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sawsanenn

Prime Bank, SimbaPay to launch international money transfer service - ThePaypers - 0 views

  • Through the digital platforms, Prime Bank aims to make available a one stop solution to its customers in terms of funds transfer. With the inclusion of SimbaPay, the customers will be able to send money to friends and family across the world using their mobile phones.
    • ghtazi
       
      it is very smart from simbapay to allow people, even those that are unbanked, to do send money to friends and family. If you have a smart phone the App is for you.
  • Kenya-based Prime Bank has partnered with UK-based FinTech SimbaPay, to launch an instant international money transfer service via the bank’s digital platform PrimeMobi.Through SimbaPay, Prime Bank customers will be able to send money directly to bank accounts or mobile wallets across 15 countries in Africa, Europe, and Asia including India, United Kingdom, China, Germany, and Uganda, among others.
    • nouhaila_zaki
       
      This excerpt is important because it introduces the partnership between Prime Bank and SimbaPay, which is intended to facilitate international money transfer through a digital platform PrimeMobi. Over 15 countries all over the world are expected to benefit from the ability to send money to either mobile wallets or bank accounts.
  • To access the service, customers will need to login to the bank’s mobile banking app – PrimeMobi, then click on International Money Transfer icon on the homescreen. After confirming the amount to be sent, the sender’s bank account will be debited, and money credited to the beneficiary instantly.
    • sawsanenn
       
      this excerpt shows how simbapay works and the procedure for customers who want to join the app. It is thoughtful from their side to make it easy for everybody
ayoubb

Is Fintech Good for Bank Performance? The Case of Mobile Money in the East Af... - 0 views

  • Mobile money, a technology-driven innovation in financial services, has profoundly penetrated the financial landscape in Sub-Saharan Africa, including banks. Yet, besides anecdotal evidence, little is known about whether mobile money adoption enhances or worsens bank performance. Combining hand-collected data with balance sheet data from Bankscope for a panel of 170 financial institutions over the period 2009-2015, we find a strong positive and significant relationship between the time elapsed since banks’ adoption of mobile money and their performance considering an array of proxies of bank profitability, efficiency and stability. In further investigations, we show how bank specialization and size alter such an association. Our results are robust to using instrumental variables, controlling for bank and macro level confounding factors, bank fixed effects and considering alternative measures of bank performance and mobile money adoption. Furthermore, we show that enhanced income diversification and broadened access to deposits are possible channels through which banks involved in mobile money improve their performance. Overall, our findings highlight the bright side of cooperation between banks and mobile network operators in the provision of mobile money.
    • ayoubb
       
      FinTech and Mobile Money
    • ayoubb
       
      Innovation
kenza_abdelhaq

EthioPay Mojaloop Case Study - DFS Lab - 1 views

  • EthioPay wanted to continue adding value for the Ethiopian banking sector through additional services and products. They wanted to add a number of different switch use cases (e.g. merchants, CICO, etc) to their ATM switch.
    • tahaemsd
       
      This is probably an efficient and scalable way to easily interconnect the different services in the ethiopian banking sector
  • They conducted a technical evaluation of the Mojaloop platform. While Mojaloop seemed to provide the required functionality, for a live deployment it lacked definition around auxiliary requirements to move into production.
  • EthioPay wanted to continue adding value for the Ethiopian banking sector through additional services and products. They wanted to add a number of different switch use cases (e.g. merchants, CICO, etc) to their ATM switch.
    • sawsanenn
       
      this excerpt is important because nowadays the development of companies for consumer products allows the huge opportunity for the expansion of electronic payments because it is assumed that consumers of electronic payments are indeed end-users and also that the majority of payouts are Customers to Business. Expanding enterprises also provide opportunities for big potential Business to Business payments.
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  • What they want EthioPay wanted to continue adding value for the Ethiopian banking sector through additional services and products. They wanted to add a number of different switch use cases (e.g. merchants, CICO, etc) to their ATM switch. What they built They conducted a technical evaluation of the Mojaloop platform. While Mojaloop seemed to provide the required functionality, for a live deployment it lacked definition around auxiliary requirements to move into production. How Mojaloop helps With over 40 million phone subscribers and most banks having their own mobile banking system in Ethiopia, there is no mobile based inter-bank fund transfer. Mojaloop is potentially an efficient and scalable way to easily interconnect these disparate services.
    • ghtazi
       
      in this excerpt, we can see that Ethiopay wants to add value to the baking sector by adding new products and services. they also do a technical evaluation of the Mojaloop platform, which is the one that provides the required functionalities to the production. Last but not least it shows us that There is no mobile-based inter-bank fund transfer for 40 million telephone subscribers and most banks in Ethiopia have their own mobile banking system.
  • EthioPay (ETS) is owned by a consortium of Ethiopian banks and operates a central switching platform for ATMs throughout the country.
    • kenza_abdelhaq
       
      Ethiopay wanted to expand its services by implementing the platform Mojaloop which will interconnect disparate services.
ghtazi

Mukuru international money transfers review | Finder South Africa - 0 views

  • Mukuru specialises in single transfers to friends and family, whether over the phone, through the app, online, bank transfers or through one of its branches. You can’t set up a recurring transfer through Mukuru and it doesn’t specialise in business transfers.You can make transfers to any of the following, depending on the country you’re sending to:Bank account. The money will be deposited directly into the bank account you choose. You’ll need to know the SWIFT code as well. This option is currently available for all supported countries.Cash pick-up location. You can send money to a cash pick-up location for your recipient to collect. If you choose this option, the person picking it up will need a valid photo ID on hand and the reference number. You’ll only be able to use this for transfers to Zimbabwe, Malawi, Namibia and Zambia.Mobile wallet. Send to your recipient’s smartphone wallet. This option is helpful if your recipient doesn’t have a bank account and isn’t near a cash pick-up location. You can use it in Zimbabwe, Malawi and Mozambique.Top-up card collection. This is used when you want to send money directly to your recipient’s card. You’ll need their card number and address. This is currently only available in Zimbabwe.
    • hibaerrai
       
      Mukuru proposes numerous services, however I believe that they should step up and propose new different services. Banks propose similar services. They should take advantage of new technologies and online platform to expand more.
  • The supported payment methods vary depending on where you are in the world but from South Africa, you’ll have a few options: make a cash deposit at one of Mukuru’s partner branches, online or telephone banking, bank transfer or through a Mukuru Money prepaid debit card, which all customers in South Africa qualify for. South Africa is the only country in Africa that allows bank transfers with Mukuru.
    • ghtazi
       
      Depending on where you are in the world, the supported payment methods differ, but you will have a few choices from South Africa: make a cash deposit at one of Mukuru's partner branches, online or telephone banking, bank transfer, or via a prepaid debit card for Mukuru Money, which all South African customers apply for. The only country in Africa that makes Mukuru bank transfers is South Africa.
omarlahmidi

St. Mary's University Institutional Repository: FACTORS AFFECTING AGENT BANKING DEPOSIT... - 0 views

  • Agent banking has increasingly gained importance in developing countries over the last two decades. However, the extent to which agent banking can be used as a tool to mobilize deposit in the banking sector remains largely unknown and the true benefits of the agent banking model to customers, the banks and the bank agents also remains largely unstudied. The main objective of the study was to assess factors affecting agent banking deposit mobilization in case of lion international bank s.c. The study was conducted among 1,300 recorded agents with a respondent sample of 306 agents.
    • omarlahmidi
       
      Belcash: a company that supplies technology system which used to provide the hello cash mobile and agent banking service.
samielbaqqali

Enjoy free banking transactions with your Carbon Account - 0 views

  • People can send you money via debit cards, USSD or bank transfers from financial institutions including GTBank, Access Bank, First Bank, and Zenith Bank.
  •  
    It is important to increase the possibilities of banks that could deal with carbon, to encourage more customers to the service.
mbellakbail69

BISA-Cashless-case-study.pdf - 0 views

shared by mbellakbail69 on 13 Feb 21 - No Cached
  • When it initially started, vendors would receive a voucher and redeem it at certain ATMs and received a pin code with that voucher. That became a bit of a problem as some vendors could not read and did not know how to operate the ATM machine so that was phased out. Vendors then had to bring a bank statement for their SnapScan accounts to be linked to their bank accounts. Those vendors who did not have a bank account had to collect their cash every second week. Problems did occur where customers paid short and vendors complained that the right amounts are not in or the money has been withdrawn but there was always a problem and results would show that the money was drawn. All issues were always resolved by SnapScan. And it became a pain with vendors not collecting their money on time and when they don’t keep the proof of their payments on their phones. Hence, I always have to liaise with SnapScan staff. Vendors getting their payments in their bank account is so much better.
    • mbellakbail69
       
      Re-registration of suppliers and the change of telephone numbers is issue because their phones are often stolen because of the insecure atmosphere in which they work. Snapscan then offers the supplier to collect the cash by entering the code and PIN into a normal cash machine and giving it the money without a bank account. Some vendors are connected to their own SnapScan account, and those with no bank accounts receive cash every second week.
  • When it initially started, vendors would receive a voucher and redeem it at certain ATMs and received a pin code with that voucher. That became a bit of a problem as some vendors could not read and did not know how to operate the ATM machine so that was phased out. Vendors then had to bring a bank statement for their SnapScan accounts to be linked to their bank accounts. Those vendors who did not have a bank account had to collect their cash every second week. Problems did occur where customers paid short and vendors complained that the right amounts are not in or the money has been withdrawn but there was always a problem and results would show that the money was drawn. All issues were always resolved by SnapScan. And it became a pain with vendors not collecting their money on time and when they don’t keep the proof of their payments on their phones. Hence, I always have to liaise with SnapScan staff. Vendors getting their payments in their bank account is so much better.
sawsanenn

SimbaPay - Katapult Accelerator - 0 views

  • SimbaPay is revolutionizing the $64 billion cross border payments market in Africa by allowing the diaspora community to send money directly to the banked and the unbanked at a 1/3rd of the cost of typical solutions used today. Using only the recipient’s phone number, SimbaPay’s technology ensures that payments are delivered within seconds to the recipient’s preferred mobile or bank account.
    • tahaemsd
       
      SimbaPay sends money directly to the banked and the unbanked using only the recipient's phone number
  • SimbaPay is revolutionizing the $64 billion cross border payments market in Africa by allowing the diaspora community to send money directly to the banked and the unbanked at a 1/3rd of the cost of typical solutions used today. Using only the recipient’s phone number, SimbaPay’s technology ensures that payments are delivered within seconds to the recipient’s preferred mobile or bank account.
    • ghtazi
       
      What we can say is that is very smart to use only the mobile phone to do a transfer of money. Banked and Unbanked people could benefit from this app. As we know there is still 1,7 billion people in the world that are unbanked, I found this move very smart.
  • SimbaPay is revolutionizing the $64 billion cross border payments market in Africa by allowing the diaspora community to send money directly to the banked and the unbanked at a 1/3rd of the cost of typical solutions used today. Using only the recipient’s phone number, SimbaPay’s technology ensures that payments are delivered within seconds to the recipient’s preferred mobile or bank account.
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  • SimbaPay is revolutionizing the $64 billion cross border payments market in Africa by allowing the diaspora community to send money directly to the banked and the unbanked at a 1/3rd of the cost of typical solutions used today. Using only the recipient’s phone number, SimbaPay’s technology ensures that payments are delivered within seconds to the recipient’s preferred mobile or bank account.
    • sawsanenn
       
      Simbapay is making a very good move by allowing the African community to be familiarized with digital platforms, it is a good step to make Africa more developed
chaimaa-rachid

Pay with your phone using SnapScan | Standard Bank - 0 views

  • No need to carry cash, wait for the card machine or enter your card details with every online purchase. With SnapScan you can use your smartphone to make payments, send money to friends and earn UCount rewards points. SnapScan is compatible with most bank cards, as well as the Standard Bank virtual card.
    • samiatazi
       
      Thanks to SnapScan carrying a mobile phone is equivalent to carrying a digital wallet for e-payments and transactions. Most importantly, customers like this app for being free, safe, easy and convenient simultaneously.
    • kenzabenessalah
       
      Since SnapScan allows people not to carry real cash, this reduces the risk of having stolen money.
  • Safe Your card details are securely encrypted (we don't have access to them, nor does the shop you're buying from)
  • Easy Just download the app and link your cheque, credit or debit card (SnapScan works with any South African bank, and prominent international credit cards) Pay with your phone using SnapScan | Standard Bank Created with Sketch. Pay with your phone using SnapScan | Standard Bank Created with Sketch.
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  • Free Pay no additional fees to use SnapScan (only your network service provider’s standard data charges and bank fees apply)
  • Convenient Pay for the goods and services that you want, wherever you are, without needing to carry cash or cards
  • No need to carry cash, wait for the card machine or enter your card details with every online purchase. With SnapScan you can use your smartphone to make payments, send money to friends and earn UCount rewards points.
  •  
    SnapScan facilitates payments by using only a mobile phone to keep customers happy.
mehdibella

Nigerian digital bank Carbon hit $240M in payments processed last year, up 89% from 201... - 0 views

  • Also, in its quest to become a digital bank, Carbon acquired a microfinance bank license. According to Dozie, the license means that Carbon’s customers are afforded additional protection through depositors’ insurance via the NDIC. The Nigerian Deposit Insurance Corporation, a federal insurance agency, protects depositors and guarantees the settlement of insured funds when a financial institution can no longer repay their deposits. With that in place, Dozie says the typical Carbon wallet is now a full-fledged bank account, and customers can perform transactions on the platform as they would with any bank.Like Carbon, other startups on the continent have followed suit by releasing year-on-year metrics. In recent memory, most of these startups play in the fintech and crypto-exchange space. But Carbon remains unique amongst this crop of companies as it releases both transaction stats and real insights into its financial performance.Whereas transaction stats tend to highlight a seemingly explosive year-on-year growth of a company, a comprehensive view of financials will likely show a mixed performance. For instance, Carbon generated $17.5 million in revenue for FY2019, up 68% from 2018. For that same period, it recorded a 23% decrease in its profit after tax numbers, a 222% rise in total liabilities and 107% increase in assets finishing the year off with a 6% increase in total equity.It’ll be interesting to see what these numbers look like for 2020. But that’s not the only event to keep an eye on. In addition to its $10 million Series A from SA-based Net1 UEPS Technologies and a $5million debt financing in 2019 from Lendable, Dozie says the digital bank, which also has a presence in Kenya, is ramping efforts to raise a Series B round soon to consolidate its position on the continent.
    • samiatazi
       
      Carbon is given a licence to the microfinance banks and the depositor's insurance offers consumers extra cover. The firm's sales for 2019 were $17.5 million, up 68% in 2018. For the same period, profit after tax numbers declined by 23 percent, overall liabilities grew by 222 percent and assets increased by 107 percent. Carbon is mounting effort to upgrade its position on the continent in the near future in a Series B round.
  • In 2018, Carbon, a Nigerian fintech startup, made its financials public for the first time. Although typical for foreign private startups, it’s almost an anomaly in Africa. There have been rare cases in the past, for instance, when Rocket Internet had to include Jumia’s financials in its yearly reports after going public. At the time, the German investment outfit was a founding shareholder in the African-based unicorn.
  • Nigerian digital bank Carbon hit $240M in payments processed last year, up 89% from 2019
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  • A $15.8 million VC-backed company, Carbon was founded by Chijioke Dozie and Ngozi Dozie in 2012. The brothers started the company in a niche digital lending market, but now, the company offers a plethora of services from savings to payments and investments.
kenza_abdelhaq

Private equity investment in leading mobile payments platform | responsAbility - 0 views

  • Fawry is the leading mobile payments platform in Egypt. Through a network of 65,000 agents, mostly small shop owners, Fawry allows 20 million customers to perform a variety of transactions such as utility bills payments, airtime top-ups or merchant transactions. Over the years, Fawry has created a platform connecting all clients’ channels of payments including bank accounts, credit cards and mobile wallets with any of the 23 banks connected to its platform. Fawry’s success has been to build acceptance and usage from clients as well as banks and merchants.
    • kenza_abdelhaq
       
      Fawry's services, operations, and network include small shop owners, a variety of transactions, and a platform connecting clients and more than 20 banks.
  • Speaking on behalf of Fawry, Ashraf Sabry, CEO, said: “Our efficient payment platform and network will enable us to provide financial services for sections of the population that have so far been underserved – at costs that will allow the model to be commercially sustainable. At the same, we aim to further spread cashless transaction in Egypt, thereby serving customers as well as commerce.”
    • kenza_abdelhaq
       
      Fawry is targeting customers as well as commerce while focusing on providing financial services to the underserved. The company focuses on financial inclusion while maintaining a certain level of costs to have a commercially sustainable model.
  •  
    "Fawry is the leading mobile payments platform in Egypt. Through a network of 65,000 agents, mostly small shop owners, Fawry allows 20 million customers to perform a variety of transactions such as utility bills payments, airtime top-ups or merchant transactions. Over the years, Fawry has created a platform connecting all clients' channels of payments including bank accounts, credit cards and mobile wallets with any of the 23 banks connected to its platform. Fawry's success has been to build acceptance and usage from clients as well as banks and merchants."
mohammed_ab

Banks and Fintech Companies: Friends or Foes? Pt. 3 - Fawry as a Case Study - WAYA - 0 views

  • awry collaborated with banks in many other products where direct integration, SaaS or hybrid models were being used to offer products  to both bank customers and Fawry customers.
    • ayachehbouni
       
      First, Fawry collaborated with banks to use bill presentment and payment to banks customers through bank ATM channels. Fawri also provided a payment service using mobile wallets in collaboration with the National Bank of Egypt. These kind of fruitful collaborations are what raised the company's services' importance and value.
  • Fawry is Egypt’s first and largest electronic payment network established in 2008, offering financial services to consumers and businesses through a variety of channels nationwide, Fawry services include but are not limited to electronic bill presentment and payment, alternative digital payments, omnichannel acceptance, supply chain payments, agent banking services, digital SME lending and other varieties of digital solutions for banks, billers and merchants.
  •  
    This excerpt highlights that Fawry is not only an electronic bill payment platform. A lot of people think that the company only offers bill payment services, and went famous for this service, however, the company expanded its product offerings to other fintech solutions like digital lending.
ghtazi

Ethio-Pay Celebrates Official Launch, Finally - 1 views

  • “What makes Ethio Pay profitable is not the number of ATMs; it rather is the large numbers of users. Our concern now is to work on promoting the system for increased customer involvement,” said Bizuneh.
    • kenzabenessalah
       
      The important message to take from this statement is that not all payment services are making profits. The reason is due to the switch operations.
  • After last month’s unofficial launch of Ethio-Pay, customers of other banks complained that the Bank of Abyssinia’s (BoA) ATMs did not provide service for other cards; guards of some branches unaware of the complete switch operation were seen forbidding customers from trying their cards at the ATMs.
  • The switch does not treat banks that have fewer ATMs any differently than those with larger networks in place. In fact, the system enables hosted members, banks without their own payment switches, to issue ATM cards without having to invest in a network of machines. It is also open to the integration of newcomers in the future without additional payments for letting their customers transact on other ATMs, the CEO added.
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  • It is all a result of low disclosure on the system start-up. We were among the banks engaged in the pilot phase,” said Yoseph.
  • After last month’s unofficial launch of Ethio-Pay, customers of other banks complained that the Bank of Abyssinia’s (BoA) ATMs did not provide service for other cards; guards of some branches unaware of the complete switch operation were seen forbidding customers from trying their cards at the ATMs. Oddly enough, 16pc of the amount transacted took place through BoA’s Machines.
  • The belated national e-payment switch, Ethio-Pay, serving the integration of Automated Teller Machines (ATMs) and Point of Sale (POS) machines, celebrated its official launch on May 12, 2016.
    • ghtazi
       
      On May 12, 2016, Ethio-Pay, the overdue national e-payment transition for the integration of Automated Teller Machines (ATMs) and Point of Sale (POS) machines, celebrated its official launch.
  • “We have our own regulation to solve possible audit dispute between banks. We also have a system to prove the audit’s accuracy,” said Bizuneh Bekele, CEO of Eth-Switch S.C.
  •  
    Ethiopay is an innovative solution the software installation incorporates to ensure the switch's facilitation of banking accounts, took almost a year before step four, the official opening of Ethio-Pay.
ghtazi

Fintech and Banks: Four Ways Banks Can Respond Better | Toptal - 0 views

  • The response by banks right now to fintech disruption is critical due to the current stage of the nascent industry’s development. Fintech startups are broadly focused on the concept of unbundling banks, offering one type of product/service and concentrating on doing it VERY well.
    • sawsanenn
       
      This response might/ can change if they adopt this digital strategy. Not only it will help banks with better customer services and reduce their prices which can attract more costumers, besides there is also better branding. This last advantage does attract many customers since they search for innovative products.
  • Fintech, shortened from financial technology, is assumed to be a modern movement, yet the use of technology to assist financial services is by no means a recent phenomenon. Financial services is an industry that introduced credit cards in the 1950s, internet banking in the 1990s and since the turn of the millennium, contactless payment technology. Yet, fintech’s place in the public conscience has really taken off in the past three years:
    • ghtazi
       
      Fintech is considered to be a new trend, shortened from financial technology, but the use of technology to support financial services is by no means a recent phenomenon. Financial services is an industry that introduced contactless payment technology to credit cards in the 1950s, internet banking in the 1990s, and after the turn of the millennium.
mohammed_ab

Electronic Transactions Reshape Egypt's Economy - 3 views

  • The rise of online banking around the world has helped other economies solve these very challenges. Cash, for example, is hard to transport. Coins and bills are prone to theft, and their use makes dodging taxes easier for those so inclined. For individuals who must pay in person, getting across a gridlocked city like Cairo is logistically difficult. Together, these problems can constrain an economy. In Egypt, where 94 percent of all transactions were cash as recently as 2014, such a system stymies economic growth.
  • Fawry is part of a new wave of technology companies ushering Egypt into the digital age. Many of these firms are helping transform industries like banking, health care, and transport, and in the process creating good jobs for young Egyptians, more than 30 percent of whom are unemployed.
  • Sabry, a former salesperson at IBM Egypt, launched Fawry because he knew these issues kept Egypt’s economy from achieving its promise. The early years were lean as the company worked to convince tech-wary Egyptians that Fawry’s systems were secure—and that their money wouldn’t disappear into an electronic void.
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  • “Time is of the essence, and Fawry saves me a lot of it,” says Shawky, who owns three electronics stores in the Egyptian capital.
    • kenzabenessalah
       
      Fawry is available for its customers day and night which attracts a large range of people.
  • It was something that Cairo-based shop owner Nader Shawky had come to dread: paying his phone bill. Every month, he trekked to the offices of his mobile provider where he and dozens of others stood in line—sometimes for up to two hours—to settle their bills. It was, he admits, a maddening process.
    • samielbaqqali
       
      By providing online banking financial administrations that allow you to cover your bills, transfer cash, and access a record of your checking account transactions from your internet browser, Fawry makes the life of its clients less difficult. Banking from anywhere, at any time of day or night, makes it a little easier to do anything you do about your finances.
  • Fawry, a fast-growing Cairo-based company that specializes in electronic payments, makes it possible for Shawky to take care of his accounts online.
  • Fawry’s growth has had a profound effect on Egypt’s economy, says Akef el Maghrabi, the vice chairman of Banque Misr, one of Egypt’s biggest banks and an early Fawry partner. “When you eliminate or reduce the reliance on cash, then you fight corruption, you provide convenience, you lower costs, and you grow the economy. [Electronic payments] do a lot of good for the country.”
    • ayachehbouni
       
      With a system that relies mainly on cash transactions, the economy faces too many challenges that stops its growth and development. For instance, cash is hard to transport, coins and bills can easily be stolen, and their use makes dodging taxes and corruption easier.
  • IFC invested $6 million in Fawry in 2013 and helped guide founder Ashraf Sabry and his team as they built their business. Now the 12-year-old company handles 2.5 million transactions a day. In 2018 Fawry processed 40 billion Egyptian pounds (about $2.5 billion) in electronic payments. Earlier in 2019, Fawry became Egypt’s largest financial technology firm to list on the national stock exchange. It now employs 1,600 people.
    • samielbaqqali
       
      By providing online banking financial administrations that allow you to cover your bills, transfer cash, and access a record of your checking account transactions from your internet browser, Fawry makes the life of its clients less difficult. Banking from anywhere, at any time of day or night, makes it a little easier to do anything you do about your finances.
  • As the Fawry network grew, shop owners who installed the system saw significant benefits, too. Fawry’s terminals drew new customers into stores, providing the consumer traffic that is the lifeblood of small shops. Mahmoud El Rawy, a grocery store owner and father of three, can attest to that. His shop struggled until he installed a Fawry payment terminal. “Fawry has had a big impact on my business,” says El Rawy, who now owns three supermarkets. “It helped bring me more customers and it’s why many come to me now.”
  •  
    Fawry is making the life of its customers less difficult by offering online banking financial administrations that empower you to cover your bills, move cash, and access a record of your checking account transactions from your internet browser. Banking from anywhere, at any time of the day or night, makes all what you do with your finances somewhat simpler.
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  •  
    Fintech is providing a very fast business and customer are really satisfied with it. I think that fast service is the main objective of Fintechs.
  •  
    Fawri is helping Egyptians in handling their bills online rather than spending hours on this kind of processes if done traditionally.
  •  
    It's interesting to see that Fawry has a positive impact on its customers but also its business partners like small show owners.
mbellakbail69

Prime Bank launches SimbaPay - International Money Transfer Service | Value Added Servi... - 0 views

  • Prime Bank, a leading private bank in Kenya, has partnered with London-based FinTech SimbaPay, to launch an instant international money transfer service via the bank’s digital platform PrimeMobi.Through SimbaPay, Prime Bank customers will now be able to instantly and securely send money directly to bank accounts or mobile wallets across 15 countries in Africa, Europe, and Asia including India, United Kingdom, China (WeChat Pay), Germany, Uganda among others, the company said in a media statement.
    • nourserghini
       
      This article reveals a new service offered by Simbapay with the partnership of the kenyan Prime Bank to provide instant money transfers to 15 countries through the PrimeMobi platform.
    • mbellakbail69
       
      Via SimbaPay, customers in Africa, Europe and Asia, including India, the United Kingdom, China, Germany and Uganda, are now in a position to transfer cash immediately and safely to bank accounts or mobile wallets.
    • mbellakbail69
       
      Via SimbaPay, customers in Africa, Europe and Asia, including India, the United Kingdom, China, Germany and Uganda, are now in a position to transfer cash immediately and safely to bank accounts or mobile wallets.
ghtazi

Setting Up or Registering a FinTech Company in Ghana - CQ Legal - 1 views

  • the regulator of FinTech in Ghana is the Bank of Ghana. The Act states that the Bank of Ghana shall have overall supervisory and regulatory authority in all matters relating to payment, clearing and settlement systems.
    • sawsanenn
       
      I think it is a good idea to avoid any complexity or fraud.
  • According to Section 3 of the Payment and Services Act, 2019 (Act 987), the regulator of FinTech in Ghana is the Bank of Ghana. The Act states that the Bank of Ghana shall have overall supervisory and regulatory authority in all matters relating to payment, clearing and settlement systems. As a result of the emergence of FinTech solutions, a lot of complexities have been introduced requiring the Bank of Ghana’s focus to understand and supervise FinTech activities effectively.
    • ghtazi
       
      This excerpt shows that fintech would be a great idea for the Ghanaian banking sector.
  • Purposeful effort will be required from regulators to shape the future of FinTech and push it in a productive direction in Ghana. It is hopeful that with the introduction of the FinTech and Innovation Office of the Bank of Ghana, there would be regular updates to the licensing requirements of FinTech companies that would ensure adequate compliance with international best practice and also encourage more entrepreneurs to set up FinTech companies in Ghana.
    • ghtazi
       
      finteches are important
aminej

Digital Banking - cassava fintech - 0 views

    • aminej
       
      I love how convenient that app is because you have so much services that are offered such as paying, scanning, E-wallet, sending money from South Africa or Europe in a practical way. The world is become more and more digital and it is good to see that Africa is following the same path and doing fine.
  • Our Digital Banking business is anchored on a transactional banking model  with the following key services – Micro-loans, Savings, Agent Banking (designed to reach the previously excluded), Device Financing and Diaspora Banking. The Digital Bank’s flagship platform is branded “Square”.   The Square Mobile App is an integrated mobile banking solution that gives customers the ability to transact wherever they are, on services such as bill payments, funds transfer, banking services, nano loans, airtime and so forth. In line with our Diaspora thrust, we have also launched the Square World App, targeting diaspora customers anywhere in the world, offering remittances, and other suite of services as if they were back home
aymanelmamoun

SimbaPay launches Kenya to China payment service over WeChat | TechCrunch - 1 views

  • The new product — which piggy-backs on WeChat’s messaging service — is aimed at Kenyan merchants who purchase goods from China, Kenya’s largest import source.
    • tahaemsd
       
      Simbapay developed a third party payment aggregator that enables funds delivery when the buyer and seller both use Wechat
  • Forging another link between Africa and China’s digital economies, the African-focused money transfer startup SimbaPay and Kenya’s Family Bank have launched an instant payment service from East Africa to China.
  • The new product — which piggy-backs on WeChat’s messaging service — is aimed at Kenyan merchants who purchase goods from China, Kenya’s largest import source.
    • aminej
       
      SimbaPay offers a new connection between Africa and China for people who buy their goods from there. Kenya is one of the biggest importers of products from China equivalent of 4 billion $ which is huge.
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  • SimbaPay transfers funds to 11 countries — nine in Africa then to China and India. “Early next year we’ll increase this to 29 countries,” said Sagini. This includes offering the WeChat China payment service elsewhere in East Africa.
    • ghtazi
       
      I like how simbapay finds its way through the African market and will increase the countries where customers can transfer funds from 11 to 29.
  • SimbaPay and Family Bank will generate revenues on the WeChat-based transfer service through a fee share arrangement on transactions. “We have a sliding scale of charges [for the service]. For example, to send the equivalent of $80 will cost $3.50,” said Sagini.This presents a significant reduction of fees and opportunity cost for Kenyan traders who import from China, according to Sagini and Family Bank.Current available payment methods to China for Kenyan businesses are less secure and more expensive options, such as traditional money transmitters (Western Union), SWIFT and off the grid services, according to Sagini and Family Bank Chief Operation Officer (COO) Godfrey Kamau Kariuki.
    • nouhaila_zaki
       
      This excerpt is very important because it explains how SimbaPay plans on promoting Sino-Kenyan trade: reduction of fees and opportunity costs for kenyan traders importing from China through a partnership with the chinese WeChat.
  • “Kenya imports about $4 billion goods from China. That’s the total market that we’re getting into. We’re looking at a single digit market share of the transactional volume around that,” SimbaPay co-founder Sagini Onyancha told TechCrunch.“The users [of the new product] are primarily small Kenyan businesses, that import phones, gadgets, electronics…small to medium size traders who import goods from China,” he said.
    • nouhaila_zaki
       
      This excerpt is important because it explains the reasons underlying SimbaPay's decision to launch an instant payment service from East Africa to China. Indeed, exchanges between Kenya and China are huge, and SimbaPay attempts to capitalize on this market. The potential users of this service are expected to be Kenyan small to medium-size business owners who import electronics from China.
  • SimbaPay and Family Bank estimate over seven million customers and businesses will be able to access their China WeChat payment service, based on projections of Kenya’s current SMEs.
    • sawsanenn
       
      this estimation can be reached because of the huge customer portfolio that china has. Plus kenya is known to be one of the main importers from China
  • SimbaPay and Family Bank will generate revenues on the WeChat-based transfer service through a fee share arrangement on transactions. “We have a sliding scale of charges [for the service]. For example, to send the equivalent of $80 will cost $3.50,” said Sagini.
    • aymanelmamoun
       
      Reducing fees and opportunity cost for Kenyan traders importing from China is a very crucial step to Family Bank.
  •  
    Forging another link between Africa and China's digital economies, the African-focused money transfer startup SimbaPay and Kenya's Family Bank have launched an instant payment service from East Africa to China.
mehdibella

Goldman Sachs cash confirms Jumo as fintech heavyweight - 1 views

  • Created in 2015 in Cape Town by Andrew Watkins-Ball, the company, which specializes in savings, loans and insurance for people and small businesses far from the traditional banking system, has raised $55 million (50 million euro) in debt and venture capital from the American bank.
    • samielbaqqali
       
      The company asked for a big amount from an American bank in order to perfect their investment.
  • Created in 2015 in Cape Town by Andrew Watkins-Ball, the company, which specializes in savings, loans and insurance for people and small businesses far from the traditional banking system, has raised $55 million (50 million euro) in debt and venture capital from the American bank.
  • The company has raised nearly $146 million since its creation from renowned players such as Google, which integrated Jumo into its accelerator in May 2017, the Mastercard foundation, development institutions such as Finnfund and Proparco (the private branch of the French Development Agency).
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  • Goldman Sachs cash confirms Jumo as fintech heavyweight
  • By entering Jumo's final $55 million round of financing, the US bank Goldman Sachs is raising the South African fintech's profile
    • mehdibella
       
      the company has taken millions of dollars to secure the continuation of this project
  • Jumo is connected to continental telecom operators such as Tigo, Airtel, and MTN as well as traditional banks such as Letshego in Ghana and Barclays in Zambia, to integrate its offers with those of its partners.
    • mehdibella
       
      it made a lot of partnerships arround many companies that would make transactions easier
  • Since 2018, the start-up has partnered with Uber in Nairobi to provide drivers with access to loans for the purchase of cars based on their rating and with flexible repayment options.By 2019, the start-up, claimed to have provided more than $bn in loans to 15 million customers, and to employ 300 people across 11 countries.
  • Since 2018, the start-up has partnered with Uber in Nairobi to provide drivers with access to loans for the purchase of cars based on their rating and with flexible repayment options.
    • ghtazi
       
      this is once again a smart move from jumo, they diversify their activity, which can be more than benefic for them.
  • Jumo is already active in Ghana, Kenya, Pakistan, Tanzania, Uganda, and Zambia and has representation in Cape Town, New Delhi, London, Mumbai, Nairobi, Porto, and Singapore, where its founder is now based.
    • nouhaila_zaki
       
      This excerpt introduces us to the geographical scope of Jumo, which appears to be pretty large (in Africa and Asia).
  • By 2019, the start-up, claimed to have provided more than $bn in loans to 15 million customers, and to employ 300 people across 11 countries.
    • nouhaila_zaki
       
      This excerpt is important because it gives us a measurement of how active Jumo is in providing customers with loans (one of their products). It also gives us an idea about the size of the company (300 employees accross 11 countries).
  • Jumo is connected to continental telecom operators such as Tigo, Airtel, and MTN as well as traditional banks such as Letshego in Ghana and Barclays in Zambia, to integrate its offers with those of its partners. Since 2018, the start-up has partnered with Uber in Nairobi to provide drivers with access to loans for the purchase of cars based on their rating and with flexible repayment options.
  • With this new round of financing — its fourth since April 2018 — the company, which targets emerging markets and is part of the very select club of African start-ups active beyond the continent’s borders, now intends to conquer Côte d’Ivoire, Nigeria, as well as Bangladesh and India
    • sawsanenn
       
      this countries can bring new options to jumo, not only new customers but also new services. These new entrances can bring to Jumo high revenues as well
  •  
    JUMO is opting for a good strategy which is doing a partnership with Google. Partnerships with giant companies like google are always beneficial because they offer you great technology and a big capital to improve your business.
  •  
    I like the way JUMO chose its partners in the telecommunication industry. Partnering with MTN that is the first telecom operator in Africa and also a big fintech advocate is a good decision for JUMO to grow.
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