Abstract
In the context of tightening sustainability regulations and rising demands for transparent and responsible capital allocation, understanding how digital financial innovations influence market efficiency has become increasingly important. This study examines the impact of Financial Technology (FinTech) solutions and crowdfunding platforms on sustainable market efficiency, volatility dynamics, and risk structures in the United Kingdom. Using weekly data for the Financial Times Stock Exchange 100 (FTSE 100) index from January 2010 to June 2025, the analysis applies the Lo–MacKinlay variance ratio test to assess compliance with the Random Walk Hypothesis as a proxy for informational efficiency. Firm-level proxies for FinTech and crowdfunding activity are constructed using the Nomenclature of Economic Activities (NACE) and Standard Industrial Classification (SIC) systems. The empirical results indicate substantial deviations from random-walk behavior in crowdfunding-related market segments, where persistent positive autocorrelation and elevated volatility reflect liquidity constraints and informational frictions. By contrast, FinTech-dominated segments display milder inefficiencies and faster information absorption, pointing to more stable price-adjustment mechanisms. After controlling for structural distortions through heteroskedasticity-consistent corrections and volatility adjustments, variance ratios converge toward unity, suggesting a restoration of informational efficiency. The results provide relevant insights for investors, regulators, and policymakers seeking to align financial innovation with the objectives of sustainable financial systems.