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nourserghini

Fintech startup, Carbon, launches $100,000 pan-African fund for startups; here's what y... - 0 views

  • Nigerian fintech startup, Carbon, just announced that it has launched a $100,000 pan-African fund for startups.According to the company, the Carbon Disrupt Fund was set up to address the lack of funding and support holding back budding tech entrepreneurs on the continent. It will invest up to $10,000 per startup in exchange for a 5% equity.Also, startups will have access to Carbon’s API, and leverage Carbon’s growing customer base and innovative technology platform, to get to market faster. Additionally, the fund will provide mentorship, access to Carbon’s customers and payment platform, as well as office space in Carbon’s Lagos offices.
    • nourserghini
       
      This is very interesting because it shows that Carbon is trying its best to encourage African start-ups in exchange of part of their shares as well as sharing their application programming interface with them in effort to help them in the market.
nourserghini

Nigerian fintech startup Carbon launches social banking service - Disrupt Africa - 0 views

  • Its latest service – Carbon Express – enables users to initiate and complete transactions such as P2P transfers and bill payments from the keyboard without launching the Carbon app or leaving the app they are using. Instead, they will be able to access services from the touch of their keyboard enabling quicker Instagram or WhatsApp commerce.
    • nourserghini
       
      Carbon express is one of the latest technologies implemented by Carbon which allows faster transactions through the keyboard only without the app.
nourserghini

Carbon to fund fintechs in Kenya, Uganda, Nigeria, Ghana, Cote d'Ivoire and Egypt | apt... - 0 views

  • Carbon’s Disrupt fund, the first of its kind by an African fintech startup, will invest up to $10,000 per startup (for 5 percent equity) and give access to Carbon’s API, allowing investees to leverage Carbon’s growing customer base and innovative technology platform, to get to market faster. Acknowledging that its success is dependent on the growth of the tech ecosystem, Carbon expects the initiative to spark more collaboration and further investment that should drive growth across the ecosystem.
    • nourserghini
       
      This article states that Carbon is the first fintech to start the initiative of a Disrupt fund for African startups.This shows how strongly Carbon believes in the success of start-ups and how eager they are to keep up with the new technology's market.
ayoubb

An Appraisal of Potential Risks of Fintech Adoption in the Nigerian Financial Services ... - 0 views

  • The probability that a customer would incur financial losses in financial transactions conducted using Fintech is referred to as financial risk particularly when these losses would have been avoided if the same transactions had been conducted on a conventional platform (Keong et al., 2020; Razzaque et al., 2020). Financial risk can also be incurred by the financial service provider thereby distorting the operating budget of the firm. An example of a financial loss according to Khalil and Alam (2020) is when the process of launching a Fintech service has taken a longer time than planned thereby translating to an increase in the total cost of implementation. The prevalence of financial risk has heightened due to the nature of digital technology employed by Fintech, which could lead to recurrence in financial losses driven by electronic fraud (e-fraud) (Keong et al., 2020). These authors also listed other causes or drivers of financial risk as factors related to budgetary exchange framework, currency misrepresentation, and additional exchange fees that accompany the preferred value. 
    • ayoubb
       
      Financial Risk of adopting Fintech in Africa
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
tahaemsd

Product Insights at Lumkani jobs - Via - 0 views

  • Lumkani is a social enterprise that seeks to address the challenge of shack/slum fires in urban informal settlements in South Africa and across the globe. Lumkani aims to create social impact in two ways. Firstly by increasing the safety and security of people living in informal settlements with technology-based early-warning systems, and secondly with affordable relevant financial services products, such as our Lumkani short term fire insurance for informal homes.
    • tahaemsd
       
      this is creating high value in urban slums
mohammed_ab

Egypt calls for financial inclusions - Wamda - 1 views

  • For years, Egyptian companies have been paying salaries in cash, and people have been saving money outside banks.  Only 10 percent of Egyptians have bank accounts, according to Payfort’s State of Payments in the Arab World 2014 report. Over the previous decade, the electronic payment market has been penetrated by two firms: state-owned e-Finance, which handles electronic payments from and to the government through banking channels, and private-sector Fawry, which was launched in 2008 to provide payment solutions through ATM machines, mobile wallets, and retail points. Chief technology officer of Fawry, Mostafa Elnahhas, told Wamda that his company succeeded in spreading 65,000 collection points in 300 cities for banked customers in Egypt. However, the electronic payment is still small-sized due to the large amount of unbanked customers and the low credit card penetration.
    • hibaerrai
       
      Fawry's main concerns for the next years is the large number of customers not familiar with electronic payment making fintech entry more challenging. E-services awareness should be made in that regard.
  • Regulations are, however, crippling entrepreneurs. Mourad Alashry, CEO of PayMe, launched his startup in August 2016. It  allows companies and businesses to collect electronic payment without signing contracts with banks or paying extra fees.  The startup offers a simple payment tool for companies to allow them to set up an account and have customers send money through it. PayMe app was forced by Egypt’s fiscal regulator to stop operating for four months to abide by regulations. (Photo via PayMe) However, shortly after its launch, the Central Bank of Egypt, the state regulator, suspended Payme’s operations as a payment firm as it wasn’t cooperating with a bank. The firm had to abide by this regulation until it followed the requirements and collaborated with state-owned bank the National Bank of Egypt, then resumed its business in January 2017.  
    • hibaerrai
       
      Egypt's regulations are quite strict. If a fintech doesn't cooperate with a bank for instance, the central bank will suspend its activities until further notice.
  • Regulations are, however, crippling entrepreneurs. Mourad Alashry, CEO of PayMe, launched his startup in August 2016. It  allows companies and businesses to collect electronic payment without signing contracts with banks or paying extra fees.  The startup offers a simple payment tool for companies to allow them to set up an account and have customers send money through it.
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  • Bureaucracy, the absence of clear government regulations in the electronic payment sector, and the low percentage of debit and credit card users in Egypt are affecting the sector, said Al Salahy.
  •  
    This article shows that regulatory agencies are still very strict with fintech firms in Egypt. It makes the work for fintech very difficult as they need to abide by these regulations even if it affects their operations and growth.
samielbaqqali

Lending and payment systems in upheaval: the fintech challenge - 0 views

  • As technology gives new entrants better and cheaper ways to compete for core banking business, banks’ dominant position could be challenged.
    • samielbaqqali
       
      Fawry should reduce its costs in order to gain loyal customers.
ghtazi

Ethiopia - Africa's next mobile banking gold mine? - 0 views

  • BelCash founder Vince Diop does not believe a limited network or high illiteracy rate will be a barrier for introducing mobile banking.
    • sawsanenn
       
      it is a good thought since nowadays even the illiterate people know how to use a phone. By making the Belcash app accessible and easy to navigate, illiteracy won't be an obstacle to mobile banking
  • BelCash and M-Birr are mobile banking technology providers that have been in Ethiopia for the last three years to set up mobile banking and mobile money services.
    • ghtazi
       
      belcash has worked for the past 3 years to introduce mobile banking and mobile money service in ethiopia.
tahaemsd

WorldCover Raises $6 Million in Series A Funding to Provide Climate Insurance in Emergi... - 0 views

  • WorldCover has uniquely combined technological advances and developed a solution that allows us to support smallholder farmers caught in conditions that are worsening due to climate change," said Christopher Sheehan, WorldCover CEO and co-founder. “With the rise of many insuretech startups around the world, we are excited about this successful round of Series A funding as it enables us to accelerate growth in existing markets while working towards expansion into new regions. This will allow us to fulfill our ultimate vision of making the world more resilient to climate change”.
    • tahaemsd
       
      worldcover is addressing the 50-100$ Billion in annual losses from natural disasters, of wich less than 1% is insured
sawsanenn

The Story of M-Pesa | TechChange | The Institute for Technology and Social Change - 0 views

  • the popular mobile money transfer program, came to be in Kenya. It’s narrated by Michael Joseph, the managing director of mobile money at Vodafone and the program’s founder.
    • ghtazi
       
      m-pesa is a popular mobile money transfer program, that was created by Micheal Joseph who's the managing director of mobile money at Vodafone.
  • The animation was produced as part of a series of online courses designed and delivered by the USAID Mobile Solutions Team, QED, and TechChange, a DC-based organization that specializes in online training for international development.
    • sawsanenn
       
      this excerpt shows organizations that collaborate with M-pesa about the transfer money program
ayoubb

Zeepay CEO declared Best Fintech CEO of the Year | Value Added Services News in Ghana - 0 views

  • Zeepay CEO Andrew Takyi-Appiah The Ghana Information Technology and Telecoms Awards have declared Zeepay CEO Andrew Takyi-Appiah the Best Fintech CEO of the Year 2020.
    • samielbaqqali
       
      A true accomplishment by starting slowly and then getting on the top of the all the CEOs.
  • Zeepay CEO declared Best Fintech CEO of the Year | Value Added Services News in Ghana
    • ayoubb
       
      Zeepay
chaimaa-rachid

Artificial Intelligence Innovation in Financial Services - 0 views

  • Realizing financial inclusion benefits through the adoption of artificial intelligence relies on its responsible adoption by firms, on competitive market settings, and on continued investment in the necessary infrastructure.
  •  
    Worldcover profits by the utilization of AI in developing business sectors as it permits it to robotize significantly more its business interaction and influence enormous data to tackle issues and overcome obstacles.
mehdi-ezzaoui

​Belcash Technology Solutions PLC - 2 views

  • Though each Hello brand represents a different service, they all share one key feature - the mobile phone is the access point for their service.
    • kenzabenessalah
       
      What's important about BelCash and the e-payment industry is that mobile phones are the key access points for the services to be maintained.
  • Belcash is the proprietor and provider of the 'Hello' brand. We attempt to find the perfect fit for our customers and partners. This heavy focus on customer service, innovation and professionalism means that our stakeholders are proud to identify themselves with us
  •  
    the services that Belcash offers to customers and solutions
hibaerrai

Y Combinator-backed Thndr receives first new brokerage license of Egypt in ten years fo... - 0 views

  • Founded in 2019 by Uber Egypt’s former General Manager Ahmad Hammouda, Thndr is starting with a Robinhood-like mobile-first equities trading platform that enables people to invest in stocks in The Egyptian Exchange.
    • ayachehbouni
       
      Thndr hopes to increase Egypt's financial literacy which is key for families to move up in social mobility.
    • hibaerrai
       
      This fintech encourages egyptian individuals to invest more in stocks and bonds and other securities. The goal is to enhance investments in the country.
  • Ahmad Hammouda, the co-founder and CEO of Thndr, said, “Our vision is to put wealth in the hands of everyday individuals. With the rise of technology, and the foresight of a very supportive Financial Regulatory Authority, we can make this vision come to life — Egypt is expected to be the 7th largest economy by 2030 and has more than 100 mn people, most of which are young and are looking for a convenient and digital way to invest their money. That’s why we are excited to bring a new breed of young investors to the market.”
    • aminej
       
      I love the fact that people in Egypt are really concerned about teaching the young generation some important concepts such as trading and investing in either national or international markets
chaimaa-rachid

Digital spillovers and SMEs' performance in Sub-Saharan Africa - Ferdi - 0 views

  • Compared to existing empirical evidence on the impacts of digital technologies on African firms, the quantitative analysis hereafter presented incorporates various novelties.
  •  
    Worldcover, a fintech organization, aims to centers on supporting natural dangers and offers blockchain-based climate land insurance to cultivators in Kenya and Ghana.
kenza_abdelhaq

How Covid turbocharged the QR revolution - BBC News - 0 views

  • He is talking about using QR codes (quick response codes), a technology from the 1990s, which is proving to be very useful in the Covid era.Many restaurants have turned to the tech, which allows customers to see a menu, order and pay just by pointing their smartphone at the black, barcode-like squares.
    • kenza_abdelhaq
       
      In times of Covid businesses adopt more and more QR codes to ease payment transactions, make orders, display menus while avoiding any contact.
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.
hibaerrai

Egypt startup receives first new brokerage license in the country in over a decade - - 0 views

  • Thndr recently acquired the necessary licensing from the Financial Regulatory Authority (FRA) making the fast-growing startup the first company to acquire a brokerage license in Egypt since 2008. 
    • ayachehbouni
       
      The reason behind this big achievement, in my opinion, is Thndr's focus and consideration to the local nuances and preferences of the Egyptian investor in mind.
  • “ Our vision is to put wealth in the hands of everyday individuals. With the rise of technology, and the foresight of a very supportive Financial Regulatory Authority, we can make this vision come to life — Egypt is expected to be the 7th largest economy by 2030 and has more than 100 mn people, most of which are young and are looking for a convenient and digital way to invest their money. That’s why we are excited to bring a new breed of young investors to the market.” 
    • hibaerrai
       
      This concept is first introduced by Thndr in Egypt to support young investors and encourage them to be more interested in financial activities. This application is innovative.
mehdi-ezzaoui

The value of mobile banking: the case of MTN mobile money in Accra, Ghana - 1 views

  • The convergence of mobile telephony, banking services, and information systems creates significant economic opportunities on a global scale. While the adoption of mobile banking and mobile money emerged on the global scene as a tool to promote financial inclusion, new developments in the industry have created additional possibilities for this type of technology to revolutionize the practices and experiences of business owners in the Third World. This paper calls attention to the different ways in which mobile banking services and mobile payment systems are able to create value for their consumers. An empirical case study is developed using the Accra Metropolitan Assembly (City of Accra) that details the experiences of MTN Mobile Money users.
  •  
    mobile banking services and mobile payment systems are able to create value for their consumers. An empirical case study is developed using the Accra Metropolitan Assembly (City of Accra) that details the experiences of MTN Mobile Money users.
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