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mehdibella

Carbon - Quick loans in Nigeria | SME loans | Download Carbon App - 0 views

  • Carbon is a financial service provided by Carbon Finance & Investments Limited (RC 1044655), licensed and regulated by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN). We empower individuals with credit, simple payments solutions, high-yield investment opportunities, and easy-to-use tools for personal financial management. We are a global company of over 90 employees with a presence in Mauritius, Nigeria, the United Kingdom, United States, Canada, South Africa, and Kenya.
    • samiatazi
       
      Carbon is a FS given via Carbon Finance and Investments which is authorized and directed by the Central Bank of Nigeria. this app engages people with credit, straightforward installments arrangements, high return speculation openings.
  • Your money is always working harder for you.Earn up to 11% interest p.a. when you invest with Carbon.
  • Your Carbon account allows you enjoy cheaper transactions, zero account fees, and an annual interest of 2% per annum.
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  • Digital banking for all lifestyles
  • Be notified of any issues you may have. We’ll help you stay on top of things.. and it’s completely free.
  • Our physical debit cards give you access to cash withdrawals anywhere. And with our secure virtual cards, you can pay for products on your favourite online stores, in dollars.
  • The best online loan service hands down. Just ensure to pay your loans on time and you'll get access to better loans and so many other rewards. Very ideal for fast track business owners who need quick access to funds on the go.
mehdibella

Leading digital financial services company Carbon from Nigeria posted all-time high gro... - 0 views

  • Lagos, Nigeria – Leading digital financial services company, Carbon, has released it’s 2019 financial statements audited by KPMG, detailing its product growth and $17.5mm in revenue.Carbon began operations in 2012 and within the space of six years, it grew revenue steadily, reaching an all-time high of $17.5mm in full-year 2019. In the same year, Carbon expanded its product offerings to the Kenyan market and it’s disbursement volumes have grown from N13bn (2018) to N23bn.Formerly called Paylater, Carbon pioneered instant lending in Nigeria and was the first mobile app to provide access to credit digitally and without requesting individuals to present the documents and collateral traditionally associated with accessing loans. Earlier this year, Carbon introduced its iOS app and USSD (*1303#) service. It also announced its Disrupt Fund, a $100,000 Pan-African fund to address the lack of capital for African tech startups.“The company will continue to share it’s audited financials annually, thus upholding a culture of transparency and accountability,” says Ngozi Dozie, Founder of Carbon.So far this year, Carbon has introduced multiple new features for its customer base including Carbon Express: a keyboard allowing users to make payments from any social app, periodic investments, free bank transfers, monthly wallet interest, and more.Carbon also plans to introduce debit cards, a reward program for loyal customers and SME accounts for entrepreneurs, in the months to come.You can find the full annual report here (https://bit.ly/2YNuvPw).About Carbon: Carbon (https://getCarbon.co) is a pan-African digital financial institution accessible via smartphones and which provides individuals with access to credit, a fee-free/interest-earning wallet, simple payments solutions, high-yield investment opportunities and easy-to-use tools for personal financial management.Our mission is to empower opportunity globally through friction-free finance that empowers individuals and businesses. We are a global company of over 100 employees with operations in Nigeria, England and Kenya.
    • samiatazi
       
      Carbon started operations in 2012 and gradually expanded its revenues over six years to an all-day volume of $17.5 million over the whole year of 2019. In the same year, the commodity offerings were extended by Carbon to Kenya and volumes of disbursements were raised, from N13bn (2018) to N23bn. All these information show the sustainable development and brilliant achievement of the company.
  • Carbon began operations in 2012 and within the space of six years, it grew revenue steadily, reaching an all-time high of $17.5mm in full-year 2019. In the same year, Carbon expanded its product offerings to the Kenyan market and it’s disbursement volumes have grown from N13bn (2018) to N23bn.
  • Leading digital financial services company Carbon from Nigeria posted all-time high growth last year
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  • “The company will continue to share it’s audited financials annually, thus upholding a culture of transparency and accountability,” says Ngozi Dozie, Founder of Carbon.
  • So far this year, Carbon has introduced multiple new features for its customer base including Carbon Express: a keyboard allowing users to make payments from any social app, periodic investments, free bank transfers, monthly wallet interest, and more.
hindelquarrouti

M-Pesa: Most Innovative Company | Fast Company - 0 views

  • Like many parts of the developing world, Africans are significantly less likely to have bank accounts and credit or debit cards. But mobile phones have penetrated the African market, and in countries such as Nigeria and Kenya, the majority of people have a workable phone.
  • M-Pesa is a Kenyan mobile payments platform, one of the first of its kind in Africa (
  • he service has been a runaway success since launching in 2007, operating in 10 countries across Africa, the Middle East, and Southeast Asia and earning Safaricom 19.4 billion shillings (about $190 million) in the first half of 2015. It seems likely that as cell phone use continues to proliferate on the African continent, M-Pesa's transactions will grow, too.
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    As mentioned in the article, Africans are less likely to have bank accounts, so it is a very good idea to create such a service. In addition, almost everyone has a cell phone, so it will be easier for them to use this platform to send and receive money than to set up a bank account.
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    M-pesa has made the smart choice of opting for the African continent since there is a considerable number of unbanked people, yet it is experiencing an increase in the use of mobile phones.
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
nourserghini

How M-Pesa, Kenya's mobile money banking, transformed the lives of the poor - Vox - 0 views

  • That’s how mobile money accounts first came about. Mobile money apps don’t require a brick-and-mortar bank, but they otherwise end up functioning a lot like a bank account and debit card would for an American — meaning your average person in Kenya with such an account now has access to most of the same financial services a person in the US does. Mobile money got off the ground early in the developing world, where people used texting-based services before smartphones became common. There were early attempts to set up such systems in the 2000s in South Africa and the Philippines. But the breakthrough was the extraordinary early success of Kenya’s M-Pesa, which actually predates apps like Venmo. (“Pesa” is Swahili for money; the “M” stands for “mobile.”) The project that became M-Pesa started in 2002 when phone companies noticed that they had unintentionally invented something that almost resembled a currency.
    • nourserghini
       
      Mpesa started in 2002 with the huge success of mobile money apps in the developing world as many individuals were unbanked or underbanked and this was the early breakthrough for them to perform important transactions.
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.
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    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.
ayachehbouni

SimbaPay Launches International Access to Kenya's M-Pesa PayBill - Techpoint Africa - 0 views

  • Kenyans living abroad. will now be able to use their bank accounts, debit or credit cards, to pay their bills back home using the SimbaPay app. The service is piloting in the UK, with further expansion into other EU regions in the works.
    • ayachehbouni
       
      What this partnership propose is not only perfect for existing customers but it is also very attractive to new potential customers.
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