The global financial system is being transformed by the integration of digital technologies such as artificial intelligence, big data, blockchain, and cloud computing, reshaping financial services, risk management, and market dynamics. This study examines how digital transformation is reshaping financial value creation and risk operations within contemporary financial systems. Despite rapid digitalisation, existing financial frameworks remain largely grounded in traditional valuation and risk assumptions, creating a gap in understanding the interaction between digital value, emerging risks, and governance. To address this, the study adopts a multi-method quantitative approach, combining fixed effects panel regression, Difference-in-Differences, Vector Autoregression, and Structural Equation Modelling on a balanced panel of eight countries (four developed and four emerging economies) over the period 2020–2024. The results show that digital transformation significantly enhances financial value, with R&D expenditure exerting a strong positive effect (β = 1.736), while digital adoption reduces non-performing loans (β = −0.967) and operational costs (β = −2.483). However, fintech adoption increases cyber risk (β = 0.341) and contributes to systemic financial stress. Structural modelling further reveals that digital value intensifies risk exposure (β = 0.534), whereas governance mitigates it (β = −0.418). The study advances financial theory by integrating value creation, risk dynamics, and governance into a unified framework. It recommends adaptive regulatory frameworks, strengthened institutional governance, and revised valuation models to ensure stability in digitally transformed financial systems.
Akinwunmi et al. (Fri,) studied this question.