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👹🏿‍🚀TechCabal Daily – Mobius revs back to life

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It’s mid-week! ☀

Our SOTIA 2024 in Review is live!

Despite a tougher funding environment, African startups expanded aggressively in 2024. 38 startups entered new markets—more than double the 16 expansions recorded in 2023. This signals a shift in strategy as founders seek growth beyond capital raises.

How will this trend shape 2025? Find out in our full report.

In other news, Flutterwave, the fintech giant, has acquired a licence in Ghana to provide inward remittance services in the country.

Mobility

Mobius Motors gets a second chance under new ownership


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Mobius Motors, once Kenya’s bet on homegrown SUVs, is back in business after Silver Box, a Middle East-based investment firm acquired 100% of the struggling automaker in an undisclosed deal. The automaker told TechCabal on Tuesday that the transaction cost information is not yet available.

Following the acquisition, Mobius has re-opened its Nairobi service centre. Production of the Mobius III is set to restart by July 2025, with a new model expected by December.

The acquisition follows a turbulent period for Mobius. Despite raising KES 5 billion ($38.5 million) from investors like Playfair Capital, Chandaria Industries, the U.S. International Development Finance Corporation, and PanAfrican Investment, the company failed to compete with Kenya’s dominant second-hand car market. 

Its business model that relied on pre-orders with refundable deposits didn’t generate enough demand. By August 2024, it was deep in debt, unable to pay suppliers and staff, and entered voluntary liquidation.

Silver Box’s transaction comes after the Competition Authority of Kenya (CAK) approved the deal. CAK said the transaction fell below the KES 1 billion ($7.7 million) threshold that would have raised competition concerns and noted that salvaging the company would help secure jobs.

With new ownership comes a leadership change. John Kavila is now the Chief Operating Officer. CEO Nicholas Guibert, who led the company during its final years will leave the company post acquisition.

Mobius has built three SUV models: Mobius I, II, and III since launching in 2009 but never gained a strong foothold. The company’s Nairobi plant, which includes fabrication, assembly, and testing facilities, remains one of its biggest assets. The new owners could use it to continue Mobius’ original vision or pivot to assembling different models.



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Internet

Do Southern African countries have a bone to pick with Elon Musk’s Starlink?


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Lesotho has threatened to cut ties with Elon Musk’s Starlink for failing to make any provision for black or local ownership for its planned entry into the Southern African country. It is asking for 30% ownership of Starlink for its Basotho people. 

While Starlink has applied for a licence to operate in Lesotho, this new challenge could throw a spanner in the works in the review process, yet this is not an isolated case. South Africa has also stalled its long-standing talks with Starlink due to the same issue: the lack of black ownership. Despite initial progress and a brief camaraderie between Musk and South Africa’s Cyril Ramaphosa, negotiations have collapsed, with Musk taking to his social media platform, X, to criticise the country.

Only 2 of 5 Southern African countries—Eswatini and Botswana—have welcomed Starlink. While a 40% success rate looks encouraging, this region has given the ISP headaches over ownership issues. It raises questions about whether Southern African countries have a bone to pick with Starlink.

We cannot tell if the issue lies with the man or his technology, but we know one thing: beyond encouraging local participation, the black ownership caveat aims to prevent foreign entities from profiting without leaving an impact on local economies.

Foreign companies have historically complied with these rules through partnerships and community investments in the host country. Walmart entered South Africa by acquiring Massmart in 2011, committing to Black Economic Empowerment (BEE) through supplier development and job creation. Similarly, Amazon launched data centres in Cape Town in line with local regulations and partnering with South African companies. French streaming giant Canal+ plans to acquire MultiChoice by establishing a local middleman company to handle licencing and ownership transfers. 

Lesotho, too, embraces this ideology. In 1996, Vodacom, a South Africa-based telecom operator, expanded into the country by granting the Basotho people minority ownership (20%) in its local subsidiary.

However, Starlink seems to rely on its “better technology” pitch—a proposition that Southern African countries aren’t buying. With South Africa’s internet penetration at 74.7% and Lesotho’s at 47%, the issue isn’t broadband access but a demand for inclusivity. Until Starlink finds a workaround, entering these markets will remain a guessing game, even for Musk.



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Features

Making a pot of Nigerian staple beef stew is becoming a luxury


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Beef stew has crossed many mountains and endured many storms over the years to remain a staple diet feature in most Nigerian homes, alongside its frequent companion, boiled rice. Colloquially, the beloved dish is called “white rice and stew.” However, beef stew may soon start disappearing from many homes—right under the sniffing noses we use to savour its aroma—no thanks to the cost-of-living crisis in the country. A PricePally report stated that it now costs more than double to prepare a pot of beef stew compared to a year ago.

Several factors are contributing to the sharp increase in the cost of essential stew ingredients like tomatoes, onions, and beef. These items have become significantly more expensive. A major issue with tomatoes is their high post-harvest loss due to inadequate infrastructure, particularly in transportation and storage. 

The extreme heat experienced in lorries traveling from northern to southern regions, especially to places like Lagos, causes many tomatoes to spoil. Without refrigerated transport, the risk of substantial post-harvest losses is very high. TechCabal detailed the current cost of preparing a pot of stew.

Food logistics in Nigeria heavily relies on road transportation, primarily using lorries and trucks, which are powered by diesel or fuel. Consequently, any increase in fuel prices directly impacts food prices. Furthermore, the frequent instances of bribery and unofficial taxation along these transportation routes add to the cost. It’s not uncommon for transporters to spend between ₩100,000 ($65) and ₩150,000 ($98) on bribes along a single route. 

Investigative journalist, Isine Ibanga detailed how security operatives on travel routes force Nigerians to pay dearly on food. Additionally, local governments often impose taxes on food transporters, even when using federal roads. All of these factors contribute to increased food prices, ultimately placing the financial burden on consumers.



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Cryptocurrency

South African financial regulators give deadline for crypto startups to comply with travel rule


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Nearly a year after issuing its first crypto licences, South Africa wants to force compliance for licenced crypto startups to report user information on their platforms before April 30. Crypto asset service providers (CASPs) will need to meet the rules under “Directive 9”—or risk getting fines.

The directive includes the “travel rule,” which demands that detailed client information—including full names, ID numbers, addresses, and wallet details—must accompany any crypto transfer over R5,000 ($275), whether local or cross-border. It’s the government’s attempt to curb money laundering and terrorism financing. 

This crackdown didn’t come out of nowhere. South Africa landed on the Financial Action Task Force’s Grey list in February 2023 for not doing enough to police financial crime. Now the government is trying to clean up its act—and crypto platforms are on the front line. CASPs will need to tighten customer verification, monitor transactions more closely, and flag suspicious activity. Failure to do so could lead to serious penalties under the Financial Intelligence Centre Act (FICA).

Taxation is part of this broader push to bring crypto into the regulatory fold. South Africa already taxes crypto gains under capital gains tax rules, but enforcement has been uneven. The difficulty in tracking decentralised transactions on the blockchain has been a major blocker for the country. While collecting the information of crypto holders from CASPs helps solve the problem, it is harder for decentralised trading platforms to do so, as they do not directly control user data. Unlike centralised exchanges, these platforms rely on smart contracts and third-party protocols, making it tough to enforce compliance. 

Several other African countries are considering taxing crypto, and South Africa’s approach could serve as a model—or a cautionary tale—depending on how it plays out. The challenge is balancing tough oversight with keeping the industry competitive.

But the road to compliance won’t be smooth. The travel rule raises tricky privacy issues, particularly under South Africa’s Protection of Personal Information Act (POPIA), which restricts sharing personal data with countries lacking strong privacy laws. Platforms will have to figure out how to stay on the right side of both sets of rules without getting tangled up in legal contradictions.

With the clock ticking, CASPs are stuck in a pickle: tighten up compliance systems and adapt or risk getting fined—or worse, losing their licences. April is almost here.



CRYPTO TRACKER

The World Wide Web3

Source:

CoinMarketCap logo

Coin Name

Current Value

Day

Month

Bitcoin $81,713

+ 2.35%

– 15.63%

Ether $1,858

– 0.69%

– 29.24%

Onyxcoin $0.01318

+ 11.91%

– 46.62%

Solana $121.39

+ 0.54%

– 39.26%

* Data as of 05.45 AM WAT, March 12, 2025.



Opportunities


  • Lagos Innovates (LSETF) is offering workspace vouchers to startups in Lagos to ease rising operational costs. Startups can access subsidised coworking spaces with reliable internet, power, and a supportive entrepreneurial community. The program is open to Lagos-based startups looking to reduce overheads and focus on growth. Apply now.

  • After successes like Jamit, Pokecoin, and Tomachain, Lisk and CV Labs are back inviting African Web3 startups to apply for Batch 2 of the Lisk Blockchain Incubation Hub. The six-month program offers up to $20,000 in grants per project, mentorship, and access to additional funding of up to $100,000. Applications close on April 12, 2025, with the cohort starting on May 19, 2025. Apply here.

Written by: Kenn Abuya, Emmanuel Nwosu, and John Dare Okafor

Edited by: Ganiu Oloruntade

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African investment professionals earn 33% less than global counterparts due to smaller ecosystem

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African investment professionals earn less than their global counterparts due to the smaller assets and funds they manage, according to data on salaries and assets under management in African investment firms by Dream VC, a venture capital institute, and A&A Collective, a global investment community. 

The average annual salary for analysts at Africa-focused venture capital, private equity, and impact investment firms is $21,000. Outside Africa, that salary jumps by 33% to $28,000. At more senior levels, the gap widens—investment managers or principals outside Africa earn $40,000 more than a principal in Africa. 

The African investment salary gap can be explained by the size of assets under management (AUM) by African funds, with the average firm managing around $87.5 million for private equity (PE) funds. Most venture capital (VC) funds manage only $50 million, while impact investment funds manage $58 million. This pales compared to global counterparts like Asia, where the average VC fund size is $324 million.

“This report brings much-needed transparency to compensation, strengthening the industry for both emerging and established investors,” Mark Kleyner, the co-CEO of Dream VC, told TechCabal about the report, which pulled data from 209 participants across 28 African countries.

Investment firms pay salaries and other operating costs out of fund management fees. Venture capital firms, which account for two-thirds of the firms sampled, charge a 2% annual management fee on the fund size, leaving 80% of the capital for deployment. If a VC firm raises a $25 million fund, it earns $5 million in management fees over a typical 10-year fund cycle.

With the median AUM by African investment firms at $50 million, most firms operate with a $1 million annual operating budget, directly causing the salary gap. This disparity risks triggering a brain drain, as investment professionals seek better-paying opportunities abroad, further shrinking the pool of experienced talent in Africa. 

African funds may need to align compensation more closely with global benchmarks to retain leadership and expertise, especially as the ecosystem is younger than more mature markets and needs more experienced professionals. This may be possible in coming years as Africa’s ecosystem continues growing. In 2017, fifteen firms were founded for the first time; by 2022, that number had grown to 25. 

Besides the young firms, Africa’s investment sector is also dominated by young professionals, with 73% under 34 and 42% aged 25–29, reflecting an industry that is packed with emerging talent. Entry-level roles like Analysts (19%) and Associates (24%) are prevalent, while senior positions such as Principals (6%) and Directors (4%) are fewer. This imbalance shows the need for more African fund managers to strengthen and expand the ecosystem.

Given how young the average professional is, it’s not surprising that over half of investment professionals hold bachelor’s degrees, while 40% have master’s degrees, including 15% with MBAs. Only 39% of professionals have studied abroad, highlighting the demand for local market knowledge—a competitive edge in Africa’s cross-border investment landscape.

Carry—an investor’s share of investment profits—remains elusive for most professionals in Africa’s investment sector. Only senior roles like principals and portfolio managers receive meaningful equity, with a maximum carry of 10%, though the average remains low at 0.016% for principals. This contrasts with global norms, where carry is a key retention tool. 

Data around compensation among African employers and employees remain scarce, and with the report, the research team “sought to create a benchmarking study that could support salary transparency and help fund managers understand industry norms for compensation.”. 

The data, Kleyner said, would also help firms “professionalise Africa’s investment landscape”—a necessity as global capital flows into the continent’s tech hubs like Lagos, Nairobi, and Accra. 

You can read the full report for more context on the African investment salary gap here. 

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Kenyan digital lender Whitepath fined $2,000 for unlawful data use in second privacy violation

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Kenya’s Office of the Data Protection Commissioner (ODPC)  has fined digital lender Whitepath KES 250,000 ($2,000) for violating data privacy laws. Court records show that the regulator found that Whitepath, which operates Instarcash and Zuricash loan apps, listed an individual as a guarantor without their consent and subjected them to debt collection calls after the borrower defaulted. 

The fine—the company’s second in two years—adds to growing regulatory pressure on Kenyan digital lenders, who are scrutinized for aggressive debt collection tactics and mishandling customer data.

According to court documents seen by TechCabal, Dennis Caleb Owuor received an unexpected debt collection call from a Whitepath representative in November 2024. The caller claimed Owuor was listed as a guarantor for a defaulting borrower, despite Owuor having no prior agreement to such an arrangement. When he questioned the claim, the caller failed to provide any justification but continued to demand repayment. Despite Owuor’s instructions to stop, the calls persisted, prompting him to escalate the matter to the ODPC, alleging illegal privacy breaches and harassment.

Whitepath failed to respond to the regulator’s inquiries, but  Kenya’s Data Protection Act allows enforcement regardless. The ODPC ruled that Whitepath had no legal basis to process the complainant’s data, as listing someone as a guarantor requires explicit consent— which was never obtained. The company also violated data protection laws by failing to notify them that their data was being used.

In addition to the fine, the regulator directed Whitepath to erase the complainant’s data and provide proof of compliance. 

This is not Whitepath’s first data privacy violation. In April 2023, the ODPC fined the lender KES 5 million ($39,000) after nearly 150 complaints alleging unauthorised access to borrowers’ contact lists and sending unsolicited messages. The penalty came after Whitepath ignored an earlier enforcement notice. 

Whitepath did not immediately respond to a request for comment. 

The case highlights ongoing regulatory action against digital lenders using unethical data practices, including extracting contact details from borrowers’ phones, sharing debtor information publicly, and employing aggressive collection tactics.

While enforcement is increasing, concerns remain over whether current penalties are sufficient. A KES 250,000 ($2000) penalty may not significantly deter a firm that disregarded a KES 5 million fine in 2023. Stronger regulatory measures, including larger fines and criminal liability for repeat offenders, may be required to ensure compliance and protect consumer rights.

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After P2P trading, hybrid finance apps are taking off in Nigeria’s crypto space

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As cryptocurrency adoption grows in Nigeria, founders are building hybrid finance apps to simplify access to crypto. These hybrid apps reduce the education barrier and overwhelming user experience flows common in crypto trading apps, allowing users to interact with cryptocurrency as easily as they do with fiat money on their traditional mobile banking apps.

Hybrid finance apps integrate traditional finance (TradFi) and decentralised finance (DeFi) features that allow users to buy, sell, or convert crypto to Naira without the need for an escrow or peer-to-peer (P2P) trading. Since mid-2023, startups like Taja, Palremit, Prestmit, Azasend, and Pandar have sprung up to create these hybrid solutions to enable more Nigerians to take part in the crypto sector. At least 20 such startups currently operate this hybrid finance model in Nigeria.

“I’ve only used Bybit when I had small amounts of Dogecoin and Bitcoin in my wallets,” said David Ayankoso, a non-frequent crypto user based in Lagos. “I find the process of exchanging crypto on Bybit to be complicated. The app is overloaded and not as simple as some other platforms. So instead, I buy Solana or Bitcoin elsewhere [on hybrid finance apps] and transfer it to my Phantom wallet to buy or trade random altcoins.”

Nigeria is one of the hotspots for crypto adoption globally, yet that high transaction value is only spread among a few knowledgeable people in the Web3 space. Sending and receiving crypto doesn’t quite work like fiat currencies in traditional banks. With one wrong click, funds are prone to losses, and bank accounts to freezes, making many Nigerians averse to digital assets.

The pitches of these hybrid finance startups often go like this: if you’re not familiar with the crypto P2P trading setup, use a hybrid finance app to avoid overwhelming yourself with the process of dealing with an escrow—or worse, getting scammed. Users simply open an account, gain access to a virtual account (a service hybrid finance apps provide through partnerships with payment processors), fund the account, and buy crypto directly from the app.

“Founders who build these apps see an opportunity to take advantage of a ‘grassroot movement’,” said Ayo Adewuyi, head of product at Prestmit, who claims the startup has over 700,000 users, thanks to additional features like gift card trading which attracts users from several countries. “For example, one of the reasons Patricia [one of the earliest to use this model] was an important crypto hybrid app was because people saw it as a Nigerian brand that wanted to localise crypto. Founders saw this and tapped into it.”

The clampdown on P2P trading and the strict regulatory oversight on big crypto exchanges paved a way for hybrid apps to thrive, said Adewuyi. He claimed Prestmit’s users grew significantly after large crypto exchanges deprioritised the Nigerian market.

While hybrid finance apps are not new, there is a growing focus on integrating crypto payment options into traditional finance systems. Beyond buying crypto for investment holdings, these apps let users manage digital assets like local currencies. They can pay bills, buy airtime and data, trade gift cards, send crypto directly to others through app tags, and pay for online services with crypto. Hybrid finance apps are also important to freelancers who earn in crypto, allowing them to convert to their local currency without relying on the P2P space.

Unlike building a crypto trading app, for example, operating a hybrid finance model is a much simpler setup. These startups provide three key things: the platform (proprietary technology like an app or a web-app), virtual accounts for user account management, and crypto liquidity.

Imagine walking into a mom-and-pop shop in your neighbourhood. With cash in hand—your local currency—you ask the storekeeper to sell you a crypto asset, say Bitcoin. The storekeeper collects your money, and two things could happen: either they process your order as the counterparty because they have the means, or they use a back-door service to obtain the required amount of crypto to sell to you. Either way, the hybrid app remains the counterparty to every trade. Most of these apps rely on crypto infrastructure providers to enable users to buy and sell crypto, while some outsource liquidity to over-the-counter (OTC) traders and institutions that provide bulk crypto liquidity.

“Liquidity is not manufactured out of thin air; liquidity providers, in some cases, are the P2P guys just that in this case, they go through a much more rigorous KYC process because startups want to be sure that the funds they are receiving are not illegal,” said Adewuyi.

The result of this outsourced liquidity often means that users have to play by the rules of the providers. Most liquidity providers cap the minimum amount of crypto users can buy or sell, which can be a bad experience for people buying or exchanging small amounts. For example, Luno, which can be considered a hybrid startup, allows users to offload their Bitcoin liquidity from 0.000025 BTC ($2.03), which means users cannot sell or off-ramp their coins below this amount. Some apps set the minimum crypto sell-off amount higher.

Since hybrid finance apps primarily make money from transaction fees, the costs are higher compared to trading platforms. Users get charged a percentage of their deposits on some of these platforms, and when they try to exchange, they do so at a higher, marked-up rate than the official exchange rate. In P2P trading apps, where liquidity is provided by traders who are directly responsible for their revenue, competition drives down prices.

“A lot of people are not interested in the complex part of crypto, and hybrid apps come in here. They provide the liquidity that users need at a specific rate, and if you’re fine with it, you go through with the transaction,” said Adewuyi.

Yet, hybrid finance apps pitch their tent on the value they provide—insurance from the risk factor found in trading apps—while extracting a few dollars in charges from customers. In the grand scheme of things, many of them do not operate as crypto exchanges, eliminating token listing fees as a possible revenue source.

Despite their dual nature, most so-called hybrid finance apps tilt more toward their traditional finance side than crypto, qualifying them more as fintechs than crypto startups. With this distinction, they are more bound by fintech rules than by the rules governing crypto startups in Nigeria’s evolving regulatory structure.

The broader trend has seen TradFi platforms integrate DeFi solutions into their products in attempts to find a balance. Uganda’s Eversend and Nigeria’s Grey, two traditional cross-border fintechs, have integrated stablecoin payments into their apps to appeal to Web3 freelancers who earn money in digital assets.

Hybrid finance apps are products of founders’ conviction that onboarding users into the utility side of crypto—as everyday money—is the future-forward way digital assets are developing. It also suggests that P2P, despite its faults, has no shortage of admirers who make crypto an insider affair. These apps are responses of founders for all those who feel left out.

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