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Nigeria’s Kuda Bank to Power Digital Banking Services in Pakistan

Kuda, a Nigeria-established digital banking platform, is on its way to power digital banking services in Pakistan, as the fintech is set to acquire a digital banking licence from the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP). This licence will be issued to “KT Bank”, a joint venture between Kuda and two leading Pakistani companies, positioning the fintech as one of the five companies to receive the highly coveted digital banking licence in the country. Kuda and four other banks nosed out 15 other applicants for this licence, including all the Pakistani commercial banks that applied.

Pakistan’s central bank followed suit in January 2022, setting out its new licensing and regulatory framework for digital banks. According to the SBP, the new licences will incite financial inclusion and pilot with only five licences. This limited number of licences seemed to make them a collector’s item of some sort, with mega digital banking players like the Sequoia-backed Dbank, South Africa’s Tyme Bank, and homegrown fintechs such as Finja losing out on the race. 

Nevertheless, Kuda Bank made a strategic move in its bid. The UK-headquartered fintech partnered with two principal Pakistani institutions in June last year—Fatima Group and The City School Group—to apply for the SBP’s licence. The City School Group is one of the largest private school networks in the region, while Fatima Group is a marriage of companies with subsidiaries that offer a range of high-scale solutions ranging from energy to agricultural manufacturing and trading. 

Kuda’s Chief Expansion Officer, Mr. Ryan Laubscher said about the partnership, “The company’s [Kuda’s] partnership with Fatima Group and The City School Group leverages each partner’s unique reach and capabilities to create a powerful proposition with enormous potential to increase financial access and affordability in Pakistan, and most notably, with a focus on the agriculture and education sectors.” maintaining that Kuda’s priority is to provide affordable banking that will scale its partners’ inclusion-focused initiatives in Pakistan.

In accordance with local Pakistan sources, all applicants were assessed on various criteria that included fitness and propriety, experience and financial strength; business plan; implementation plan; funding and capital plan; IT and cybersecurity strategy, and outsourcing arrangements. Now, each of the selected five will assimilate a public limited company with the Securities and Exchange Commission of Pakistan, after which they will get an approval-in-principle to pilot their solutions.

The SBP expects that these digital banks will provide digital financial services, including credit services and low-cost movement of money to all Pakistanis, thereby promoting financial inclusion and serving the unbanked or underserved—exactly what Kuda has been able to do in its home market, Nigeria. 

Kuda was founded in 2019 by Babs Ogundeyi and Musty Mustapha, and has, in its three-year run, raised more than $90 million while expanding its customer base to over five million users. The neobank boasts of easy and free to low-cost transactions, instant lending, debit card services, and more recently, international remittances from the UK. Tagged “the bank of the free”, Kuda demonstrates a new era of banking to Nigerians: seamless, free, and completely digital and the neobank is poised to replicate the script in its latest South Asian market.

In 2021, when Kuda closed its $55 million Series B round, CEO Ogundeyi expressed that Kuda would use the funding to prepare for continental expansion as it seeks to provide banking services for “every African on the planet”. While those continental expansion plans are yet to materialise, we did see Kuda expand its offerings to the African diaspora in the UK, the second largest sender of remittances to Nigeria behind the US. Now, Africa might have to wait as Kuda focuses on infiltrating the Pakistani market, it’s newest invasion where it must compete with existing players—such as Easypaisa DB—to achieve market share.

From a business perspective, it’s easy to draw a tie between the Pakistani market and the Nigerian one. Both countries are densely populated with the potential for huge volumes of transactions when Kuda is adopted at scale. If Nigeria, Africa’s most populous country could deliver Kuda its $500 million valuation, there’s no denying the fact the fifth most populous country in the world can’t decorate Kuda with a horn. For context, Kuda is one of the African startups in the soon-to-be-unicorn pipeline.

Concerns have been raised regarding the possibility of African fintech startups being able to build global solutions. With information like this, Kuda is joining startups like Paga and Moniepoint with a resounding affirmation.

Article Source: TECH CABAL

Nichole Manhire

Is the media and brand manager at GFA News. She works very closely with editors and podcasters that contribute to telling the African business success story. For marketing and advertising send Nichole an email: nichole@getfundedafrica.com

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