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Flutterwave Acquires Mono, Buys Out Investors’ Stakes

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Flutterwave Mono

By Adedapo Adesanya

One of Africa’s fintech unicorns, Flutterwave, has bought Nigerian open banking startup, Mono, in an undisclosed all-stock deal.

The acquisition allowed all Mono investors to at least recoup their capital, with some early backers realizing returns of up to 1,900 per cent.

It will bring together two of Africa’s leading fintech infrastructure companies and see Mono continue to operate as an independent product.

Flutterwave operates one of the continent’s widest payments networks, while Mono has built Application Programming Interfaces (APIs) that allow businesses to access bank data, initiate payments, and verify customers.

Mono has raised about $17.5 million from investors, including Tiger Global, General Catalyst, and Target Global.

Founded in 2020, Mono uses APIs that allow users to consent to sharing their bank information, enabling financial institutions to analyze income, spending patterns, and repayment capacity.

Mono was launched to ease access to bank data across African markets, where credit bureaus remain limited and fintechs, especially lenders, often rely on customers’ bank transaction histories to assess creditworthiness.

The company claims to have powered more than 8 million bank account linkages, covering roughly 12 per cent of Nigeria’s banked population. It also claims to have delivered 100 billion financial data points to lending companies and processed millions in direct bank payments.

According to the chief executive of Mono, Mr Abdulhamid Hassan, nearly all Nigerian digital lenders now rely on Mono’s infrastructure.

For Flutterwave, which powers local and cross-border payments across more than 30 African countries, the deal deepens its vertical integration. In addition to payments, the company can now offer onboarding and identity checks, bank account verification, data-driven risk assessment, and one-time or recurring bank payments within a single stack.

Flutterwave CEO, Mr Olugbenga Agboola framed the acquisition as a bet on Africa’s next phase of fintech growth.

“Payments, data, and trust cannot exist in silos,” he said. “Open banking provides the connective tissue, and Mono has built critical infrastructure in this space.”

“If the economy is going to be credit-driven, you need deep data intelligence to know how people earn and spend,” Hassan said. “But at the same time, for open banking to really work, regulators need to be confident that customer funds are safe,” Mr Hassan told TechCrunch.

The Mono acquisition will see it tap into Flutterwave’s vast footprint as it already operates across dozens of African markets, with local licenses, enterprise customers, and compliance teams in place.

“This allows us to expand what’s possible for businesses operating across African markets while staying grounded in security, compliance, and local relevance,” Mr Agboola said.

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.

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Banking

Lower Interest Rate, Recapitalisation to Boost Credit Expansion—First Bank MD

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Olusegun Alebiosu

By Adedapo Adesanya

The Managing Director of First Bank of Nigeria Limited, Mr Olusegun Alebiosu, has said lower interest rates and the ongoing bank recapitalisation exercise would significantly boost the bank’s credit expansion in 2026.

He noted that Nigeria was entering 2026 with stronger economic momentum as reforms begin to stabilise markets, lift investor confidence and unlock new growth opportunities.

Mr Alebiosu made this disclosure while speaking at the lender’s Nigeria Economic Outlook 2026, a hybrid forum in Lagos.

He said the outlook reflected a gradual but clear economic recalibration, driven by policy discipline, financial sector reforms and renewed momentum in productive sectors.

According to him, in spite of inflationary pressures, currency realignments and external shocks, Nigeria had demonstrated resilience through innovation and structural reforms. This, he added, had positioned the economy for sustained recovery.

Mr Alebiosu said the annual forum had evolved into a strategic platform for shaping ideas, sharing insights and identifying pathways for inclusive and sustainable growth amid global uncertainty.

He reaffirmed the bank’s commitment, noting that the institution’s 131-year legacy remained anchored on supporting national development through strong capital buffers, digital transformation and effective financial intermediation.

“Nigeria’s competitiveness will depend on disciplined reforms, investment in human capital, scalable infrastructure and strong public-private collaboration,” he said.

He added that effective partnerships between government and the private sector would be critical to unlocking growth opportunities, while the forum’s sessions would offer practical guidance on managing volatility and identifying growth-driving sectors.

He said Nigeria was entering a new phase of macroeconomic stability.

The First Bank MD said this is supported by easing inflation, stronger manufacturing output and renewed investor confidence, adding that lower interest rates and the ongoing bank recapitalisation exercise would significantly boost credit expansion in 2026.

“Banks now have more liquidity and the environment is improving. Lending will naturally increase, provided we avoid reckless credit decisions,” he said.

Mr Alebiosu urged Nigerians in the diaspora to reconsider holding savings in foreign currencies, noting that returns on naira-denominated assets were increasingly outperforming foreign holdings.

“With an appreciating naira, keeping money abroad is a waste of time,” he said.

He also cited rising industrial activity and the decentralisation of power generation as key catalysts for real-sector growth, adding that falling food and fuel prices indicated easing market distortions.

According to him, stronger external reserves and rising foreign inflows have improved Nigeria’s buffers against volatile capital movements.

“If $10 billion in hot money leaves today, we can pay and not blink,” Mr Alebiosu said.

He projected economic growth of between seven and 10 per cent in 2026, including during the election period, which will buffer the sector against any crisis.

“There will be no crisis. The economy is racing, and after the election you will see accelerated growth far higher than we have ever seen,” he added.

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Banking

Wema Bank to Upgrade ALAT

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ALAT By Wema

By Aduragbemi Omiyale

The digital banking arm of Wema Bank Plc, ALAT, is scheduled for an upgrade this month, a statement from the lender has revealed.

Tagged ALAT: The Evolution, Wema Bank said it is adding more features to the platform to once again redefine the future of banking and set the standard on the next chapter in the industry.

With ALAT: The Evolution, the company is pushing the envelope even further, saying it represents a thoughtful evolution of everything users already love about ALAT; redesigned to feel more intuitive, more responsive, and more personal.

From faster interactions, to a smarter understanding of user behavior, to the introduction of SAW (Smart ALAT by Wema, an AI assistant on the ALAT App), the upgraded ALAT will show how far digital banking has come, and how much further it can go when innovation is intentional.

When ALAT by Wema first launched in 2017, it made history as Africa’s first fully digital bank, changing how millions of people viewed and experienced banking.

With the upgraded version of ALAT, Wema Bank is again reaffirming its position as the most innovative bank in the banking industry.

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Banking

Access Bank Congo Chooses Adeboye Ayewamide as New CEO

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Adeboye Ayewamide

By Adedapo Adesanya

Access Bank Congo has appointed Mr Adeboye Ayewamide as its new chief executive, following regulatory approval from the Central Bank of the Congo.

Mr Ayewamide  succeeds Mr Arinze Osuachala, who led the bank for eight years.

In a press release, Access Bank said Mr Osuachala’s tenure marked a shift for the institution, transforming it from a small franchise into a profitable and well-capitalised bank. During this period, the bank recorded steady balance sheet growth, strengthened its revenue base, and maintained capital levels above regulatory requirements.

Mr Ayewamide brings over 18 years of banking experience across commercial banking, operations, risk management, customer experience, and technology transformation. He has held several leadership roles within the Access Bank Group, with a track record focused on execution and institutional growth.

He is an alumnus of Harvard Business School, Wharton, IMD, and Lagos Business School, and holds a Chartered MBA from Bangor University as well as an MBA in Finance from Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU), Ile-Ife, Osun State.

Under the outgoing leadership, Access Bank Congo expanded its network from 2 to 22 locations nationwide and upgraded its core systems to improve operations and service delivery.

The Chairman of the Board, Mr Aubin N’semy Mabanza, stated, “We are pleased to welcome Mr Adeboye Ayewamide as the new Managing Director of Access Bank DRC SA. His leadership experience, strategic depth and human-centric approach ideally position him to lead the Bank into its next phase of growth.

The Board also expresses its sincere appreciation to Mr Osuachala for his exemplary leadership and the remarkable progress made during his tenure, which has significantly strengthened the Bank’s financial strength and strategic relevance.

Mr Ayewamide expresses enthusiasm, stating, “It is an honour to lead Access Bank RDC SA at this crucial time. I look forward to working closely with our stakeholders to build on the strong foundation already in place, accelerate innovation, deepen financial inclusion, and deliver sustainable value to our customers and communities.”

“Leading Access Bank DRC SA has been a privilege. I am proud of the transformation we have accomplished together and grateful for the commitment of our teams, the support of our regulators and the trust of our customers. I am confident that the Bank will continue to prosper under Mr Ayewamide’s leadership,” Mr Osuachala reflected.

Access Bank RDC SA is entering a new stage of strategic execution and expansion with this leadership change as it aims to become the most reputable African bank in the world.

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