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mehdibella

Carbon reveals the appeal of fintech transparency in second profitable year, with $17mi... - 0 views

  • Lending through a pandemic COVID-19 has prevented them settling into Kenya, where there are no less than 50 digital lending platforms competing for an adult population that is over 80% financially included.  Reports of predatory lending have increased red tape in the East African country. A newly gazetted directive bars digital lenders from reporting defaulting borrowers below certain amounts to credit bureaus, among other rules.  It increases the time it will take for a new entrant like Carbon to comfortably express its various services. “We haven’t really had a chance to test the engine,” Dozie says, but they have given out enough loans to calibrate their algorithm. In Nigeria, they have reduced lending to shore up against the uncertainty caused by the pandemic, revising the repayment schedule for 9,016 loans. However, Dozie says they are currently at more than half the level achieved last year, in value and volume. Another profitable year ahead? Carbon’s products need overall improvement, in responding to customer complaints (see responses to this tweet) about deductions, and notification lags, among others. The pandemic’s impact on the Nigerian economy could have an effect on the company’s bottom line. Profit in the next report might as well be less impressive than what this year’s report contains. “It will be easier to beat [this year’s] numbers in naira terms, but we are all at the mercy of macroeconomics on the dollar terms,” Dozie says. He says they will report whatever happens, as part of a long-term pitch to customers who, he believes, will be impressed by an honest expression of financial strength. Otherwise, focus remains on leveraging other strategic moves from 2019, notably the acquisition of payments startup Amplify.  The latter’s intellectual property has gone into developing an SME platform, as well as in developing Carbon Express, a smartphone keypad button that can be used for instant transactions within any app. Carbon acquired Amplify particularly for this feature and their engineering. Maxwell Obi, one of Amplify’s two co-founders who joined Carbon as part of the deal, has left the company, but the others have been instrumental in building valuable aspects like an iOS app.
  • Another value-adding space is credit reporting. Carbon doesn’t produce the reports; they source from partner bureaus, and make them available to customers. 
    • samiatazi
       
      In 2019, Carbon purchased Amplify, a startup for payments. The latter has established a SME platform. Intellectual Property Carbon Express is a keypad button for any application to use for instant transactions. At present, they are more than half the level of value and volume reached last year. The effect of the pandemic on the economy in Nigeria could affect the bottom line of the business.
  • In an audited report published this week, Carbon, the Nigerian fintech company, declared that it made the naira equivalent of $312,905 in profit after tax in 2019. 
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • Carbon reveals the appeal of fintech transparency in second profitable year, with $17million in revenue
  • Carbon offered 975,000 loans valued at $64.1million in 2019. The average loan offered to borrowers is $65.8 which, according to CEO Chijioke Dozie, is at the same level from 2018. A larger income tax bill ate into the company’s 2019 balance, reducing net profit by 23.5%
  • Carbon lent 76% more and, with $17million, accrued 70% more in revenue. But the real metric for progress last year was in the other lines of business feeding its base in Nigeria, and now being exported to Kenya where it launched last December. 
mehdi-ezzaoui

EasyEquities turns profitable for Purple Group | Company News - 0 views

  • The online equity investment platform has reached a tipping point, with more than 150-thousand active users. Purple Group has reported a strong rise in first-half earnings as its EasyEquities online investment and trading platform reached tipping point. The fintech group owns 70% of EasyEquities and Sanlam Investments holds the remaining 30%.
    • aminej
       
      EasyEquities has been doing very well lately with an increase of active users, profit and platform assets. Even though the COVID crisis will affect them since a lot of people will lose their job, homes etc..many won't be able to invest anymore but still during any crisis there is place for opportunity.
  • The next six months will, no doubt, prove to be unpredictable. In many ways perhaps some of the toughest months experienced in the investment world in decades lie ahead with the world economy in unchartered waters," Purple Group said. "But that suits us just fine. Firm in the knowledge that we simply must, every minute of every day, be there for our partners and clients on their financial journey."
    • aminej
       
      This is the positive mindset that should be kept during crisis. Not only EasyEquities will suffer in this period but many other Fintechs. As we have seen many companies went banckrupt because of the crisis but I really hope EasyEquities will make it because they have been doing great work in Africa and worldwide
  • EasyEquities grew revenue by 140% to R28.6 million in the six months to end-February as the number of funded retail investment accounts more than doubled to 199,491. The platform generated a R76,000 profit for the period from a R12.4 million loss previously. Platform assets quadrupled to R15.8 billion.
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    easy equities make profits and grew revenue to become one the most profitable fintech
nouhaila_zaki

Egypt: Fawry expected to join FTSE, MSCI Indices in 2021 | african markets - 0 views

  • Fawry for Banking and Payment Technology Services (FWRY) is forecast to join the FTSE and MSCI emerging markets indices in September 2021, according to a research by Arqaam Capital. The company meets the liquidity requirements, which ensures inclusion in the FTSE EM All Cap Index’s next rebalancing on 21 September, with a weight of 0.0082%. In January, Fawry’s board of directors approved to subscribe to the capital increase of Fawry Plus, as the company will be allowed to subscribe up to EGP 35 million. During the first nine months of 2020, Fawry achieved a consolidated net profit before minority interest of EGP 119.2 million.
    • nouhaila_zaki
       
      This excerpt is important because it reflects Fawry's position in the stock market and how its liquidity allows it to perhaps be included in the FTSE EM All Cap Index's nxt rebalancing. Moreover, the article introduces the consolidated net profit secured by Fawry in the first nine months of 2020, which amounts to EGP 119.2 million.
  •  
    "Fawry for Banking and Payment Technology Services (FWRY) is forecast to join the FTSE and MSCI emerging markets indices in September 2021, according to a research by Arqaam Capital.   The company meets the liquidity requirements, which ensures inclusion in the FTSE EM All Cap Index's next rebalancing on 21 September, with a weight of 0.0082%. In January, Fawry's board of directors approved to subscribe to the capital increase of Fawry Plus, as the company will be allowed to subscribe up to EGP 35 million.   During the first nine months of 2020, Fawry achieved a consolidated net profit before minority interest of EGP 119.2 million. "
mehdi-ezzaoui

EasyEquities owner enjoying a purple patch - 1 views

  • EasyEquities owner Purple Group intends to speed up its entry into new markets and the rollout of new products following its first annual profit since 2012.The financial services company is pursuing its mission of "democratising all things investment" with an almost evangelical zeal, and years of slog have finally paid off with earnings of R17m for the year ended August...
    • aminej
       
      After years without any profit, EasyEquities have managed in 2012 to make 17m of profit which is huge and good for them since they will be able to invest more in that platform and make it even better for their customers.
  • EasyEquities owner Purple has finally turned a profit, which is key to the group’s ambitious growth plans
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    EasyEquities owner Purple Group intends to speed up its entry into new markets and the rollout of new products following its first annual profit since 2012.
tahaemsd

The Purposeful For-Profits, Brooks Gibbins - 0 views

  • WorldCover, is a for-profit company that aspires to provide the 90% of smallholder famers around the world with access to crop insurance.  In countries like Ghana, there is no social safety net.  Every farmer is one natural disaster away from ruin.
    • tahaemsd
       
      Worldcover provides a transformative safety net using satellites to monitor the rainfall and trigger payouts automatically
ghtazi

Invest Mobile | F6S - 0 views

  • We connect our clients to the best investment solutions through our custom algorithm thats allows you to invest daily, weekly or monthly
    • aminej
       
      InvestMobile offers the most profitable investments for their customers in order to maximize their profits. It is located Ghana, Accra, it will reduce the number of unbanked people and teach people more about investments methods
  • We connect our clients to the best investment solutions through our custom algorithm thats allows you to invest daily, weekly or monthly
    • ghtazi
       
      the vision of Invest mobile, they claim that they have a custom algorithm that would suits best their customers in their investment
kenza_abdelhaq

Egyptian digital payments company Fawry IPO oversubscribed 30 times | Reuters - 0 views

  • Fawry, founded in 2009, is owned by local and foreign investment banks. About 8% of its shares are held by management and employees.Fawry’s network processed 600.1 million transactions last year with a total value of 34.2 billion Egyptian pounds, EFG Hermes said in its statement.The company made a core profit of 152 million pounds in 2018, up 41.2% on the previous year.
    • kenza_abdelhaq
       
      Owned by local and foreign investment banks, Fawry managed to realize a profit of 152 million pounds in 2018, 46% higher than the previous year thanks to the large number of transactions processed.
nouhaila_zaki

Fawry's market cap swells to over $2 billion - MENAbytes - 1 views

  • ess than six months after becoming the first billion-dollar technology company in Egypt, Fawry has hit another milestone by surpassing the $2 billion market cap for the first time. Its stock has doubled in the last six months and closed at an all-time high of EGP 46.90 today, pushing its market cap to over EGP 32 billion. This makes it the fourth most valuable company listed on The Egyptian Exchange (EGX) and it seems that it’s only a matter of days before it takes the second position. The Egyptian payments firm had gone public in August 2020 by listing its shares on EGX at the price of EGP 6.46 per share. The share price has surged over 7x after company’s public market debut about eigtheen months ago.
    • kenza_abdelhaq
       
      Rapid Stock growth of Fawry after introduction in the Egyptian Exchange On August 2020. It is currently the fourth most valuable company listed in the EGX.
    • nouhaila_zaki
       
      This excerpt is important because it discusses Fawry's market cap which increased to $2 billion in 2021, thus becoming the fourth most valuable company listed on the Egyptian stock exchange. Fawry is also expected to take the second position in a matter of days.
  • Being the leading the electornic payments player in Egypt, Fawry is arguably the biggest benificiary of acceleration of digital payments there. It offers hundreds of electronic payment services through its network of over over close to 200,000 service points across Egypt – whcih include ATMs, mobile wallets, retail shops, post offices, and vendor kiosks. Fawry has introduced many new payments and lending products for both consumers and businesses over the last tweleve months and is apparently on additional new services too that are expected to be rolled out within the next few months.
    • kenza_abdelhaq
       
      Large network and diversified services related to payments makes Fawry the leading electronic payments player in Egypt and the only technology stock listed on the Egyptian Exchange.
  • Fawry is yet to announce the results for fourth quarter of 2020 but for the first nine months of last year, the company made about $57 million (EGP 892.7 million) in revenue, an 45.2 percent increase year-on-year basis. For the same period, it doubled its net profit (on a YoY basis) to $7.5 million (EGP 119 million). The company has been witnessing decent growth over the last few years but it seems that Covid-19 has accelerated it even further.
    • nouhaila_zaki
       
      This excerpt is important because it reflects how the covid-19 pandemic accelerated the growth and increased the net profit of Fawry.
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    Fawry is experiencing a drastic growth and it is becoming the leading electronic payments company in Egypt. It is benefiting from the acceleration of digital payments in Egypt.
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.
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    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

AV Ventures Invests in AgroCenta, Supporting Digital and Financial Inclusion of Ghanaia... - 0 views

  • AV Ventures, ACDI/VOCA’s impact investing subsidiary, recently completed its investment in AgroCenta, a technology-driven agricultural platform provider in Ghana. The funding made by AV Ventures is part of a US$790,000 pre-Series A investment round with other participating international institutions, including Shell Foundation, the United Kingdom’s Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office, and Rabo Foundation, with support from AgroCenta’s strategic advisor, Qbera Capital.
    • tahaemsd
       
      With the newly secured funding, agrocenta will widen the reach of its smallholder farmer financial inclusion programs
  • The digital services AgroCenta provides along the selected cereals value chain also improve the repayment of loans by smallholder farmers. The services provide farmers with an end market through the offtaking of produce and through facilitating the provision of high-quality agricultural inputs, which maximize their yields and productivity. To date, the average farmer on CropChain has increased their income by 35 percent and their crop yields by 40 percent, while reducing their food waste by 25 percent. AgroCenta has also made strides to promote gender and social inclusion; nearly half of its CropChain users and more than half of its microloan borrowers on LendIt are female smallholder farmers. 
    • nouhaila_zaki
       
      This excerpt is important because it introduces the results of using AgroCenta on smallholder farmers, ranging between the maximization of productivity, of income, reduction of food waste,to gender and social inclusion.
  • Founded in 2016, AgroCenta operates two integrated digital platforms in Ghana, CropChain and LendIt, to help address challenges related to smallholder farmers’ access to markets and financial services.
    • kenza_abdelhaq
       
      Since 2016, AgroCenta operates 2 digital platforms: - CropChain: integrated agricultural supply chain management platform. - LendIt: allowing access to financial services like mobile payments, microloans, crop insurance.
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  • Poor infrastructure and logistics prevent many smallholder farmers in Ghana from accessing large, urban markets where they could obtain better prices for their crops. Many of these farmers lack information on fair market prices, which leaves them susceptible to selling at low prices to middlemen. Without a strong credit history, many of them also have limited access to finance for purchasing high-quality agricultural inputs that would enable them to scale beyond subsistent production.  
    • sawsanenn
       
      this excerpt shows reasons why smallholder farmers should consider agrocenta to increase their profitability and their revenues
  • For AV Ventures, the investment is part of its long-term strategy of providing innovative and catalytic capital to support growth-oriented small- and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) like AgroCenta that make up the “missing middle” of investment — too large for microfinance but too small or too early-stage to attract private equity investors. These SMEs are often the backbone of economies and potential drivers of innovation, but too often they miss out on financing that could enable their growth and longevity.  
    • hibaerrai
       
      Agrocenta attracts more investors as it is considered among small and medium businesses that promote innovation. In fact, the fintech is specialized in agricultural loans, something not that common in the country.
  • CropChain is an integrated agricultural supply chain management platform that provides smallholder farmers with access to markets. Farmers use the platform to advertise their produce, while large offtakers or buyers of selected cereals use it to make purchases or enter long-term offtaker purchase contracts with AgroCenta. AgroCenta leverages the platform to source cereals directly from smallholder farmers to supply to large offtakers who have contracts with the company. This allows AgroCenta to earn margins between the price it pays farmers and the contractually agreed upon price with offtakers.
    • mbellakbail69
       
      Agrocenta draws even more investment amongst SMEs that promote innovation. This extract shows some of the reasons why smallholders should consider Agrocentra for increasing the profitability and income .
  • “This is a significant milestone for AgroCenta, having the support of leading institutions, particularly with the COVID-19 backdrop, underlining the strength of AgroCenta and the importance of its mission. The demand for agricultural raw materials from offtakers in the brewery, manufacturing, and consumer sector is increasing exponentially because of the easing of COVID-19 restrictions that were put in place by the government of Ghana. Hence, this capital injection will help to secure purchases at fair and transparent prices from smallholders — a much needed lifeline for many who are at the proverbial bottom of the pyramid.”
    • ghtazi
       
      in this excerpt, we can see how agrocenta takes the pandemic situation and what are the solutions that the company adopts to face it.
mehdi-ezzaoui

Should online micro-lending be for profit or for philanthropy? DhanaX and Rang De [1] |... - 1 views

  • The basic model of the Kiva intermediary model, illustrated in Figure 1, is that small lenders lend to Kiva. Kiva lends to MFIs. These MFIs then lend to poor people. Thus the MFIs are using Kiva as a financing agency. Kiva is actually providing a service to small lenders who want to participate directly in the microfinance movement. In the Kiva model, there is no interest given by Kiva to the lender and no interest charged by Kiva to the MFI. However, the MFI charges normal interest rates to the poor borrower. Kiva is a not-forprofit.
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    Kiva as an example of the article if whether microlending should be profitable or not
mbellakbail69

Digital Payments Firm Strikes Gold in Egypt, Where Cash Is King - Bloomberg - 0 views

  • An Egyptian digital payments firm has quadrupled in value during the pandemic, helped by a government push to reduce citizens’ heavy reliance on cash. Investors and analysts are split on whether the stock rally has further legs.
  • A 300% rally from a mid-March low has boosted its market value to 20 billion Egyptian pounds ($1.3 billion). That puts Fawry among the country’s 10 most valuable companies alongside firms such as Telecom Egypt Co. and Elswedy Electric Co., which generate many times more revenue and profit.
    • ayachehbouni
       
      In addition to the opportunity the Covid-19 crisis has created to Fintech companies such as Fawry, The North African nation's central bank asking lenders to find a way to make sure all citizens have access to financial services, focusing on digital payments and mobile wallets, is also one of the main reasons behind the rise in the company's valuation as it resulted in its services being needed more than ever before.
  • Egypt, where it’s common for government employees to ring doorbells to collect cash payments for gas and electricity bills, is trying to shift more transactions digital. The North African nation’s central bank has asked lenders to set a strategy to ensure all citizens have access to financial services, focusing on digital payments and mobile wallets. The regulator is also pushing consumers to use payment platforms such as Fawry in an attempt to curb the spread of the new coronavirus.#lazy-img-364482620:before{padding-top:56.25%;}
    • nouhaila_zaki
       
      This excerpt is important because it reflects how the Egyptian government and central bank contributed to the prosperity of Fawry during the covid-19 pandemic.
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  • The National Bank of Egypt is looking to buy stakes in Aman, Raya Holding for Financial Investments’ e-payment subsidiary, which was planned to IPO in three years, the local business newspaper Al Mal reported in 2019. MM Group for Industry & International Trade SAE is also planning to begin procedures to list non-banking investments firm Ebtikar next year, according to Daily News Egypt.
    • mbellakbail69
       
      All the same, Fawry's surging stock price may encourage further investment in Egypt's e-payment sector.
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    I believe that digitalization helped many companies to boost their profits during the pandemic. Fawry's is the leading Fintech company in Egypt and the pandemic served this company very well.
  •  
    "Egypt, where it's common for government employees to ring doorbells to collect cash payments for gas and electricity bills, is trying to shift more transactions digital. The North African nation's central bank has asked lenders to set a strategy to ensure all citizens have access to financial services, focusing on digital payments and mobile wallets. The regulator is also pushing consumers to use payment platforms such as Fawry in an attempt to curb the spread of the new coronavirus."
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.
mehdibella

Carbon , Nigerian fintech startup processed $240M payments transactions in 2020 - Techg... - 0 views

  • In 2012, two brothers, Chijioke Dozie and Ngozi Dozie, founded Carbon, a Nigerian digital bank start-up. Carbon began as a digital lending company, but now the company provides a variety of services, from payments to savings to investments. According to Dozie, “Our annual report will be released in the second quarter after our financial audit is complete, to gain customer trust, Chijioke Dozie, the CEO, told ProWellTech in 2019 that the company will make Carbon’s financials public.” If you note, before we published the 2019 fiscal year update, we released a year under review in January 2020.Gross profits, profit or loss before and after tax, liabilities and equity, total assets, etc. are included in Carbon’s annual report. Carbon’s year of analysis reveals processed payments, client base, disbursed loans, and investments made on the platform. The business with about 659,000 customers processed N96.54 billion (~$241.35 million) according to Carbon’s year of analysis for fiscal year 2020, which is up 89 percent compared to the same period a year earlier. N25.51 billion (~$63 million) was the disbursement volume for its lending arm, an improvement of 9.1 percent from the 2019 financial year. Investments worth N13.02 billion (~32.55 million) were made on the site, up by 365 percent from FY 2019.The factors that affected these numbers last year, according to the company, included the launch of an iOS app that pushed clients Acquisition, introducing its feature for low-income customers with USSD banking services; and a social chat feature to allow faster transactions. Besides that, Carbon obtained a microfinance bank license in an attempt to become a digital bank. The license implies, according to Dozie, that Carbon’s customers are given additional protection by the Nigerian Deposit Insurance Corporation through depositor insurance. The standard Carbon wallet is now a full-fledged bank account, Dozie says, and clients will transact on the platform like any bank would.
    • samiatazi
       
      Carbon's analysis year offers statistics on processed purchases, user base, loans paid out and network expenditures. The corporation has processed 96,54 billion (241,35 million dollars) last year with around 659,000 customers. N25.51 billion represented a 9.1 percent increase over the 2019 budgetary year for the disbursement of the lending arm. Carbon was invested in N13.02 billion ($32.55 million), up 365% from FY 2019.
  • Carbon , Nigerian fintech startup processed $240M payments transactions in 2020 - Techgist Africa | Africa Leading Tech
aminej

Apollo Agriculture - 0 views

  • Apollo Agriculture is a technology company based in Nairobi, Kenya that helps small-scale farmers maximize their profits.
    • aminej
       
      Apollo Agriculture is a competitor of FarmDrive they both help farmers in difficulty to increase their profits and be protected against losses. The Kenyans also are focusing more and more on agricutlture which is good for their economy
mohammed_ab

African Fintech: Growth, Profit and Forecasts - FurtherAfrica - 0 views

  • Investment in African Fintechs nearly quadrupled in 2018 to $357m USD, with startups in Kenya, Nigeria and South Africa accounting for the largest share, according to The Mobile Economy, Sub-Saharan Africa 2019 report from the GSM Association.
  • MTN announced in July that it had been granted a full Super Agent Licence in Nigeria for its Yello Digital Financial Services Limited subsidiary. This will enable the scale launch of MTN Nigeria’s Fintech strategy.
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    I liked this article as it shows the exponential growth of fintech investments in African countries. These investments have increased by 300% in 2018 compared to the previous year. It's interesting to see that the group believes that mobile will be at the center of financial inclusion in Africa.
samiatazi

Fintech strategy sets off revolution in banking sector - MeilleureBanque.com - 0 views

  • Fintech, at the heart of the banking sector revolutionObviously, Fintechs and traditional banks adopt very different strategies. Indeed, while traditional institutions have a long-term vision (analysis of the financial market, risk amortization), neobanks prefer immediate action.Thus, we can consider that there are two categories of Fintech on the market. On the one hand, regulated companies that ensure compliance with regulatory constraints, and on the other, those that adopt a completely different strategy based on customer satisfaction.The first category positions itself as a direct competitor of banking establishments, while the second opts for cooperation and encourages the buyout or majority stake.Fintechs base their strategy on customer dissatisfaction, especially with their bank . These new shoots seek to improve every aspect of the banking relationship, as a priority, by neglecting issues related to organization, compliance and profitability.However, professionals remain skeptical. Do these FinTechs really hope to succeed in a few months, where several players have been striving for years? By this we mean the fact of wanting to change the regulations of the sector or even the constitution of a team of experts within a short time.So far, experts in the banking industry doubt a real revolution in banking regulation.Traditional banks remain priority players in the marketDespite the emergence of remote banking and the new measure on banking mobility , traditional banks remain the majority players in the market. Indeed, new brands are still struggling to reach the same level as a "real" bank.In addition, for the time being, income from investment funds and venture capitalists has not been of much use to the banking sector. Remember, however, that it is thanks to them that certain brands such as Uber, Amazon or Tesla have succeeded.Today, players in e-commerce are using capital increases to compensate for losses, a technique that has not yet been adopted in the banking sector. As a starting point, SoftBank has already started by building up a $ 100 billion fund for banking technology.
    • samiatazi
       
      Yves Smith reports: Fintech and conventional banks are taking very various tactics. Traditional banks remain market leading players. The long-term view of traditional institutions and neo-banks favor urgent intervention. The SoftBank has already begun to develop a $100 trillion bank technology fund, and that FinTechs seek to enhance every part of banking by neglecting organization, security and profitability problems. He said that conventional banks fail to achieve the same level as a "real" bank, and risk capitalists were not very useful.
aminej

What is the relationship between SatrixNOW and EasyEquities? : Satrix Now - 0 views

  • The EasyEquities platform is powered by First World Trader ("FWT"), meaning it runs on FWT's core infrastructure, but it is a simplified offering in terms of the user interface and the investment offering is designed to keep costs to a minimum and the process intuitive and easy.
    • aminej
       
      It is so smart from EasyEquities owners how they have managed to keep cost very low in order to be able to make profit. For me I believe it is the most important aspect to think about when you want to open your business.
hibaerrai

Thndr Becomes Egypt's First Mobile Investment App | NileFM | EGYPT'S#1 FOR HIT MUSIC - 0 views

  • Savings and investing is a critical part of building wealth and economic development, and Egypt’s youth needs a mobile-first platform like Thndr to open the floodgates of investing in the coming decades. Platforms like Thndr have seen great success in other markets across the world, and Thndr is built with keen attention to the local nuances and preferences of the Egyptian investor in mind.
    • ayachehbouni
       
      The financial startup allows users to link their Egyptian bank account, and trade, invest, and profit from Egyptian stocks, bonds, and indices. Thndr also allows users a virtual EGP 100,000 to practice investing until they get the hand of stock investment.
  • Egyptian mobile investment app, Thndr has become the first brokerage firm to receive regulatory approval from the Financial Regulatory Association (FRA) in the last 12 years. The financial startup allows users to link their Egyptian bank account, and trade, invest, and profit from Egyptian stocks, bonds, and indices. The decision by FRA to give the startup regulatory approval comes after Egypt reforms its financial regulations on new companies with the recently approved Banking Act passed last month which allows more companies to become involved with financial trading and investment.
    • aminej
       
      THNDR Strategy aims to educate more egyptian people about trading and investing which are very good ways to make money in the short and long run. They also want to facilitate access to financial markets only through your phone for Egyptians who are almost 100m (HUGE CUSTOMER TARGET), Finally they plan to educate their population by teaching them how to invest in stocks, bonds and other securities.
  • Before the passing of the Banking Act in July 2020, the only financial apps available for Egyptians were applications that helped you put aside money for saving. However, that is set to change as companies like Thndr take advantage of the new space given to financial technology companies to allow users to invest in the Egyptian stock exchange from their homes. Stock investment apps have become popular in the last few years as a way to not only save money but to make savings grow over time. While there is always risk involved with stock trading, Thndr hoping to provide users with education on how to invest in order to be more financial secure.
    • hibaerrai
       
      Thndr is one of the first not common investment applications in Egypt. users can now invest in stocks or any other security from their homes and make money from it.
  •  
    Thndr was mainly created for a new wave of customers in order to destroy the barriers and give the chance to all egyptians to open accounts and invest.
nouhaila_zaki

M-Pesa - Wikipedia - 0 views

  • M-Pesa is a branchless banking service; M-Pesa customers can deposit and withdraw money from a network of agents that includes airtime resellers and retail outlets acting as banking agents.
    • kenzabenessalah
       
      M-PESA is unique because it offers branchless banking which makes transactions more efficient.
  • It has since expanded to Tanzania, Mozambique, DRC, Lesotho, Ghana, Egypt, Afghanistan and South Africa. Meanwhile services in India, Romania, and Albania have been terminated amid low market uptake. M-Pesa allows users to deposit, withdraw, transfer money, pay for goods and services (Lipa na M-Pesa), access credit and savings, all with a mobile device.
    • nouhaila_zaki
       
      I like this excerpt because it describes where M-Pesa has successfully expanded and where the company's expansionist efforts failed.
  • M-Pesa is widely seen as demonstrating that it is possible to make a profit while also improving the lives of the poor.[28] Tavneet Suri, based at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and William Jack, based at Georgetown University have produced a series of papers extolling benefits of M-Pesa. In particular, their 2016 article published in "Science" has been very influential in the international development community. The much cited result of the paper was, that 'access to M-PESA increased per capita consumption levels and lifted 194,000 households, or 2% of Kenyan households, out of poverty.[29] Global development institutions focusing on the development potential of financial technology frequently cite M-Pesa as a major success story in this respect, citing the poverty-reduction-claim and including a reference to Suri and Jack’s 2016 signature article. In a report on "Financing for Development", the United Nations write: "The digitalization of finance offers new possibilities for greater financial inclusion and alignment with the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and implementation of the Social Development Goals. In Kenya, the expansion of mobile money lifted two per cent of households in the country above the poverty line."[30]
    • nouhaila_zaki
       
      This excerpt is important because it reports on academic research describing how M-Pesa is the living example of how the search for profit is not antithetical to inclusion and improvement of lives of the poor. Using M-Pesa as a case study, several researchers praise fintech for its ability to offer greater financial inclusion.
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