Author name: Oluebube Elechi

News In Brief

Nedbank moves to buy control of Kenya’s NCBA in $856m East Africa play

South Africa’s Nedbank has made a cash-and-shares offer to buy 66% of Kenya’s NCBA Group in a transaction valued at about $855.5 million, tightening the link between two banks that sit on opposite ends of Africa’s fastest-growing retail markets. NCBA said the proposal prices the lender at about 1.4 times book value. The structure keeps NCBA listed on the Nairobi Securities Exchange, with the remaining 34% of shares continuing to trade locally, while NCBA would become a subsidiary of Nedbank if the deal closes. Shareholders who tender their shares would receive 20% of the consideration in cash and 80% in newly issued Nedbank ordinary shares listed on the Johannesburg Stock Exchange. The share-heavy mix reduces the immediate cash cost for Nedbank, while giving NCBA investors exposure to the South African bank’s performance. The deal brings together two leaders with different strengths. According to Nedbank’s Chief executive officer, Jason Quinn, this deal serves as a better entrance into East Africa, choosing an established platform over the slower work of building from scratch. While NCBA CEO, John Gachora has framed it as bringing in a strategic partner with deeper capital and cross-border capability, one that can help the group grow in its current countries and widen its options for the next set of markets. Formed in 2019 through the merger of NIC Group and Commercial Bank of Africa, NCBA operates 122 branches across Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania and Rwanda, and offers digital banking services in Ghana and Côte d’Ivoire. The bank has built a large digital lending and payments franchise, which has helped it scale beyond its home market. The proposed acquisition fits a wider trend of African banks pursuing cross-border consolidation to capture regional trade flows and deepen digital retail banking in high-growth corridors.

News In Brief

Flutterwave Rolls Out Stablecoin Balances for Merchants With Turnkey, Nuvion

Flutterwave has launched stablecoin balances for merchants and users on its platform, partnering with wallet infrastructure provider Turnkey and global banking platform Nuvion to support embedded wallets for cross border payments. Founded in 2016 by Olugbenga Agboola and Iyinoluwa Aboyeji, Flutterwave has grown into one of Africa’s largest payments infrastructure firms by helping businesses accept and move money across markets. The company is now extending that core pitch into stablecoins, as more merchants look for faster settlement and lower fees than traditional banking routes often allow. The new feature lets selected users hold and transact in stablecoins such as USDC and USDT, alongside fiat balances including the U.S. dollar and the naira, within Flutterwave’s products. The company said the rollout will start with a limited group of merchants, with plans to expand access later in the year. Nkem Abuah, Flutterwave’s lead for remittances and stablecoin partnerships, said the aim is to make it easier for African businesses to accept regulated payment methods from a global customer base, including stablecoins. Turnkey is providing the wallet and security layer that powers the embedded wallet experience, while Nuvion is designed to bridge fiat and stablecoin rails so merchants can move between currencies within a single workflow. Turnkey chief executive Bryce Ferguson said stablecoins can reduce reliance on intermediaries and improve efficiency for business owners. Flutterwave has been building toward this shift. In October 2025, it partnered with Polygon Labs for cross border stablecoin settlement, and it has continued to expand its infrastructure footprint, including its acquisition of Nigerian open banking startup Mono in 2025.

News In Brief

Nigeria Leads Africa in Deals Count but Low on Funding Share Ratio

African startups recorded $3.8 billion in funding in 2025, up 32% from 2024, according to Briter’s Africa Investment Report 2025. The recovery was uneven. Capital flowed mainly to a small group of markets and a small number of large rounds. Nigeria recorded its lowest share of funding among Africa’s four largest startup hubs. Startups in the country accounted for 8% of total disclosed funding in 2025, behind South Africa (32%), Kenya (29%) and Egypt (15%). It was Nigeria’s weakest share since 2019, a shift for a market that previously led Africa by deal value. The fall came even as Nigeria posted the highest number of deals on the continent. That split, high deal volume but low share of capital, suggests a market where company formation and early stage fundraising remain active, while growth stage funding has become harder to secure. Briter’s report shows that cheque sizes increasingly skewed toward fewer, larger rounds, which shaped outcomes. In 2025, fewer than 5% of deals exceeded $50 million, yet those deals accounted for about half of disclosed funding. This concentration helped shape outcomes in markets that attracted late stage capital, while countries with more early stage rounds saw smaller totals despite high activity. Only a handful of large Nigerian rounds stood out in 2025 with Moniepoint’s $90 million Series C extension one of the country’s biggest disclosed deals. Kenya and South Africa, by comparison, benefited from more growth stage capital landing in fewer companies. Egypt continued to attract sizeable rounds, including in capital intensive sectors that tend to draw larger cheques. The report linked Nigeria’s weaker share to market conditions as well as investor preference pointing to macroeconomic pressures, currency volatility, and reduced foreign investor exposure as factors that have dampened large equity investments in Nigeria over recent years. Nigeria’s relative share has declined since 2021, even as deal activity remained high. By sector, fintech and digital financial services remained the most funded category in 2025 by both value and deal count, maintaining a long running trend across the continent. This is closely followed by climate focused solutions raising more than three times their 2024 total, with solar energy leading funding activity. Much of that climate capital went to markets seen as offering clearer infrastructure pathways and more predictable returns, including South Africa and Kenya. Investor attention to artificial intelligence also increased, despite that funding was concentrated in applied products rather than deep research and development. The report also highlighted a shift in how startups financed growth. Debt financing crossed $1 billion for the first time, overtaking equity as some scaled startups relied more on loans, structured facilities and other non-dilutive instruments. This move reflects a preference for revenue strength, asset backing and predictable cash flows, rather than aggressive expansion. Exit activity subsequently reached an all-time with over 63 acquisitions recorded in 2025. More than half involved corporate buyers rather than other startups or private equity firms. Although most deals values were not disclosed, but the volume points to a market where acquisitions are becoming a more common path to scale. Foreign investors remained the main source of venture funding, led by the United States and Europe. The pool is gradually widening, with more inflows from Asia and the Gulf, alongside a stronger base of Africa focused investors providing steadier capital. For Nigeria, the picture is mixed. Even as it continues producing more start-ups and closing deals than any other market, the funding decline suggests fewer companies are reaching the stage where they can attract large rounds, or investors are choosing to place growth capital elsewhere.