Swedfund’s recent $10 million equity investment in Moniepoint marks a shift in development finance priorities, emphasizing sustainable fintech models over user acquisition-driven growth. Moniepoint’s strategy of building robust financial infrastructure, rather than chasing app downloads, has positioned it as a trusted payments backbone in Nigeria. With POS transactions reaching ₦19.5 trillion in 2024, Moniepoint’s operations have become integral to the country’s daily commerce and economic inclusion efforts.
Founded in 2015, Moniepoint maintained a disciplined approach by focusing first on switching and agent infrastructure — the essential “rails” for Nigeria’s digital payments — before expanding into lending and foreign exchange services. Its long-term focus on compliance, risk management, and operational reliability has yielded a resilient business model. By leveraging transaction data from millions of merchants, Moniepoint has developed a credit portfolio with low default rates, distinguishing itself from high-risk fintechs reliant on unverified lending models.
The rapid rise in POS transactions, up more than 30 percent from 2023, underscores Nigeria’s accelerating transition to digital payments. Moniepoint now serves four million merchants, accounting for over 60 percent of all POS terminals nationwide, effectively functioning as a national payments utility. For DFIs like Swedfund, this makes Moniepoint an appealing investment — not only for its growth potential but for its systemic importance and low-risk revenue model, akin to infrastructure tolls that generate steady income.
Swedfund’s investment also signals a new chapter in African fintech funding, where DFIs replace traditional venture capital as long-term investors. This transition rewards companies that prioritize governance, compliance, and measurable social impact. As Swedfund’s Senior Investment Manager Helen Hagos notes, empowering MSMEs through Moniepoint’s digital network can drive job creation, rural industrialization, and innovation across Nigeria. The company’s ecosystem of small traders and women-led enterprises embodies inclusive economic growth, aligning with DFIs’ development objectives.
Beyond financing, Swedfund’s commitment extends to improving job quality through capacity building and the integration of Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) principles. This transforms Moniepoint from a fintech platform into a development partner that advances financial inclusion with dignity and accountability. In this sense, the partnership represents more than capital infusion — it’s a model for nation-building through digital financial infrastructure that drives real, measurable impact.







