Nigerian fintech startup, Anchor has come out of stealth with the announcement of its $1 million pre-seed funding.
The startup, founded by Segun Adeyemi, Olamide Sobowale, and
Gbekeloluwa Olufotebi, helps businesses provide services such as payments, savings,
and card issuance, among others.
Investors in the round include Y Combinator, Byld Ventures,
Luno Expeditions, Niche Capital, Mountain Peak Capital, and Emmanuel Okeleji,
Seamless HR CEO.
In 2015, the emergence of fintechs such as Flutterwave and Paystack changed the game for online businesses in Africa by making it easier to integrate payments into customer interfaces without building those features from the ground up or merging with tacky foreign software.
Amplify was another payment platform that launched during
that period. However, it differentiated itself by committing to payments on
social media platforms, which Nigerian digital bank Carbon was interested in
when it acquired the startup in 2019.
At the time, the startup’s co-founder and CEO, Segun
Adeyemi, said that he was taking a break and would “likely start another
company” later. While he worked as a Nigeria country manager for JUMO, a South
African fintech that offers credit infrastructure to large mobile money
operators across Africa, Adeyemi quit last year to launch Anchor, another
fintech where he is also chief executive, this February. The new company is
akin to Amplify in terms of infrastructural play; however, it provides financial
features instead of payment ones. Adeyemi launched the fintech with Olamide
Sobowale and Gbekeloluwa Olufotebi.
“We’re now seeing a new development where businesses want to
offer different products and financial services beyond just payments,” Adeyemi told
TechCrunch over a call. “We strongly believe that the way is not just by
latching banking-as-a-service on a payments platform, but there has to be
proper banking as a service platform built with the right infrastructure and
go-to-market strategy. That’s the problem we decided to solve as a team,
basically the full end-to-end infrastructure for startups to be able to build,
embed and launch financial services.”
Banking-as-a-service (BaaS) platforms are one of the hottest
segments in the global fintech space, with upstarts like Unit and Rapyd hitting
unicorn valuations and older startups such as Stripe spinning off similar
services. These platforms have become popular with neobanks or upstarts in
different segments trying to embed financial services into their offerings
because large, incumbent banks have been relatively slow to bring their
services up to speed with the pace of change in the world of tech and banking.
As such, banking-as-a-service platforms see an opportunity to provide more
personalized services and flexibility at less cost.
The situation is no different in Africa. Despite fintech
accounting for more than 60% of VC dollars last year and the proliferation of
financial services, building a fintech startup is an expensive and lengthy
endeavor. Per reports, it can take up to 18 months and an average of $500,000
to launch a fintech on the continent as they deal with issues ranging from
licensing and compliance processes and multiple integration layers to managing
third-party relationships and core banking infrastructure.
Anchor wants to “abstract away these complexities” so pure
fintechs and businesses offering embedded finance can get started in five
minutes, said Adeyemi in a statement. “For startups building a full-scale
digital bank or providing embedded finance, we can provide compliance covering
that allows them to launch quickly. So from build to embed to launch, our goal
is how can we do all of that in the shortest time possible without compromising
on security, compliance and scalability. That’s our value proposition,” he
added on the call.
The seven-month-old startup provides APIs, dashboards and
tools that help developers embed and build banking products such as bank
accounts, funds transfers, savings products, issuing cards and offering loans.
Anchor, accepted into Y Combinator’s summer batch this year
as the first banking-as-a-service platform from the continent, went live with
its private beta this May. Over 30 startups accessed it, including Pivo,
another YC S22-backed company, Outpost Health, Dillali and Pennee.
Anchor claims to be transacting several millions of dollars
while growing 200% month-on-month. The startup makes revenue by charging fees
and taking cuts from every billable part of the business: account issuing,
money movement, savings and deposits among others.
After testing these features with a select few, Anchor is
coming out of stealth with a $1 million+ pre-seed and making its platform
public. Anchor plans to use this investment to attract the best talent, improve
the company’s tech infrastructure, invest in compliance and regulatory
infrastructure and acquire customers. Investors backing the BaaS fintech
include Byld Ventures, Y Combinator, Luno Expeditions, Niche Capital, Mountain
Peak Capital, and angel investors such as SeamlessHR CEO Emmanuel Okeleji.
Meanwhile, Anchor isn’t the only company trying to simplify
how businesses offer financial services in Nigeria and Africa. Other upstarts,
such as Bloc, have identified this same opportunity, and larger fintechs like
Flutterwave are also looking to tap into that market.
Adeyemi argues that the founding team’s technical
experience, attention to security and scalability and the speed at which
businesses can go live on its platform give Anchor some edge. While the CEO
built Amplify, the startup’s CTO Sobowale worked at four prominent Nigerian
fintechs: AppZone, TeamApt, Kuda and Carbon, and Olufotebi was a full stack
developer at Booking.com, where he built financial operations software.
“There’s an understanding of the space as founders and the
core team building this. We have seen first-hand the painful process of closing
banking partnerships, negotiating third-party contracts, and obtaining
regulatory approvals. And more generally, the extensive time and effort
required to launch financial products,” the chief executive said.
“We optimize for speed of go to market while at the same
time, we don’t compromise on security and scalability. So there are a lot of
use cases we’ve built for, that if you start from scratch, it will take you
some time to get started stage.”
The CEO also pointed out how Anchor has created a network
effect with its service where the more platforms it onboards, the stronger its
infrastructure and support system. Businesses also need to consider high
switching costs when using BaaS platforms, and for a startup like Anchor, being
a first mover is a sustainable competitive advantage, he added.
