongoing artificial intelligence boom, fintech stocks can benefit from having an already addressable market and growing use cases, helping to generate higher levels of resilience among its most innovative stocks. 

Although it’s uncertain how long these headwinds from the Middle East will continue to impact the stock picking potential of investors in the United States, investors may find that fintech leaders may be among the key tech players that have the best chance of mounting a meaningful recovery ahead of some of their market peers. 

Author

Dmytro Spilka

Dmytro is a tech, blockchain and crypto writer based in London. Founder and CEO at Solvid. Founder of Pridicto, an AI-powered web analytics SaaS.

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