The financial and finance tags are meta-tags and should be burninated.
The tag wiki for financial says:
Anything related to financial calculations and processing of financial data. For example, this tag can be used for questions about interest rates calculations, stock exchange data processing, market data analysis, etc.
The tag wiki for finance is much more extensive, here is an excerpt:
The finance (or "financial services") industry is an umbrella term for organisations that manage money & assets. It includes businesses like banks, credit card companies, insurance companies, consumer finance companies, stock brokerages, hedge funds and investment funds and some government sponsored enterprises.
Let's look at the four criteria for burninationfour criteria for burnination:
Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? and is it unambiguous?
The term "financial" can apply to a lot of things. Sometimes a broad coverage is dealt with by a good tag wiki, but in this case that is not true. The tag wiki itself says it can be about anything from interest rate calculations to market data analysis.
The tag wiki for finance says that it is "for problems specific to the finance industry", followed by no less than 7 different examples, from financial messaging protocols to market data analysis. It also points out that "finance industry" is an umbrella term, so a very large variety of questions could be tagged with "finance".
Is the concept described even on-topic for the site?
Arguably yes, as a lot of software is written for the finance industry. However, at the technical level, this is mostly irrelevant. Programming questions about these should be tagged with the more specific technical issues they address. For example, a question about the SWIFT messages should be tagged with swift-mt. That will make it much better searchable than the generic terms "finance" or "financial".
Does the tag add any meaningful information to the post?
No. As pointed out above, the tags are too broad.
Does it mean the same thing in all common contexts?
Arguably, yes. On Stock Ov... sorry, Stack Overflow, "financial" still means "some code or calculation that involves money". And the tag wiki for "finance" gives many examples of what the tag should be applied to. Unfortunately, that guidance can be summarized as "any problem you could encounter while writing software for the finance industry". Which makes it a poor tool for classification, precisely because a lot of software is written for that industry. So the clear meaning does not save it.
To summarize: these two tags are meta-tags, and too broad to be useful for Stack Overflow. Let's burninate them.