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FCCPC Okays 94 Digital Money Lenders to Curb Loan Sharks

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By Adedapo Adesanya

As part of the plans to curb the spread of loan shark activities in the country, the Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission (FCCPC) has approved the operations of 94 digital money lenders in Nigeria, while also keeping an eye on practices from international entities like Singapore money lender to ensure comprehensive regulation.

From the cache of companies, the commission stated that only 49 of the digital lenders were given full approval, while the remaining 45 got conditional approval.

The agency disclosed this in an update on its ongoing registration of digital money lenders in the country.

Nigerians have been the target of unlicensed loan apps, otherwise known as loan sharks., which has brought disgrace and threat to unsuspecting users.

FCCPC said it came up with the Limited Interim Regulatory/Registration Framework and Guidelines for Digital Lending in collaboration with the Joint Task Force (JTF) to promote fair, transparent, and beneficial alternative lending opportunities for Nigerians.

The guidelines require digital lenders to register with the FCCPC and complete two forms; Form DLG 001 and Form DLG 002. Form DLG OO1 is the registration form that requires the applicant company to provide identification and operational information to the FCCPC, while Form DLG 002 contains declarations relating to legitimacy; compliance with applicable regulatory requirements; lawful source of funds and conformity with anti-money laundering; and data protection laws.

Recall that the commission had last year given all the digital money lenders 90 days to comply with these guidelines; it later extended the deadline, which expired on November 14, 2022, to January 31, 2023.

This is a list of the 49 digital money lenders that have secured full approval from the FCCPC:

SYCAMORE INTEGRATED SOLUTIONS LIMITED

TRADE DEPOT

TAJOW INVESTMENT

BLUE RIDGE MICROFINANCE BANK LIMITED

GROLATECH CREDIT LIMITED

BRANCH INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL SERVICES LIMITED

P2VEST TECHNOLOGY LIMITED

CREDITWAVE FINANCE LIMITED

KEENEST TECH SERVICE LIMITED

FAIRMONEY MICRO FINANCE BANK

ALTRACRED FINANCE INVESTIMENT LIMITED

CREVANCE CREDIT LIMITED

MENACRED COMPANY LIMITED

AFROWIDE DEVELOPMENT LTD

RED PLANET NIGERIA LIMITED

AFROFIRST MOBILE AND TECHNOLOGY COMPANY LIMITED

RANKCAPITALS LIMITED

IBS GOLDEN INVESTMENT COMPANY LIMITED

LENDVISERY SERVICES LIMITED

CREDITWAVE FINANCE LIMITED

RENMONEY MICROFINANCE BANK LIMITED

SWIPEBILL TECHNOLOGIES NIGERIA LIMITED.

HOMETOWN FINTECH LIMITED

GIASUN TECHNOLOGY NIGERIA LIMITED

BE RESOURCES LIMITED

ROCKIT LENDERS NIGERIA LIMITED

PIVO TECHNOLOGY LIMIED

YES CREDIT COMPANY LIMITED

FUBRIL CENTURY LIMITED

IRORUN TECHNOLOGIES LIMITED

CSENSE LIMITED

SUPREME HELP COOPERATIVE SOCIETY LIMITED

ORCOM AND ORCOM BUSSINESS SUPORT LIMITED

PAYHIPPO LIMITED.

EASYCHECK FINANCE INVESTMENT LIMITED

QUARK FINANCIAL NIGERIA LIMITED

EDMOND SOLUTIONS COMPANY LIMITED

TED ROCKET LIMITED

PENAID LIMITED

ARVE LIMITED

DOVER CREDIT LIMITED

RAGEKAY GLOBAL INVESTMENT LIMITED

MAYWOOD LENDING LIMITED

LINKPARK TECHNOLOGY NIGERIA LIMITED

MANGNET LENDING LIMITED

RUBYSTAR GLOBAL LIMITED

BESTFIN NIGERIA LIMITED

FUBRI CENTURY COMPANY LIMITED

BERLY SPRING GLOBAL LIMITED.

These 45 companies have secured conditional approvals from the commission. This means that they still have some requirements to meet before they can get the full approval:

TRIPPDBASE LIMITED

BLACKCOPPER SERVICE

OWOAFAR FINTECH SERVICE

PAYLATER HUB

WINDVILLE FINANCIAL NIGERIA LIMITED

AFROFIRST MOBILE AND TECHNOLOGY COMPANY LIMITED

ORCOM AND ORCOM BUSINESS SUPPORT LIMITED

OTP INTERNET TECHNOLOGY LTD

RED HARBOR FINTECH LIMITED

BERYL SPRING GLOBAL LIMITED

HOMETOWN FINTECH LIMITED

AJAX LENDING LIMITED

RACEOVA NIG. LIMITED

LANTANA TECHNOLOGY LIMITED

THE PLATFORM DIGITAL NETWORK LIMITED

ZIPPY CAPITAL LIMITED

NEO-LINK TECHNOLOGY LIMITED

TRIPOBASE LIMITED

BESTFIN NIGERIA LIMITED

POCKETFUEL FINANCE LIMITED

LENDING EDGE LIMITED

TED ROCKET LIMITED

PENAID LIMITED

ALTARA CREDIT LIMITED

NEW CREDAGE NIGERIA LIMITED

LENDHA TECHNOLOGIES LIMITED

DOJA LEMAIRE GLOBAL LIMITED

PAYDAYHUB ONLINE NIGERIA LIMITED

RETAIL BOOSTER LIMITED

FINNEW FINTECH LIMITED

FEZOTECH NIGERIA LIMITED

ORANGE LOAN & PURPLE CREDIT LIMITED

CITADELE CAPITALS LIMITED

FEWCHORE FINANCE COMPANY LIMITED

A1 CAPITAL SOLUTION LIMITED

ONE PAYOUT LIMITED

LINKPARK TECHNOLOGY NIGERIA LIMITED

LIDYA GLOBAL LIMITED

PHOENIX PAYMENT SOLUTIONS LIMITED

RED PLANET NIGERIA LIMITED

KWABA INTERNATIONAL LIMITED.

MAYWOOD LENDING LIMITED.

PRINCEPS CREDIT SYSTEM LIMITED

LINKPARK TECHNOLOGY NIGERIA LIMITED

FINPADI TECHNOLOGIES LIMITED.

Adedapo Adesanya is a journalist, polymath, and connoisseur of everything art. When he is not writing, he has his nose buried in one of the many books or articles he has bookmarked or simply listening to good music with a bottle of beer or wine. He supports the greatest club in the world, Manchester United F.C.

Banking

Ecobank, DHL Organise Programme to Unlock Fresh Possibilities for SMEs

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Ecobank DHL Fresh Possibilities for SMEs

By Modupe Gbadeyanka

Some entrepreneurs across diverse sectors recently completed a three‑week intensive capacity‑building programme organised by Ecobank Nigeria, in partnership with DHL.

The event was put together to equip Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) with the skills, tools, and insights required to scale beyond local markets and compete globally.

The focus was on critical growth enablers such as cross‑border trade, e‑commerce opportunities, logistics, customs procedures, and international shipping—key pillars for sustainable expansion in today’s increasingly connected global marketplace.

In one of the sessions, titled Trade and Grow Beyond Borders: Welcome to E‑commerce, the Relationship Channel Manager for DHL Customers/Global Express, Mr Charles Eke, underscored logistics as a critical success factor for SMEs, identifying key challenges such as access to finance, markets, and efficient logistics.

He also provided practical guidance on customs processes, international shipping, documentation, and shipment tracking, while emphasising the immense opportunities e‑commerce presents for cross‑border expansion.

According to him, international markets often offer greater growth potential than domestic markets for well‑positioned SMEs.

The Head of SMEs, Partnerships and Collaborations at Ecobank Nigeria, Mrs Omoboye Odu, described the programme as a catalyst for meaningful growth and mindset change.

“Over the past three weeks, something truly powerful has taken place. This programme has gone far beyond knowledge sharing—it has inspired new thinking and unlocked fresh possibilities for our SMEs. The message is clear: no business should be limited by geography,” she said.

Mrs Odu reiterated Ecobank’s deliberate focus on SMEs as key drivers of Africa’s economic development, saying, “Beyond building capacity, we are intentionally opening doors by connecting businesses to new markets and opportunities. With our presence in over 30 African countries, coupled with integrated payment, trade finance, and e‑commerce solutions, Ecobank is uniquely positioned as the Pan‑African bank enabling seamless cross‑border trade.”

One of the participants, Ms Dolapo Fatoki of Debsfray, a Lagos-based fashion brand, described the initiative as impactful, practical, and transformative.

“The sessions were highly informative. I gained a deeper understanding of documentation and pricing, two areas that previously posed major challenges for me. The collaboration between DHL and Ecobank has been exceptional and truly beneficial,” she noted.

Similarly, the Creative Director of FC Accessories, Mr Tosin Olukuade, described the programme as “an eye‑opener,” adding that it reshaped his approach to business growth.

“The insights I gained will help me scale my business exponentially. I am grateful to Ecobank and DHL for creating this opportunity,” he said.

Reflecting on the programme’s digital focus, the chief executive of Needle Point, Mrs Theresa Onwuka, highlighted how the sessions broadened her outlook on growth and innovation.

“The class was so good—it got my mind thinking of possibilities. My main takeaway is clear: digitalisation is the way forward,” she remarked.

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Banking

Banks to Submit Monthly Reports on Failed Digital Transactions

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By Adedapo Adesanya

The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has directed banks and other financial institutions to submit monthly reports on failed electronic transactions across digital channels, as part of new compliance measures introduced in its revised Guide to Charges.

The directive was contained in a circular titled Exposure Draft of the Guide to Charges by Banks and Other Financial Institutions in Nigeria, 2026 (The Guide) and signed by the Director of the Financial Policy and Regulation Department, Mrs Rita Sike.

According to the apex bank, Chief Compliance Officers and Heads of Information Technology in financial institutions are required to jointly render electronic reports of all failed transactions conducted via Automated Teller Machines, Point of Sale terminals, mobile channels, web platforms, and other electronic systems.

The circular read, “The Chief Compliance Officer and Head Information Technology shall jointly render monthly reports electronically, of all failed electronic transactions via various e-channels (ATM, PoS, mobile, web/internet and related channels) that originate or terminate in the institution.”

The reports are to be submitted to designated CBN email addresses, reinforcing the regulator’s push for stricter monitoring of service failures across the banking system.

Beyond the reporting requirement, the CBN also introduced broader accountability measures, placing responsibility on top management of financial institutions to ensure strict adherence to the new guide.

Executive Compliance Officers or Managing Directors are mandated to cascade compliance expectations across all business units and ensure that banking systems are configured to apply only approved charges.

Specifically, the regulator directed that Heads of Information Technology must ensure that “all systems configurations only capture and allow posting of charges as permitted and described in this Guide,” while Chief Compliance Officers are to monitor strict compliance with the framework.

The revised guide, effective May 1, 2026, replaces the 2020 version and provides a comprehensive framework for charges across banking and other financial services.

The CBN explained that the review was aimed at promoting a safe and sound financial system, encouraging innovation, and expanding financial inclusion through lower tariffs on micropayments and transactions.

It added that the revised framework would strengthen oversight and accountability, encourage the adoption of electronic payment channels, and accommodate new industry participants.

Business Post also reported that the regulator has raised ATM card fees by 50 per cent to N1,500 and scrapped the monthly maintenance charge.

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Banking

CBN Proposes N1,500 ATM Card Fee, N150 e-Dividend Mandate Processing Fee

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By Aduragbemi Omiyale

The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has proposed that financial institutions operating in the country should charge N150 for the e-dividend mandate processing fee from May 1, 2026.

This was contained in the latest Guide to Charges by Banks and Other Financial Institutions in Nigeria, signed by the Director of the Financial Policy and Regulation Department of the CBN, Ms Rita Sikе.

The move is to promote a safe and sound financial system in Nigeria, accelerate the adoption of innovative financial services, financial inclusion and micropayments/transactions.

The reviewed guide, according to the central bank, provides for an increased range of financial services, encourages development of innovative products, strengthens responsibility for oversight and accountability and promotes financial inclusion through lower tariffs for micropayments/transactions.

It also reviewed some charges for banking services to encourage increased adoption of electronic channels and accommodate new industry participants since the issuance of the 2020 guide.

“In view of the above, the draft guide is hereby exposed to members of the public for their comments/input on the proposed fees contained therein. Comments are to be sent to [email protected] on or before May 08, 2026,” a part of the note stated.

In the draft, the banking sector regulator is suggesting the payment of N1,500 for local debit card issuance and replacement by customers and a $10 annual fee for foreign currency-denominated debit/credit cards.

For on-site ATM transactions, a charge of N100 per N20,000 withdrawal was proposed and N100 plus a surcharge of not more than N500 per N20,000 withdrawal. It emphasised that the surcharge, which is an income of the ATM deployer/acquirer, shall be disclosed at the point of withdrawal to the consumer.

The bank also said that for electronic fund transfers below N5,000, no fee would be collected, but from N5,000 to N50,000, customers would part with N10, and for transfers above N50,000, the fee of N50 would be paid, while for microfinance banks, there would be the settlement bank’s charge plus 10 per cent of the charge.

The CBN noted that this guide applies to commercial banks, merchant banks, Payment Service Banks (PSBs), non-interest banks, microfinance banks, finance companies, Primary Mortgage Banks (PMBs), Development Finance Institutions (DFIs), credit guarantee companies, Mobile Money Operators (MMOs), and any other institution as may be designated by it.

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