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Home Lead-In

What Do Incumbents Produce When Fintech Start-ups Cease?

by Rarzack Olaegbe
2 years ago
in Lead-In, Click Send
Reading Time: 2 mins read
Fintech
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The sun will shine after the eclipse. It is the resurrection. That is what is happening in the sector. It is a good sign. It forebodes hope – not doom – that soon the legacy fintech and start-ups will eat from the same dish. If a soothsayer had predicted this, I would not believe it. Perhaps, I would believe it because I am a believer.

On The One Hand

Initially, you would have thought of the incumbent firms swallowing fintech start-ups. At least, not in Europe or America. But fintech start-ups have acquired the incumbent. Open the book. Research shows that in February 2020, LendingClub announced plans to acquire Radius Bank in a cash-and-stock transaction valued at $185 million. The deal closed in February 2021, leading to a very quick and surprising second-quarter profit.

In March of 2024, SoFi agreed to acquire Golden Pacific Bancorp (GBP) for about $22.3 million in a deal designed to accelerate its acquisition of a national bank charter. Blockchain-based lender Figure Technologies agreed to merge with mortgage firm Homebridge Financial Services, which has 180 retail branches and funded more than $25 billion in home loans in 2020.

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The fintech start-up and challenger bank Jiko acquired Wadena, Minnesota-based Mid-Central National Bank in a deal that took years of due diligence and whose sales price fell in the range of a Series A round, according to the founder. Did you see that coming? No, you did not.

On The Other Hand

For some fintech companies, an acquisition is about speed and the ability to gain all the licenses. It creates the opportunity to avoid some hurdles associated with building a financial institution from the ground in a highly regulated industry. That is what Interswitch – backed by Visa – has done when it announced a merger with mobile money provider M-Kudi.

This move is a precursor to becoming a Payment Service Bank (PSB). Well, first it must obtain a license from the Central Bank of Nigeria. The merger, contingent on regulatory approval, marks a significant shift for Interswitch as it looks to expand beyond traditional payment services. This strategic move aligns with its goal to extend its services beyond payment solutions and enter the realm of banking services. A statement read.

The proposed marriage between Interswitch and M-Kudi will help improve Interswitch’s financials. Aside from the technical flexibility of the merger and other sources, acquiring M-Kudi provides multiple benefits. Interswitch will gain by being able to hold loans on its balance sheet and gain confidence from investors.

In The Long Term

For one, the merger will give Interswitch the audacity to compete with the likes of Moniepoint, Kuda, Carbon, Fairmoney et al to serve the unbanked, underserved, and underbanked customers. That is when Interswitch’s commitment to redefine its role in the financial landscape will shine through.

This commercial transaction is great news for fintech start-ups, after the series of demise experienced last year. In the year 2023, many start-ups in the ecosystem did not survive. Funding dwindled by 43 per cent. All of these contributed to dampening the outlook of the ecosystem in 2023.

In The Short Term

It is the resurrection morning. The sun will rise after the eclipse. An incumbent will produce even when the fintech start-ups have ceased to create.

 

 

 

Tags: FINTECH
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Lead-In

Providus Bank has acquired the 34% equity stake held by the Asset Management Corporation of Nigeria (AMCON) in Unity Bank Plc, marking a decisive step toward the long-anticipated merger between the two financial institutions. The deal, valued at about N6.5 billion, saw AMCON offload its decade-old holding in Unity Bank to Providus at a price of N3.18 per share, representing a 110per cent premium to the bank’s prevailing market value of N1.50 on the Nigerian Exchange. Industry analysts said the transaction signals a turning point for Unity Bank, which has faced prolonged struggles with weak capitalisation, rising non-performing loans, and declining market relevance. By transferring AMCON’s strategic stake, they noted, Providus has strengthened its hand as it pushes for regulatory approvals to consummate a full merger. AMCON acquired its Unity Bank stake during the 2011–2012 banking sector clean-up after the global financial crisis exposed balance sheet vulnerabilities across second-tier lenders. Its divestment, according to banking sources, underscores the corporation’s gradual exit from long-held equity positions as it focuses on recovering toxic assets and reducing its systemic footprint. “AMCON’s sale to Providus is significant not just for Unity Bank but for the entire financial system,” said a Lagos-based investment banker. “It shows the government is serious about cleaning up legacy interventions while paving the way for stronger private-sector-led banks.” Unity Bank shareholders are set to benefit from the deal’s pricing structure. At N3.18 per share, Providus’ offer more than doubles the bank’s trading value, giving investors a rare premium exit in a market where bank stocks often trade at steep discounts. For minority shareholders, the merger if approvedcould also unlock value by combining Providus’ niche strength in corporate banking and digital services with Unity Bank’s broader retail and SME base. Providus, one of Nigeria’s fastest-growing mid-tier lenders, is widely seen as using the Unity Bank deal to accelerate its ambition of achieving national bank status. By absorbing Unity’s branch network and customer base, the lender would scale its operations beyond its current limited licence, positioning itself to compete more aggressively with tier-one institutions. “The synergies are clear,” said a senior Unity Bank executive familiar with the talks. “Providus brings balance sheet strength and digital innovation, while Unity offers reach and brand equity, especially in northern Nigeria.” Following AMCON’s divestment, the proposed merger will be subject to approval from the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), and Unity Bank shareholders. Both banks are expected to present a detailed merger scheme in the coming months, outlining share swap ratios, post-merger governance, and capital plans. Market watchers say regulatory scrutiny will focus on whether the combined entity meets CBN’s revised recapitalisation thresholds, which mandate higher minimum capital bases for Nigerian banks. The Providus–Unity transaction comes amid a wave of consolidation moves triggered by the CBN’s ongoing recapitalisation drive. Several lenders are exploring mergers, acquisitions, or fresh capital injections to meet compliance deadlines ahead of 2026. “This is the first big-ticket transaction of the recapitalisation era,” said a financial markets analyst. “It won’t be the last.”

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