SPINNING AND CHURNING IN A SEA OF OPPORTUNITY – THE STATE OF MOBILE MONEY IN AFRICA TODAY
Finweek English|16 January 2020
The mobile money lending market saw several curtailments over the past year. As the market matures, local lenders are seeing opportunities.
Sean Christie and Leila Stein
SPINNING AND CHURNING IN A SEA OF OPPORTUNITY – THE STATE OF MOBILE MONEY IN AFRICA TODAY

The last two quarters of 2019 saw galvanic activity in the mobile financial services on the African continent, particularly among the lenders. Google shook things up by banning a certain class of personal loan app from Play Store; California-based microlender Tala pulled out of Tanzania; JUMO, with offices in Cape Town and Nairobi, retrenched a number of employees, and MTN announced its intent to relaunch a mobile money platform before the end of 2019.

SMMEs versus consumers

“The mobile financial services space is very active at the moment, with a number of consumer and SME lenders emerging across the continent,” says Johan Bosini of venture firm Quona Capital, which has focused on supporting small, micro and medium (SMME) lending start-ups around the world, as well as a variety of other financial technology companies.

With such a high prevalence of digital lenders in East Africa, particularly, Bosini believes that regulatory change around consumer lending could be coming.

Undeniably, players on the consumer credit side, like California-based Branch.co and Tala face, increasing stigmatisation on the continent, a situation that has not been helped by Google’s August 2019 ban on any apps that offer personal loans with an annual percentage rate of 36% or higher.

In September, Tala was accused of economic crimes in Dar es Salaam, and promptly stopped offering loans in Tanzania. Marcello Schermer, head of expansion at South African-born mobile point-of-sales start-up Yoco, notes that “concern around the uses to which consumers put micro loans has noticeably intensified,” mentioning Financial Sector Deepening Kenya’s, an organisation boosting financial market access to the poor, recent finding that digital borrowers are twice as likely to engage in mobile betting.

Some are turning away from consumer credit offerings towards SMME lending.

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