FinTechTerms
FinTechTerms

Hyperinflation

Extremely rapid and out-of-control inflation.

Why it matters

Hyperinflation matters because it connects valuation, risk, reporting, and market interpretation with the practical decisions teams make inside open banking and payment rails. A weak understanding can lead to poor product framing, misleading market interpretation, incomplete compliance checks, or incorrect assumptions about how a financial workflow behaves.

How it works

In practice, Hyperinflation is read through its definition, the systems or market actors it touches, and the way it changes decisions around consent, account access, regulated APIs, payment initiation, and bank connectivity. A useful review asks who uses the term, what data or obligation it changes, which control owns the outcome, and whether the meaning differs across product, market, and regulatory contexts.

Risks and pitfalls

The common failure is to ignore consent scope, API role boundaries, or the difference between account data and payment initiation. The risk increases when the same label is reused across banking, crypto, capital markets, software, and analytics without checking whether the operational meaning is still the same.

Regional notes

This concept appears across BIST, MOEX, GLOBAL contexts, but implementation can change with local regulation, payment rails, trading venues, data availability, and institutional practice. For BIST, MOEX, and global comparisons, the safest approach is to keep the definition stable while checking market-specific rules and infrastructure before drawing conclusions.