How Local Investors Rallied Behind Nigerian Fintech AppZone In Its $10 million Raise After 12 Years In Existence

L-R: Emeka Emetarom, Obi Emetarom and Wale Onawunmi Courtesy: AppZone.

This year, Africa-based investors are taking the bull by the horns. They have gone after AppZone, the Lagos-based fintech software firm and have poured in up to $10 million in new funding, consequently. Appzone has clients spread across Nigeria, Ghana, Gambia, DRC (Democratic Republic of Congo), Tanzania, Senegal and Guinea, and has so far raised $15mn in total equity funding.

“For the last 12 years, we’ve worked in stealth mode, building the really complex infrastructure to power the continent’s growing digital financial services space and forging partnerships with the continent’s biggest financial institutions,” Appzone’s co-founder and CEO Obi Emetarom. “We are not just trying to bring African fintech on-par with the rest of the world — we exist to make our financial sector the most innovative and technologically advanced on the globe through solutions built for Africa by Africans.”

L-R: Emeka Emetarom, Obi Emetarom and Wale Onawunmi Courtesy: AppZone.
L-R: Emeka Emetarom, Obi Emetarom and Wale Onawunmi Courtesy: AppZone.

Here Is What You Need To Know

  • The latest round was led by CardinalStone Capital Advisers with participation from V8 Capital, Lateral Investment Partners, Constant Capital, and Itanna Capital Ventures.
  • The funding will bolster investment in Appzone’s key technology and set off a surge of new nation expansions.

Why The Investors Invested

A majority of the investors involved in this round are based in Africa. While CardinalStone Capital Advisers and Itanna Capital Ventures are based in Nigeria, Constant Capital is based in Accra Ghana. On the other hand, V8 Capital has its base in Mauritius. Lateral Investment Partners, although it has its base in the United States, maintains strong African presence. 

Investment in AppZone is one of the few instances where local investors would be spearheading a big ticket size funding in an African startup. 

This is particularly interesting because according to African Private Equity and Venture Capital Association 2019 VC report, North American investors represented 42% of the total number of investors that participated in VC investments on the continent between 2014 and 2019, followed by European based investors at 23%. African based investors accounted for only 20%, followed by Asia-Pacific (8%) and investors based in the Middle East (6%). This, perhaps, shows why the continent lags behind other continents in terms of funding available to its startups ecosystem.

Cardinal Stone Capital Advisers’ investment in Appzone, according to Yomi Jemibewon, co-founder and managing director, is “further evidence of Africa’s potential as the future centre of world-class technology.”

“Appzone is building a disruptive fintech ecosystem that will be the backbone of Africa’s finance industry with products across payments, infrastructure and software as a service. The impact of Appzone’s work is multifold — the company’s products deepen financial inclusion across the continent whilst providing best-fit and low-cost solutions to financial institutions. Its emphasis on premium talent also helps stem brain drain, rewarding Africa’s best brains with best in class employment opportunities,” he said.

Lead investor in this round, CardinalStone Capital Advisers (CCA) recently failed to raise the $100 million it expected when its first vehicle was finally closed. Focused on Nigeria and Ghana, CardinalStone Capital Advisers Growth Fund LP finally closed with commitments of around $64 million. The operation, which took place in September 2020, was announced by the firm on Tuesday, March 23, 2021. The VC invests in high-growth companies, for amounts between $5 and $10 million. The fund, which has already made two investments in a fintech and a welfare company in Nigeria, has announced over the next two years, 7 more commitments in diverse sectors.

Read also: What Does 2021 Hold In Store For African Startups?

A Look At What AppZone Does

AppZone, which was established in 2008, provides proprietary solutions for digital core banking and interbank transaction processing to clients in seven African countries, including well-known institutions such as Access Bank, GT Bank, and Zenith Bank.

The firm began as a consulting company specialising in custom software creation for commercial banks. The business released its first core banking product for microfinance institutions in 2011. The next year, Appzone launched its first commercial banking product (branchless banking). In 2016, it launched its mobile and internet banking services, and in 2017, it introduced an instant card issuance product. In 2020, the firm will introduce services for end-to-end lending automation and blockchain swapping for banks.

Read also:Ghanaian Customers Now Have More Digital Payment Options

To date, the company’s channels have represented 18 commercial banks and over 450 microfinance banks, totaling $2 billion in annual transaction volume and $300 million in annual loan disbursement.

Traditional and challenger banks in Africa are restricted, according to Appzone co-founder and CEO Obi Emetarom, to using international technology solutions customised for Western markets, many of which are plagued by major stumbling blocks such as prohibitive prices, inadequate flexibility to innovate, and a lack of local tech support.

Charles Rapulu Udoh

Charles Rapulu Udoh is a Lagos-based lawyer who has advised startups across Africa on issues such as startup funding (Venture Capital, Debt financing, private equity, angel investing etc), taxation, strategies, etc. He also has special focus on the protection of business or brands’ intellectual property rights ( such as trademark, patent or design) across Africa and other foreign jurisdictions.
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AppZone $10 million AppZone $10 million

Appzone to Expand Banking Technology Across Africa With New Funding

Obi Emetarom, CEO Appzone

As part of efforts aimed at deepening operations and expanding its digital banking services across the continent, Appzone, a Nigeria-based company that builds technology for banks, has raised $10m in a Series A round. The funding was led by CardinalStone, an investment banking firm in Nigeria. V8 Capital, Lateral Investment Partners, Constant Capital, and Itanna Capital Ventures also participated, the company said.

Founded in 2008 by Obi Emetarom who is also the CEO with the objective of building software solutions for banks, it took three years for them to launch their first product – a Digital Core Banking application for microfinance institutions.  The company has grown in leaps over the last decade.

Obi Emetarom, CEO Appzone
Obi Emetarom, CEO Appzone

In 2012, they launched a banking system to facilitate branchless banking for Diamond bank, a rare feat at the time. At this time, Appzone reported an Average Rate of Return (ARR) of 5% of total revenue (ARR is a useful metric for companies and their investors to assess how well a business is performing on the path to profitability).

Read also:How Can Foreign Remittance Companies Partner With Local Fintech Startups In Ghana, Without Physical Presence?

Four years later, they began providing internet and mobile banking services to Providus bank, followed by a system to help Guaranty Trust Bank issue cards instantly to customers. The company’s ARR was at 76% by this time, receiving a Payment Solution Service Provider (PSSP) license from the Central Bank of Nigeria in 2018.

With this funding A, Appzone plans to build on the success and experience garnered so far to become a pan-African fintech. For CEO Emetarom, it is time for the company to emerge from stealth mode and take a place among the class of innovators defining fintech on the continent.

“We are now looking to hire from Africa’s top 1% to grow our team of elite talent who have proven themselves to be true African builders; the brightest senior software engineers and domain experts, doing the incredibly hard work of building the backbone and next generation infrastructure for digital financial services at a level beyond world-class,” Emetarom said in a statement.

Read also:Sparkle Business Launches Mobile App to Support SMEs in Nigeria

Appzone’s mission, according to Emetarom, is “to make our financial sector the most innovative and technologically advanced on the globe through solutions built for Africa by Africans.”

That would mean gaining more ground in the African countries where it currently operates – Nigeria, Ghana, Gambia, Democratic Republic of Congo, Tanzania, Senegal and Guinea – and pushing into new territories.

Kelechi Deca

Kelechi Deca has over two decades of media experience, he has traveled to over 77 countries reporting on multilateral development institutions, international business, trade, travels, culture, and diplomacy. He is also a petrol head with in-depth knowledge of automobiles and the auto industry