It was December 2013: Oluwatomisin Ashimolowo had just arrived in Kenya as an 18-year-old preparing to commence his…It was December 2013: Oluwatomisin Ashimolowo had just arrived in Kenya as an 18-year-old preparing to commence his…

How Betaling turned a student FX crisis in Kenya into an African cross-border payments business

2026/04/25 02:36
6 min read
For feedback or concerns regarding this content, please contact us at crypto.news@mexc.com

It was December 2013: Oluwatomisin Ashimolowo had just arrived in Kenya as an 18-year-old preparing to commence his studies in the university in January 2014. Within  one year of studies, a basic expectation collapsed: his parents in Nigeria could not wire his tuition fees.

What should have been routine, paying school fees, became a logistical dead end. ATM withdrawal limits back home made it difficult for families to access cash. International transfers were either delayed for weeks or blocked outright. For Nigerian students in Kenya at the time, the financial system had quietly stopped working.

Desperation forces innovation. Initially, the students crowdsourced liquidity by asking inbound travellers from Lagos to carry US dollars in cash. Ashimolowo, however, spotted a more sustainable arbitrage opportunity. He mapped the pay cycles of expatriates working in multinational corporations who urgently needed Naira. By exchanging their dollars for local currency, he built a bespoke, trust-based remittance pipeline. It was a scrappy, WhatsApp-and-spreadsheet operation; crucially, it worked.

What began as an undergraduate’s survival tactic has matured into Betaling, a formidable infrastructure player in Africa’s fragmented cross-border payments sector. Today, the platform settles millions in volume, resolving deep liquidity bottlenecks for multinationals, regional importers, and local SMEs. The fintech origin story serves as a stark reminder of an uncomfortable truth regarding the African payment ecosystem: the most resilient settlement networks are rarely engineered from theoretical models imported from London or Silicon Valley. They are forged by founders who have intimately lived the friction.

Before Betaling evolved into a formalised B2B payments engine, it operated as a vital side channel whilst Ashimolowo cut his teeth in the corporate sector. His early observations of legacy banking provided a foundational thesis on customer retention and market reality.

When Ecobank launched its RapidTransfer service, it briefly appeared to solve the students’ liquidity crisis. The relief, however, was fleeting. The rates proved commercially unviable. Users completed one transaction and immediately returned to Ashimolowo’s informal desk.

How Betaling turned a student FX crisis in Kenya into an African cross-border payments businessOluwatomisin Ashimolowo, co-founder and CEO of Betaling

That incident cemented his core business philosophy. “Consistency in pricing beats competitive entry pricing every time,” Ashimolowo notes. He watched successive waves of African fintechs launch with aggressively subsidised rates to artificially inflate user acquisition. The inevitable price hikes destroyed the trust they had bought. The entire premise of building financial technology to optimise speed and cost evaporates the moment operators unilaterally change the terms.

While running his exchange network, Ashimolowo immersed himself in the mechanics of SME finance. He joined one of Kenya’s first mobile financing companies, issuing credit for digital devices to blue-collar workers and small businesses. He subsequently moved into broader SME lending, financing local purchase orders to keep enterprises operational. By 2022, a move to London for a master’s degree led him to Intuit QuickBooks, where he designed partnerships empowering SMEs with robust financial management tools.

This dual life, operating a cross-border liquidity network whilst navigating the corporate machinery of lending, highlighted a universal truth. Capital flow is the absolute lifeblood of emerging market enterprises.

Betaling is formalising the architecture of trust

By 2019, the macroeconomic landscape was shifting. Betaling’s user base mutated. The platform ceased being a conduit for tuition fees; commercial entities had discovered the network. Importers in Kenya and Ghana were utilising the service to settle with suppliers and fund cross-continental operations. The marginal profit generated as students had morphed into verifiable proof of a massive, underserved B2B market.

Recognising the necessity to scale, Ashimolowo brought in Emmanuel Abiodun Oladepo. Oladepo had been independently constructing his parallel settlement network. In 2020, they officially incorporated as Betaling Africa. Incorporation, Ashimolowo insists, was never about legitimacy; it was about moving from solving a personal pain point to addressing a multi-billion-dollar market failure.

The final piece of the founding triad was Seye Obadeyi, an industry veteran who understood the opaque plumbing of traditional banking. Obadeyi knew exactly where legacy institutions failed and how Betaling could route around those blockages.

How Betaling turned a student FX crisis in Kenya into an African cross-border payments businessOluwatomisin Ashimolowo, co-founder and CEO of Betaling

As transaction volumes swelled past the £100,000 monthly mark, eventually processing millions in bootstrapped volume, the founders realised their informal networks were reaching their operational ceiling. Scale forced structural upgrades. They integrated enterprise-grade CRM systems to manage institutional client relationships. They established direct connections with over-the-counter (OTC) trading desks. Most critically, they integrated stablecoins to facilitate instantaneous, borderless settlements across their supported corridors.

Yet, they remained highly disciplined, avoiding the temptation to overbuild. They adopted enterprise-grade infrastructure only when transaction volume strictly demanded it, transitioning methodically from students to SMEs and eventually to regional importers and multinational corporations.

The reality of scaling African fintech

The African continent frequently serves as a testing ground for foreign business models. Ashimolowo is sharply critical of the tendency to force-fit external playbooks into highly nuanced markets like Lagos or Nairobi.

The assumption that regulatory fragmentation is the primary hurdle misses the point entirely. The real bottleneck is a fundamental misunderstanding of local market dynamics. Pricing strategies engineered in European tech hubs routinely fail across Africa. The hyper-focus on transaction speed often matters less to a merchant than the reliability, certainty, and underlying cost of moving funds through complex channels.

Betaling’s upward trajectory bypassed venture capital vanity metrics. The team maintained strict honesty regarding margins and scaled strictly in tandem with verifiable commercial demand. Execution remained paramount. Doing exactly what was promised, maintaining static pricing, and ensuring settlement deadlines never slipped formed the bedrock of their early growth.

How Betaling turned a student FX crisis in Kenya into an African cross-border payments businessOluwatomisin Ashimolowo, co-founder and CEO of Betaling

Today, Betaling operates at an institutional level. The firm collaborates directly with liquidity providers, regional fintechs, and multinational companies navigating the dense complexities of multi-country payroll and supplier settlements. They tackle the core friction choking the continent’s commercial growth: the devastating loss of capital to exorbitant fees and prolonged settlement times via offshore intermediary banks.

Despite matching settlement needs directly within the Betaling Treasury Network and reducing correspondent banking dependence, the operational ethos remains remarkably unchanged from the early days in Nairobi.

For aspiring operators eyeing emerging markets, Ashimolowo’s advice is brutally pragmatic. The greatest opportunities in African fintech do not lie in the next algorithmic breakthrough. They reside with the companies willing to execute the unglamorous, painstaking work of understanding commercial friction and delivering a solution with absolute consistency.

Market Opportunity
CROSS Logo
CROSS Price(CROSS)
$0.13007
$0.13007$0.13007
+0.47%
USD
CROSS (CROSS) Live Price Chart
Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact crypto.news@mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

Iran war disrupts oil supply, crude hits $90 by June draws interest

Iran war disrupts oil supply, crude hits $90 by June draws interest

The post Iran war disrupts oil supply, crude hits $90 by June draws interest appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Egypt’s economic outlook has been slightly trimmed
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2026/04/26 14:25
US-Iran tensions rise as decapitation strike prediction complicates ceasefire

US-Iran tensions rise as decapitation strike prediction complicates ceasefire

The post US-Iran tensions rise as decapitation strike prediction complicates ceasefire appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Lt. Col. Anthony Aguilar’s prediction
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2026/04/26 13:53
Franklin Templeton CEO Dismisses 50bps Rate Cut Ahead FOMC

Franklin Templeton CEO Dismisses 50bps Rate Cut Ahead FOMC

The post Franklin Templeton CEO Dismisses 50bps Rate Cut Ahead FOMC appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Franklin Templeton CEO Jenny Johnson has weighed in on whether the Federal Reserve should make a 25 basis points (bps) Fed rate cut or 50 bps cut. This comes ahead of the Fed decision today at today’s FOMC meeting, with the market pricing in a 25 bps cut. Bitcoin and the broader crypto market are currently trading flat ahead of the rate cut decision. Franklin Templeton CEO Weighs In On Potential FOMC Decision In a CNBC interview, Jenny Johnson said that she expects the Fed to make a 25 bps cut today instead of a 50 bps cut. She acknowledged the jobs data, which suggested that the labor market is weakening. However, she noted that this data is backward-looking, indicating that it doesn’t show the current state of the economy. She alluded to the wage growth, which she remarked is an indication of a robust labor market. She added that retail sales are up and that consumers are still spending, despite inflation being sticky at 3%, which makes a case for why the FOMC should opt against a 50-basis-point Fed rate cut. In line with this, the Franklin Templeton CEO said that she would go with a 25 bps rate cut if she were Jerome Powell. She remarked that the Fed still has the October and December FOMC meetings to make further cuts if the incoming data warrants it. Johnson also asserted that the data show a robust economy. However, she noted that there can’t be an argument for no Fed rate cut since Powell already signaled at Jackson Hole that they were likely to lower interest rates at this meeting due to concerns over a weakening labor market. Notably, her comment comes as experts argue for both sides on why the Fed should make a 25 bps cut or…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 00:36

Roll the Dice & Win Up to 1 BTC

Roll the Dice & Win Up to 1 BTCRoll the Dice & Win Up to 1 BTC

Invite friends & share 500,000 USDT!