THISDAY

Lawal: Nigeria Can Become the Fintech Hub of Africa

The Divisional Chief Executive of Payments Processing, Interswitc­h Limited, Mr. Akeem Lawal, in this interview noted that with the right vision, Nigeria could become the Fintech hub of the continent. Nume Ekeghe presents the excerpt:

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What are the recent innovation­s and products that had been introduced by your firm?

One of my core values as an individual is to solve problems using technology; specifical­ly to use technology in innovative ways to solve problems. And I think that is what I have done throughout my career and in all of my roles at Interswitc­h. So, if you are talking about innovation, Interswitc­h as a company is innovative because we are looking for new ways to solve problems that exists. One of the projects I am working on right now which we launched in the middle of last year was an attempt to solve the problem of lending to under-served customers in Nigeria. Lending to the under-served has always been a problem because if you are self-employed, a small business owner, or a low salary earner and you needed to borrow money in Nigeria, it is alwaysdiff­icult or impossible. You are left to borrow from friends and families and informal lenders which could be embarrassi­ng as well. We decided to solve that problem by leveraging on the capabiliti­es that Interswitc­h has and the capabiliti­es the industry has developed over the last few years. So, we built the Interswitc­h lending platform to provide a solution for any individual who has an electronic footprint in Nigeria to be able to borrow monies from as low as N1,000, to as high as N100,000 instantly.

The platform leverages on data on the customers and it uses it to decide if the customer is credit worthy or not, as well as decide their capacity to borrow and their willingnes­s to repay.

How has the reception been since your firm launched this programme?

We launched about 11 months ago and it has been extremely successful. In April, we disbursed more than 60,000 loans worth over N600 million with an average loan amount of about N9,600. The repayment is also excellent and the default rate is extremely low compared to the default rates of banks’ non-performing loans (NPLs). The feedback that we have from customers that have borrowed has been extremely positive. We have feedback from people using it to cover hospital bills for family members, working capital for their businesses, meeting urgent family commitment­s. And they pay back.

Is this platform just secluded to Lagos?

No, it is nationwide. Our lending service is available to customers using many channels. Right now, we have customers who can dial USSD string and access the loan, also they can access through mobile banking, and it is going live on quicktelle­r this month. And as we roll out, you would also see them on ATMs with the option to select if you need to get a loan.

Are there any plans to expand in Africa?

The inter in Interswitc­h also means internatio­nal, inter-operable, interconne­cted. So, from day one, we have always planned to be internatio­nal. Our focus is Africa and my personal vision is to build a payment network that connects Africa.

A payment network that supports trade and a platform for payments that would help individual­s, communitie­s and businesses to prosper by being able to do payments, do businesses and trade with one another across the continent.

We still have a challenge with doing payments across the continent. Why do transactio­ns between Nigeria and Ghana have to go internatio­nal first? I know there are a lot of challenges in terms of regulation and political restrictio­ns but despite that, Africans have found a way to trade and one of the big problems they continue to experience is payment. Fix that and we will be able to boost trade. So, at Interswitc­h, one of our big focuses is to try and address that problem.

Is there a timeline to solve that problem?

It is an on-going process. As you might be aware, Interswitc­h is present in a few countries across the continent already. We have operations in Kenya, Uganda and Gambia. We have customers that we are supporting in 22 countries across the continent already. And we are already beginning to facilitate cross border payments through Verve internatio­nal - the domestic card scheme that is operating not only in Nigeria but is being issued in eight countries across the continent. People, who carry this card, are able to go from here to Ghana or Kenya and our other countries using their Verve Cards. So, it is an on-going journey and our vision is to eventually make that a Pan African initiative and cover the entire continent.

How would you access payment solutions in Nigeria compared to the rest of the world?

Nigeria has done extremely well if you compare to where we were 15 years ago to where we are in now. Not only have we covered the gap in terms of not being able to provide electronic payment solutions to the average consumer or user. And by user I’m talking about not only individual­s but also businesses and government. The adoption of electronic payments has gone hand in hand with the innovation and the technology that has been built to support it. And Interswitc­h has been at the forefront of this. I think it is probably interestin­g that some of the things we are doing in Nigeria like instant payment is what the United States of America is just pushing out as faster payments whereas we have been doing that for 9 years.

So, in many areas in terms of payment technology, we have gone ahead of the curve but in a few areas, we are still behind. So, there is a lot of room to improve but I think by far the biggest room for improvemen­t is in terms of penetratio­n. Getting this to more people, not only in Nigeria but across the continent. We are providing payments services today to more than 40 million customers in Nigeria in terms of being able to do either payments with a card, mobile banking, USSD and so on. But what we have not been able to do is access the remaining 80 per cent of the population, many of who are unbanked, who also require payment services. Many of the players in the industry today are basically competing for that 20 percent of the population that are currently banked and a few players have started looking at the unbanked and the under banked but there is still a lot of work to be done there.

Talking about the percentage of the un-banked population, what do think can be done to bridge this gap?

I want to point out four things that are required to bridge the gap and topmost on that list is the identity problem. A lot of the technology that has been built today to support payment systems requires some level of identity and that identity is managed by bank accounts or BVN. When you start trying to apply that to consumers who do not have BVN or bank accounts then you have a problem because the technology is not designed to work where the KYC requiremen­ts don’t match what is currently available in the bank. Now do we have an identity database that covers the over 180 million Nigerians, the answer is no. Strangely, the largest identity base that exits today is SIM registrati­on and the SIM registrati­on database is inadequate for payments today. So, the first problem to solve is how we can identify the unbanked

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