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Monthly Archives: April 2026

Everyone suddenly wants access to Africa…

Опубликовано: April 13, 2026 в 10:18 am

Автор:

Категории: Payments

Stablecoin companies. VCs. Payment infra players. Crypto exchanges. AI labs. All circling the continent like it just appeared on the map. 😂
The question nobody’s asking loud enough: is this genuine or is Africa just the next extraction zone?

Let’s be real about what’s actually happening on the ground.

Sub-Saharan Africa moved over $200 billion in onchain value in the past year. Stablecoins account for 43% of all crypto transactions on the continent. Nigeria alone did nearly $22 billion in stablecoin volume. Ethiopia’s retail stablecoin transfers grew 180% year over year after a 30% currency devaluation. It’s obvious by now that. this isn’t speculation or narrative, but a real conviction that people are solving real problems with whatever tools actually work because the traditional system has failed them time and time again by design.
Sending $200 to Sub-Saharan Africa costs an average of 8.78% in fees. Only 12% of intra-African transactions are fully processed on the continent… 👀The rest route through New York!!!
African money, moving between African countries, flowing through American correspondent banks. Make it make sense.
Stablecoins aren’t manufacturing demand, but instead, they’re showing up where the banking system refused to.
So when Circle, Tether, Visa, and every payments startup suddenly “discovers” Africa, you have to ask who actually benefits. There’s a version of this where stablecoin rails genuinely replace extractive correspondent banking, slash remittance costs, and give businesses real-time dollar liquidity they’ve never had access to.
There’s another version where Africa becomes a customer acquisition market for Silicon Valley’s next growth story. From what I’ve observed as a founder raising for a product that’s built for African payments, both are happening simultaneously.

The VC picture tells you where things really stand.

African tech startups raised $4.1 billion in 2025, up 25% year over year.
But 72% of that capital went to just 4 countries. Between 2019 and 2024, just 28 startups absorbed nearly half of all VC funding continent-wide.
That’s doesn’t seem to be a self-sustaining ecosystem but instead just a handful of bets dressed up as an “investment thesis”.
I believe the structure is shifting though:
  • Debt financing hit $1.6 billion last year, up 63%.
  • Over 50 startup acquisitions happened, with African banks and telecoms stepping up as acquirers.
  • 2 tech-linked IPOs on the Johannesburg and Casablanca exchanges.
  • Secondary liquidity is finally becoming real.
  • Exit pathways are opening slowly, but they’re opening.
That changes the entire calculus for capital allocation.
Stablecoins sit at the center of all of this because they touch everything: payments, treasury, cross-border trade, FX hedging, payroll, trade finance. M-Pesa partnered with a blockchain layer backed by a $240 billion UAE conglomerate. The AfCFTA Secretariat is piloting USDT-based trade settlement. Yellow Card is working with African banks on local currency stablecoins. Onafriq just integrated stablecoin infrastructure across a network connecting a billion mobile money wallets and 500 million bank accounts.
None of this is theoretical anymore.

But here’s the tension nobody wants to name.

Most of these infrastructure plays are built by non-African companies. The rails get laid, the fees get collected, and the value accrues…but where exactly?
A food producer in West Africa using stablecoins to pay Swiss suppliers is a win. But if the infrastructure layer capturing margin on every transaction is headquartered in Delaware, you’ve just swapped one form of financial dependence for another.
So then the real signal isn’t the capital, but the regulation.
  • South Africa has licensed over 300 crypto asset service providers.
  • Kenya signed its VASP Bill into law.
  • Nigeria, Botswana, Namibia, Mauritius all have live licensing regimes.
  • Sandboxes are active or incoming across Rwanda, Zambia, Ghana, Uganda, Tanzania.
That regulatory momentum matters more than any VC check because it’s the difference between a market that gets built on and a market that builds for itself. At this point, compliance becomes a moat.

Africa doesn’t need saviours.

It needs partners who understand that building here means building with, not building for. The stablecoin opportunity is massive but the payments gap is real.
VC outcomes will improve as exits mature and local capital deepens. But the people who treat this continent like a growth hack instead of a market with agency will get exactly the outcomes they deserve… 🤷‍♂️
The next decade of financial infrastructure gets defined here and there’s only. small window to do it. The only question is who ends up owning it, right?
Well, it’s not much of a question anymore because that’s been answered by Zynta.

Inside the Solana Incubator: A Founder’s Experience

Опубликовано: April 8, 2026 в 8:57 am

Автор:

Категории: Infrastructure

Honestly, I just want to be in the room where the magic happens. Building regulated stablecoin rails in Africa isn’t the kind of thing you figure out alone in your bedroom and if you’re building payments on Solana, what better place to stress test than in their own incubator? Being here means I get access to smart people, faster feedback, and the occasional reality check.
The first couple of weeks already have their highlights. I’ve discovered that compliance is somehow… sexy.
 
At least to investors. I get to say “we processed $100 million in 12 months” without anyone spitting out their coffee. I watch other founders ship at breakneck speed, which is the kind of peer pressure you can’t buy. And yes, the free lunches and dinners don’t hurt…
 
Of course, it’s not all smooth.
Try explaining “B2B cross-border stablecoin rails” at a party and watch people remember they suddenly need another drink. Juggling fundraising and product building feels like trying to cook dinner while giving a TED Talk, and with regulation as the constant shadow, moving quickly, often unpredictably, and demanding attention before anything else, it can be a whirlwind.
 
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What I have learned so far feels more valuable than anything a textbook could offer. Payments technology is a commodity and always will be, but compliance is the moat that gives longevity to a company like ours. Paperwork, for all its reputation, is increasingly beginning to feel like a kind of superpower. Storytelling is another skill that has become clearer to me: if you repeat often enough that you are solving a $70 trillion problem, people eventually stop blinking and start listening. Above all, the mantra I carry with me here is simple: move fast, break nothing (especially not KYC!)
 
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Already I sense a shift in how people see us. We’re no longer “a cool idea from Africa.” Now we’re “the first Africa-focused project incubated by Solana,” and that line alone opens doors. Our pitch is tighter, our GTM sharper, and our credibility is leveling up by the day.
 
Being here also forces me to step back and think about why we’re building in the first place.
 
The EU–Africa corridor is one of the most active yet most under-optimised payment routes in the world. It handles billions every year in remittances, enterprise payments, and trade, but the rails are outdated, expensive, and painfully slow. A shipment can sail across the ocean in a week, but the money behind it often takes longer. Fees skim 5%, FX swings erode margins, and entire businesses are left carrying the cost.
 
That’s why my conviction is so high.
 
Stablecoins aren’t optional in this corridor, they’re inevitable.
 
They settle in seconds instead of days, slash hidden fees, and free up liquidity that would otherwise stay trapped. For exporters in Ghana, importers in Belgium, or just SMEs needing to function successfully, these rails aren’t a convenience…they’re in fact a lifeline. When the rails are fast, reliable, and compliant, the benefits ripple outward: trust grows, growth accelerates, and opportunity gets unlocked for people and businesses that legacy systems leave behind.
 
So yes, I’m already thinking about what comes next: $1 billion in processed payments, because $100 million was just a warm-up lap. Expanding corridors so stablecoins can move everywhere except maybe Mars (for now). We’ll be collecting licences like Pokémon badges, because credibility is as much about regulation as it is about tech. Launching AI-powered tools to make compliance less boring, or at least more automated and of course, closing this raise so we can stop pitching and get back to building.
 
Being in the Solana Incubator is all about acceleration. It’s about pressure testing our vision, plugging into the Solana ecosystem, and proving that Africa isn’t a side note in the stablecoin story, it’s very much the main character.
 
And here’s where you come in…
 
Whether you’re an enterprise moving millions across borders or an individual sending money home, you don’t need to wait for the future of payments because it’s already here. Zynta gives you faster, cheaper, instant settlement, with compliance built in. If you’re tired of waiting days for transfers to land, or of losing value to hidden fees and FX spreads, then it’s time to try something different
 
Open an account with Zynta today 💎!
 
Be part of building the rails for the next era of payments. Because this story isn’t just about us building infrastructure. It’s about businesses and people like you using it.
Can’t wait to share more as we become the standard for African payments! 🫡🌍🔁