This Small-Cap Fintech Could Jump If Global Payments Bounce Back

This fintech stock, at the very least, belongs on every Canadian’s watchlist.

| More on:
Person holds banknotes of Canadian dollars

Source: Getty Images

Fintech stocks have been through a wild ride over the last couple of years, and few illustrate that volatility better than Mogo (TSX:MOGO). The small-cap Canadian digital finance company has swung between $1 and $5 a share in the past year, leaving investors wondering whether it’s destined to fade into obscurity or stage a comeback. With payments and wealth platforms showing real growth and a unique capital strategy built around Bitcoin, Mogo looks more interesting than many give it credit for.

What happened

Over the past year, Mogo’s results have been uneven but not without progress. Revenue slipped slightly, down 2% year over year in the most recent quarter, but profitability turned a corner. Net income came in at $13.5 million, largely thanks to gains from its WonderFi investment. Meanwhile, adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA) rose to $1.9 million with an 11.4% margin. It was also cash flow positive, a major milestone for a fintech that has long operated in the red. Even more importantly, payments revenue grew 23% while wealth revenue jumped 48%.

One of the biggest developments has been its push to become a fully integrated wealth and payments platform. Mogo already offers digital investing and lending, but it’s seeking regulatory approval to add crypto trading alongside equities. If granted, it would become just one of two Canadian companies able to do that under a single regulated umbrella. With 2.3 million members and assets under management hitting a record $462 million, there’s a base to build on if adoption accelerates.

The other headline-grabber is Mogo’s Bitcoin strategy. While many fintechs are still cautious about integrating crypto into their balance sheets, Mogo leaned in. Its board approved up to $50 million in Bitcoin allocations, to be funded by excess cash and the monetization of investments.

Considerations

Of course, risks remain high. The payments side of the business processed $2.8 billion in volume in the latest quarter, flat from a year ago, with Canada weighing on results. Growth came mainly from Europe, where volume rose 15%. That international angle is promising but still small compared to global payment leaders. Mogo also carries over $80 million in debt, a heavy burden for a Canadian stock with a market cap just over $50 million. While it improved liquidity with $50.8 million in cash and investments, the balance sheet limits flexibility if growth slows. And the Bitcoin reserve strategy could just as easily hurt as help, depending on crypto’s notoriously wild swings.

Still, Mogo has given shareholders reasons to pay attention. It repurchased more than half a million shares in the second quarter, showing confidence in its own stock. It also monetized part of its WonderFi position, pocketing about $14 million in proceeds. That not only bolstered liquidity but also highlighted the value of its investment portfolio, which includes stakes in names like Gemini and Hootsuite.

What makes the story intriguing is that Mogo is operating in a sector that could roar back if global payments rebound. Digital transactions remain on a long-term growth curve. With artificial-intelligence (AI) driven demand for efficient cross-border flows, companies that can innovate at scale stand to benefit. If Mogo can keep growing wealth and payments revenue at a double-digit pace while managing costs, its small-cap status means any positive shift could move the stock sharply higher.

Bottom line

At around $2.39 per share, Mogo has already rallied more than 30% over the past year. Yet it’s still a fraction of where it traded during the last fintech boom. The fundamentals are better today than they were then, with positive cash flow, profitability, and an expanding platform.

The question is whether the market will reward that progress. If digital payments strengthen globally and Mogo secures approval for crypto trading, the upside could be far greater than its current valuation suggests. For investors willing to stomach volatility, this small-cap fintech might just be one of the more compelling high-risk, high-reward plays on the TSX.

Fool contributor Amy Legate-Wolfe has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

More on Tech Stocks

Female raising hands enjoying vacation, standing on background of blue cloudless sky.
Tech Stocks

If You Were Waiting for Tech Stocks to Go on Sale, Now’s Your Chance

Tech stocks, like Constellation Software (TSX:CSU), might be terrific bargains amid volatility.

Read more »

visualization of a digital brain
Tech Stocks

The AI Stocks I’m Seriously Considering After the Tech Wreck

Shopify (TSX:SHOP) stock is a seriously impressive stock that just had a great Black Friday.

Read more »

Engineers walk through a facility.
Tech Stocks

TFSA Investors: How to Invest $7,000 in 2026?

TFSA investors should consider investing in diversified index funds and undervalued growth stocks to derive inflation-beating returns.

Read more »

gift is bigger than the other
Tech Stocks

1 Oversold TSX Tech Stock to Buy and Hold in December 2025

Down almost 55% from its 52-week high, CMG is a TSX tech stock that offers significant upside potential in December…

Read more »

Business success of growth metaverse finance and investment profit graph concept or development analysis progress chart on financial market achievement strategy background with increase hand diagram
Dividend Stocks

This Under-the-Radar Tech Stock Can Be Canada’s Next Unicorn

This under-the-radar Canadian power-tech supplier rides AI data centres and electrification, and could quietly compound into a unicorn.

Read more »

investor looks at volatility chart
Tech Stocks

This Soaring Canadian AI Stock Still Trades at a 33% Discount in December 2025

Down 14% from all-time highs, Celestica is an AI stock that trades at a discount to consensus price targets in…

Read more »

data center server racks glow with light
Tech Stocks

Why AI Infrastructure Could Be Canada’s Hidden Asset Boom

Canada’s clean power and land could make it the backbone of AI’s growth, and Hut 8 offers an infrastructure-first way…

Read more »

A person's hand cupped open with a hologram of an AI chatbot above saying Hi, can I help you
Tech Stocks

Shopify Made a Transformative Deal With OpenAI: Is the Stock a Buy?

Shopify (TSX:SHOP) is an AI winner and shares might be too cheap to pass up given the growth catalysts in…

Read more »