Entering the POS market in 2019; Opay and Moniepoint captured 37% and 21% market share 

Hi Fintech friends 👋,

Here are the highlights of what happened in African Fintech this week;

  • Two Nigerian Fintechs announced funding deals.

  • Nigeria's Central Bank fined two African Fintechs Unicorns $646K each. 

  • Africa’s second biggest mobile money planned to acquire a bank license.

  • A $40 Million Debt Fund for African Fintechs was launched.

  • Nigeria’s oldest bank was hit by a $4.5 Million fraud.

💸Fundraise and Exits

  • Nigeria’s Juicywayraised $3 million to help businesses solve the FX shortage problem.

Nigerian fintechs are primarily focused on payments and consumer lending.

  • Nigerian fintech Billboxxraised $1.6 million to expand offering invoicing and cash flow solutions to Small and Medium businesses (SMEs).

💰 Venture Funds

  • Cauris Financelaunched a $40 Million Debt Fund for African Fintechs.

2023 African Fintech deal summary

🚀 Partnerships & Product Launches

  • Palmpayintegrated with Jumia to allow customers to pay online from their accounts.

  • Egyptian fintech MNT-Halan entered UAE market.

Middle East FinTech deals fall 35% in Q1 2024

👔 Leadership Lineup

  • “They just show up and look at our books,”fintech executives revealed stricter Central Bank Of Nigeria compliance checks.

Nigeria Fintech Map 2023

📰 News of the Week

  • The Central Bank Of NigeriafinedMoniepoint and OPay $646K each as Nigeria tightens fintech regulation.

Opay and Moniepoint valuation

The penalties followed a routine The Central Bank Of Nigeria audit of the fintech sector, which revealed compliance issues. According to two sources familiar with the process, these regulatory checks are a standard procedure for banks and financial institutions under CBN oversight. At least four other fintech companies were similarly penalized, though the details of these fines remain unknown.

👀 Eye Openers

  • Mobile Money companies are becoming banks? 

MTN Mobile Money by numbers

  • Most mobile money companies, like M-Pesa, the largest mobile money provider in Africa do not want to become banks for various reasons. But, MTN, Africa’s second-largest mobile money provider, is taking a different approach. It plans to launch a digital bank in South Africa, leveraging its extensive telecom reach to drive financial inclusion.

Should we expect to see more mobile money providers become banks? Share your thoughts in the comments, and we will publish them in the next newsletter.

📑 Read of the week

📖 Other News, Reads, and Media

  • First Bank, Nigeria’s oldest bank was hit by a massive fraud incident that led to the theft of $4.5 Million from customer accounts by unknown persons.

  • Nigerian police reportedly arrest bank customers linked to Flutterwave’s $7 Million fraud case.

  • Kenyan Fintech LejaProcessed $2 Billion in Business Transactions in 2024.

🎥 VIDEO INTERVIEWS/DISCUSSIONS

  • Interview with Iyinoluwa Aboyeji, Co-founder of two African unicorns, Flutterwave and Andela, as he shared the biggest mistakes Nigerian startups make.

🦉 Tweet of the Week

🚨 Reminder: Raising money doesn't guarantee success

Here's a look at some of Africa's best-funded startups that raised over ~$500M combined and still shut down

[Via @AfridigestHQ | Subscribe to the newsletter today 👉🏽 https://t.co/2E5QtCbDUz] pic.twitter.com/BREUZigbPH— Afridigest 🧠💡🌍🚀📨 (@AfridigestHQ) December 13, 2024

🎯 Fintech Opportunities

  • Post revenue African startups in Kenya, Tanzania and Rwanda are invited to apply for EUR 100,000 in non-dilutive funding and technical assistance.

Made in Tanzania 🇹🇿 with 💚

👍🏽👎🏽  Did you enjoy this edition of This Week In Fintech Africa? Please share your feedback with me on Twitter or LinkedIn .

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