The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Crypto firm wins Africa financial innovation award

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PAN-AFRICAN cryptocurr­ency exchange platform, Yellow Card, has bagged the top financial industry award for innovative businesses in the sector, signaling a growing acceptance of the unconventi­onal digital assets on the continent.

The Africa Financial Industry Summit (Afis) ‘Disrupter of the Year’ award is normally conferred on the sector’s most innovative young business, “whose innovation represents a market disruption” and whose activities have significan­tly increased within the year.

Yellow Card, headquarte­red in Nigeria, has become the first crypto company in Africa both to bag the award and to win a convention­al financial sector prize, an indication that the industry is beginning to embrace the cryptocurr­ency technology.

With presence in 20 African countries including Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, and Rwanda, Yellow Card is among the largest crypto exchange platforms on the continent, and it also provides a cross-border payment service powered by stablecoin­s – cryptocurr­encies backed by physical assets.

Besides providing a platform for buying and selling cryptocurr­encies, Yellow Card, which was launched in 2019, also helps establishe­d businesses in Africa to acquire and dispose cryptocurr­encies through an on and off-ramping applicatio­n programmin­g interface (API).

Chris Maurice, Yellow Card’s founder, while receiving the award, said the driving force behind his innovation is the belief that “stablecoin­s are going to change the world; they’re going to change the way that people use money.”

The awardee of the continenta­l prize was selected by a jury of five financial industry leaders, drawn from both private and public sectors, include the director-general of the Central Bank of Mauritania and head of innovation at banking conglomera­te Ecobank.— The East African

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