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Stripe Acquires Nigerias Paystack For $200 Million To Expand Into Africa
~5.2 mins read
When Stripe announced earlier this year that it had picked
up another $600 million in funding, it said one big reason
for the funding was to expand its API-based payments
services into more geographies. Today the company is
coming good on that plan in the form of some M&A.
Stripe is acquiring Paystack, a startup out of Lagos,
Nigeria that, like Stripe, provides a quick way to integrate
payments services into an online or offline transaction by
way of an API. (We and others have referred to it in the
past as “the Stripe of Africa.â€)
Paystack currently has around 60,000 customers,
including small businesses, larger corporates, fintechs,
educational institutions, and online betting companies,
and the plan will be for it to continue operating
independently, the companies said.
Terms of the deal are not being disclosed but sources
close to it confirm that it’s over $200 million. That makes
this the biggest startup acquisition to date to come out of
Nigeria, as well as Stripe’s biggest acquisition to date
anywhere. (Sendwave, acquired by WorldRemit in a $500
million deal in August, is based out of Kenya.)
It’s also a notable shift in Stripe’s strategy as it continues
to mature: typically, it has only acquired smaller
companies to expand its technology stack, rather than its
global footprint.
The deal underscores two interesting points about Stripe,
now valued at $36 billion and regularly tipped as an IPO
candidate (note: it has never commented on those plans
up to now). First is how it is doubling down on geographic
expansion: even before this news, it had added 17 more
countries to its platform in the last 18 months, along with
progressive feature expansion. And second is how Stripe
is putting a bet on the emerging markets of Africa
specifically in the future of its own growth.
“There is enormous opportunity,†said Patrick Collison,
Stripe’s co-founder and CEO, in an interview with
TechCrunch. “In absolute numbers, Africa may be smaller
right now than other regions, but online commerce will
grow about 30% every year. And even with wider global
declines, online shoppers are growing twice as fast. Stripe
thinks on a longer time horizon than others because we
are an infrastructure company. We are thinking of what the
world will look like in 2040-2050.â€
For Paystack, the deal will give the company a lot more
fuel (that is, investment) to build out further in Nigeria and
expand to other markets, CEO Shola Akinlade said in an
interview.
“Paystack was not for sale when Stripe approached us,â€
said Akinlade, who co-founded the company with Ezra
Olubi (who is the CTO). “For us, it’s about the mission.
I’m driven by the mission to accelerate payments on the
continent, and I am convinced that Stripe will help us get
there faster. It is a very natural move.â€
Paystack had been on Stripe’s radar for some time prior to
acquiring it. Like its US counterpart, the Nigerian startup
went through Y Combinator — that was in 2016, and it
was actually the first-ever startup out of Nigeria to get into
the world-famous incubator. Then, in 2018, Stripe led an $
8 million funding round for Paystack, with others
participating including Visa and Tencent. (And for the
record, Akinlade said that Visa and Tencent had not also
approached it for acquisition. Both have been regular
investors in startups on the continent.)
In the last several years, Stripe has made a number of
investments into startups building technology or
businesses in areas where Stripe has yet to move. This
year, those investments have included backing an
investment in universal checkout service Fast, and
backing the Philippines-based payment platform
PayMongo.
Collison said that while acquiring Paystack after investing
in it was a big move for the company, people also
shouldn’t read too much into it in terms of Stripe’s bigger
acquisition policy.
“When we invest in startups we’re not trying to tie them
up with complicated strategic investments,†Collison said.
“We try to understand the broader ecosystem, and keep
our eyes pointed outwards and see where we can help.â€
That is to say, there are no plans to acquire other regional
companies or other operations simply to expand Stripe’s
footprint, with the interest in Paystack being about how
well they’d built the company, not just where they are
located.
“A lot of companies have been, let’s say, heavily
influenced by Stripe,†Collison said, raising his eyebrows a
little. “But with Paystack, clearly they’ve put a lot of
original thinking into how to do things better. There are
some details of Stripe that we consider mistakes, but we
can see that Paystack ‘gets it,’ it’s clear from the site and
from the product sensibilities, and that has nothing to do
with them being in Africa or African.â€
Stripe, with its business firmly in the world of digital
transactions, already has a strong line in the detection
and prevention of fraud and other financial crimes. It has
developed an extensive platform of fraud protection tools,
but even with that incidents can slip through the cracks.
Just last month, Stripe was ordered to pay $120,000 in a
case in Massachusetts after failing to protect users in a $
15 million cryptocurrency scam.
Now, bringing on a business from Nigeria could give the
company a different kind of risk exposure. Nigeria is the
biggest economy in Africa, but it is also one of the more
corrupt on the continent, according to research from
Transparency International.
And related to that, it also has a very contentious
approach to law and order. Nigeria has been embroiled in
protests in the last week with demonstrators calling for the
disbanding of the country’s Special Anti-Robbery Squad,
after multiple accusations of brutality, including
extrajudicial killings, extortion and torture. In fact, Stripe
and Paystack postponed the original announcement in
part because of the current situation in the country.
But while those troubles continue to be worked through
(and hopefully eventually resolved, by way of government
reform in response to demonstrators’ demands),
Paystack’s acquisition is a notable foil to those themes. It
points to how talented people in the region are identifying
problems in the market and building technology to help fix
them, as a way of improving how people can transact, and
in turn, economic outcomes more generally.
The company got its start back when Akinlade, for fun (!)
built a quick way of integrating a card transaction into a
web page, and it was the simplicity of how it worked that
spurred him and his co-founder to think of how to develop
that into something others could use. That became the
germination of the idea that eventually landed them at YC
and in the scope of Stripe.
“We’re still very early in the Paystack payments
ecosystem, which is super broken,†said Akinlade. The
company today provides a payments API, and it makes
revenue every time a transaction is made using it. He
wouldn’t talk about what else is on Paystack’s radar, but
when you consider Stripe’s own product trajectory as a
template, there is a wide range of accounting, fraud, card,
cash advance and other services to meet business needs
that could be built around that to expand the business.
“Most of what we will be building in Africa has not been
built yet.â€
Last month, at Disrupt, we interviewed another successful
entrepreneur in the country, Tunde Kehinde, who wisely
noted that more exits of promising startups — either by
going public or getting acquired — will help lift up the
whole ecosystem. In that regard, Stripe’s move is a vote
of confidence not just for the potential of the region, but
for those putting in the efforts to build tech and continue
improving outcomes for everyone.
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Nsidibe26

You Are Actually Giving Away Your Personal Data When You Copy And Paste It -
~0.6 mins read
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q2oYl0pMSjg
I wish smartphones have clipboard access permission but
they don't have, once you copy anything (it goes into the
clipboard) it is a public access area - almost every app in
your phone can access, read and copy the information in
your clipboard. It's like anything uploaded to the internet via
http, it can be accessed by anyone who wishes to have the
information.
Let me make it simple - Stop copying and pasting sensitive
personal information in your phone like email, passwords,
credit card details, bank accounts etc.
Your phone clipboard is a public access area and any app
can collect and use any data in the clipboard.
Check out how to go about it securely in this Video...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q2oYl0pMSjg
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