Egypt eyes surge in fintech investment after new laws

CAIRO, June 22 (Reuters) – New legislation and regulatory changes in Egypt are set to unleash a surge in new fintech investments and change the way the country’s largely unbanked citizens do business, industry players say.

Fintech innovation in Egypt, the Arab world’s most populous country, has trailed other emerging market powerhouses such as China, India, Kenya and Indonesia, a situation the industry hopes the new legal environment will change.

One innovator is MNT NV, a microfinance lending and payments company with more than a million active customers and a 21.7% market share. It has just completed a share swap to take over fintech company Halan Inc, Mounir Nakhla, a cofounder of both firms, told Reuters. The deal had not previously been reported.

MNT-Halan is Egypt’s first private non-bank company to be licensed by the central bank to operate a digital wallet, a mobile telephone application that allows consumers, vendors, lenders and borrowers to transfer money, pay bills, buy goods on instalment, secure loans and make other transactions.

MNT is marrying its large base of unbanked users with electronic technology, hoping to place itself at the forefront of a digital transformation.

“What we’re going to do will be revolutionary, I believe. We have the reach, the technology and the capacity to scale,” said Nakhla, who created the first of a series of start-ups in 2010. MNT has attracted $50 million from venture capital funds and other investors, and hopes to raise more capital soon.

MNT will also leverage more than a hundred warehouses and distribution points it has around Egypt and a fleet of vehicles to deliver products ordered online the same day.

Private investors have been reluctant to put money in Egypt in recent years due to an expansion of state ownership in the economy, and it remains to be seen how keen fintech investors will be.

NEW LAWS

But changes in the legal and regulatory framework could encourage them.

In September, the government passed a new law governing the central bank with provisions allowing it to give out banking licences to fintech firms, said Mohamed Essam, a fintech specialist at the law office of Matouk, Bassiouny and Hennawy.

A second law for the Financial Regulatory Authority (FRA) and governing non-banking fintech such as nano-finance, consumer tech and insurance tech is in parliament and due to be finalised in the coming months.

“Suddenly in two years we have the new central bank law, regulations for wallets,” and soon the FRA law, Essam said.

“We believe that within the next few months or couple of years we will see a big bang in fintech.”

UNICORNS

Ahmed Alfi, chairman of venture capital firm Sawari Ventures, says MNT could be Egypt’s second fintech “unicorn”, or company with a market value exceeding $1 billion, after e-payments giant Fawry (FWRY.CA), now worth about $2 billion.

“There will be several unicorns in the fintech space in Egypt,” said Alfi. Sawari Ventures runs a 1 billion Egyptian pound ($64 million) fund that invests in high-growth companies.

Sawari has not invested in MNT-Halan, but has taken a share in another start-up, MoneyFellows.

MoneyFellows has been digitising a traditional system where friends and acquaintances regularly pay into a fund and distribute the proceeds in turns to help members make big purchases, a system known in Egyptian Arabic as a “gamiya”.

Established in Egypt in 2018, MoneyFellows now has 1.5 million users and has raised capital of $11 million.

It tentatively plans to raise $20 million or more from venture capital funds this year to expand into new products and countries.

“We’re looking at other markets, such as Africa,” said founder and CEO Ahmed Wadi. “We’re also planning add-ons”, such as offering buy now, pay later options with certain merchants.

OPPORTUNITIES

Ashraf Sabry, chairman of Fawry, said a new e-money law, passed a year ago, that requires bigger companies to accept and disburse money electronically, was also a big step.

The law will come into force in September, he said.

Egypt, with a population of 102 million and a workforce of about 28 million, has around 19 million debit cards, a similar amount of prepaid cards and about four million credit cards issued, Sabry said. They are often used only for withdrawing cash, but with 25-30 million people owning smartphones the country is primed for electronic banking to take off, he added.

Fawry over the last two months raised 400 million Egyptian pounds in a capital increase.

($1 = 15.6500 Egyptian pounds)Reporting by Patrick Werr Editing by Mark Potter

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Source: https://www.reuters.com/business/egypt-eyes-surge-fintech-investment-after-new-laws-2021-06-22/

World Economic Magazine

Recent Posts

Judge Blocks New York Labor Law in Major Win for Amazon’s Workplace Policy Battle

Amazon secured a key early win as a federal judge blocked New York from enforcing…

3 hours ago

Enthuse Foundation Announced Finalists for 7th Annual Women Founders Pitch Competition

The Enthuse Foundation has revealed the finalists for its 7th Annual Women Founders Pitch Competition,…

3 hours ago

2nd Edition Model Risk Management, Canada

The Marcus Evans 2nd Edition Model Risk Management, Canada conference taking place in Toronto, Canada…

1 day ago

‘Grow With China’ Event Highlights Shanghai’s Expanding Role in Global Economic Growth

Economists say Shanghai is strengthening its role as China’s reform engine, accelerating innovation and global…

1 day ago

U.S. Consumers Plan to Spend Nearly $80 Billion During Black Friday

U.S. shoppers are set to spend nearly $80 billion this Black Friday and Cyber Monday,…

3 days ago

Waiken’s $450 Million Bet on Latin America: A Strategic Push into Connectivity and Content

Waiken has unveiled a US$450 million investment plan through 2031 to strengthen its entertainment and…

3 days ago