African Payment Startup Chipper Cash Issues A Statement About Its Bankrupt Investor, Silicon Valley Bank

chipper cash

This past week has been one of the most chaotic and unraveling for the US technology and startup community. In the wake of both Silvergate Bank and Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) being shut down within a few days of each other, I wanted to come out and share a few thoughts. The most important of which is to clearly state that fortunately Chipper Cash has had overall insignificant exposure to both these events.

chipper cash
chipper cash

Given the scale and complexity of our global operations, Chipper Cash maintains multiple banking relationships across the world — including multiple within the United States. As such, we had a very limited amount of money (only about $1M) held in our SVB account at the time the bank was taken over by the California regulator. We have already received confirmation from the FDIC that we can expect about half the funds back by Monday March 13th 2023. Furthermore, there was absolutely no impact on our customer operations around the world.

read also Yellow Pay Now Available Across Africa

I also wanted to talk about the fact SVB was one of our many investors, and led our Series C round in 2021. This is a fact I am very proud of. SVB has been the most important banking partner to the entire Silicon Valley ecosystem; and for us at Chipper they have been incredible partners as investors. A little known fact is that 5 years ago when I was trying to open Chipper’s first bank account, SVB was the only bank that would accept us. I know there are countless other startups all doing very important work who would say the same thing. Therefore, it is quite sad to see such a pillar of our ecosystem brought to its knees.

However, it is important to clarify what SVB being an investor actually meant for us at Chipper, especially during a time like this. From a financial perspective, it doesn’t really change anything. SVB made their investment in Chipper in 2021 and we received those funds as soon as that round closed. What is happening now doesn’t change that. Additionally, SVB wasn’t the only investor in that round — we had several other new and existing investors participate in the $100m round — and SVB owns a very small part of Chipper ~2%. Chipper is very fortunate to have a very broad and supportive investor base that has supported us from our earliest days and continues to do so today.

read also

We are definitely living through a very tough and uncertain time not just in our entire industry, but across the entire global economy. The events of this week have only further highlighted this fact, and every business is having to make difficult but necessary adjustments. I speak constantly with other CEOs who are all having to navigate their companies through these uncertain times. For us at Chipper, we have our work cut out for us and we continue working hard everyday towards our mission to enable people in Africa to move and interact with their money freely.

It is probably most important, that in times like these, we all remember that this is a marathon and not a sprint. When Maijid and I set out on this journey over 4 years ago we knew that it would ebb and flow, and that there would be several headwinds and false starts along the way. This too shall pass. There is so much more to be done and we couldn’t be more excited about that.

Ham Serunjogi is a co-founder at Chipper Cash

Chipper Cash Silicon Bank Chipper Cash Silicon Bank

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

Zambian Fintech Startup Zazu Secures $1.4m To Grow Team

This has been a year for fintech startups. Apart from leading in the largest investment focus for investors, the sector is increasingly becoming a comfort area for investors. Zambian fintech startup, Zazu has joined the train of startup fund raisers, securing US$1.4 million funding round to allow it to grow its team and better connect with its potential user base.

Here Is The Deal

  • The US$1.4 million in funding, which comes from undisclosed sources, will help Zazu expand its team and better market its product to build its user base.

‘‘With 15 people on the team, we have been able to cover a lot of ground. Our products have been used by over a million Zambians and this investment is going to see us welcome our first 100,000 cardholders, as well as increase our team size,” said Perseus Mlambo, chief executive officer (CEO) at Zazu.
Zazu, meanwhile, plans to run another crowdfunding campaign in order to help it take its products out of beta.’’

“Since putting our app in beta, we haven’t disclosed user numbers because we have been focusing on getting user feedback and acting on that. Putting our app in beta saw us get inbound requests from a few investors and to not jeopardise some of the discussions we are having for a larger round next year, we aren’t disclosing source of funds at this time,” he said.

What Zazu Does

Launched in October 2015, Zazu originally allowed farmers with extra produce to connect with new markets, but pivoted into the digital banking space in 2017. 
The startup ran a successful crowdfunding campaign that same year, and has since then developed two products focused on the Zambian market. The first, a chatbot that uses SMS to teach people how financial services work, has been used by over 1.1. million people, while Zazu has also built a digital wallet app that is connected to a prepaid card to give people more control over their spending.

“Our first crowdfunding campaign allowed us to quickly validate some of our assumptions and meet some incredible investors who have gone on to become advisors at Zazu,” Mlambo said. “Now that we have a working product and the licence to operate the business, we are really looking forward to, in a sense, rewarding those investors for their belief in us back then, and growing our investor base.”

Mlambo did not provide a date as to when the latest crowdfunding campaign would begin, and said at this point the startup could not disclose who was behind the US$1.4 million already raised.

 

Charles Rapulu Udoh

Charles Rapulu Udoh is a Lagos-based Lawyer with special focus on Business Law, Intellectual Property Rights, Entertainment and Technology Law. He is also an award-winning writer. Working for notable organizations so far has exposed him to some of industry best practices in business, finance strategies, law, dispute resolution, and data analytics both in Nigeria and across the world