Every morning, millions of Nigerians wake up and reach for their phones. They pay for breakfast with a…Every morning, millions of Nigerians wake up and reach for their phones. They pay for breakfast with a…

Who manages payment transaction history of Nigerians?

2025/12/04 01:30

Every morning, millions of Nigerians wake up and reach for their phones. They pay for breakfast with a mobile transfer, settle bills through their banking apps, and send money to family members across the country. By the time the sun sets, they’ve collectively moved over ₦1.07 quadrillion through digital channels in 2024 alone, a 79.6% increase from the previous year.

But here’s what most don’t realise. Every tap, every transfer, every transaction leaves a trail. And increasingly, those trails lead straight into foreign hands.

Nigeria’s digital payments revolution is indeed a reality. With 7.9 billion real-time transactions in 2024, Nigeria leads Africa and ranks among global digital payment powerhouses like India, Brazil, and China.

PoS terminals now number nearly 3 million, processing ₦85.9 trillion in the first half of 2024 alone. The numbers tell a story of transformation. From a cash-dominated economy to one where digital transactions are becoming the norm.

NIP unpacked: The payments engine powering Nigeria

But beneath this success story lies a troubling paradox. As Nigeria builds its digital future, it’s simultaneously surrendering the keys to its economic intelligence.

The $200 million question

In October 2020, when Stripe announced its acquisition of Paystack for over $200 million, Nigeria celebrated. It was the largest startup acquisition to date from Nigeria, validation that Nigerian innovation could compete globally. Paystack’s co-founder, Shola Akinlade, became a symbol of what was possible.

What got less attention was what Stripe actually bought. Not just technology or market share, but something far more valuable: access to the financial DNA of Africa’s largest economy.

By the time of acquisition, Paystack was already processing more than half of all online transactions in Nigeria. Every purchase, every subscription payment, and every digital transaction flowing through Paystack’s systems generates data. This is data about consumer behaviour, business performance, economic trends, and spending patterns.

Co-founders of Paystack: Shola Akinlade and Ezra OlubiCo-founders of Paystack: Shola Akinlade and Ezra Olubi…

Today, that data flows to Stripe’s servers. And with it go insights that could tell you which Nigerian businesses are thriving, which sectors are contracting, and what economic shifts are coming, before they show up in official statistics.

Paystack isn’t alone. Look deeper into Nigeria’s payment infrastructure, and a pattern emerges. Interswitch, Nigeria’s pioneering payment processor, founded in 2002, had a majority stake acquired by London-based Helios Investment Partners in 2010. Despite Visa’s subsequent $200 million investment in 2019, Helios still owns over 52% of the company.

These aren’t just investments. They’re strategic positions in the command centres of Nigeria’s financial system. When you withdraw cash from an ATM, pay with a Verve card, or use Quickteller, you’re touching Interswitch infrastructure. And the data from those touches? It belongs to whoever controls the company.

The irony is sharp. Nigeria processed ₦825.5 trillion through internet transactions in the first half of 2024, yet the companies processing these transactions answer to foreign shareholders and boards thousands of miles away.

Data knows what we don’t…

Here’s what payment data can reveal that traditional economic indicators cannot:

When transaction values at electronics retailers spike in specific neighbourhoods, it predicts consumer confidence before any survey captures it. When restaurant payments decline while grocery transactions rise, it signals economic anxiety before unemployment numbers reflect it. When cross-border payment patterns shift, it forecasts trade dynamics before customs data confirms it.

This is real-time economic intelligence. And right now, the entities with the clearest view of Nigeria’s economic pulse are sitting in Silicon Valley boardrooms and London investment offices.

The Central Bank of Nigeria publishes aggregate statistics, including total transaction volumes, broad categories, and quarterly summaries. But while CBN reports that NIP transactions reached ₦476.89 trillion in the first half of 2024, it possibly doesn’t know which specific merchants are growing fastest, what products Nigerians are buying more of, or how spending patterns differ across cities and demographics.

The payment processors know. Nigeria probably doesn’t.

Interestingly, Nigeria isn’t blind to this issue. The Nigeria Data Protection Commission now classifies payment gateway service providers as Data Controllers of Major Importance, requiring them to register and pay ₦250,000 in fees.

But registration isn’t the same as access. Compliance isn’t the same as control. A foreign-owned company can file all the right paperwork while its parent company extracts strategic intelligence that Nigeria’s own policymakers never see.

Read also: “We found out that some fintechs operate from China”- Lawmakers flag gaps in Nigeria’s fintech regulation

Compare this to other emerging markets. India built its Unified Payments Interface (UPI) as a government-led infrastructure, ensuring that payment data serves national interests. China mandates data localisation for payment processors. Even Kenya structured M-Pesa in ways that kept strategic control within reach.

Nigeria took a different path: build regulatory frameworks, attract foreign investment, and hope compliance equals sovereignty. But you can’t regulate your way to data sovereignty when you don’t own the infrastructure generating the data.

This isn’t about xenophobia or rejecting foreign investment. Nigeria needs capital, expertise, and technology transfer. The question is whether we’re trading short-term gains for long-term strategic vulnerability.

CBN retains interest rate at 27.5%, encourages banks to make more cash available at ATMsCentral Bank Governor, Olayemi Cardoso

Consider what Nigeria loses:

Economic foresight: While foreign investors see trends emerging in real-time data, Nigerian policymakers wait for quarterly reports that are outdated before they’re published.

Competitive advantage: When international companies have better visibility into Nigerian market dynamics than Nigerian companies do, who do you think wins?

Strategic autonomy: In an age where data drives decisions, not controlling your economic data means not fully controlling your economic destiny.

Nigeria’s digital payments market is projected to reach $154.50 billion by 2029. Every naira of that will generate data. The question is: who will own the insights?

A way forward?

The solution isn’t to reverse course or reject foreign participation. It’s to be smarter about the terms of engagement. Other countries require data-sharing agreements that give regulators access to real-time, granular insights. They mandate local data storage. They build public infrastructure that competes with private platforms.

Nigeria could require payment processors to share aggregated, anonymised insights with the Central Bank. It could invest in its own payment infrastructure that serves as both competition and insurance. It could make data sovereignty a condition for licensing, not an afterthought.

The digital payment revolution is Nigeria’s to win. But right now, we’re celebrating the growth while handing over the intelligence. We’re building the future while mortgaging the insights that should guide it.

As cash payments are projected to decline by 32% by 2030, the question becomes more urgent: In a cashless Nigeria, who will own the trails that reveal where we’ve been and predict where we’re going?

The transactions are ours. But the insights? Those are leaving the country with every digital payment we make.

Sorumluluk Reddi: Bu sitede yeniden yayınlanan makaleler, halka açık platformlardan alınmıştır ve yalnızca bilgilendirme amaçlıdır. MEXC'nin görüşlerini yansıtmayabilir. Tüm hakları telif sahiplerine aittir. Herhangi bir içeriğin üçüncü taraf haklarını ihlal ettiğini düşünüyorsanız, kaldırılması için lütfen service@support.mexc.com ile iletişime geçin. MEXC, içeriğin doğruluğu, eksiksizliği veya güncelliği konusunda hiçbir garanti vermez ve sağlanan bilgilere dayalı olarak alınan herhangi bir eylemden sorumlu değildir. İçerik, finansal, yasal veya diğer profesyonel tavsiye niteliğinde değildir ve MEXC tarafından bir tavsiye veya onay olarak değerlendirilmemelidir.

Ayrıca Şunları da Beğenebilirsiniz

Bitcoin ETF Investors React to Fed’s Decision

Bitcoin ETF Investors React to Fed’s Decision

The post Bitcoin ETF Investors React to Fed’s Decision appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. In a surprise move, spot Bitcoin ETFs experienced their first significant daily outflows in over a week, following the Federal Reserve’s adjusted policy outlook. This shift reflects the market’s readiness to respond to any hint of change on the regulatory landscape, as well as its sensitivity to central bank cues. Continue Reading:Bitcoin ETF Investors React to Fed’s Decision Source: https://en.bitcoinhaber.net/bitcoin-etf-investors-react-to-feds-decision
Paylaş
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 18:51
US Senators Introduce SAFE Crypto Act to Target Rising Crypto Scams

US Senators Introduce SAFE Crypto Act to Target Rising Crypto Scams

The post US Senators Introduce SAFE Crypto Act to Target Rising Crypto Scams appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News Crypto scams are getting faster, smarter and
Paylaş
CoinPedia2025/12/17 18:33
From Idea to App Store: The Complete Guide to Mobile App Development in Saudi Arabia

From Idea to App Store: The Complete Guide to Mobile App Development in Saudi Arabia

Saudi Arabia is at the forefront of digital transformation. With Vision 2030 driving innovation and a rapidly growing population of tech-savvy users, mobile apps have become a core driver of business growth in the Kingdom. From e-commerce and fintech to healthcare, logistics, and on-demand services, Saudi businesses are embracing mobile apps to connect with customers and scale faster. But how do you take a mobile app idea and turn it into a successful launch on the App Store or Google Play? This guide breaks down the complete mobile app development process in Saudi Arabia — step by step. Step 1: Validate Your App Idea for the Saudi Market Before you start building, ask: What problem does my app solve for Saudi users? Is there a cultural or market gap my app can fill? How do local competitors approach the same challenge? For example, apps related to digital payments, e-learning, delivery services, and healthcare are in high demand across Saudi Arabia. Conducting market research and aligning your app idea with local user behavior is critical. Step 2: Plan Features with Local Needs in Mind Your app should start with an MVP (Minimum Viable Product) — a core version that solves the main problem. Later, you can scale with advanced features. In Saudi Arabia, consider adding: Arabic language support (essential for user adoption) Integration with local payment gateways like STC Pay, Mada, or Apple Pay Regulatory compliance (especially for fintech and health apps) Localization for user preferences (Hijri calendar, cultural UI elements) Step 3: Select the Right Development Approach You can choose: Native Apps (Swift for iOS, Kotlin for Android) — Great for scalability and performance. Cross-Platform Apps (Flutter, React Native) — Cost-effective for startups targeting both iOS and Android simultaneously. Hybrid Apps — Suitable for simpler apps with limited features. For Saudi startups and enterprises, cross-platform development is often preferred to reach a wider audience quickly and efficiently. Step 4: Design With a Local Touch The design must balance global usability standards with local cultural relevance. UI (User Interface): Clean, modern visuals that align with Saudi branding. UX (User Experience): Simple navigation, clear Arabic text support, and intuitive flows. Wireframing & Prototyping: Test early with Saudi users to ensure adoption. A user-friendly design is one of the top reasons apps succeed in the Kingdom’s competitive market. Step 5: Develop Your Mobile App Once the design is ready, the coding begins. Saudi app development companies often follow Agile methodology, ensuring flexibility and faster delivery. Front-End Development: Interface and user interactions. Back-End Development: Databases, servers, and APIs. Integration: Secure connections between front-end and back-end. Strong collaboration between developers, designers, and business analysts ensures your app aligns with Saudi market needs. Step 6: Testing Across Devices and Networks Saudi users rely on different devices and network speeds. That’s why rigorous testing is critical: Functionality Testing: Features work as expected. Performance Testing: The app runs smoothly on both 4G and 5G networks. Localization Testing: Arabic text displays correctly, without alignment issues. Security Testing: Data protection compliance with Saudi cybersecurity standards. Step 7: App Store & Google Play Launch in Saudi Arabia To publish your app: Apple App Store (iOS): Requires an Apple Developer account and strict guideline compliance. Google Play Store (Android): Faster approval but still requires detailed app info. You’ll also need metadata in both English and Arabic — titles, descriptions, and screenshots — to maximize visibility among Saudi users. Step 8: Market Your App in Saudi Arabia Launching an app is only the beginning. You need a marketing strategy tailored to the Kingdom: App Store Optimization (ASO): Use Arabic and English keywords. Social Media Campaigns: Leverage platforms like Snapchat, Twitter (X), and Instagram, which are highly popular in Saudi Arabia. Influencer Marketing: Collaborate with Saudi influencers for early traction. Paid Ads: Google Ads and Saudi-focused Facebook/Instagram ads. Partnerships: Collaborate with local businesses to reach a wider audience. Step 9: Gather Feedback and Optimize Once your app is live, monitor: User reviews on app stores Analytics on engagement, retention, and churn rates Suggestions from Saudi users for culturally relevant features Continuous updates and improvements are vital to stay competitive. Step 10: Scale With Advanced Features Once your MVP gains traction, you can expand with advanced features such as: AI and machine learning for personalization Blockchain-based payments for fintech apps AR/VR features for retail and gaming apps IoT integration for smart home and mobility solutions Saudi Arabia’s digital ecosystem is growing rapidly — apps that adapt quickly will thrive. Conclusion Mobile app development in Saudi Arabia is not just about building an app — it’s about aligning with Vision 2030, cultural needs, and user expectations. By following a clear process — from idea validation to launch and beyond — you can transform your concept into a profitable digital product. Whether you’re a startup or an enterprise in Saudi Arabia, the opportunity is massive. With the right strategy, you can move from idea to App Store and create an app that truly resonates with Saudi users. From Idea to App Store: The Complete Guide to Mobile App Development in Saudi Arabia was originally published in Coinmonks on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story
Paylaş
Medium2025/09/18 14:46