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  • April 30 2025
  • BM

Bolt launches ₦3.2M electric tricycles in Lagos with 15% driver commission

Ride-hailing giant Bolt is rolling out electric tricycles in Lagos as it pushes to expand its electric vehicle (EV) footprint across West Africa. Starting in May, the company will deploy 25 tricycles developed in partnership with SGX Mobility, a Lagos-based electric mobility company. The launch builds on Bolt’s existing tricycle business in Nigeria, where it already offers keke rides in cities like Jos and Uyo. But this is its first electric version in the country. Riders in Lagos can now choose electric tricycles as a ride option directly in the Bolt app. Each electric tricycle will cost ₦3.2 million ($1,996), with drivers required to make a ₦208,000 ($130) down payment and spread the rest over 18 to 24 months. Lease payments come in at ₦32,000 ($20) weekly or ₦156,000 ($97) monthly. Daily battery swaps cost around ₦6,500 ($4.06)—roughly half the daily fuel cost of a petrol-powered keke. “This launch is about building an ecosystem, not just introducing vehicles,” Caroline Wanjihla, Bolt Africa’s spokesperson, told TechCabal at the launch event on Wednesday. “We’re betting on driver economics. EV tricycles have lower running costs. And with our lease model, drivers can own their vehicles in two years, while saving on fuel and maintenance from day one.” Bolt is also operating a lease-to-own financing model that has recently come under scrutiny. Drivers on platforms like Moove and LagRide have long complained of inflexible repayment terms, mounting defaults, and vehicle repossessions. Many ended up working long hours just to break even. Bolt says its lease-to-own model is built differently with lower entry costs, predictable weekly payments, and a lower commission rate.  “With Lagride and Moove, we are looking at more expensive vehicles. The tricycles are much cheaper, and the payment is flexible. We are also tweaking the model to allow for 15% commission as opposed to 25% charged on vehicles,”  Zankyang Duniya, Operations Manager at Bolt, said during the press briefing.  The tricycles can hit top speeds of 80km/h and run for up to 12 hours on a full charge, according to Ayo Mustapha, Corporate Finance Manager at SGX.  The tricycles also operate on a battery swap model. Drivers will be able to quickly exchange batteries at a swap station located in Eagle Square, Surulere, a system designed to minimise downtime and make daily earnings more predictable. Bolt EV tricycle launch also comes at a time when local cycle workers are exploring alternatives to gasoline-powered tricycles due to increased fuel prices. Some have turned to compressed natural gas (CNG), converting their vehicles to run on the cheaper fuel as a stopgap. But access to reliable refueling infrastructure remains patchy, and the cost of conversion is still a barrier for most low-income drivers. Bolt’s EV push now enters that same conversation, with the added promise of ownership and zero greenhouse gas emissions. In the short term, Bolt is taking a cautious approach, watching how drivers and riders adapt to the new vehicles. If demand falls short, the company says it’s prepared to tweak the lease structure, redeploy assets, or slow down expansion. But if the rollout sticks, Bolt plans to extend the model to other Nigerian cities and into additional African markets, including Ghana, Uganda, Tanzania, and Tunisia. The bet is that Lagos, for all its gridlock, is ready for electric vehicles if the economics and infrastructure are built right. Bolt thinks it can do both.

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  • April 30 2025
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Kofa raises $8.1 million to expand battery-swapping energy network

Kofa, a Ghana-based clean energy startup that offers battery-swapping infrastructure, has raised $8.1 million in pre-Series A funding. Kofa will use the new funding, a mix of equity and debt, to expand its battery-swapping infrastructure across Ghana and Kenya. It will also support the deployment of new swap stations, the purchase of battery inventory, and the scaling of its AI-driven energy management platform. E3 Capital, one of Africa’s largest early-stage climate-tech venture capital funds and Injaro Investment Advisors, a Ghanaian private capital fund manager, co-led the round with participation from Shell Foundation and other high-profile European angel investors in the battery industry. Launched in 2021, Kofa operates as an energy company that focuses exclusively on delivering and managing energy through its swappable batteries. At the core of Kofa’s model is a battery-swapping network: users—gig workers, motorbike riders, or microbusiness owners—pay about $1 per swap to replace a depleted battery with a fully charged one in under two minutes. Kofa is among startups building clean energy alternatives on a continent still crippled by unreliable electricity. Investors are paying attention—clean energy startups raised over $180 million in Q1 2025 alone. However, Kofa stands out in its focus on being a core energy company, unlike other African clean energy startups —Rwanda’s Ampersand and Kenya’s BasiGo—which offer vertically integrated solutions that bundle vehicle manufacturing, leasing, and energy provision.  Kofa’s unbundled approach avoids manufacturing and retail entirely. The startup partners with large-scale vehicle distributors and lets them handle sales and logistics. Its energy-as-a-service model makes Kofa the clean-energy backbone, much like Shell or MTN in their respective sectors. “We think trying to capture the whole value chain is the wrong play here,” Erik Nygard, CEO and co-founder of Kofa, told TechCabal in an interview. “It ignores the reality on the ground. In Africa, scale happens through partnerships, not vertical integration.” Kofa’s batteries are manufactured in China and integrated into vehicles built by partners like Chinese OEM TailG. Kofa itself does not own the batteries; they are financed by asset investors. This asset-light model allows Kofa to focus solely on delivering reliable energy and managing logistics with its AI optimization software, Nygard says. “Our investment in Kofa is about more than just backing a promising energy company; it’s about supporting a solution that delivers tangible economic benefits for local communities,” said Jerry Parkes, Managing Director of Injaro Investment Advisors.  “We are also excited to deploy Ghanaian capital in support of a visionary and experienced founder driving sustainable energy innovation in Africa.”  A $30 billion market opportunity Sub-Saharan Africa spends approximately $30 billion annually on petrol for motorcycles and small generators. Kofa’s battery swapping model can deliver power at 20–30% lower cost than petrol, presenting an enormous savings opportunity for consumers and businesses. “Even 10% of that market is $3 billion in revenue,” Nygard noted. “And that’s while saving people money. That’s the win-win.” Kofa currently operates 10 swap stations in Accra, with plans to build out 40 stations across Accra and Kumasi in the next few months. It has also started expanding into Kenya. Kofa facilitates about 200 swaps per day today, a figure the company expects to grow sharply as its partner network and customer base scale. The startup is not yet profitable, but Nygard is clear-eyed about the path forward. “Profitability at this stage isn’t the goal — scale is,” he said. “This is a capital deployment

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  • April 30 2025
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👨🏿‍🚀TechCabal Daily –  Nigeria just opened banking

In partnership with Lire en Français اقرأ هذا باللغة العربية Good morning! MTN Nigeria just turned a profit in Q1 2025; investors, how’s your victory dance going? There are two universally accepted truths: one, water is essential for survival; two, TechCabal throws the best mixers. Yesterday’s event was proof. We gathered investors and operators poolside for a night of laughter, banter, and good vibes. I hopped across a couple of mixers last night, but TechCabal’s stood out. Great conversations. Great wine. And yes, the snacks were slapped. It’s past midnight as I’m editing this, but I’m still riding the high. In other news: A startup out of southeastern Nigeria wants to become the “Netflix of documentaries.” Based in Aba, Igwe Praise and his small crew of engineers and content junkies are building a dedicated documentary streaming platform—betting there’s room in the crowded market for deep storytelling. Know a startup we should be writing about? Nominate them here. Let’s get into today’s dispatch. Nigeria finally approves open banking Jeff Bezos’ Kuiper finally launches 27 satellites to space Mastercard partners with OKX, Nuvei, and Circle to launch stablecoin payments World Wide Web 3 Opportunities Fintech Nigeria finally approves open banking Image Source: Google *pans camera to fintechs doing their victory dance Following a series of decisions and walkbacks, Nigeria’s Central Bank (CBN) has finally given open banking—a system that enables third-party sharing of customer data by banks—a nod. It has taken eight long hard years but it’s finally here.  Why it matters: This approval lets you consent to allowing regulated financial institutions to access your data, such as account balance (don’t be shy), transaction history, and spending patterns, and in some cases, initiate transactions on your behalf.  This data will be shared through a standardised API that all banks and participating institutions can connect to, enabling secure and consistent access. For you (customers), it means better and more personalised financial products. For banks, it means a new wave of competition from fintechs. Why it’s a big deal: Nigeria has struggled with credit access—despite the troves of consumer transaction data sitting idle. Today, up to 70% of account holders still can’t access credit. With open banking in play, fintechs and banks can securely share user data, better assess creditworthiness, and unlock more inclusive lending. This is a game-changer for startups like Mono, OnePipe, and others whose core business depends on seamless access to banking data. Banks must now begin open banking implementation by August 1, 2025. Seamless Global Payments With Fincra. Issue accounts in NGN, KES, EUR, USD & more with one integration. Send & receive funds seamlessly across borders; no more banking hassles or complex conversions. Create an account for free & go global today. Get the best African tech newsletters in your inbox Country Afghanistan Albania Algeria American Samoa Andorra Angola Anguilla Antarctica Antigua and Barbuda Argentina Armenia Aruba Australia Austria Azerbaijan Bahamas Bahrain Bangladesh Barbados Belarus Belgium Belize Benin Bermuda Bhutan Bolivia Bosnia and Herzegovina Botswana Bouvet Island Brazil British Antarctic Territory British Indian Ocean Territory British Virgin Islands Brunei Bulgaria Burkina Faso Burundi Cambodia Cameroon Canada Canton and Enderbury Islands Cape Verde Cayman Islands Central African Republic Chad Chile China Christmas Island Cocos [Keeling] Islands Colombia Comoros Congo – Brazzaville Congo – Kinshasa Cook Islands Costa Rica Croatia Cuba Cyprus Czech Republic Côte d’Ivoire Denmark Djibouti Dominica Dominican Republic Dronning Maud Land East Germany Ecuador Egypt El Salvador Equatorial Guinea Eritrea Estonia Ethiopia Falkland Islands Faroe Islands Fiji Finland France French Guiana French Polynesia French Southern Territories French Southern and Antarctic Territories Gabon Gambia Georgia Germany Ghana Gibraltar Greece Greenland Grenada Guadeloupe Guam Guatemala Guernsey Guinea Guinea-Bissau Guyana Haiti Heard Island and McDonald Islands Honduras Hong Kong SAR China Hungary Iceland India Indonesia Iran Iraq Ireland Isle of Man Israel Italy Jamaica Japan Jersey Johnston Island Jordan Kazakhstan Kenya Kiribati Kuwait Kyrgyzstan Laos Latvia Lebanon Lesotho Liberia Libya Liechtenstein Lithuania Luxembourg Macau SAR China Macedonia Madagascar Malawi Malaysia Maldives Mali Malta Marshall Islands Martinique Mauritania Mauritius Mayotte Metropolitan France Mexico Micronesia Midway Islands Moldova Monaco Mongolia Montenegro Montserrat Morocco Mozambique Myanmar [Burma] Namibia Nauru Nepal Netherlands Netherlands Antilles Neutral Zone New Caledonia New Zealand Nicaragua Niger Nigeria Niue Norfolk Island North Korea North Vietnam Northern Mariana Islands Norway Oman Pacific Islands Trust Territory Pakistan Palau Palestinian Territories Panama Panama Canal Zone Papua New Guinea Paraguay People’s Democratic Republic of Yemen Peru Philippines Pitcairn Islands Poland Portugal Puerto Rico Qatar Romania Russia Rwanda Réunion Saint Barthélemy Saint Helena Saint Kitts and Nevis Saint Lucia Saint Martin Saint Pierre and Miquelon Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Samoa San Marino Saudi Arabia Senegal Serbia Serbia and Montenegro Seychelles Sierra Leone Singapore Slovakia Slovenia Solomon Islands Somalia South Africa South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands South Korea Spain Sri Lanka Sudan Suriname Svalbard and Jan Mayen Swaziland Sweden Switzerland Syria São Tomé and Príncipe Taiwan Tajikistan Tanzania Thailand Timor-Leste Togo Tokelau Tonga Trinidad and Tobago Tunisia Turkey Turkmenistan Turks and Caicos Islands Tuvalu U.S. Minor Outlying Islands U.S. Miscellaneous Pacific Islands U.S. Virgin Islands Uganda Ukraine Union of Soviet Socialist Republics United Arab Emirates United Kingdom United States Unknown or Invalid Region Uruguay Uzbekistan Vanuatu Vatican City Venezuela Vietnam Wake Island Wallis and Futuna Western Sahara Yemen Zambia Zimbabwe Åland Islands ?> Gender Male Female Others TC Daily Events <!– Next Wave –> <!– Entering Tech –> Subscribe Internet Delay is not denial; Jeff Bezos’ Kuiper finally launches 27 satellites to space Amazon’s Kuiper satellites finally go to space/Image Source: The New York Times It sucks to be Elon Musk (don’t take that literally). Only weeks ago, he was basking in multiple wins: Starlink launched in crisis-torn Somalia and Lesotho under serendipitous circumstances. To add to his wins, fellow billionaire Jeff Bezos, who owns Amazon’s Kuiper—a low-earth orbit (LEO) satellite internet company—seemed to be having a problem launching his rockets. Bad weather torpedoed them from lifting. It was pretty good going for Musk until April 28, at 7.01 PM Eastern Time

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  • April 29 2025
  • BM

MTN Nigeria posts ₦133.7 billion Q1 profit in second straight positive quarter

MTN Nigeria reported a profit after tax of ₦133.7 billion( $102.85 million) in Q1 2025. This marks the telecom giant’s second consecutive profitable quarter, a significant rebound from the ₦392.7 billion ($302.08 million) loss recorded in Q1 2024, largely driven by foreign exchange losses and inflation. The unaudited Q1 2025 results, released on Tuesday, reflect a strengthening financial outlook. Service revenue rose 32.5% year-on-year to ₦752.98 billion ($579.22 million), fueled by recent price hikes, broader adoption of 4G and 5G networks, and solid growth in MTN’s digital and fintech verticals. It’s also the company’s first Q1 profit since the 2023 naira devaluation triggered a cascade of FX-related losses. MTN’s return to financial stability has tangible benefits for its over 84 million subscribers. A profitable MTN can invest more aggressively in network upgrades, improve service quality, expand rural connectivity, and enhance the overall digital experience. Faster internet speeds, fewer call dropouts, and better access to services in underserved areas are among the expected gains. “We are encouraged by the improvements in Nigeria’s macroeconomic conditions, marked by increased forex liquidity, a relatively stable naira, and easing inflation,” said Karl Toriola, MTN Nigeria CEO. “However, the recent escalation in global geopolitical and trade tensions presents risks to the broader outlook.” Profitability has also strengthened MTN’s operational efficiency. Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization (EBITDA) margin rose to 38.5%. Key contributors include MTN’s expense efficiency program and successful renegotiation of tower leases, which have already saved the company ₦3.8 billion ($2.92 million) annually. MTN’s stock has responded positively. Trading volumes soared to 11 million units on April 15—its highest single-day activity this year—while the share price surged 55% from a 2024 low of ₦170 to ₦264.20 ($0.20) by the end of April. Analysts have taken notice, with Chapel Hill Denham calling the stock “extremely cheap” despite its recent rally, citing stronger earnings expectations and improved investor sentiment. This momentum also sets the stage for a new public offering. MTN Nigeria plans to reduce MTN Group’s stake from 76% to 65% via a share sale expected to raise between ₦500 billion and ₦700 billion ($436.6 million). Proceeds will fund network expansion and reduce debt. The company’s last offering in 2021 drew over 126,000 local investors, and this new issuance aligns with government efforts to boost indigenous ownership in the telecom sector. A central pillar of MTN’s recovery strategy is diversification. In Q1, the company rebranded its fibre-to-the-home business to FibreX, supporting Nigeria’s ambition for 90% broadband penetration by 2025. This complements fintech growth, where MoMo wallet transactions rose 21% year-on-year, processing $16.8 billion in merchant payments. Digital services now contribute over 25% of fintech revenue. The company also made progress operationally. Active data users increased by 12% year-on-year, and the negative effects of the NIN-SIM linkage enforcement, which caused subscriber losses in 2024, have largely tapered off. Despite these wins, challenges remain. Retained earnings still stand at a negative ₦607 billion ($466.9 million), which may delay dividend resumption. Inflation remains stubbornly high at 28.3%, squeezing margins, and a pending class-action lawsuit on data mismanagement could pose reputational risks. Analysts forecast a sharp recovery for MTN Nigeria, powered by strategic tariff increases, network expansion, and operational discipline. The company aims for mid-40% growth in service revenue and EBITDA margins through the remainder of 2025. Key to this ambition will be the continued rollout of 5G infrastructure, improved forex liquidity, and the execution of the public offering. MTN Nigeria’s Annual General Meeting, set for April 30, will address potential dividend policy revisions and corporate governance updates—two topics sure to be closely watched by investors.

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  • April 29 2025
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Nigeria’s open banking to launch in August after four-year wait

Nigeria’s central bank (CBN) has approved the launch of open banking, mandating that banks begin sharing customer data with other financial institutions starting in August 2025, according to one person with direct knowledge of the meeting. Nigeria becomes the first African country to implement open banking, four years after the Central Bank of Nigeria first released its regulatory framework for the initiative. With the CBN’s approval, customers can now consent to allow regulated financial institutions to access their data, such as account balances, transaction histories, and spending patterns, and, in some cases, even initiate transactions on their behalf.  The data will be shared through a standardised API that all banks and participating institutions can connect to, enabling secure and consistent access. A central registry will identify and authenticate all participants, while a consent management framework tied to customers’ Bank Verification Numbers (BVNs) will ensure that customers remain in full control of who can access their data and for what purpose. Open banking is ready for Nigeria, but CBN’s approval stands in the way The CBN revised its approach after pushback from the banking industry against centralising control under the Nigerian Interbank Settlement System (NIBSS). It has now established independent committees to oversee open banking, led by bankers and employees of financial institutions without direct CBN control over any of the committees. The importance of open banking cannot be overstated. By accessing years of data on Nigeria’s 120 million bank customers, financial institutions can use this data to offer new services to Nigerians.  The most likely service to improve with access to data is lending. So far, bank-led lending has resulted in low credit penetration, with as much as 70% of bank account holders locked out from accessible credit. FIntechs have entered the credit market to fix this despite having limited data, leading to a mixed bag of subprime loans and predatory collection methods. With open banking, lending fintechs would receive data (transaction history, consumption patterns) from banks to assess creditworthiness and also help create a much-needed credit score for Nigerians. Financial institutions can also create new types of personalised financial products backed by data.  *This is a developing story. Open banking can change Nigeria’s financial industry. Why is the CBN stalling on it?

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  • April 29 2025
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9mobile claims SIM porting is active, but users say otherwise

9mobile subscribers are encountering a new and frustrating challenge: they cannot port their numbers to other networks due to persistent network outages in several parts of the country. Despite these disruptions, 9mobile maintains that porting services remain active. “Our customers can still port out of our network if they choose to, and we comply fully with regulatory guidelines to ensure a smooth process,” said Chineze Amanfo, 9mobile’s Public Relations Lead. “We encourage any customer experiencing issues to contact our support team for assistance.” The discrepancy between the company’s assurances and user experiences has raised concerns about transparency and access, especially as network reliability continues to decline. For users dealing with frequent call disruptions, slow internet, or total network outages, porting offers a vital solution. In April 2013, the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) introduced Mobile Number Portability (MNP) to give consumers more control and encourage competition. The policy allows telecom users in Nigeria to switch to a different network without losing their existing phone number. Porting requires both the donor (current) and recipient (new) networks to be online and responsive in real time. Any outage, glitch, or downtime on either end halts the porting process entirely. And that’s exactly what many 9mobile users are now facing. Until January, 9mobile users could port out without issue. In January 2025, the operator recorded 4,528 outgoing ports, making up nearly 79% of all 5,710 ported numbers across the industry. MTN Nigeria followed with 952 port-outs, Airtel had 130, and Globacom recorded just 100. Porting involves the subscriber sending “PORT” via SMS to a short code to initiate the transfer, after which the request is processed by a central Number Portability Clearing House. But if 9mobile’s systems are down or unresponsive, the request can’t go through, and subscribers can’t generate the code. For some subscribers, the frustration has reached a breaking point. Oloruntoba Yusuf, a broadcaster and former 9mobile user, told TechCabal that after enduring two months of poor service, he tried and failed to port.  “I gave up,” he said. “ I changed my BVN number and threw the SIM card away. My sister-in-law still uses 9mobile and says the network hasn’t been restored.” A TechCabal reporter attempted to port from the network after 9mobile’s response to comments and received the following message: “Your message has been received. If you have not done so already, please proceed to the nearest shop of the network you want to port to.” Rotimi Babs, an energy consultant and current 9mobile subscriber, said the problems go beyond unreliable service. Although network coverage has been inconsistent, purchasing airtime and data bundles has been even more frustrating: banks debit his account, but 9mobile fails to credit the data. Even trying to buy data using existing airtime doesn’t work. “I’ve migrated most of my communication away from the line,” Babs said. “At the first opportunity to port, I won’t hesitate.” Some industry insiders claim the timing of the disruption in porting is not coincidental. 9mobile is in the final stages of negotiating a national roaming agreement with MTN Nigeria. The deal would allow 9mobile to use MTN’s infrastructure to improve its reach and service quality, especially in underserved areas. According to two sources familiar with the matter, the partnership could be announced within a few months. “To secure more favourable terms in the deal, 9mobile likely wants to retain as many subscribers as possible,” said one telecom executive who wanted to remain anonymous to speak freely. “Blocking porting—even indirectly—helps keep those numbers stable.” But Amanfo told TechCabal that the possibility of switching off its network is zero.  “We work under strict regulatory guidelines,” she said. “We cannot just switch off our network without the express permission of the NCC. You can confirm this from the regulator as well.”  In December, 9mobile blamed ongoing technical glitches caused by fibre cuts in multiple locations for the difficulty in supplying quality service. It denied intentionally blocking users from leaving the network. However, the operator’s sharp decline tells its own story. Formerly known as Etisalat Nigeria, 9mobile held 15.7% market share in 2015. As of January 2025, it had dropped to 1.9%, with just 3.2 million active subscribers, and that number hasn’t changed for three months straight. In several regions, including many parts of Lagos, even remaining subscribers report complete service blackouts. Whether the MTN roaming deal can revive 9mobile remains to be seen. But for now, many of its customers feel trapped, with no signal and no way out.

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  • April 29 2025
  • BM

Coronation Wealth wants the average Nigerian to invest in the capital markets

Coronation Wealth, the investment and wealth management subsidiary of Coronation Group, is making a long-term play to turn millions of Nigerians into first-time investors, most of whom have never bought a single stock. Launched in April 2024, the company is tackling one of the country’s most persistent financial challenges: a deep lack of participation in formal capital markets. Despite a population of more than 200 million, fewer than 1% of Nigerians invest in collective investment schemes like mutual funds, according to the company. CEO Olufemi Yoloye sees this as both a risk and a major opportunity. “The market is so thin that it’s not a game of snatching customers from another house,” Yoloye told TechCabal in an interview. “We literally have to create a market for the investing public.” Coronation Wealth is solving for two key pain points: low financial literacy and poor access to investment tools. Its solution comprises three core products: a digital investment education platform, a gamified fantasy trading league using live market data, and a consumer investment app aimed at simplifying the onboarding process for first-time users. Its Coronation Investment Academy, which has attracted nearly 400,000 learners, offers free, digestible educational content to help bridge the knowledge gap that often drives Nigerians to riskier, informal investment schemes. “That’s why every year there’s a new Ponzi scheme, and every year it has victims,” he said. The company has also rolled out the “Play Coronation Fantasy League,” a virtual platform that allows users to trade virtual portfolios using real-time market data. This gamified approach, which simulates managing a ₦100 million ($75,000) portfolio, is designed to engage users and make investing more approachable. “If MTN is ₦20, it is ₦20 on the fantasy league,” Yoloye explained. “If it rises, your portfolio reflects that.” Targeting retail investors The Coronation Wealth app is the actual investment platform, designed with simplicity in mind. Yoloye explains that the app prioritises ease of use: “The retail guy cannot be overwhelmed by the information.” With just a few graphs and straightforward analysis, the app avoids the complexity that can deter new investors. Coronation Wealth also offers proprietary research, including stock recommendations and model equity portfolios, such as one that returned 50% last year, outpacing inflation. The company’s strategy focuses on breaking down barriers for retail investors by providing access to investments that have traditionally been the domain of high-net-worth individuals and institutional investors. For example, commercial paper – a popular fixed-income instrument – is typically out of reach for most Nigerians due to its ₦5 million ($3,121) minimum investment. However, Coronation Wealth has found a way to allow retail investors to participate by pooling their money into funds that invest in such instruments. “We’re democratizing access to investment,” Yoloye says. Yoloye’s investment philosophy is centered on “first principles.” He advises users to assess their “risk appetite,” “investment horizon,” and “budget” before diving into the world of investment. “When in doubt, just go for a money market fund,” he suggests.  “If you don’t have time to track yield curves or monitor MPC [monetary policy committee] communications, it’s someone’s job to do that for you when you invest in a fund.” Beyond investing Coronation Wealth is also positioning itself as a “multi-sided platform” that serves as an intermediary between various financial services and retail investors. The platform integrates several services from across the Coronation Group, including Coronation Asset Management, which offers mutual funds, money market funds, and fixed-income instruments, and Coronation Securities, which provides access to stock trading. The platform will also eventually offer insurance products, with regulatory approvals pending. For Yoloye, the aim is to provide a one-stop shop for all things related to capital markets. “We’re not there yet, but we’re live with mutual funds and shares,” he says. “By the end of the year, we should roll out insurance and other services. Over time, we’ll layer services from our partners as well.” Despite the competition, Yoloye doesn’t see other players in the market as direct rivals. “Anywhere people can put money today, I see them as a competitor, more realistically, more practically, I see them as peers,” Yoloye says. He tracks other capital market operators, such as Optimus by Afrinvest, I-invest by Sterling, and PiggyVest, observing their strategies and using them as benchmarks.  “Whenever they do anything [features and product offerings], I’m eager to see how we can support building the capital market,” he adds. Coronation Wealth says its digital-first approach sets it apart from traditional players in the market. “We are closer to tech bros than institutional,” Yoloye says, noting that the platform’s agility allows it to rapidly adapt to market needs. The company recently rolled out an updated version of its app in January 2025 to improve performance and align more closely with user preferences.  “We had to rewrite the entire app,” he explains. “Not because it was more from a perspective of we need to improve performance, but because there was a lot of groupthink. We wanted to make the app work for everyone, not just capital market players.” Coronation Wealth sees a massive opportunity to reshape Nigeria’s investment landscape. The country’s average age is skewing younger, with 62% of the population under the age of 24, according to the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS). This shift presents a unique chance to meet a new generation of investors where they are and build a more inclusive market.  “If all we’re able to do is support national discourse with raw data, we can make the case for regulation adjustments that allow younger investors to participate,” Yoloye says. Coronation Wealth’s long play is that financial inclusion won’t be driven solely by bank accounts or payments, but by equity ownership. It’s betting that Nigeria’s next million investors aren’t coming from the banks. They’re being created from scratch.

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  • April 29 2025
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A southeast Nigerian startup wants to become the “Netflix of documentaries”

When the COVID-19 pandemic forced the world indoors in 2020, streaming audiences went hunting for more than sitcoms and Marvel reruns. Documentaries—long a second-class citizen in the streaming world— moved quietly to the front row. Now, a startup out of Aba, southeastern Nigeria—once an  epicenter of Nollywood’s DVD distribution boom—thinks it has the answer for the next phase of that demand. OptimalVid, founded in 2024 by Praise Igwe and a small team of engineers and content junkies, is betting that a dedicated documentary streaming platform—with cheaper, smarter, and more flexible access—can carve out a place in the crowded streaming universe. It’s a risky idea. But sometimes, the best ideas are. With a planned app rollout later this month, OptimalVid will allow users to stream documentary content for $2 per month. Unlike many platforms, users will be able to pause their subscription—a feature built for fluctuating economic realities. “Let’s say you’ve used your subscription for 15 days, but you know you won’t be streaming for the next few days. With OptimalVid, you can pause your subscription for 3, 5, or 7 days so you don’t lose value during downtime. It’s a way to make sure your payment stretches further, especially when life gets in the way,” Igwe, CEO and Co-founder of the startup said in an interview.” However, users cannot pause for more than 10 days in a 30-day billing cycle.  At launch, the platform will source royalty-free and free-to-air documentaries. Over time, it plans to license premium titles from content marketplaces like All Rights and Filmhub, where deals can be made for as little as $500 for 100 titles per month. A niche that’s growing faster than you think Documentaries are still very niche, but a growing one. According to recent projections by Market Research Future, a data and intelligence firm, the global market for documentary films and shows will almost double by 2034, from $4.83 billion in 2025 to $8.95 billion. More importantly, audience behaviour is shifting: more viewers, particularly post-pandemic, are seeking nonfiction content that informs as much as it entertains. “People want to learn now, not just escape,” Igwe said. “They want content that’s not just made-up stories.” OptimalVid’s gamble is that it can serve this evolving appetite better than the current behemoths who operate in this niche streaming space. But it’s a long road, and the competition is brutal. Players like CuriosityStream (with over 25 million subscribers), Kanopy, and DocuBay already dominate the niche with deeper pockets and broader libraries. On the African continent, AfriDocs offers free streaming of African and international documentaries. And looming over everyone are platforms like YouTube and Netflix, where documentary content is either free or produced at a blockbuster scale. The business model and the real test OptimalVid is betting that lower prices (a $2 launch subscription, and a subsequent $5 fee per month) and subscription pausing—a rarely offered feature—will make it sticky among cost-conscious users. Its early strategy is simple: start with low-cost licensing, build an audience, raise capital, and eventually invest in exclusive rights and original productions. The startup is currently raising a $1.5 million seed round to bankroll this vision, with funds earmarked for content licensing, cloud infrastructure, and modest team scaling. However, building a global streaming platform from Aba faces major challenges. Nigeria’s streaming market is still small. Netflix estimated in 2023 that South Africa had almost seven times more streaming customers than Nigeria—1.1 million versus 169,600. This fact is not lost on Igwe; he is building OptimalVid for global reach, echoing moves by Nigerian streaming pioneers like IrokoTV. In 2020, IrokoTV CEO Jason Njoku announced a pivot away from Africa-focused growth to international markets with higher consumer spending. But reaching a global audience means competing with better-funded platforms that can spend heavily on original content, a proven growth driver for streaming platforms. Netflix, for example, allocated a large chunk of its $17 billion content budget for 2024 to originals and added a record 19 million new subscribers after releasing hits like the second season of Squid Game. Betting on a smarter screen OptimalVid’s early moves—lean licensing, flexible subscriptions, and global-first design—are smart bets for a scrappy startup. But surviving in the brutal economics of streaming will take more than good ideas. Without exclusive content, the platform risks becoming just another option in an ocean of free and premium services. Still, the timing feels right. The demand for nonfiction storytelling is swelling, and audiences everywhere are seeking new voices and smarter screen time. If streaming’s next big shift comes from an unexpected corner of the world, it wouldn’t be the first time. “We’ll focus on our own documentaries for now, and we hope to do so for a long time. In the future when we become category kings in this industry, we might extend to other industries,” Igwe said.

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  • April 29 2025
  • BM

Lendsqr develops AI to assess Nigerian borrowers by face and voice

Nigerian lending software startup, Lendsqr, is building an artificial intelligence model that analyses borrowers’ voices and faces to determine if they qualify for a loan.  The model, which the company says is 76% accurate, will help Nigerians without financial documentation apply for small ticket-sized loans between ₦30,000 ($18) and ₦50,000 ($31) from lenders.  Before lenders issue loans, they have to tick off a list of requirements to determine a borrower’s creditworthiness, and most lenders rely on the five Cs: character, capacity, capital, collateral, and conditions.  Lendsqr’s model will help lenders judge borrowers’ capacity to repay the loan and their intention to repay. “Can we help vulnerable people prove their capacity and character, not through paperwork but through their words? That’s the thinking behind this AI project,” Adedeji Olowe, Lendsqr’s CEO, told TechCabal.  How the model works When borrowers apply for a loan through Lendsqr, they can talk to the AI model instead of filling out forms. The model prompts them to answer questions about their jobs and how they intend to repay, and the borrower responds either by video or by voice.  Based on the video or audio data, Lendsqr’s model predicts whether the borrower will repay or default. Lendsqr is currently piloting this model using its capital. It will also make its research findings from the model public before the end of the third quarter of 2025 and will allow its competitors to use the data to power their loan engines.  While the company’s immediate goal is to expand credit access for Nigeria’s mass market, it also plans to test the model in Canada to support immigrants and new students who often struggle to access credit due to a lack of local credit history. “Africa is the primary target because this is where the problem is largest,” Olowe said. “Across Africa: Kenya, Ghana, Ivory Coast, Malawi, and  South Africa, you see the same pattern. The underbanked and vulnerable struggle to get loans because they lack documentation.”  Game changer If Lendsqr’s model can accurately predict creditworthy Nigerians, the impact could be transformative for the economy. Today, only 6% of Nigerian adults have accessed formal credit, and fewer than 12% of the country’s 41 million small businesses have access to it, despite Nigerian banks consistently reporting record deposits. Fintechs have stepped in to fill this credit gap by taking a less risk-averse approach to lending. However, they often rely on costly internal verification methods, which drive up the overall cost of borrowing for Nigerians. For Lendsqr’s current customers—including Kredi, Snapcash, and Blockacash—the new model has the potential to lower lending costs and expand their customer base, making credit more accessible to Nigerians who need it most. “Imagine you’re a lender giving loans to 10,000 people: If 9,000 repay because of better screening, it dramatically improves your profitability and sustainability,” Olowe said.  Partly funded by the Nigerian government through the Ministry of Communications, Innovation & Digital Economy, and Google, the model will be released when it’s 90% accurate.  “If it works, it won’t replace traditional lending for mortgages or car loans, but it could help people access foundational credit. Small, life-changing amounts,” Olowe said.  Fintech startup Lendsqr is launching ₦1 billion working capital for lenders

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  • April 29 2025
  • BM

Landmark ruling on unequal pay puts Kenyan startups, SMEs on notice

Kenya’s Employment and Labour Court has declared that paying workers different salaries for the same role is unlawful, in a ruling that could have far-reaching implications for tech startups and SMEs.  The case stemmed from a complaint by Tom Oduor, a former manager at Dawa Life Sciences, who alleged he was paid less than colleagues performing the same role. In a ruling delivered on April 9, Justice Stella Rutto ordered the company to pay him $30,000 (KES 3.88 million) in compensation for discriminatory pay, unfair dismissal, and accrued leave. The ruling lands close to home for Kenya’s tech sector, where wide, unexplained pay gaps often mark roles like software engineering, design, and product management. Many startups and SMEs rely on lean HR structures and negotiation-based offers, but such practices may not shield them from liability under this ruling. “In as much as the claimant may have accepted contractual terms that were less favourable compared to his counterparts, there was a statutory duty on the part of the employer to ensure fairness across the board and strive to eliminate and discriminatory policy or practice in the workplace,” Justice Rutto said in her ruling. Justice Rutto’s judgment could expose startups and small firms with opaque pay structures to legal risk, especially where salary disparities cannot be justified. The Judge said Kenya’s employment laws obligate employers to uphold fair labour practices, including ensuring equal pay for equal work. She cited a breach of constitutional protections under Article 27 of the constitution and Section 5 of the Employment Act, placing the burden of proof on employers to demonstrate that pay differences are not discriminatory. “By dint of Section 5(7) of Employment Act, the employer bears the burden of proving that the discrimination did not take place as alleged and that the discriminatory act is not based on any of the grounds specified within that sector,” the Judge said. The ruling comes against a backdrop of rising employment disputes in Kenya, supported by an assertive workers’ court. On March 28, a Nairobi court ordered neobank Umba to pay $21,600 (KES 2.88 million) in damages and legal costs for unfairly terminating one of its executives. The ruling came two weeks after another court ordered Marketforce Technologies, once a rising star in Africa’s B2B e-commerce sector, to pay $16,000 (KES 2.1 million) to a former employee for wrongful termination, highlighting legal challenges for startups navigating employment laws in the East African country. 

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