Follow the money

A Reckoning Over ‘Dirty Money’ Grips Africa’s Bubbly Fintech Scene

By  |  July 26, 2022

On a hot afternoon in the middle of December 2019, Opeyemi Odewale, a Nigerian finance professional and fintech founder who had begun to dabble in the world of angel investing, connected with WeeTracker from the U.S. over Skype.

The conversation was mostly about his investment in a then-6-month-old Nigerian fintech startup known as Bankly, but there was the occasional unavoidable digression - mainly about his work and career.

Apart from claiming a trajectory that has seen him hold positions at PricewaterhouseCoopers, Barclays, and JP Morgan, among others, and completed more than USD 2 B in acquisitions, divestitures, and joint ventures for private equity companies in a career in finance spanning nearly two decades, Odeyale particularly took pride in his work as the founder of Ping Express; a U.S.-based remittance fintech that launched in 2015.

“Ping Express grew to a multi-million-dollar profile in less than three years and now operates in 31 countries,” Odeyale had told WeeT...

Most Read


How Nigeria Fell In—And Out Of—Love With Its Ubiquitous POS Agents

Not long ago, Point-of-Sale (POS) agents were hailed as a revolutionary force reshaping


Gig Workers Are Driving Ethiopia’s EV Push With Help From A Fledgling Startup

On the busy streets of Addis Ababa, a quiet yet powerful shift is


African Roots, Global Routes: The VC Helping Startups Crack The New Code

Originally slated to unfold at Moonshot 2024, where “Building for the World” headlined