In 2025 alone, startups across Africa raised billions of dollars while many of them were still unprofitable.
But then, some of the world’s biggest technology companies followed the same pattern in their early years. They spent heavily first, built infrastructure, gained users, and then monetised at scale later.
That is why the move by Flutterwave is way more important than we speak about.
After processing over $40 billion in payments over the last decade, the company secured a Nigerian microfinance banking licence last month, following its acquisition of Mono, the open banking startup often described as Africa’s version of Plaid.
This is bigger than another fintech expansion story. What Flutterwave has done is move from simply moving money to controlling more of the infrastructure behind the movement of money.
For years, Flutterwave operated between businesses and banks. Companies used their rails to collect payments, settle transactions and move funds across borders, but the actual deposits and core banking functions still depended on licensed banks. The company processed huge volumes, but part of the economics were elsewhere.
That structure is common in fintech. A startup may appear large from the outside because transaction volume is high, but volume does not automatically mean strong margins.
Many financial technology firms spend years paying partners, covering compliance expenses, subsidising growth, expanding into new countries and building trust before the business model fully matures.
In simple terms, some businesses spend their early years building the road before they can charge properly for traffic.
Flutterwave’s banking licence changes that equation. The licence allows the company to hold deposits directly, offer accounts, expand lending and control settlement flows inside its own ecosystem rather than depending entirely on partner institutions.
That may sound technical, but it changes the economics of the business in a big way.
Margins improve when a company owns more layers of its infrastructure. Costs that once went to third parties begin to stay within the system. Products become easier to bundle, data becomes more useful, lending becomes possible and customer retention becomes stronger.
This is why the Mono acquisition is also very important. Mono’s infrastructure gives Flutterwave stronger access to account connectivity, financial data, identity verification and repayment intelligence.
That means the company is no longer thinking only about payment processing. Its focus is a future where payments, banking, verification, lending and financial data operate together.
And that transition explains a fact that many people ignore when discussing startups. Not every serious business is designed to become profitable immediately.
Some companies optimise for early profit, while others optimise for scale, distribution and infrastructure first.
If a company focuses too early on squeezing profit from every transaction, growth can slow down. Expansion becomes harder, product depth suffers and competitors with stronger infrastructure eventually overtake them.
This is especially true in Africa, where building financial infrastructure is far more expensive and fragmented than many outsiders realise.
A fintech operating across multiple African countries must navigate different currencies, regulators, banking systems, compliance standards and settlement structures.
In many cases, the rails barely speak to one another efficiently. Building around those gaps costs money and takes time.
That is why many African startups spend years appearing “busy but unprofitable”. The asset being built is usually invisible at first.
Trust, distribution, licensing, compliance, partnerships, technical infrastructure, and customer behaviour take years to develop properly.
What investors and founders usually hope is that once those layers become strong enough, monetisation becomes easier and more durable.
Flutterwave now appears to be entering that phase, already managing payments for global brands including Uber and Netflix across Africa. But the bigger shift is gradually moving from being a payments processor to becoming a financial infrastructure company.
That changes who its competitors are and also changes how the company earns money.
A processor earns from transaction activity, while a financial ecosystem earns from multiple layers at once, including deposits, cards, settlements, lending, verification, subscriptions and embedded services. That is a very different business.
Of course, delayed profitability is not automatically a good sign. Some companies simply burn cash without building durable value. Scale alone is meaningless if the economics never improve.
But there is usually a visible pattern when infrastructure businesses begin to mature. They stop renting critical systems and start owning them.
That is what we see behind Flutterwave’s banking licence. For nearly ten years, the company helped businesses move money across Africa while relying heavily on external banking infrastructure. Now, it is beginning to own more of that infrastructure itself.
And in business, that is the point where the monetisation begins.
0Shares






