Latest news

UBA & Fintechs Unite for Africa’s Payment Future


United Bank for Africa Plc has signalled a new era of cooperation, moving away from the traditional rivalry between legacy banking institutions and emerging financial technology firms in a landmark move to harmonise the African financial landscape.

At its inaugural Fintech Conference held in Lagos, themed ‘Navigating Regulatory Milestones: The Future of Bank–Fintech Partnerships’, the pan-African bank gathered over 20 industry titans, including OPay, PalmPay, Mastercard, and representatives from the Central Bank of Nigeria.

The consensus was clear: the survival and expansion of Africa’s digital economy depend entirely on a unified front.

Opening the conference, UBA’s Executive Director of Digital Banking, Emmanuel Lamptey, set the tone by challenging the industry to abandon its “competitive silos”.

He said, “The future is not banks versus fintechs but banks with fintechs. When we combine scale, trust, and regulatory depth with innovation and agility, we unlock a financial system that works for far more Africans.”

Similarly, fintech leaders argued that the speed of innovation in Africa has outpaced the development of independent infrastructure, making collaboration a necessity rather than a choice. The CEO of PayAza, Seyi Ebenezer, noted that the industry has reached a tipping point.

He said, “Collaboration is no longer optional. The priority now is speed, how quickly we can remove the barriers between fintechs and banks to unlock scale.”

While the conference celebrated the expansion of payment gateways and instant transfers, stakeholders did not shy away from the rising tide of cyber threats. As AI becomes more integrated into banking, evidenced by UBA’s AI assistant, Leo, now handling transfers up to N5m, the security landscape has fundamentally shifted.

Peter Ehizogie of Mastercard warned that every leap in convenience brings a corresponding leap in risk, saying, “Each wave of innovation—instant payments, cards, gateways, and now AI—has expanded opportunity while introducing new risks. Collaboration is what ensures progress is sustained, not disrupted.”

Addressing the technical defence of these new systems, UBA’s Head of Digital Banking Sales, Shamsideen Fashola, emphasised that the industry is now locked in a high-tech arms race.

He said, “Cybersecurity is now AI versus AI. As institutions innovate to improve customer experience, they must invest just as aggressively in defending against evolving threats.”

The conference concluded with a unified call to action for regulators and operators to streamline the “regulatory milestones” that often slow down cross-border integration. For UBA, which serves 45 million customers across 20 African countries and global hubs like New York and Paris, the goal is to create a seamless payment corridor that mirrors the agility of a startup with the security of a global bank.

By the close of the event, the message to the continent was unwavering: the future of African payments will not be built by a single winner but by an ecosystem that prioritises collective resilience over individual dominance.

Tags :

Related Posts

Must Read

Popular Posts

The Battle for Africa

Rivals old and new are bracing themselves for another standoff on the African continent. By Vadim Samodurov The attack by Tuareg militants and al-Qaeda-affiliated JNIM group (Jama’a Nusrat ul-Islam wa al-Muslimin) against Mali’s military and Russia’s forces deployed in the country that happened on July 27, 2024 once again turned the spotlight on the activities...

I apologise for saying no heaven without tithe – Adeboye

The General Overseer of the Redeemed Christian Church of God, Pastor Enoch Adeboye, has apologised for saying that Christians who don’t pay tithe might not make it to heaven. Adeboye who had previously said that paying tithe was one of the prerequisites for going to heaven, apologised for the comment while addressing his congregation Thursday...

Protesters storm Rivers electoral commission, insist election must hold

Angry protesters on Friday stormed the office of the Rivers State Independent Electoral Commission, singing and chanting ‘Election must hold’. They defied the heavy rainfall spreading canopies, while singing and drumming, with one side of the road blocked. The protest came after the Rivers State governor stormed the RSIEC in the early hours of Friday...

Man who asked Tinubu to resign admitted in psychiatric hospital

The Adamawa State Police Command has disclosed that the 30-year-old Abdullahi Mohammed who climbed a 33 kv high tension electricity pole in Mayo-Belwa last Friday has been admitted at the Yola Psychiatric hospital for mental examination. The Police Public Relations Officer of the command SP Suleiman Nguroje, told Arewa PUNCH on Friday in an exclusive...