👨🏿‍🚀TechCabal Daily – Jumia’s 2022 losses

17 FEBRUARY, 2023

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Yesterday, we launched an exciting new video series called “My Startup in 60 Seconds”, where startup founders share the unique problems they’re solving for Africa in one short minute.

In Episode 1, Adeola Ayoola tells us why she’s building Famasi Africa, a healthtech simplifying Africans’ access to medication. 

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DASH UNDERGOING FINANCIAL AUDIT

Almost one year after raising $32.4 million, Ghanaian fintech Dash is undergoing a forensic financial audit. 

Per TechCrunch, the startup’s CEO Prince Boakye Boampong has also been placed on indefinite administrative leave. 

These two facts are not unconnected.

Sources close to the company confirmed to TechCrunch that Boampong’s suspension was due to allegations of financial misreporting.

Launched in 2019, Dash reportedly had 200,000 users and had processed $250 million in transactions by October 2021. Barely five months later, the startup announced that it had reached 1 million users across Ghana, Nigeria and Kenya; it also said it had processed $1 billion in transactions. 

Some now believe that these numbers may have been inflated. 

While Dash’s board of directors is yet to confirm the reason behind Boampong’s suspension, sources revealed to TechCrunch that the company’s executives repeatedly hid firm financials and fostered a disorderly workplace where employees were fired at will. 

The board, however, disclosed that the forensic audit would be completed within a month. It also appointed Kenneth Kinyua, former CEO at Kopo Kopo, as interim CEO in Boampong’s stead.



JUMIA RECORDS LOSS IN 2022

Jumia has released its Q4 2022 financials, and things are not looking up.

With revenue of $66 million for Q4, the company revealed it lost $207 million in 2022—$49.2 million in Q4 alone. Jumia also projects that it will reduce its losses even further in 2023 to a range of $100–$120 million.

Its order volume dipped to $9.9 million, and gross merchandise volume (GMV) dipped to $283.1 million. Jumia Pay, which has been a crown jewel for Jumia in recent years, also saw a decline in total processed volume.

Staff numbers are also down

The company confirmed that it reduced its staff count in Dubai by 60%. 

In November 2022, TechCabal reported that the company planned to reduce its operating costs by cutting the size of its Dubai office. Yesterday, the company announced that it cut a total of 900 people from its global workforce. 

A new CEO 

Francis Dufay, who was appointed interim CEO in December when co-founders Jeremy Hodara and Sacha Poginonnec exited the company, has been confirmed as the permanent CEO of Jumia. 

The company now rests its hope on Dufay to push it past its losses into success. 

In the statement confirming his appointment, Jumia said, “The executive search that was being conducted has now been concluded. The appointment reflects the strong confidence of the Board in the leadership of Francis and his ability to successfully scale the business to profitability.”



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BLOCKFINEX ACQUIRES FLUIDCOINS

Nigeria’s tech ecosystem has recorded its first acquisition of the year.

Yesterday, TechCabal broke the news of crypto exchange company Blockfinex’s acquisition of Fluidcoins. The Barbados- and Seychelles-registered company acquired a 100% stake in Fluidcoins for an undisclosed amount. 

According to Blockfinex CEO, Danny Oyekan, the acquisition was driven by his company’s foray into crypto wallets and payments processing.

For this job, Fluidcoins is the right bet. Founded in 2021 by Lanre Adenowo, Fluidcoins is a crypto payment solution that allows African businesses accept payment in crypto. In August 2022, the platform launched its crypto wallet Flip which can be used to save stablecoins while earning interest, buy airtime, and send peer-to-peer payments. 

In a statement shared with TechCabal, Blockfinex said that it will leverage this acquisition to launch a new product, BlockPay, which will be available in the UAE, US and Africa. BlockPay will be a payment processor and API Wallet-as-a-service provider.

Zoom out: For Fluidcoins, the acquisition comes 18 months after the startup raised $150,000. The management and team of Fluidcoins will stay 

on to work on the product for Blockfinex. 



TC INSIGHTS: FUNDING TRACKER

This week, pan-African ID verification and KYC compliance company, Smile Identity, raised $20 million in Series B funding in a round led by Costanoa and Norrsken22. Other investors include Commerce Ventures, Courtside Ventures, Two Culture Capital, Valuestream Ventures, Intercept Ventures, Latitude, Future Africa, and 500 Fintech.

Here are the other deals this week:

  • South-Africa based insurtech company Naked received $17 million in Series B funding. The round was led by International Finance Corporation, with participation from the German Development Finance Institution (DEG), Yellowwoods, and Hollard.
  • Qotto, a clean energy company based in Benin and Burkina Faso, closed $8 million in Series B funding in a round led by IBL group. The Off-Grid Energy Access Fund (FEI-OGEF), Cordaid, and other investors participated in the round. 
  • Power Set, a Kenyan-based fintech company, raised $3 million in a seed round. The round was led by DOB Equity with participation from Bolt by QED Investors, Quona Capital, Zephyr Acorn, and Norrsken Accelerator.
  • Nigerian Insurtech company Curacel raised $3 million in seed funding from Tencent, AAF Management, Elefund, Blue Point Capital Partners, Pioneer Fund, Olive Tree Capital, Y Combinator, James Park (CEO of Fitbit), Olugbenga Agboola, Babs Ogundeyi, and other strategic investors.
  • Morrocan food-tech company Terraa received $1.5 million in pre-seed funding in a round led by Foodlabs. Other participating investors in the round include UM6P Ventures, Outlierz Ventures, Musha Ventures, and Africa-centric DFS Lab.
  • Kenya-based BuuPass, a mobile digitisation company, raised $1.3 million in pre-seed funding from Founders Factory Africa, FrontEnd Ventures, Adaverse, Gullit, Five35, Renew Capital, Changecom, XA Network, Ajim Capital, Artha Ventures, Daba Finance, Google Black Founders Fund, and several angel investors.
  • Nigerian HR tech company Pade raised $500,000 in pre-seed funding, the round from Zrosk IML, Zedcrest Capital, Microtraction, Expert Dojo, and Resilience 17, with other angel investors participating.

That’s it for this week!

Follow us on Twitter, Instagram, and LinkedIn for more funding announcements. 



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IN OTHER NEWS FROM TECHCABAL

KYC verification: What businesses in Africa must know.

Digital finance is here to stay in Nigeria’s fintech sector.

Peppa is reducing online fraud in Africa, one transaction at a time.

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Written by – Timi Odueso & Tomisin Bamidele

Edited by – Kelechi Njoku

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