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    Innovation Village | Technology, Product Reviews, Business
    You are at:Home»Fintech»African Fintech Firm OPay Reportedly Raising $400M at $1.5B valuation
    OPay

    African Fintech Firm OPay Reportedly Raising $400M at $1.5B valuation

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    By AdeO on May 28, 2021 Fintech, Funding, Payments, Venture Capital

    OPay, the Chinese-backed and Africa-focused fintech platform is in talks to raise up to $400 million according to a report by The Information. The fundraising will be coming two years after OPay announced two funding rounds in 2019 — $50 million in June and $120 million Series B in November.

    The $170 million raised so far comes from mainly Chinese investors who, over the past few years, have begun to bet big on Africa. Some of them include SoftBank, Sequoia Capital China, IDG Capital, SoftBank Ventures Asia, GSR Ventures, Source Code Capital.

    In 2018, Opera popularly known for its internet search engine and browser launched the OPay mobile money platform in Lagos. It didn’t take long for the company to start expanding aggressively within the city using ORide, a now-defunct ride-hailing service as an entry point to the array of services it wanted to offer.

    Opera’s OPay discontinues ORide, OCar, OExpress businesses in Nigeria

    The company has tested a number of verticals — OBus, a bus-booking platform (also defunct); OExpress, a logistics delivery service; OTrade, a B2B e-commerce platform; OFood, a food delivery service, among others.

    While none of these services has significantly scaled, OPay’s fintech and mobile money arm (which is its main play) is thriving. This year, its parent company Opera reported that OPay’s monthly transactions grew 4.5x last year to over $2 billion in December. OPay also claims to process about 80% of bank transfers among mobile money operators in Nigeria as well as 20% of the country’s non-merchant point of sales transactions.

    Last year, the company also said it acquired an international money transfer license with a partnership with WorldRemit also in the works.

    It’s quite surprising that none of OPay’s plans to expand to South Africa and Kenya (countries it expressed interest in during its Series B) has come to fruition despite its large raises.

    The company blamed the pandemic for these shortcomings. However, earlier this year the country set up shop in North Africa by expanding to Egypt.

    This next raise which might be a Series C will be instrumental in the company’s quest for expansion, both geographically and in product offerings. Per The Information, OPay’s valuation will increase to about $1.5 billion, three times its worth in 2019.

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