Nigerian Fintech Startup TeamApt Raises $50M+ New Funding

 TeamApt, a Nigerian fintech company that offers platforms for business payments and banking, has raised over $50 million, according to reliable sources. 

QED Investors, a venture capital firm specialising in fintech, led the funding round. Novastar Ventures (co-lead), Lightrock, and BII, previous investors from the company’s Series B last year (Crunchbase values it at $30 million+), all took part in this round. 

Tosin Eniolorunda,  CEO TeamApt
Tosin Eniolorunda, CEO TeamApt

The company is still reportedly looking to raise a Series C next year, so even while TeamApt wouldn’t assign a “letter” to this most recent round, it might be referred to be a pre-Series C round.

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Tosin Eniolorunda, the CEO of the company, said that TeamApt would be able to expand its credit services with the aid of the new fundraising round. Due to the company’s continued use of the microfinance bank subsidiary’s balance sheet as collateral, its loan portfolio is still quite tiny. However, the company expects to use a variety of financing partnerships, including banks, development finance organisations, and securitization structures, to obtain financial facilities as its portfolio grows.

Why The Investors Invested

As one of the largest fintechs in Africa (in terms of revenue and market valuation), TeamApt was bootstrapped for four years before raising a venture round in 2019. It is also profitable. According to insiders, the company had annualised revenue of over $100 million last year and experienced an almost four-fold increase in valuation from its prior priced round.

“I am proud to bring Africa to QED and QED to Africa. I could not think of a better way to enter the continent than with our investment in TeamApt,” said Gbenga Ajayi, QED Investors partner and head of Africa, in a statement. “Tosin and his team have steadily built an impressive payment and distribution network across Nigeria over the past five years. Their strong and positive unit economics, coupled with a deep customer focus, will enable them to continue to build out an even more expansive network.”

QED has funded more than 180 companies and has approximately $5 billion in assets under management (AUM) and a newly completed 7th fund worth $1.05 billion (of which 27 are unicorns). Gbenga Ajayi and Chidinma “Chid” Iwueke were hired by QED in January to oversee its investments in Africa, a step uncommon for Western VCs. Co-founder and managing partner of the company Nigel Morris claimed that Africa was the final component needed to complete QED’s transformation into a global VC firm specialising in fintech.

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For portfolio businesses like Brazil’s Nubank and India’s Jupiter, which fulfil Eniolorunda’s definition of a lead investor, QED is also a well-known credit operator and has assisted in building solid credit operations. In a January interview, QED stated that it expects upcoming portfolio companies to “take advantage of its specialisation in fintech, operational expertise, and willingness to roll up its sleeves” to build and scale financial products for Africa’s needs, which is precisely at the core of TeamApt’s business.

A Look At What TeamApt Does

With its products Moniepoint and Monnify, TeamApt, a 2015 startup, runs one of Nigeria’s biggest business banking and payments platforms and conducts transactions worth $100 billion on average annually. Currently, Moniepoint offers 400,000 small and medium-sized businesses in Nigeria access to a range of features to help them manage their operations, including working capital, loans for business expansion, and tools for managing expenses like business payment cards, accounting and bookkeeping solutions, and insurance.

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“From our bootstrapping days, we built products where we can see positive unit economics from day one, which has continued to be reflected in our profitability,” the chief executive said. “This has put us in the realm of the few attractive cash-flow-positive hyper-growth companies — even as we continue growing at triple digits year-on-year, while at the same time expanding our margins.”

Charles Rapulu Udoh

Charles Rapulu Udoh is a Lagos-based lawyer, who has several years of experience working in Africa’s burgeoning tech startup industry. He has closed multi-million dollar deals bordering on venture capital, private equity, intellectual property (trademark, patent or design, etc.), mergers and acquisitions, in countries such as in the Delaware, New York, UK, Singapore, British Virgin Islands, South Africa, Nigeria etc. He’s also a corporate governance and cross-border data privacy and tax expert. 
As an award-winning writer and researcher, he is passionate about telling the African startup story, and is one of the continent’s pioneers in this regard. You can book a session and speak with him using the link: https://insightsbyexperts.com/view_expert/charles-rapulu-udoh

North Africa-focused VC, Global Ventures, Participates In Series B Round Of Nigeria’s TeamApt

Global Ventures, a Dubai-based venture capital firm, mostly invests in businesses in the Middle East and North Africa region, but it has been stretching its tentacles in recent years. After previously investing in Helium Health in Nigeria and Ilara Health in Kenya, the VC has returned to Nigeria to invest in fintech startup TeamApt. The fintech business recently announced the completion of its Series B investment round as it strives to expand following its transformation from B2B to B2C.

“Universal access to financial services is key to the advancement of any society. We built Moniepoint because we believe everyone deserves to enjoy financial happiness and this can only happen when they can access financial services effortlessly,” said Tosin Eniolorunda, co-founder and chief executive officer (CEO) of TeamApt.

“This fundraise is happening at a significant time in our growth as a company. In the past years, we have exceeded several strategic milestones without external funding, helping accelerate the Central Bank of Nigeria’s target of 95 per cent financial inclusion by 2024, but as the hurdles of financial access are not unique to Nigeria, this funding allows us to extend our solutions to other parts of Africa,” he said. 

The team at TeamApt.
The team at TeamApt. Image credits: TeamApt

The investment although undisclosed came from was led by Novastar Ventures with participation from FMO, Global Ventures, CDC, Oui Capital, Kepple Africa Ventures, Soma Capital, and a syndicate of local angel investors including Gbenga Oyebode.

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Why The Investors Invested

The traction the startup has garnered since 2015 when it was founded made the whole difference. It now maintains a network of 92,000 agents across Nigeria. The startup’s solutions are also being used by over 15 million customers and 100,000 businesses and top-tier banks in the country. 

TeamApt has created its agency network quickly and successfully to become Nigeria’s #1 operator, a testament to the team’s expertise and the platform’s exceptional user experience, Brian Waswani Odhiambo, head of West Africa at Novastar Ventures, said.

“We are glad to catalyse their vision by providing TeamApt with sufficient capital to pursue its new phase of growth,” he added. 

TeamApt was already profitable by 2020, with over $3 billion in transaction volume processed and considerable margins maintained.

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“And they’re only getting started. Financial inclusion is a challenge in Nigeria but also across Sub-Saharan Africa, where only 43% of the region’s adults are banked. The opportunity to address this challenge through mobile and agency banking is significant, and we are thrilled to partner with the mission-driven team at TeamApt as they break new frontiers in financial inclusion in Africa and beyond,” noted Global Ventures in a statement. 

A Look At What The Startup Does

TeamApt was founded in 2015 to address inefficiencies in Nigeria’s developing digital financial services market, and it offers a number of solutions. The firm has 100% of Nigeria’s commercial banks as customers and received a switching license and a US$5.5 million Series A fundraising round from the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) in 2019.

The firm said in January that it would move its focus from supplying financial services solutions to banks to selling goods to consumers and companies in order to expand on its successful performance in 2020.

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.
He is well versed on issues of ESG (sustainability), media and entertainment law, corporate finance and governance.
He is also an award-winning writer

How TeamApt Became Nigeria’s largest non-bank mobile money

Fintech startup TeamApt which launched its mobile money platform Moniepoint in 2019, has become the largest non-bank mobile money service in the country, processing 13 million transactions monthly. Launched in 2015, the Lagos-based TeamApt was formed to solve inefficiencies in Nigeria’s growing digital financial services market, and has a variety of products, including payments service AptPay, digital banking solution Moneytor, and Profectus Robotics, a back-office automation solution.

TeamApt Founder and chief executive officer (CEO) Tosin Eniolorunda

TeamApt which counts 100 per cent of the country’s commercial banks amongst its customers and last year secured a switching licence from the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) as well as a US$5.5 million funding round, now has more than three million customers and 100,000 businesses depending on its solutions and infrastructure.

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Moniepoint, TeamApt’s mobile money platform, has been a particular success, and has become the largest non-bank mobile money operator in Nigeria by value processed, despite being the latest entrant. Moniepoint processes 13 million transactions monthly with a value of NGN197 billion (US$516 million), while averaging 23 per cent month-on-month user growth.Meanwhile, Monnify, its payment gateway also launched in 2019, is the first and largest account transfers payment gateway in Nigeria.

Founder and chief executive officer (CEO) Tosin Eniolorunda told Disrupt Africa he was pleased with the consistency of the progress TeamApt had made since launch.

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“Starting and running a business can be a very arduous and time-consuming task but seeing results and enabling business growth can be very rewarding,” he said. Such success has encouraged the team to push on with expansion plans. “Our plan has always been to expand beyond Nigeria and take the solutions that have worked so well in Nigeria to other developing and emerging markets. We’ve pinpointed some markets,” Eniolorunda said.

With this in mind, further funding is also on the horizon. “We are speaking to various people and exploring a few opportunities,” said Eniolorunda.

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