MFS Africa, the pan-African payments gateway which connects wallets across different mobile money platforms through its API, has acquired Beyonic, a digital payments services provider for enterprises which operates in Ghana, Uganda, Tanzania, Kenya and Rwanda.
As part of the acquisition, MFS Africa will absorb Beyonic’s entire team while Luke Kyohere, CEO of Beyonic, will join MFS Africa’s leadership team. MFS Africa will also offer Beyonic’s enterprise-focused service as a product under its wider brand. The acquisition, terms of which are undisclosed, remains subject to regulatory approval by the Fair Competition Commission in Tanzania.
Since being founded in 2009, Johannesburg-based MFS Africa has built a “network of networks” by enabling interoperability between 200 million mobile money wallets across different platforms in 34 markets on the continent, says Dare Okoudjou, MFS Africa founder and CEO. After partnering with banks and remittances companies looking to plug into its network, Okoudjou says the company also received interest from SMEs and enterprises, including tech companies on the continent, looking to integrate cross-border, mobile money payments.
“We thought why not look for someone who’s already solving for this and has got it right in a few markets, then we can use our platform to take a pan-African position and expand it across Africa—and Beyonic is exactly that,” Okoudjou, tells Quartz Africa. “Initially, we want to make sure that our theory holds for the five markets that Beyonic is currently in. If our assumptions are ticking off, then we will go on a rapid expansion across Africa.”
Beyonic had previously raised an undisclosed seed round amount from US start-up accelerator TechStars in 2016. For its part, MFS Africa raised $14 million in a 2018 Series B round led by LUN Partners Group, a Shanghai-based VC with participation from existing investor Goodwell Investments while US-based Equator Capital Partners and UK-based FSD Africa joined the round as new investors.
The acquisition represents a snapshot of the current start-up landscape across the continent. With changing macroeconomics due to the Covid-19 pandemic, bigger start-ups aiming to widen their core offerings and consolidate their positions can do so by acquiring smaller, complementary players.
Even though Covid-19 is expected to trigger an economic crunch, it could be a boon for fintech players particularly by making governments even more receptive of financial technology solutions to reduce the need for in-person, transactions and easier distribution of relief funds.
Some recent evidence of government-led moves suggests that position holds some merit: the Ethiopian government opened up its mobile money market to new players in April while Togo has launched a digital cash transfer program to send funds to citizens using mobile money. (