Timi Odueso, Author at TechCabal https://techcabal.com/author/timi/ Leading Africa’s Tech Conversation Mon, 09 Sep 2024 05:20:04 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.1 https://techcabal.com/wp-content/uploads/tc/2018/10/cropped-tcbig-32x32.png Timi Odueso, Author at TechCabal https://techcabal.com/author/timi/ 32 32 👨🏿‍🚀TechCabal Daily – Nigerian neobanks to charge electronic levy https://techcabal.com/2024/09/09/techcabal-daily-nigerian-neobanks-to-charge-electronic-levy/ https://techcabal.com/2024/09/09/techcabal-daily-nigerian-neobanks-to-charge-electronic-levy/#respond Mon, 09 Sep 2024 05:45:00 +0000 https://techcabal.com/?p=142560

Good morning ☀

Are you ready to dive headfirst into Africa’s tech revolution? 

Moonshot 2024 is your ticket to the future. Imagine networking with industry titans, discovering groundbreaking startups, and soaking up the vibrant energy of Lagos. And the best part? Sochitel has us covered with prepaid eSIMs so we can stay connected and focused on what matters most – making connections and seizing opportunities. Let’s make this happen!

Secure your spot now for two days of inspiration, networking, and innovation.

Banking

What caused the Sterling Bank outage?

Sterling Bank
Image Source: TechCabal.

Since August 30, over 3 million Nigerians have been asking one question: why is Sterling Bank, a Nigerian tier-2 bank, inaccessible?

TechCabal reported that the week-long outage was caused by the bank’s switch to a new core banking application (CBA). The bank switched Temenos T24 to SEABaaS, a custom-built software. This is Sterling Bank’s third migration since 2016.

CBAs are back-end systems that handle banking transactions and financial records. And software migrations typically happen in banking. Depending on the approach taken and the complexity of the upgrade, CBA migrations take anywhere from weeks to months, or even a year to complete.

Usually, the tipping point for banks to migrate their software is often to balance the operating cost versus the effort in maintaining their software. Other times, it is intended to migrate the banking platform to a more secure base.

Sterling Bank has promoted this new development on X, calling it a “masterpiece.” However, customers have been unable to use their bank apps or access banking features.

This frustrated many Nigerian users who got stuck simply trying to use their mobile app to send money. Worse, some of them tried unsuccessfully to access salaries from employers paid during the last week of the month.

Sterling Bank will join other financial institutions like Kuda and Moniepoint that use custom-built CBAs. The overall feeling in the camp is that the new software will improve Sterling Bank’s performance, and make operations more scalable or better suited to its banking needs than what it previously had.

Read the exclusive article here.

Read Moniepoint’s 2024 Informal Economy Report
Moniepoint image

Did you know that 57.7% of the business owners in Nigeria’s informal economy are under 34 years old? Click here to find out more about the demographics of Nigeria’s informal economy.

Economy

Nigeria’s central bank sells dollars to BDCs dollar at ₦1580/$

The Dollar to Naira
Image source: Google

Nigeria’s central bank (CBN), in its continuous effort to stabilise the country’s volatile exchange rate, has sold US dollars to Bureau de Changes (BDCs) at a rate of ₦1,580/$.

As part of its current strategy to increase liquidity, the CBN provided each eligible BDC with $20,000 in forex while mandating that they can only sell to end-users at a maximum 1% markup. This means BDCs must sell dollars at no more than ₦1,595.8/$1, retaining a profit of only ₦15.8 for every dollar they sell.

CBN has opted to keep a keen eye on BDCs. It banned forex sales to BDCs in 2021. Their frequent, sometimes large-volume dollar trades in the parallel market, were allegedly a conduit for illicit forex flows to happen, according to former CBN chief, Godwin Emefiele. The uncontrolled parallel market caused an uneven demand and supply of forex.

However, following the lifting of the ban on BDCs early this year, CBN has been closely monitoring BDC operations. In February 2024, it revoked the licenses of 4,173 BDCs, leaving an estimated 1,500 active operators. It has since resumed selling forex to these active operators and mandating profit margins they can sell at. 

BDCs cannot exceed these margins. With this tighter oversight, the CBN is hoping to stabilise the naira by reducing currency demand and supply imbalances that have upended it for so long.

Fincra secures International Money Transfer Operator (IMTO) licence in Nigeria
Fincra image

Since its inception, Fincra has provided businesses with local payment options. However, with the IMTO licence, Fincra can now manage funds transfers from abroad to Nigerian recipients more efficiently. Read more here.

Fintech

Nigerian neobanks to deduct ₦50 levy

CBN
Image source: PremiumTimes Nigeria

Digital banks or Neobanks launched with a promise to make bank transfers almost instant and free (or at a lesser cost when compared to traditional banks). Kuda Bank, one of Nigeria’s top neobanks for example, offered 25 free transfers per month to its customers. This appeal allowed neobanks to rack up customers quickly. Although users still maintained accounts with traditional banks, they used the neobanks to move money around and conduct daily transactions. 

However, neobank customers might start bearing the weight of their transactions.

Starting today, fintechs will charge a ₦50 Electronic Money Transfer Levy (EMTL) for transactions between ₦10,000 ($6) and above. 

The EMTL was introduced in 2020 as part of Nigeria’s Finance Act 2019 to generate revenue for the government. The country’s tax collector, the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS), first imposed the levy on deposit money banks in December 2023. In January 2024, the EMTL was charged on all foreign currency transactions.

Although the government’s delayed application of the EMTL to fintech has raised eyebrows, applying the same levy to both traditional banks and fintech follows the principle “what is good for the goose is good for the gander”. 

Given that traditional banks have been subject to this levy, it’s logical to extend it to fintech. The EMTL continues a round of increased regulation for neobanks.

Paystack Virtual Terminal is now live in more countries
Paystack image

Paystack Virtual Terminalhelps businesses accept secure, in-person payments with real-time WhatsApp confirmations and ZERO hardware costs. Enjoy multiple in-person payment channels, easy end-of-day reconciliation, and more. Learn more on the Paystack blog →

Energy

Nigeria to build first LNG Plant

CBN
An LNG plant in Australia. Image Source: Woodside Petroleum

Nigeria produces 1.5 million barrels of crude oil daily—the largest oil producer in Africa and the ninth largest globally. While the country will now be able to process its crude oil locally thanks to the Dangote refinery, it is also taking steps to tap into its petroleum by-products.

Nigeria has more than 209 trillion cubic feet of gas reserves. Yet, it loses about $1 billion annually due to its inability to convert these gas reserves to liquid natural gas (LNG)—a clean-burning fuel that can be used to generate electricity in power plants. 

That’s about to change Nigeria’s oil regulator approved UTM Offshore Limited to build the country’s first floating liquefied natural gas facility. 

UTM was first granted a license to build a 1.2 million tons per annum facility in 2019, but it was upgraded to 2.8 million tons due to increased demand for LNG in the market.

The UTM offshore-approved plant will produce 2.8 million metric tons of LNG yearly. The vessel will use flared gas from an ExxonMobil oil field in Akwa Ibom. The facility will produce LNG, 500,000 metric tons of liquefied petroleum gas for the domestic market, and condensate. 

The project will be funded by Afreximbank. The bank already secured $2.1 billion in financing the first phase of construction and committed $3 billion for the second phase.

The project is expected to be commissioned in 2028, with the first gas production a year later.

CRYPTO TRACKER

The World Wide Web3

Source:

OneLiquidity  logo

Coin Name

Current Value

Day

Month

Bitcoin $54,708

+ 0.43%

– 9.20%

Ether $2,291

– 0.14%

– 11.59%

Toncoin

$4.89

+ 3.89%

– 27.08%

Solana $128.34

– 0.01%

– 16.32%

* Data as of 06:10 AM WAT, September 9, 2024.

Events

There are more jobs on TechCabal’s job board. If you have job opportunities to share, please submit them at bit.ly/tcxjobs

Read the guide on how to build a fintech in Africa
Kora image

To build a fintech in Africa, you must navigate complicated regulatory regimes, incorporate in each market, get the right licences, and use the right technology stack. Kora and Norebase put everything you need to build in this guide. Check it out.

Written by:Faith Omoniyi & Emmanuel Nwosu

Edited by: Olumuyiwa Olowogboyega & Timi Odueso

Want more of TechCabal?

Sign up for our insightful newsletters on the business and economy of tech in Africa.

  • The Next Wave: futuristic analysis of the business of tech in Africa.
  • Entering Tech: tech career insights and opportunities in your inbox every Wednesday at 3 PM WAT.
  • TC Scoops: breaking news from TechCabal

P:S If you’re often missing TC Daily in your inbox, check your Promotions folder and move any edition of TC Daily from “Promotions” to your “Main” or “Primary” folder and TC Daily will always come to you.

Email Us
]]> https://techcabal.com/2024/09/09/techcabal-daily-nigerian-neobanks-to-charge-electronic-levy/feed/ 0 👨🏿‍🚀TechCabal Daily – How OmniRetail cracked African e-commerce https://techcabal.com/2024/09/06/techcabal-daily-new-changes-at-flutterwave/ https://techcabal.com/2024/09/06/techcabal-daily-new-changes-at-flutterwave/#respond Fri, 06 Sep 2024 06:00:00 +0000 https://techcabal.com/?p=142436

TGIF ☀

We’ve got ₦1 million up for grabs.

We’ve partnered with Zedcrest Wealth to host the first edition of the Money Titan Tournament at Moonshot 2024. Test your financial literacy by competing in five exciting stages, from Beginner to the Grand Finale, with rewards at every level.

If you’re ready to become the Money Titan 2024 and win the cash prize, sign up on the Zedcrest app and join the waitlist. Sign up now.

Companies

How did OmniRetail crack B2B e-commerce in Africa?

Deepanker Rustagi
Image Source: Ganiu Oloruntade/TechCabal.

African B2B e-commerce businesses raised a combined $423 million between 2021 and 2022 because their value proposition worked: they helped informal retailers stock up inventory faster by connecting them to wholesalers.

Fast-moving consumer goods (FMCG) needed to be sold off quickly due to their short shelf life and to accommodate the high demand for these products. But the delivery delay from distributors made this a lingering problem. Retailers were losing money and business was shrinking.

B2B e-commerce companies formed partnerships with manufacturers, often deploying their logistics fleet and inadvertently displacing distributors. Soon, this situation kept everyone in a bind: retailers wanted better rates, and the companies had to compete with distributors.

These businesses were seeing some red as low margins and unit-level losses became challenges for the business. Yet OmniRetail, a B2B e-commerce company founded by Deepanker Rustagi in 2019 claims it has cracked the code to profitability.

OmniRetail does not attempt to replace the middlemen. It offers three products: Omnibiz for retailers, Mplify for distributors, and an embedded finance app, Omnipay for facilitating payments. 

Retailers place orders on Omnibiz, and the company, using their bulk orders as a bargaining chip, gets favourable discount offers that they pass to the retailers. As soon as these orders tick off, distributors pick it up on Mplify and deliver last-mile to retailers. 

“The value chain margin in commerce has various layers, including distributors, wholesalers, and retailers. If you can play a role in these different layers of efficiency, you can get a large amount,” said Rustagi.

For a company that claims to have achieved net profitability, OmniRetail’s asset-light approach allows it to achieve even greater economies of scale.

Go deeper in our OmniRetail coverage here.

Read Moniepoint’s 2024 Informal Economy Report
Moniepoint image

Did you know that 57.7% of the business owners in Nigeria’s informal economy are under 34 years old? Click here to find out more about the demographics of Nigeria’s informal economy.

Companies

Flutterwave names Mitesh Popat as new CFO

The Zimbabwe Gold
Image source: Flutterwave

Flutterwave has appointed Mitesh Popat as its new chief financial officer (CFO), replacing former CFO Oneal Bhambani who left the company in November 2023.

Before joining Flutterwave, Popat spent 18 years at Citi where he served as CFO for the Middle East and Africa (MEA). Popat revels in executing financial business growth strategies. His work navigating financial compliance at Citi in the MEA region is an addition Flutterwave will be keen on having on their team, given their expansion goals. 

In 2024, the fintech company expanded its payments infrastructure to Southern and Eastern African markets, with its latest licence acquisition in Uganda. Equally, the company is actively cutting off cash-burning products and aggressively pursuing new growth markets.

It has shut down its struggling money transfer product, Barter, opting instead to stick with its remittance product, Send. It also shifted its focus to enterprise payments and laid off 3% of its staff who were working on products the company deemed surplus to requirements.

Flutterwave is looking to connect more African markets to its ecosystem. And Popat’s new job will see him ask questions daily about how the company will capture more money while losing less—to boost retail investors’ confidence—as it continues to front-pedal its plan to go public.

Fincra secures International Money Transfer Operator (IMTO) licence in Nigeria
Fincra image

Since its inception, Fincra has provided businesses with local payment options. However, with the IMTO licence, Fincra can now manage funds transfers from abroad to Nigerian recipients more efficiently. Read more here.

Insights

Funding Tracker

Funding Tracker
Image source: Stephen Agwaibor/TechCabal

This week, Nigeria’s Kredete, a financial software platform, secured $2.25 million in seed funding. The funding round was led by Blockchain Founders Fund, with participation from Techstars, Tezos Foundation, Polymorphic Capital, Launch Africa, Neer Venture Partners, and DNA Fund. (September 2)

Here are other deals for the week:

  • Chpter, a Kenyan e-commerce startup, raised $1.2 million in a pre-seed round. Pani led the funding round with participation from Plesion Capital, Techstars, Norrsken, Renew Capital, Viktoria Ventures, and angel investors. (September 2)
  • Tunisian IoT-based smart energy management solution startup Wattnow announced the closing of an undisclosed multi-million dollar funding round. The round was led by Lateral Frontiers and 216 Capital, with participation from Outlierz Ventures, Satgana, Octerra Capital, and other strategic angel investors. (September 4)

Follow us on Twitter, Instagram, and LinkedIn for more funding announcements. Before you go, our State of Tech in Africa H1 2024 Report is out. Click this link to download it.

Paystack Virtual Terminal is now live in more countries
Paystack image

Paystack Virtual Terminalhelps businesses accept secure, in-person payments with real-time WhatsApp confirmations and ZERO hardware costs. Enjoy multiple in-person payment channels, easy end-of-day reconciliation, and more. Learn more on the Paystack blog →

CRYPTO TRACKER

The World Wide Web3

Source:

OneLiquidity  logo

Coin Name

Current Value

Day

Month

Bitcoin $56,408

– 1.32%

– 1.30%

Ether $2,380

– 1.28%

– 5.85%

Toncoin

$4.86

+ 6.20%

– 15.75%

Solana $129.44

– 2.88%

– 15.75%

* Data as of 06:40 AM WAT, September 6, 2024.

Events

  • Inside the big stories transforming the Arabian Peninsula and the world. Introducing Semafor Gulf – your go-to source for understanding the rising influence of Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Qatar. Three times a week, the Semafor Gulf newsroom will bring you original reporting that examines how the region’s financial, business, and geopolitical decisions shape the world, from culture and investment to infrastructure, climate, and technology. Navigate the region’s capital, influence, and power with Semafor Gulf – subscribe for free here.

  • We’re excited to announce our partnership with Wimbart the second edition of their pioneering pan-African research publication, “Startup Performance Reporting in Africa”. This report will shed light on the intricacies of investor relations within the African tech ecosystem. If you’re a founder, take a couple of minutes to share some key insights with us by filling out this survey

  • The Future of Capitalism Tech Startup Competition is offering $1 million to one lucky tech startup that can transform how businesses today operate. If your tech can save costs, boost efficiency, increase productivity or customer satisfaction, then apply by September 30 for a chance to win. 
Read the guide on how to build a fintech in Africa
Kora image

To build a fintech in Africa, you must navigate complicated regulatory regimes, incorporate in each market, get the right licences, and use the right technology stack. Kora and Norebase put everything you need to build in this guide. Check it out.

Written by:Stephen Agwaibor & Emmanuel Nwosu

Edited by: Olumuyiwa Olowogboyega & Timi Odueso

Want more of TechCabal?

Sign up for our insightful newsletters on the business and economy of tech in Africa.

  • The Next Wave: futuristic analysis of the business of tech in Africa.
  • Entering Tech: tech career insights and opportunities in your inbox every Wednesday at 3 PM WAT.
  • TC Scoops: breaking news from TechCabal

P:S If you’re often missing TC Daily in your inbox, check your Promotions folder and move any edition of TC Daily from “Promotions” to your “Main” or “Primary” folder and TC Daily will always come to you.

Email Us
]]> https://techcabal.com/2024/09/06/techcabal-daily-new-changes-at-flutterwave/feed/ 0 👨🏿‍🚀TechCabal Daily – Congo cancels $1.2 billion national ID project https://techcabal.com/2024/09/05/techcabal-daily-congo-cancels-1-2-billion-national-id-project/ https://techcabal.com/2024/09/05/techcabal-daily-congo-cancels-1-2-billion-national-id-project/#respond Thu, 05 Sep 2024 06:00:00 +0000 https://techcabal.com/?p=142357

Good morning ☀

This is our last call for reviews on TC Daily design. 

If you have something to say about the newsletter’s design, please let us know by filling out this form

Companies

Airtel Nigeria’s move to unlock new revenue streams

Airtel image
Image source: Airtel

Mature businesses have established positions in the market. They usually have a strong mix of assets and liabilities on their balance sheets, people either love them or hate them for one reason or another, and they are often considered important businesses. Yet, these companies everywhere face the same problem: capped revenues. 

A mature business needs help to grow. Because it has a mature product line known by everybody, its growth rate slows. When growth slows, money inflow stalls with it, making reaching new heights difficult. In cases like this, mature businesses try to unlock new revenue streams by targeting a new audience or entering a new market.

Airtel Nigeria, the country’s second-largest telco and arguably a mature business operating since 2001, is doing this same thing with its subsidiary: Airtel Nigeria Telesonic Limited. On September 4, the Nigerian telecoms regulator, the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) awarded Telesonic with three new licences to provide internet services, sell telecoms infrastructure, and provide wholesale long-distance telecoms services.

Airtel Nigeria, through its subsidiary, will enter new markets to try and unlock new revenue opportunities and provide a buffer to its telco business that so often takes a business hit due to operational and forex losses, owing to currency devaluation. 

Though its market choice of entry is questionable due to the participation of other established players, with a stroke of luck and a lot of branding activity, Airtel Nigeria will reach a new audience that will open new pathways to profit for it.

Read Moniepoint’s 2024 Informal Economy Report
Moniepoint image

Did you know that 57.7% of the business owners in Nigeria’s informal economy are under 34 years old? Click here to find out more about the demographics of Nigeria’s informal economy.

Economy

DRC cancels $1.2 billion national ID project

The Zimbabwe Gold
Image source: AP Archive

The Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), one of the world’s poorest countries, has no national ID system. This lack of civil registry has made it difficult to know the country’s population, who can vote, or who is eligible to pay tax. Citizens of the country also struggle with securing official documents, cash checks, opening bank accounts and receiving money from abroad as a result. 

Despite many failed promises by the country’s leaders to build a national ID system, the country’s latest stab at building a national ID system has been put on hold.

In 2020, close to 60 companies reached out to the Congolese government to provide a national ID system. The project was estimated to cost about $360 million, according to the country’s Ministry of Interior. 

When biometrics provider Idemia and local partner Afritech emerged as the preferred provider, their proposed cost ballooned to about $1.2 billion. The proposed figures, more than three times the ONIP’s cost estimates, made activist groups and government watchdogs frown against the project, warning against potential misuse of funds.

These warnings by watchdog groups prompted the government to cancel the deal. If the deal had been executed, it would have been one of the most expensive digital identity contracts in history.

Collect payments anytime anywhere with Fincra
Fincra image

Are you dealing with the complexities of collecting payments from your customers? Fincra’s payment gateway makes it easy to accept payments via cards, bank transfers, virtual accounts and mobile money. What’s more? You get to save money on fees when you use Fincra. Get started now.

Mobility

Fuel hikes in Nigeria force Uber to review fares

Bolt and Uber cars
Image source: Nairametrics

Since President Bola Tinubu removed fuel subsidy in 2023, the price point for fuel has jumped four times—₦195 to ₦540 to ₦610, and now ₦897 per litre. 

Gig drivers have had to deal with these price increases, leaving ride-hailing companies to constantly review base fares. 

These ride-hailing companies will once again make the decision after the NNPC set new fuel prices to about ₦897 per litre.

“We are currently conducting a comprehensive review of the recent increase in fuel prices and considering various initiatives to minimize its impact on driver earnings,” Uber’s spokesperson told TechCabal.

Before now, drivers have always complained that the price increment by Uber and Bolt did not meet their expectations. These drivers have also clamoured for a reduction in commission. However, ride-hailing companies risk driving riders away with exorbitant price increases. Already, ride-hailing is becoming a luxury to most users. 

Still, drivers want increased prices, with some turning to rival inDrive, the ride-hailing platform that uses a bidding system that allows drivers and riders to set fares and charges less commission. 

One contrarian idea might be that both Uber and Bolt may need to copy inDrive’s model to win over drivers. Bolt has implemented a flexible pricing model, similar to inDrive’s, allowing passengers to bid higher fares to drivers, increasing their likelihood of securing rides during peak demand times.

Paystack Virtual Terminal is now live in more countries
Paystack image

Paystack Virtual Terminalhelps businesses accept secure, in-person payments with real-time WhatsApp confirmations and ZERO hardware costs. Enjoy multiple in-person payment channels, easy end-of-day reconciliation, and more. Learn more on the Paystack blog →

IoT

Huawei to build more data centres in Africa

data centre
Image source: Hyperscale

Huawei, a Chinese global technology company, has been silently making its mark on the African tech scene.

After entering the African market in 1999, Huawei had to compete with already established players like Ericsson and ZTE in the telecoms market. However, soon enough, it gained credence by doing just one thing: it expanded to carrier and enterprise services. The allure of getting full-service solutions appealed to big businesses like Nigerian traditional banks, Orange, and Safaricom.

The growth of these companies also played its part and solidified Huawei’s growth. As they grew, Huawei too grew. Whether you chalk this up to serendipity or not, Huawei is spotting another trend in the African tech scene. 

There is currently a data centre boom going on in Africa due to interest in artificial intelligence and reliable cloud storage solutions for big businesses. Huawei has revealed plans to build more data centres in East and West Africa to support this increasing demand.

The technology giant has been consolidating its partnership with African governments after building smart cities and tech talent initiatives in countries like Zambia and Uganda. Yet, its real goal is to become an infrastructure leader in the continent.

Its playbook remains the same: aggressive pricing, customised full-service integrated solutions for big businesses, and government support.

CRYPTO TRACKER

The World Wide Web3

Source:

OneLiquidity  logo

Coin Name

Current Value

Day

Month

Bitcoin $57,183

+ 1.23%

+ 3.00%

Ether $2,410

+ 1.48%

– 3.75%

Toncoin

$4.58

– 4.73%

– 16.17%

Solana $132.86

+ 4.22%

– 5.44%

* Data as of 06:30 AM WAT, September 5, 2024.

Events

  • We’re excited to announce our partnership with Wimbart the second edition of their pioneering pan-African research publication, “Startup Performance Reporting in Africa”. This report will shed light on the intricacies of investor relations within the African tech ecosystem. If you’re a founder, take a couple of minutes to share some key insights with us by filling out this survey

  • The Lagos Innovates Workspace Voucher Programme is back, offering startups the chance to secure state-of-the-art workspaces with top-notch equipment, all without the usual costs. Benefit from a collaborative environment, networking opportunities, and the freedom to focus on building your dream startup. Apply for a workspace voucher.

  • Lagos Idea Hub is an 8-week programme designed for entrepreneurs ready to scale their startups with tailored mentorship, proven growth strategies, and direct access to industry experts. Gain practical insights from mentors who understand your industry, implement strategies that drive sustainable growth, and connect with a powerful network of entrepreneurs, investors, and leaders. Apply to join the Cohort 10.0.

  • The Future of Capitalism Tech Startup Competition is offering $1 million to one lucky tech startup that can transform how businesses today operate. If your tech can save costs, boost efficiency, increase productivity or customer satisfaction, then apply by September 30 for a chance to win. 
Read the guide on how to build a fintech in Africa
Kora image

To build a fintech in Africa, you must navigate complicated regulatory regimes, incorporate in each market, get the right licences, and use the right technology stack. Kora and Norebase put everything you need to build in this guide. Check it out.

Written by:Faith Omoniyi & Emmanuel Nwosu

Edited by: Olumuyiwa Olowogboyega & Timi Odueso

Want more of TechCabal?

Sign up for our insightful newsletters on the business and economy of tech in Africa.

  • The Next Wave: futuristic analysis of the business of tech in Africa.
  • Entering Tech: tech career insights and opportunities in your inbox every Wednesday at 3 PM WAT.
  • TC Scoops: breaking news from TechCabal

P:S If you’re often missing TC Daily in your inbox, check your Promotions folder and move any edition of TC Daily from “Promotions” to your “Main” or “Primary” folder and TC Daily will always come to you.

Email Us
]]> https://techcabal.com/2024/09/05/techcabal-daily-congo-cancels-1-2-billion-national-id-project/feed/ 0 👨🏿‍🚀TechCabal Daily – Flip the crypto coin https://techcabal.com/2024/09/04/techcabal-daily-flip-the-crypto-coin/ https://techcabal.com/2024/09/04/techcabal-daily-flip-the-crypto-coin/#respond Wed, 04 Sep 2024 06:00:00 +0000 https://techcabal.com/?p=142265

Good morning ☀

Calling all AI enthusiasts! Join the TechCabal X Zindi audio classification challenge.

Join us in building an audio classification model for the Ewe language and stand a chance to win $500. You’ll be competing for a top prize, and contributing to the preservation of an important African language. 

Sign-up now.

Crypto

Is Crypto welcome in Nigeria?

Nigeria crypto
Image source: Pymnts

Persona non grata is a Latin phrase that translates to “unwelcome person” and is used to describe someone who is officially declared undesirable or unwelcome by a government. 

This dictum may explain the Nigerian government’s stance on crypto. 

Crypto regulation in Nigeria has been a rollercoaster. After lifting a two-year crypto ban in December, the government had a change of heart. In the following months, it showed signs that it still frowned against digital assets. 

The government blocked the websites of crypto exchanges and warned against P2P trades. Executives of Binance who had come into the country to resolve the blocked access were arrested, with one executive still in detention. Nigeria’s anti-graft agency, the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) also froze 1,000 bank accounts linked to crypto trade. 

If you’ve followed till now, you’ll get a sense that crypto may not be fully welcomed in the country. And while the SEC may have issued its first crypto licences to Quidax and Busha, banks and fintechs across the country are playing it safe.

While the Nigerian SEC has released new guardrails for crypto transactions in the country, banks claim that they are unclear and difficult to follow. While the newly licensed entities are optimistic about a good rapport with banks and fintech, the banks have made their point clear that they’ll only engage when they receive instructions from the CBN.

Read Moniepoint’s 2024 Informal Economy Report
Moniepoint image

Did you know that 57.7% of the business owners in Nigeria’s informal economy are under 34 years old? Click here to find out more about the demographics of Nigeria’s informal economy.

Crypto

Binance calls for Gambaryan’s release

The Zimbabwe Gold
Tigran Gambaryan

Since Nigeria started scapegoating crypto company Binance in February over claims that it allowed currency traders to manipulate FX rates, not much has changed. On September 3, the naira continued a week-long slide, settling at ₦1,590/$1. 

While the Central Bank’s search for stable pricing remains elusive, the case against Tigran Gambaryan, the Binance compliance executive arrested in February 2024 has continued. On Monday, a video of Gambaryan being denied the use of a wheelchair by prison officials went viral. His family has repeatedly asked for his release on health grounds. 

On Tuesday, Binance also asked the Nigerian government to release Gambaryan. Its CEO Richard Teng posted on X that Gambaryan’s treatment is “inhumane”, and that he must be allowed to go home to his family. US lawmakers have since petitioned President Joe Biden to secure his release.

However, Nigeria is not budging in its stance that Gambaryan and his employer are allegedly complicit in laundering money. To this day, Nigeria has yet to show how it will hold any water to this claim, as it never tracked or regulated crypto transactions.

Moreover, in 2021 when Nigerian banks were freezing crypto-related accounts, Binance’s peer-to-peer (P2P) platform allowed crypto trading to continue under the radar, drawing Nigeria’s ire.

Again, this is not Binance’s first money laundering case; the US Department of Justice sued the company for $4.3 billion on similar charges in 2023. Nigeria is likely sensing an opportunity here. If this messy affair plays out longer, all indications point toward Binance eventually settling.

Collect payments anytime anywhere with Fincra
Fincra image

Are you dealing with the complexities of collecting payments from your customers? Fincra’s payment gateway makes it easy to accept payments via cards, bank transfers, virtual accounts and mobile money. What’s more? You get to save money on fees when you use Fincra. Get started now.

Economy

Fuel price hike in Nigeria affects gig drivers

NNPC fuel Pump Prices
Image source: Nairametrics

Shortly after the Nigeria National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPC) opened up about its “financial strain” and debts owed to petrol suppliers, Nigerians braced themselves for the inevitable. 

Since the subsidy removal in 2023 by President Bola Tinubu, citizens still managed to buy fuel cheaply at NNPC stations. Compared to private filling stations that sold higher to gain profits, the government-owned NNPC sold fuel at ₦610 ($0.38) per litre—shielding Nigerians from the landing cost of ₦1,200 ($0.75) per litre in imports.

However, on September 3, after succumbing to its financial reality, NNPC increased the price of fuel by more than 40%. Some of its stations sold fuel yesterday at ₦897 ($0.56) per litre. Worse, other parts of the country sold higher at ₦910 ($0.57).

While the long queues Nigerians have been witnessing these past three weeks will likely continue, fuel-dependent businesses like gig drivers will be feeling the heat.

When we spoke to a Bolt driver in Owerri, he expressed frustration yesterday. “When I got to NNPC to buy fuel this morning, they were adjusting the pump price to ₦885 ($0.56) per litre. It was shocking. There was a queue so I was unable to buy fuel after waiting for 5 hours. I left and went to another [private] filling station, and bought fuel at ₦995 ($0.63) per litre.”

With increased fuel prices, gig drivers will spend more money fuelling their cars. Yet, low fares and high commissions could eat into their daily earnings. They’ve been lobbying ride-hailing apps like Uber and Bolt via protests to increase base fares and reduce commission from the average 25% to 5%. But these apps have been understandably hesitant. Commissions make up about 50% of Uber’s earnings. An 80% reduction could see these companies lose one-tenth of their revenue.

While Uber says it has been “constantly monitoring” the local dynamics to understand the impact on the marketplace, it is possible that Nigerian gig drivers and their welfare unions will intensify efforts to lobby ride-hailing apps for better working conditions.

Paystack Virtual Terminal is now live in more countries
Paystack image

Paystack Virtual Terminalhelps businesses accept secure, in-person payments with real-time WhatsApp confirmations and ZERO hardware costs. Enjoy multiple in-person payment channels, easy end-of-day reconciliation, and more. Learn more on the Paystack blog →

CRYPTO TRACKER

The World Wide Web3

Source:

OneLiquidity  logo

Coin Name

Current Value

Day

Month

Bitcoin $56,499

– 4.35%

+ 7.26%

Ether $2,376

– 5.87%

– 3.50%

Toncoin

$4.81

– 8.26%

– 8.10%

Solana $127.30

– 5.28%

+ 9.37%

* Data as of 06:30 AM WAT, September 4, 2024.

Events

  • We’re excited to announce our partnership with Wimbart the second edition of their pioneering pan-African research publication, “Startup Performance Reporting in Africa”. This report will shed light on the intricacies of investor relations within the African tech ecosystem. If you’re a founder, take a couple of minutes to share some key insights with us by filling out this survey

  • The Lagos Innovates Workspace Voucher Programme is back, offering startups the chance to secure state-of-the-art workspaces with top-notch equipment, all without the usual costs. Benefit from a collaborative environment, networking opportunities, and the freedom to focus on building your dream startup. Apply for a workspace voucher.

  • Lagos Idea Hub is an 8-week programme designed for entrepreneurs ready to scale their startups with tailored mentorship, proven growth strategies, and direct access to industry experts. Gain practical insights from mentors who understand your industry, implement strategies that drive sustainable growth, and connect with a powerful network of entrepreneurs, investors, and leaders. Apply to join the Cohort 10.0.

  • The Future of Capitalism Tech Startup Competition is offering $1 million to one lucky tech startup that can transform how businesses today operate. If your tech can save costs, boost efficiency, increase productivity or customer satisfaction, then apply by September 30 for a chance to win. 
Read the guide on how to build a fintech in Africa
Kora image

To build a fintech in Africa, you must navigate complicated regulatory regimes, incorporate in each market, get the right licences, and use the right technology stack. Kora and Norebase put everything you need to build in this guide. Check it out.

Written by:Faith Omoniyi & Emmanuel Nwosu

Edited by: Olumuyiwa Olowogboyega & Timi Odueso

Want more of TechCabal?

Sign up for our insightful newsletters on the business and economy of tech in Africa.

  • The Next Wave: futuristic analysis of the business of tech in Africa.
  • Entering Tech: tech career insights and opportunities in your inbox every Wednesday at 3 PM WAT.
  • TC Scoops: breaking news from TechCabal

P:S If you’re often missing TC Daily in your inbox, check your Promotions folder and move any edition of TC Daily from “Promotions” to your “Main” or “Primary” folder and TC Daily will always come to you.

Email Us
]]> https://techcabal.com/2024/09/04/techcabal-daily-flip-the-crypto-coin/feed/ 0 👨🏿‍🚀TechCabal Daily – Zimbabwe backs its currency with $190 million https://techcabal.com/2024/09/03/techcabal-daily-zimbabwe-backs-its-currency-with-190-million/ https://techcabal.com/2024/09/03/techcabal-daily-zimbabwe-backs-its-currency-with-190-million/#respond Tue, 03 Sep 2024 06:00:00 +0000 https://techcabal.com/?p=142193

Good morning ☀

Difficulties within Africa’s economic landscape have raised questions about the feasibility of building successful startups on the continent. 

Iyin Aboyeji, a Nigerian entrepreneur who co-founded two companies valued at over $1 billion before the age of 30, is now a prominent startup investor. 

Iyin is one of the featured speakers at Moonshot 2024, joining other innovators and industry leaders working on groundbreaking solutions to Africa’s most pressing challenges.

You can listen and learn from Iyin’s journey at Moonshot 2024. Get your tickets here.

Startups

Inside Mira’s new all-in-one hardware

The Mira Register
The Mira Register

In Zero to One, Peter Thiel argues that founders should test their hypotheses in the real world. 

Mira, a Nigerian fintech which launched in 2024, aims to change how restaurants handle food orders. With Mira, users would scan a QR code, check out a list of meals, and pay through any medium of choice. Restaurants can also receive these orders on any device. 

When the product went out into the world, Mira learned that restaurants wanted a familiar system. This informed the launch of Mira Register, an all-in-one device that allows restaurants to track customer orders and manage other internal business processes.

Mira claims its unique approach to building products sets it apart from competitors. 

The startup uses a hybrid approach that allows restaurants to operate the product with minimal internet connection. The startup is benefiting from founder Ted Oladele’s experience building great startups at Flutterwave.

As founder, Ted Oladele sees Mira Register as the startup’s opportunity to enter the hospitality industry. The CEO is also optimistic about capturing a 10% market share in Nigeria’s saturated POS sector using Mira Register. Already, it has processed over $500,000 in transactions since launch and serves several well-known SMEs like Asheluxe, Grey Matter, and The Vault.

Read all about Mira’s pivot here.

Read Moniepoint’s 2024 Informal Economy Report
Moniepoint image

Did you know that 57.7% of the business owners in Nigeria’s informal economy are under 34 years old? Click here to find out more about the demographics of Nigeria’s informal economy.

Economy

Zimbabwe backs its currency with $190 million

The Zimbabwe Gold
The Zimbabwe Gold (ZiG)

Like most African countries struggling with rising import costs, declining export prices, and high inflation, Zimbabwe has taken steps to shore up foreign currency to help increase demand for its domestic currency, the ZiG. So far, the country has spent $190 million doing this. 

The Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe said it was using 50% of the foreign exchange proceeds which it collects from exporters to back its new gold-backed currency. In July, Zimbabwe pumped $50 million into the market to support the ZiG. 

“If we have forex demand that can’t be met by voluntary liquidations, the central bank must step in. It has the reserves,” Persistence Gwanyanya, a member of the Reserve Bank’s monetary policy committee said in an interview.

In July, Bloomberg reported that Zimbabwe has about $370 million in reserves. The apex bank has said interventions in the interbank market will be “a permanent feature”.

Zimbabwe is not the only African country that is aggressively buying foreign currency to support its domestic currencies. South Sudan, Mauritius, Nigeria and Zambia have together spent at least $1 billion since July to defend their currencies. Rising import costs, declining export prices, and high inflation have triggered this more-than-usual intervention by these central banks.

Collect payments anytime anywhere with Fincra
Fincra image

Are you dealing with the complexities of collecting payments from your customers? Fincra’s payment gateway makes it easy to accept payments via cards, bank transfers, virtual accounts and mobile money. What’s more? You get to save money on fees when you use Fincra. Get started now.

Telcos

Nigeria to fine telcos for poor services

You will pay dearly meme
Image source: YungNollywood

The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC), the country’s telecoms watchdog has made it compulsory for telcos to pay a default fine of ₦5 million ($3,100) if they fail to meet the benchmarked Quality of Service (QoS) scores. An additional ₦500,000 ($315) will also be charged for periods of continuous downtime.

To calculate QoS, telcos are judged on three metrics. The first two are closely related: they need to ensure that at least 98% of all calls connect successfully, which means keeping failed connections to under 2%. 

The third metric focuses on their ability to handle customer needs, requiring telcos to meet both voice and data demands by customers.

However, this default fine is coming when telcos are having a hard time in Nigeria. Telcos are having to deal with high operating costs due to the ailing naira, high price of diesel, government-imposed taxes, and vandalised infrastructure which cost them ₦14.6 billion ($9.2 million) to fix in 2023. Coincidentally, these vandalisms are the major causes of the downtimes telcos face. 

These new fines may seem like even more trouble for telcos but there’s good news on the horizon. The Nigerian government is planning to issue a 10-year jail term for vandals who are nabbed in fibre optic vandalism cases.

Paystack Virtual Terminal is now live in more countries
Paystack image

Paystack Virtual Terminalhelps businesses accept secure, in-person payments with real-time WhatsApp confirmations and ZERO hardware costs. Enjoy multiple in-person payment channels, easy end-of-day reconciliation, and more. Learn more on the Paystack blog →

Economy

Indonesia seeks $3.5 billion trade agreement with Africa

IAF Photo
Image source: IAF

During the Indonesia-Africa Forum currently taking place in Bali, senior diplomats from the Asian country proposed that Indonesia seek a $3.5 billion trade agreement with African countries.

Indonesia is a well-known nickel exporter. With at least 50% of its nickel being exported, it is one of the world’s largest nickel exporters. However, that also constitutes a pain it has been trying to deal with.

Nickel is key for making batteries for electric vehicles (EVs). And Indonesia, knowing fully well that it cannot make EVs itself, opted to build hubs to make car batteries using its nickel. 

Then the big EV companies came circling to invest in its smelting facilities. As at 2023, Indonesia had built 54 nickel smelting facilities, with 16 more under construction. Indonesia has since aggressively pursued its battery production goal.

This is why trade with Africa is important; it will collaborate with resource-rich African countries to import finishing minerals like lithium that, when used with nickel, can produce batteries that power EVs and other electronic devices.

Yet, there may be another reason. Most African countries are net importers of palm oil, one of Indonesia’s top exports. Due to the seasonal fluctuations, limited arable land resources, and farmers choosing to practice subsistence farming, the production of palm oil in Africa has been insufficient in the past. In 2020, African nations imported nearly 8 million tonnes of palm oil.

Prior to this agreement proposal, Indonesia did little business with Africa. However, with this development, Indonesia can export more of its top products to Africa, and import mineral resources to fuel its battery production drive. Then, it can export these finished goods back to Africa. The trade agreement in place will also secure better import duty rates for the Global South. It is yet to be seen if Indonesia has any production nous to pull this off.

Read the guide on how to build a fintech in Africa
Kora image

To build a fintech in Africa, you must navigate complicated regulatory regimes, incorporate in each market, get the right licences, and use the right technology stack. Kora and Norebase put everything you need to build in this guide. Check it out.

CRYPTO TRACKER

The World Wide Web3

Source:

OneLiquidity  logo

Coin Name

Current Value

Day

Month

Bitcoin $59,299

+ 2.69%

– 2.29%

Ether $2,532

+ 3.09%

– 13.17%

Toncoin

$5.24

+ 1.88%

– 13.22%

Solana $135.30

+ 5.65%

– 5.55%

* Data as of 06:30 AM WAT, September 3, 2024.

Events

  • We’re excited to announce our partnership with Wimbart the second edition of their pioneering pan-African research publication, “Startup Performance Reporting in Africa”. This report will shed light on the intricacies of investor relations within the African tech ecosystem. If you’re a founder, take a couple of minutes to share some key insights with us by filling out this survey

  • Resilience17 (R17) is launching an AI Accelerator to help ambitious globally focused teams build and launch AI products. The Go Time AI Accelerator is open to Nigeria-based companies. The accelerator offers up to $200k total investment with an initial $25k upfront (via SAFES with a $2.5m valuation cap), expert mentorship from industry veterans and technical gurus, technical and business growth support, access to API & Cloud credits, housing credits, delicious team meals, and a vibrant workspace in Victoria Island, Lagos. Apply by September 13.

  • The Africa Prize for Engineering Innovation is open to African innovators creating engineering solutions to local challenges. Innovators from sub-Saharan Africa should pitch viable engineering products or services that will have social or environmental benefits to the continent. Apply for the chance to get up to $25,000 in funding

  • The Future of Capitalism Tech Startup Competition is offering $1 million to one lucky tech startup that can transform how businesses today operate. If your tech can save costs, boost efficiency, increase productivity or customer satisfaction, then apply by September 30 for a chance to win. 

Written by:Olumuyiwa Olowogboyega & Emmanuel Nwosu

Edited by: Olumuyiwa Olowogboyega & Timi Odueso

Want more of TechCabal?

Sign up for our insightful newsletters on the business and economy of tech in Africa.

  • The Next Wave: futuristic analysis of the business of tech in Africa.
  • Entering Tech: tech career insights and opportunities in your inbox every Wednesday at 3 PM WAT.
  • TC Scoops: breaking news from TechCabal

P:S If you’re often missing TC Daily in your inbox, check your Promotions folder and move any edition of TC Daily from “Promotions” to your “Main” or “Primary” folder and TC Daily will always come to you.

Email Us
]]> https://techcabal.com/2024/09/03/techcabal-daily-zimbabwe-backs-its-currency-with-190-million/feed/ 0 👨🏿‍🚀TechCabal Daily – A new Chpter https://techcabal.com/2024/09/02/techcabal-daily-a-new-chpter/ https://techcabal.com/2024/09/02/techcabal-daily-a-new-chpter/#respond Mon, 02 Sep 2024 05:30:00 +0000 https://techcabal.com/?p=142067

Good morning ☀

We’re currently running a salary week discount for Moonshot 2024!

From now until September 5, you can get Moonshot tickets 20% off with the code MSVIP. Share this with your friends and help them save some cash.

Companies

Tingo Group, Dozy Mmobuosi will pay over $250 million in SEC suit

Tingo Founder Dozy Mmuobosi
Tingo Founder, Dozy Mmobuosi

For years, Tingo, a self-described agri-fintech, was considered an oddity. Despite what it said in press releases and its claims of hundreds of millions in revenue, no one in Nigeria’s tech ecosystem could tell you the first thing about the company. That’s almost always a red flag. 

It has a mobile telephone subsidiary, a food business, and also claimed to have a massive business with Nigeria’s small-scale farmers. While most people remained sceptical, being listed on the NASDAQ helped it escape scrutiny.

Things mostly stayed that way until the company’s CEO, Dozy Mmobuosi, was linked to a bid to buy an English football team in Sheffield. Things quickly fell apart from there. 

On Thursday, a New York judge ordered Mmobuosi and his companies to pay over $250 million in a civil suit instituted by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). The SEC began investigating Tingo in 2023 and alleged that the company inflated its financial performance and was mostly hot air. 

While the company denied those allegations and even promised to respond, it had no legal representation in the civil action. Here’s what we wrote in June 2023, weeks after Hinderburg research first flagged issues with Tingo’s business: 

“Tingo also announced that it has engaged White & Case LLP, a leading international law firm, to conduct an independent review and report to its independent directors concerning allegations contained in the report published by Hindenburg on June 6, 2023.”

The company did not discuss the allegations on subsequent earnings calls and did not disclose whether the independent review yielded any reports.

Read all about Tingo here.

Read Moniepoint’s 2024 Informal Economy Report
Moniepoint image

Did you know that 57.7% of the business owners in Nigeria’s informal economy are under 34 years old? Click here to find out more about the demographics of Nigeria’s informal economy.

Funding

Chpter raises $1.2million in pre-seed round

nigeria crypto sign
Chpter co-founders, L-R: Mark Kiarie (COO), Kelvin Kuria (CPO), Tesh Mbaabu (CEO) and Mesongo Sibuti (CTO)s

We all spend way too much time on social media, and Chpter, the Kenyan social commerce startup that turns any social media platform into a sales channel, thinks that’s just great. 

Founded in 2022 by Tesh Mbaabu, Mesongo Sibuti, Kuria Kelvin, and Mark Kiarie, Chpter was accepted into Norrsken’s accelerator programme in 2023 and participated in Safaricom’s Spark Accelerator in 2024. While it raised undisclosed amounts of money through both programmes, the startup is now happy to share details about some new funding. 

Chpter has raised $1.2 million in a pre-seed round led by Pani, a pan-Africa VC firm co-founded by former Cellulant CEO Ken Njoroge. Norrsken, Renew Capital and Techstars also invested. 

Read all about how the company plans to use the funding here.

Collect payments anytime anywhere with Fincra
Fincra image

Are you dealing with the complexities of collecting payments from your customers? Fincra’s payment gateway makes it easy to accept payments via cards, bank transfers, virtual accounts and mobile money. What’s more? You get to save money on fees when you use Fincra. Get started now.

Cloud computing

AWS to invest $1.7 billion into South Africa

Carbon black image
Image source: REUTERS/Ivan Alvarado/Files

On August 30, Amazon Web Services (AWS), one of the largest cloud service providers, hosted a summit in Johannesburg, South Africa to discuss the advancements of Generative Artificial Intelligence (Gen AI) in the country.

AWS powers most of the AI tech development in the country by some of its foremost innovators, like Dataprophet which uses machine learning models to detect faulty goods, or Capitec bank’s robocall-detection product that helps customers spot fraudsters.

Thanks to the wide adoption of its Amazon Bedrock solution, the cloud provider is now committed to making a follow-on investment of $1.7 billion by 2029 to increase renewable energy supply to its data centres.

Currently, AWS has two of its three data centres located in South Africa. At least one of them consumes about 1,000 megawatts-hour (MWh) of electricity. AI consumes data points that must be stored on servers and these servers need electricity to run. 

So AWS’s value proposition goes something like this: it will use that investment to generate more electricity to sustain the high demand for storage for these data points. In turn, companies will use AWS Bedrock which allows companies to build on existing Gen AI models, and scale their operations.

It’s a win-win deal for both AWS and South Africa as the country continues to push the frontiers for AI development in Africa.

Paystack Virtual Terminal is now live in more countries
Paystack image

Paystack Virtual Terminalhelps businesses accept secure, in-person payments with real-time WhatsApp confirmations and ZERO hardware costs. Enjoy multiple in-person payment channels, easy end-of-day reconciliation, and more. Learn more on the Paystack blog →

Economy

A $6 billion debt means Nigeria’s fuel scarcity won’t end soon

funding tracker image
Image source: Punch Newspapers Nigeria

Nigeria’s petrol subsidy, a decades-long government intervention that has defied all efforts at dismantling, was scrapped unceremoniously in May 2023. It was hailed as an important but poorly executed reform, but other problems like FX volatility and a government struggling to raise revenues have made follow-through difficult. 

The devaluation of the naira, for instance, has increased the cost of importing petrol and has ensured that a 3x increase in fuel price is no longer sufficient. Depending on who you talk to, the current landing price of petrol is ₦1,000 ($0.63)/litre, significantly higher than the ₦610 ($0.38) fuel currently retails for. It means the federal government has been paying subsidies for months.

Those subsidies have strained the government’s finances and caused late payments to fuel importers. Late payments lead to long fuel queues and Nigeria’s fuel scarcity, which has historically been seasonal, is now a feature in many major cities. 

It is creating headaches for individuals and businesses. Logistics operators are struggling to get fuel and sometimes paying above market price. They’re also passing on those costs to end users. The scarcity also makes life difficult for millions of people who generate their own power given the country’s unreliable power supply. 

Yet the situation may only get worse. 

On Sunday, the Nigeria National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPC) admitted that its debts to fuel importers are significant and the “financial strain has placed considerable pressure on the company and poses a threat to the sustainability of fuel supply.”

If you’re not versed in government speak, the NNPC, which reported ₦3.3 trillion ($2.07 billion) in 2023 profits in August, will likely use all of those profits to pay subsidies. And that may not even be sufficient. Some reports put the backlog of payments at $6 billion.

While NNPC continues to “engage with stakeholders,” Nigerians have to brace themselves for more queues and a possible fuel price increase.

Read the guide on how to build a fintech in Africa
Kora image

To build a fintech in Africa, you must navigate complicated regulatory regimes, incorporate in each market, get the right licences, and use the right technology stack. Kora and Norebase put everything you need to build in this guide. Check it out.

CRYPTO TRACKER

The World Wide Web3

Source:

OneLiquidity  logo

Coin Name

Current Value

Day

Month

Bitcoin $57,490

– 1.38%

– 6.51%

Ether $2,439

– 1.73%

– 17.8%

Toncoin

$5.12

– 5.78%

– 16.30%

Solana $127.77

– 4.52%

– 15.64%

* Data as of 06:10 AM WAT, September 2, 2024.

Events

  • We’re excited to announce our partnership with Wimbart the second edition of their pioneering pan-African research publication, “Startup Performance Reporting in Africa”. This report will shed light on the intricacies of investor relations within the African tech ecosystem. If you’re a founder, take a couple of minutes to share some key insights with us by filling out this survey

  • Resilience17 (R17) is launching an AI Accelerator to help ambitious globally focused teams build and launch AI products. The Go Time AI Accelerator is open to Nigeria-based companies. The accelerator offers up to $200k total investment with an initial $25k upfront (via SAFES with a $2.5m valuation cap), expert mentorship from industry veterans and technical gurus, technical and business growth support, access to API & Cloud credits, housing credits, delicious team meals, and a vibrant workspace in Victoria Island, Lagos. Apply by September 13.

  • The Africa Prize for Engineering Innovation is open to African innovators creating engineering solutions to local challenges. Innovators from sub-Saharan Africa should pitch viable engineering products or services that will have social or environmental benefits to the continent. Apply for the chance to get up to $25,000 in funding

  • The Future of Capitalism Tech Startup Competition is offering $1 million to one lucky tech startup that can transform how businesses today operate. If your tech can save costs, boost efficiency, increase productivity or customer satisfaction, then apply by September 30 for a chance to win. 

Written by:Olumuyiwa Olowogboyega & Emmanuel Nwosu

Edited by: Olumuyiwa Olowogboyega & Timi Odueso

Want more of TechCabal?

Sign up for our insightful newsletters on the business and economy of tech in Africa.

  • The Next Wave: futuristic analysis of the business of tech in Africa.
  • Entering Tech: tech career insights and opportunities in your inbox every Wednesday at 3 PM WAT.
  • TC Scoops: breaking news from TechCabal

P:S If you’re often missing TC Daily in your inbox, check your Promotions folder and move any edition of TC Daily from “Promotions” to your “Main” or “Primary” folder and TC Daily will always come to you.

Email Us
]]> https://techcabal.com/2024/09/02/techcabal-daily-a-new-chpter/feed/ 0 Quick Fire🔥 with Dolapo Omotoso https://techcabal.com/2024/08/30/quick-fire-dolapo-omotoso/ https://techcabal.com/2024/08/30/quick-fire-dolapo-omotoso/#respond Fri, 30 Aug 2024 09:00:00 +0000 https://techcabal.com/?p=141966 Today’s guest is Dolapo Omotoso, the Revenue Growth Director and marketing strategist leading TransferGo’s African expansion. With expertise in creative storytelling and community-led growth, Dolapo drives impactful growth strategies, leveraging her experience from customer success intern to senior leader in the industry.

Explain your job to a 5-year-old

Think of me like Santa Claus, but instead of delivering gifts from the North Pole, I deliver money. I help people who live far away from their family and friends send money to them every day.

You started as a customer success intern and rose to country manager for a Series A company and you’re now a director at an international company. What steps did you take to make this happen?

I became the go-to person for difficult tasks and delivered excellent results. I also love learning and implementing new ideas. Most importantly, I was resilient and focused on understanding how the business works and how all roles contribute to the big goal.

How have these skills translated to your current job?

Everything matters. From learning patience and empathy during my time at Piggyvest to understanding crisis management as a social media manager, engaging a community as a content marketer, and knowing how to view growth—all of it contributed. No knowledge was wasted.

What drew you to remittances?

My sister. I wanted to build something for her, to make it easy for her to hold currencies that mattered to her. At some point, my friends moved away, and now I guess I’m building for them too.

What’s the most challenging aspect of your job?

Ensuring everyone is happy. From satisfying customers with the rates, service, and product, to adapting to new environments rapidly, localising strategies, and balancing the need for rapid growth—it’s a lot to juggle. This requires a deep understanding of each market, strong collaboration with local teams, and the ability to make quick, informed decisions that drive growth without compromising on quality or customer satisfaction.

What advice would you give anyone trying to enter the fintech industry from a non-finance or engineering background?

You are only as good as your foundation, so make sure it’s solid and grounded. Leverage communities and networks—don’t be afraid to network and learn. Being taught by people who have gone through what you’re dealing with is the easiest way to gain valuable, rare insights.

What exciting things are you working on now?

Right now, I’m leading growth in Africa, for TransferGo which is incredibly exciting. We’re expanding into new markets, like East Africa, and working on localizing our services to fit the unique needs of these regions. As a director, I get to shape the entire strategy. I’m also exploring opportunities to build and lead local teams. It’s a dynamic role that allows me to make a significant impact on the future of TransferGo in Africa.

What do you do outside work?

Turns out I love to yap. I had a mentorship class I was running with the Empowerher community and I find it interesting doing speaking engagements. I am passionate about connecting with people and sharing my journey. I did a bit with communities like the Non-Tech in Tech Community and some universities.

]]>
https://techcabal.com/2024/08/30/quick-fire-dolapo-omotoso/feed/ 0
👨🏿‍🚀TechCabal Daily – Zambia’s inflation hits 32-month high https://techcabal.com/2024/08/30/techcabal-daily-zambias-inflation-hits-32-month-high/ https://techcabal.com/2024/08/30/techcabal-daily-zambias-inflation-hits-32-month-high/#respond Fri, 30 Aug 2024 05:45:00 +0000 https://techcabal.com/?p=141971

TGIF ☀

It’s still salary week, and to help you spend your hard-earned coins wisely, we’re currently running a salary week discount for Moonshot 2024!

From now until September 5, you can get Moonshot tickets 20% off with the code MSVIP. Share this with your friends and help them save some cash.

Features

Quick Fire 🔥 with Dolapo Omotoso

Dolapo Omotoso is a Revenue Growth Director and marketing strategist leading TransferGo’s African expansion. With expertise in creative storytelling and community-led growth, she drives impactful growth strategies, leveraging her experience from customer success intern to senior leader in the industry.

Dolapo Omotosho for TC Daily
Dolapo Omotosho for TC Daily

Explain your job to a 5-year-old

Think of me like Santa Claus, but instead of delivering gifts from the North Pole, I deliver money. I help people who live far away from their family and friends send money to them every day.

You started as a customer success intern and now you’re a director at an international company. How did this happen?

I became the go-to person for difficult tasks and delivered excellent results. I also love learning and implementing new ideas. Most importantly, I was resilient and focused on understanding how the business works and how all roles contribute to the big goal.

How have these skills translated to your current job?

Everything matters. From learning patience and empathy during my time at Piggyvest to understanding crisis management as a social media manager, engaging a community as a content marketer, and knowing how to view growth—all of it contributed. No knowledge was wasted.

What drew you to remittances?

My sister. I wanted to build something for her, to make it easy for her to hold currencies that mattered to her. At some point, my friends moved away, and now I guess I’m building for them too.

What’s the most challenging aspect of your job?

Ensuring everyone is happy. From satisfying customers with the rates, service, and product, to adapting to new environments rapidly, localising strategies, and balancing the need for rapid growth—it’s a lot to juggle. This requires a deep understanding of each market, strong collaboration with local teams, and the ability to make quick, informed decisions that drive growth without compromising on quality or customer satisfaction.

What advice would you give anyone trying to enter the fintech industry from a non-finance or engineering background?

You are only as good as your foundation, so make sure it’s solid and grounded. Leverage communities and networks—don’t be afraid to network and learn. Being taught by people who have gone through what you’re dealing with is the easiest way to gain valuable, rare insights.

What exciting things are you working on now?

Right now, I’m leading growth in Africa, for TransferGo which is incredibly exciting. We’re expanding into new markets, like East Africa, and working on localizing our services to fit the unique needs of these regions. As a director, I get to shape the entire strategy. I’m also exploring opportunities to build and lead local teams. It’s a dynamic role that allows me to make a significant impact on the future of TransferGo in Africa.

What do you do outside work?

Turns out I love to yap. I had a mentorship class I was running with the Empowerher community and I find it interesting doing speaking engagements. I am passionate about connecting with people and sharing my journey. I did a bit with communities like the Non-Tech in Tech Community and some universities.

Read Moniepoint’s 2024 Informal Economy Report
Moniepoint image

Did you know that 57.7% of the business owners in Nigeria’s informal economy are under 34 years old? Click here to find out more about the demographics of Nigeria’s informal economy.

Crypto

Busha and Quidax receive provisional VASP licences

nigeria crypto sign
Image source: Pymnts

Nigeria’s softening its stance towards crypto wasn’t on anybody’s 2024 bingo card after the country dragged Binance to court in February for allegedly being complicit in helping unscrupulous people steal $35 million.

About two years ago, it implicitly banned crypto and asked all financial institutions to freeze accounts that did as little as mention “crypto” or used crypto-related words in their transactions.

But the country has made a U-turn since. 

On August 29, the country’s Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) issued crypto licences in principle to two crypto companies; Busha and Quidax. It has also onboarded five others to its Regulatory Incubator (RI) programme to learn about how Nigerians use crypto. These Virtual Assets Service Provider (VASP) licences will help crypto companies offer crypto services to customers including buying, selling, storing, and trading cryptocurrencies.

While Nigeria is rightly adopting crypto fast; trading it, storing it, or doing whatever else with it, for the government, controlling crypto is likely more than just this “catch the thief” outlook it’s portraying.

There are more than 30 crypto and crypto-related companies in the country. All of them, unregulated. This meant they were untaxed—or there wasn’t a proper structure for taxing them.

But with new crypto laws and regulations coming, Nigeria can collect money from these companies while still keeping an eye out for people misusing crypto. 

There just leaves two questions: how did crypto companies in Nigeria avoid scrutiny pre-2024? Did simply being facilitators rather than participators in crypto over-the-counter (OTC) trades help these companies survive long enough?

Either way, we’re witnessing a Nigerian masterclass.

Collect payments anytime anywhere with Fincra
Fincra image

Are you dealing with the complexities of collecting payments from your customers? Fincra’s payment gateway makes it easy to accept payments via cards, bank transfers, virtual accounts and mobile money. What’s more? You get to save money on fees when you use Fincra. Get started now.

Economy

Zambia’s inflation hits 32-month high

Carbon black image
Image source: UBA Group

For most African countries, changes in food prices are a major driver of overall inflation. This is because food constitutes a significant portion of the consumer price index (CPI), a key metric used to measure inflation. When food prices rise due to factors like extreme droughts that threaten food production, the headline inflation rate tends to follow suit.

And when an extreme drought threatens food production, prices of food go up, pushing inflation up a notch. This has been the case for Zambia where food makes up more than half of the inflation basket.

The inflation figure for August was 15.5% up from 15.4% in July. The country has been experiencing a severe drought that has blighted crops, leading to a 17.6% increase in food prices up from 17.4% in the previous month. The drought has also dampened hydropower generation, and hurt the nation’s currency due to increased costs of food importation.

To keep inflation under control, the Bank of Zambia held the interest rate at a seven-year high of 13.5%. The Bank now has its work cut out to get inflation to its 6-8% target. 

Zambia’s situation is eerily similar to Zimbabwe’s where drought has increased food prices leading to the country’s first inflation increase since it changed currency in April.

Paystack Virtual Terminal is now live in more countries
Paystack image

Paystack Virtual Terminalhelps businesses accept secure, in-person payments with real-time WhatsApp confirmations and ZERO hardware costs. Enjoy multiple in-person payment channels, easy end-of-day reconciliation, and more. Learn more on the Paystack blog →

Insights

Funding tracker

funding tracker image
Image source: Stephen Agwaibor/TechCabal Insights

This week, South African AI & Data-analytics start-up Omnisient raised $7.5 million in Series A from Arise. (August 29)

Here are other deals for the week:

  • Rwanda-based e-mobility startup Ampersand received $2 million in new equity investments from AHL Venture Partners and Everstrong Capital and reinvestment from Beyond Capital Ventures. (August 29)
  • Kenyan social commerce startup Sukhiba raised $1.5 million in a seed extension round led by EQ2 Ventures. Other investors, such as Accion Venture Lab, Musha Ventures, Quona Capital, and existing investor CRE Ventures, participated in the round. (August 27)
  • Kenya-based HR Tech Workpay announced that it secured $5 million of Series A investment in a round led by Norrsken22. Participation came from Visa, Y Combinator, Acadian Ventures, Saviu Ventures, Axian, Plug n Play, and Verod-Kepple Africa Ventures. (August 23)

Follow us on Twitter, Instagram, and LinkedIn for more funding announcements. Before you go, our State of Tech in Africa H1 2024 Report is out. Click this link to download it.

Dive In Festival 2024: A Global Call for Change
Dive in Festival imagek image

Join the Dive In Festival 2024 on Sept 24 in Nigeria and Namibia! This global event features industry leaders, discussions on sustainability, and opportunities to connect with a community driving change. Register Now to join the conversation!

CRYPTO TRACKER

The World Wide Web3

Source:

OneLiquidity  logo

Coin Name

Current Value

Day

Month

Bitcoin $59,024

– 0.31%

– 10.01%

Ether $2,519

– 0.27%

– 22.8%

Toncoin

$5.45

– 2.11%

– 19.11%

Solana $139.27

– 3.08%

– 22.14%

* Data as of 06:05 AM WAT, August 30, 2024.

Events

  • Resilience17 (R17) is launching an AI Accelerator to help ambitious globally focused teams build and launch AI products. The Go Time AI Accelerator is open to Nigeria-based companies. The accelerator offers up to $200k total investment with an initial $25k upfront (via SAFES with a $2.5m valuation cap), expert mentorship from industry veterans and technical gurus, technical and business growth support, access to API & Cloud credits, housing credits, delicious team meals, and a vibrant workspace in Victoria Island, Lagos. Apply by September 13.

  • The Africa Prize for Engineering Innovation is open to African innovators creating engineering solutions to local challenges. Innovators from sub-Saharan Africa should pitch viable engineering products or services that will have social or environmental benefits to the continent. Apply for the chance to get up to $25,000 in funding

  • The Future of Capitalism Tech Startup Competition is offering $1 million to one lucky tech startup that can transform how businesses today operate. If your tech can save costs, boost efficiency, increase productivity or customer satisfaction, then apply by September 30 for a chance to win. 

Written by: Faith Omoniyi, Stephen Agwaibor & Emmanuel Nwosu

Edited by: Olumuyiwa Olowogboyega & Timi Odueso

Want more of TechCabal?

Sign up for our insightful newsletters on the business and economy of tech in Africa.

  • The Next Wave: futuristic analysis of the business of tech in Africa.
  • Entering Tech: tech career insights and opportunities in your inbox every Wednesday at 3 PM WAT.
  • TC Scoops: breaking news from TechCabal

P:S If you’re often missing TC Daily in your inbox, check your Promotions folder and move any edition of TC Daily from “Promotions” to your “Main” or “Primary” folder and TC Daily will always come to you.

Email Us
]]> https://techcabal.com/2024/08/30/techcabal-daily-zambias-inflation-hits-32-month-high/feed/ 0 👨🏿‍🚀TechCabal Daily – Starlink shines in Botswana https://techcabal.com/2024/08/29/techcabal-daily-starlink-shines-in-botswana/ https://techcabal.com/2024/08/29/techcabal-daily-starlink-shines-in-botswana/#respond Thu, 29 Aug 2024 06:00:00 +0000 https://techcabal.com/?p=141858

Good morning ☀

According to the National AI and Big Data Strategy Report, only seven African countries have developed national AI plans, and none have formal AI regulations. 

Later today, by 4 PM WAT, I’ll be having a conversation with three AI experts on why that is, and how we can bridge the gap by building AI models with African data. 

On the panel are Zain Verjee, Co-founder of The Rundown; Megan Yates, Co-Founder of Zindi, and Clinton Oduor, ML Engineer, & Head of Data Science, Amini. 

Register to join us for what’s sure to be an insightful fireside conversation

Internet

Starlink is now live Botswana

Reserve Bank off Zimbabwe Image
Image source: Starlink

It would seem Starlink is hogging all the media headlines this week. Today marks the satellite ISP’s third appearance in TC Daily.

But following the kerfuffle with Safaricom planning to slow down its operations in Kenya, and cutting off 12,700+ South African users, the satellite internet service provider (ISP) has caught a break in other countries. Starlink is now live in Botswana, three months after securing a licence.

Yet, this was a hard-won victory. Starlink was previously denied an operating licence in Botswana in February 2024 over missing information in its application, despite claims from the government disputing this. 

African countries want stricter regulations for foreign satellite internet companies. Due to its competitive advantage in speed and bringing arguably superior technology in low-orbit satellites compared to cell towers, African governments are cautious of handing Starlink free rein to cannibalise local ISPs and mobile network providers in their countries.

Botswana’s ISP market is competitive. Mascom, the leading ISP in the country, controls 43% of the market share. Orange and BTC follow closely at 39% and 18% respectively. In terms of the quality of broadband service, Starlink will have an advantage. The average internet speed in Botswana is 21 megabytes per second (MBPS). Starlink reaches 250 MBPS.

Starlink’s licence in Botswana also gives it another advantage in distribution. Local ISPs rely on multi-level resellers. However, Starlink only sells its hardware through authorised distributors, which gives it control over the distribution value chain and reduces middleman fees.

But Starlink will be betting its last-mover advantage on its technology. Botswana joins eight other African countries that have authorised Starlink to operate in the continent.

Read Moniepoint’s 2024 Informal Economy Report
Moniepoint image

Did you know that 57.7% of the business owners in Nigeria’s informal economy are under 34 years old? Click here to find out more about the demographics of Nigeria’s informal economy.

Manufacturing

Bamburi Cement receives new $197.2 million acquisition offer

Bamburi Cement
Image source: Bamburi

In a surprising twist, Savannah Clinker has made a $197.2 million bid for Bamburi Cement, just weeks after the Kenyan cement giant accepted an offer from Tanzania’s Amsons Group.

The counter-offer, at $0.54 per share, represents a 53.34% premium over Bamburi’s current share price. It could complicate the sale of the company, which was already in the works after Holcim, a Swiss construction materials giant, approved Amsons’ bid.

Savannah Clinker is owned by Benson Ndeta, a director of Savannah Cement, a company that recently entered administration. Unlike Amsons, Savannah Clinker has indicated that it does not intend to delist Bamburi from the Nairobi Securities Exchange.

The competing bid could set the stage for a heated battle between the two companies as they vie for control of one of Kenya’s most valuable assets.

Collect payments anytime anywhere with Fincra
Fincra image

Are you dealing with the complexities of collecting payments from your customers? Fincra’s payment gateway makes it easy to accept payments via cards, bank transfers, virtual accounts and mobile money. What’s more? You get to save money on fees when you use Fincra. Get started now.

Manufacturing

Egypt in talks with India to set up new carbon black plant

Carbon black image
Image source: Pyrosis Plant

Did you know that the rubber in car tires is strengthened by a tiny, black powder called carbon black? It’s a versatile material used in everything from tires to paints and even electronics. The global carbon black market size is worth $12.8 billion and governements across the world, including Egypt, have been ramping up plans to get a slice of the market. 

On Tuesday, Egypt began talks with an Indian carbon black manufacturer to establish a $60 million production plant in the country. While the government kept the name of the Egypt manufacturer under wraps, discussions were held with a top carbon black manufacturer.

If the talks goes through, the carbon black manufacturer will be the second Indian manufacturer to set up a carbon black plant in the country after Birla Carbon, a leading India-based global producer, which has a manufacturing facility in Egypt.

Paystack Virtual Terminal is now live in more countries
Paystack image

Paystack Virtual Terminalhelps businesses accept secure, in-person payments with real-time WhatsApp confirmations and ZERO hardware costs. Enjoy multiple in-person payment channels, easy end-of-day reconciliation, and more. Learn more on the Paystack blog →

Economy

Nigeria plans FATF Greylist exit by 2025

intense suspicion meme
Image source: YungNollywood

Nigeria was listed by the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) in February 2023, as one of the countries with weak anti-money laundering (AML) policies in the world. 

The country has historically struggled with untraceable money. It lost $217.7 billion to illicit financial transactions between 1970 and 2008. While that number has slowed, the country still accounts for 30.5% of illicit financial outflows from Africa.

Since being placed on the FATF greylist, Nigeria has worked closely with the FATF to improve its anti-money laundering and counter-terrorism financing (AML/CFT) policies. It has complied with 32 of the FATF’s 40 recommendations. 

Femi Gbajabiamila, chief of staff to the Nigerian president, has promised to secure Nigeria’s removal from the FATF Greylist to enable it to do business with other countries without scrutiny. The chief has vowed to do so before May 2025.

So far, Nigeria has tightened customer due diligence processes in traditional finance, and also plans to regulate cryptocurrency—one channel it has previously said is notorious for hiding money. 

Yet, Nigeria still has its work cut out to regulate designated non-financial businesses and professions (DNFBPs), like real estate agents, lawyers, and accountants that may be involuntarily involved in these acts due to their trade and financial activities. The FATF says little to no work has been done to fix this blindspot.

While relevant regulators like the Special Control Unit on Money Laundering (SCUML) and the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) have made initial policy reviews on these DNFBPs, there needs to be awareness creation on how to spot potential money laundering activities, how to conduct due diligence, and ensure tighter compliance checks.

Whether this is feasible in the nine months that Gbajabiamila is proposing remains to be seen. The next FATF review is in November 2024.

Dive In Festival 2024: A Global Call for Change
Dive in Festival imagek image

Join the Dive In Festival 2024 on Sept 24 in Nigeria and Namibia! This global event features industry leaders, discussions on sustainability, and opportunities to connect with a community driving change. Register Now to join the conversation!

CRYPTO TRACKER

The World Wide Web3

Source:

OneLiquidity  logo

Coin Name

Current Value

Day

Month

Bitcoin $59,184

– 0.21%

– 11.34%

Ether $2,528

– 7.86%

– 23.87%

Toncoin

$5.55

+ 4.80%

– 30.85%

Solana $143.40

– 2.68%

– 21.88%

* Data as of 06:15 AM WAT, August 29, 2024.

Events

  • Resilience17 (R17) is launching an AI Accelerator to help ambitious globally focused teams build and launch AI products. The Go Time AI Accelerator is open to Nigeria-based companies. The accelerator offers up to $200k total investment with an initial $25k upfront (via SAFES with a $2.5m valuation cap), expert mentorship from industry veterans and technical gurus, technical and business growth support, access to API & Cloud credits, housing credits, delicious team meals, and a vibrant workspace in Victoria Island, Lagos. Apply by September 13.

  • The Africa Prize for Engineering Innovation is open to African innovators creating engineering solutions to local challenges. Innovators from sub-Saharan Africa should pitch viable engineering products or services that will have social or environmental benefits to the continent. Apply for the chance to get up to $25,000 in funding

  • The Future of Capitalism Tech Startup Competition is offering $1 million to one lucky tech startup that can transform how businesses today operate. If your tech can save costs, boost efficiency, increase productivity or customer satisfaction, then apply by September 30 for a chance to win. 

Written by: Faith Omoniyi, Stephen Agwaibor & Emmanuel Nwosu

Edited by: Olumuyiwa Olowogboyega & Timi Odueso

Want more of TechCabal?

Sign up for our insightful newsletters on the business and economy of tech in Africa.

  • The Next Wave: futuristic analysis of the business of tech in Africa.
  • Entering Tech: tech career insights and opportunities in your inbox every Wednesday at 3 PM WAT.
  • TC Scoops: breaking news from TechCabal

P:S If you’re often missing TC Daily in your inbox, check your Promotions folder and move any edition of TC Daily from “Promotions” to your “Main” or “Primary” folder and TC Daily will always come to you.

Email Us
]]> https://techcabal.com/2024/08/29/techcabal-daily-starlink-shines-in-botswana/feed/ 0 👨🏿‍🚀TechCabal Daily – Kenya considers Safaricom’s ISP suggestions https://techcabal.com/2024/08/28/techcabal-daily-kenya-considers-safaricoms-isp-suggestions/ https://techcabal.com/2024/08/28/techcabal-daily-kenya-considers-safaricoms-isp-suggestions/#respond Wed, 28 Aug 2024 05:30:00 +0000 https://techcabal.com/?p=141773

Good morning ☀

We’re about 6 weeks away from Moonshot 2024, and people can’t wait—especially last year’s attendees.

Moonshot testimonial

This year’s Moonshot promises more content tracks, sessions, mixers, and the most audacious thinkers, doers, and investors in African tech, working on everything from fintech to commerce, renewable energy, climate change, tech policy, AI, telco, cloud and more.

Save a seat at Moonshot 2024. Get tickets here.

M&As

Wasoko and MaxAB finally complete merger

Reserve Bank off Zimbabwe Image
(L-R) Belal El-Megharbel and Daniel Yu of MaxAB and Wasoko respectively.

As far as mergers and acquisitions go in Africa’s tech ecosystem, the Wasoko-MaxAB merger is one of the most significant. Both B2B e-commerce companies, with base operations in Kenya and Egypt respectively, have joined forces to create a dominant player in the African B2B e-commerce market.

Talks of an all-stock merger have been ongoing since December 2023. Initially expected to be completed in March 2024, the deal was marred by multiple layoffs, court lawsuits, and delays due to reasons Daniel Yu, Wasoko CEO, claimed were “sensitive.” 

Mergers, depending on the nature, typically take six months to complete. However, complications could arise that might take the negotiations well over a year. But both companies will now look to put all that squabbling behind them. Yu and MaxAB CEO, Belal El-Megharbel, will serve as co-CEOs in the newly merged company. New details reveal that the deal is a 50-50 merger.

The merger will combine the strengths of both companies, combining Wasoko’s network of merchants in East Africa with MaxAB’s expertise in B2B beverage supply in North Africa. With this partnership, the combined entity—yet to be renamed—will operate across East, Central, and Northern African regions.

This will allow the combined entity to offer a wider range of products and services to a larger customer base.

Wasoko-MaxAB will focus on raising additional funding—a claim Yu has not denied—cutting costs on non-profitable markets, and growing its buy-now-pay-later (BNPL) product.

B2B e-commerce in Africa has become a difficult beast with funded companies like Copia Global shutting down this year. However, with the combined advantage, Yu and El-Megharbel will be hopeful for a turnaround of their companies’ struggles and growth in their standing in the tough B2B e-commerce climate.

Read Moniepoint’s 2024 Informal Economy Report
Moniepoint image

Did you know that 57.7% of the business owners in Nigeria’s informal economy are under 34 years old? Click here to find out more about the demographics of Nigeria’s informal economy.

Internet

Kenya’s regulator welcomes Safaricom’s ISP suggestions

Starlink image
Image source: Zikoko Memes

Last Thursday, Safaricom, Kenya’s largest internet service provider, argued against granting licences to independent licences to satellite internet providers like Starlink. Safaricom argued that granting independent licences to satellite service providers could lead to harmful interference with existing mobile networks, and compromise national security. 

Yesterday, Kenya’s Communications Authority said those concerns are valid and that it will examine them within its frameworks.

At the heart of the issue is Starlink’s growing appeal among users in Kenya. Fast internet speeds, cheap data bundles and a workaround to afford the Starlink kit are among the perks offered to Kenyans.

Starlink’s cheaper service is a new threat to Safaricom whose data revenue helped it achieve profitability in 2023. Other telecoms have also started ramping up marketing campaigns to retain customers.

Any decision made by the CA upon reviewing Safaricom’s demand will be consequential to the users, Starlink, Safaricom and other telecoms in the country. 

Unlike other internet service providers, Starink, through a satellite connection, is able to provide internet service even in the most remote parts of Kenya. A move to block independent satellite providers could jeopardise Kenya’s hard-won improvements in internet accessibility. Users will also have fewer (expensive) alternatives to choose from if the CA moves to block independent satellite providers.

Collect payments anytime anywhere with Fincra
Fincra image

Are you dealing with the complexities of collecting payments from your customers? Fincra’s payment gateway makes it easy to accept payments via cards, bank transfers, virtual accounts and mobile money. What’s more? You get to save money on fees when you use Fincra. Get started now.

Mobility

Bolt reintroduces car loans amid drivers’ demand for increased base fare

mild disgust meme
Image source: YungNollywood

When a President visits, the whole city grinds to a halt. Certain roads are blocked and traffic diversions are made. While diversions are important to keep traffic at bay, they are also an important tactic for businesses.

Yesterday, Bolt reintroduced car loans in Kenya, steering the conversation away from drivers’ calls for lower commissions and higher base fares. 

Drivers had previously gone on a five-day strike, requesting an increase in base fare. Those drivers went as far as imposing their own prices on riders and harassing them when they didn’t oblige. However, Bolt’s novel idea to quell the outrage was a reintroduction of its car loan. 

The car loan was first introduced in 2019, however, a lack of traction (fueled by the COVID-19 lockdown) led to an end of the venture. While Bolt has not shared much information about the latest interaction of the car loans, it last offered drivers vehicles at 1.2 million KES ($9,302). Drivers were expected to pay back within 36 months at an interest rate of 22.5%.

While the car loans offer a convenient way for drivers to own vehicles, drivers say they don’t want the deal as asset financing faces more scrutiny on the continent. Kenyan drivers claim their earnings were insufficient to cover repayment and vehicle maintenance costs.

Companies

Jim Volkwyn steps down from MultiChoice board

Jim Volkwyn image
Image source: MultiChoice

The responsibility of board members is toward a company’s best interests. But what happens when these members consult for the same company on pure financial interests? If the company makes a bad business decision as a result of an ill-advised consultation, who takes the fall?

These are questions that the Public Investment Corporation (PIC), South Africa’s government investment arm, is asking Multichoice and its board member Jim Volkwyn.

PIC, the second-largest shareholder in MultiChoice after Vivendi, has questioned the company’s tradition of involving board members as consultants in its operations. Volkwyn was paid R10 million ($565,000) in his six-year tenure as a consultant. Former board chair Imtiaz Patel also reportedly earned R20 million ($1.12 million) in a similar consulting role before stepping down from the company in April 2024.

The shareholder also claimed that the streaming company acted alone in its decisions and did not inform shareholders. However, MultiChoice has denied this claim stating that Volkwyn’s consultancy arrangements (including his financials) were made transparent to all shareholders in the company.

In its defence, MultiChoice also issued statements claiming that it was cheaper to hire board members as consultants due to their experience in the pay-TV industry compared to outsiders. Volkwyn, the company’s longest-serving board member, was formerly the CEO of MultiChoice when the streaming company was under Naspers, a South African-based tech conglomerate.

Volkwyn has now stepped down from the board over allegations of breaching corporate governance principles, ahead of the company’s Annual General Meeting on August 28, 2024. He will not be seeking re-election to the board, effectively avoiding what could be a showdown hogging media headlines in the coming weeks, or worse, tanking MultiChoice’s market standings.

Paystack Virtual Terminal is now live in more countries
Paystack image

Paystack Virtual Terminalhelps businesses accept secure, in-person payments with real-time WhatsApp confirmations and ZERO hardware costs. Enjoy multiple in-person payment channels, easy end-of-day reconciliation, and more. Learn more on the Paystack blog →

CRYPTO TRACKER

The World Wide Web3

Source:

OneLiquidity  logo

Coin Name

Current Value

Day

Month

Bitcoin $59,843

– 5.71%

– 14.1%

Ether $2,477

– 7.86%

– 25.9%

Toncoin

$5.33

+ 1.56%

– 36.43%

Solana $148.08

– 6.42%

– 23.25%

* Data as of 05:45 AM WAT, August 28, 2024.

Events

  • The Central Bank of Nigeria is conducting a survey to gather insights from fintech operators on their scope of activities, key issues, and challenges facing the industry. Your perspective as an operator is important to this study. Please take a moment to complete this survey

  • We’re excited to announce our partnership with Wimbart the second edition of their pioneering pan-African research publication, “Startup Performance Reporting in Africa”. This report will shed light on the intricacies of investor relations within the African tech ecosystem. If you’re a founder, take a couple of minutes to share some key insights with us by filling out this survey

  • The Africa Prize for Engineering Innovation is open to African innovators creating engineering solutions to local challenges. Innovators from sub-Saharan Africa should pitch viable engineering products or services that will have social or environmental benefits to the continent. Apply for the chance to get up to $25,000 in funding

  • The Future of Capitalism Tech Startup Competition is offering $1 million to one lucky tech startup that can transform how businesses today operate. If your tech can save costs, boost efficiency, increase productivity or customer satisfaction, then apply by September 30 for a chance to win. 

Written by: Faith Omoniyi, Stephen Agwaibor & Emmanuel Nwosu

Edited by: Olumuyiwa Olowogboyega & Timi Odueso

Want more of TechCabal?

Sign up for our insightful newsletters on the business and economy of tech in Africa.

  • The Next Wave: futuristic analysis of the business of tech in Africa.
  • Entering Tech: tech career insights and opportunities in your inbox every Wednesday at 3 PM WAT.
  • TC Scoops: breaking news from TechCabal

P:S If you’re often missing TC Daily in your inbox, check your Promotions folder and move any edition of TC Daily from “Promotions” to your “Main” or “Primary” folder and TC Daily will always come to you.

Email Us
]]> https://techcabal.com/2024/08/28/techcabal-daily-kenya-considers-safaricoms-isp-suggestions/feed/ 0