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Banking
Kenyan banks say no to CBKâs new loan pricing system

Kenyan commercial banks have rejected the Central Bankâs proposed loan pricing model, arguing it risks reintroducing interest rate controls through the back door.Â
ICYMI: The CBK wants lenders to price credit using the Central Bank Rate (CBR) plus a regulated premium known as âKââbut banks prefer a market-driven benchmark like the interbank rate.
This standoff has big implications. The CBK aims to make interest rates more transparent and better aligned with monetary policy. But banks say the new formula could limit their ability to price risk effectively, especially when lending to small businesses. They argue that strict pricing rules would reduce credit flow to riskier sectors and undermine efforts to support economic growth.
Banks also noted the potential disruption to their existing SME loan commitments. The Kenya Bankers Association says lenders have pledged to disburse KES150 billion ($1.16 billion) annually to SMEs. Imposing a rigid pricing formula, they argue, could make those goals harder to meet.
The pushback highlights a growing tension between policy control and market flexibility. The CBK wants to improve how its rate decisions actually influence borrowing costs, especially in a market where past rate cuts havenât made much difference. But banks are cautiousâmemories of the interest rate cap era, scrapped in 2019, still linger, and theyâre not keen on repeating that experience. At the time, the CBK limited interest rates to 4% above CBR, and set a maximum rate of 13%. While the CBK was trying to stimulate economic activity by making loans cheaper, this squeezed banksâ profits as they couldnât charge enough to cover rising costs or losses from bad loans.
Without a middle ground, the fallout could mean tighter credit for the very sectors these reforms are meant to helpâjust when businesses are already struggling to access capital.
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Cryptocurrency
Nigeriaâs SEC warns against Tofro, another Ponzi scheme
If it smells like a scam, walks like a scam, and promises crypto riches overnightâitâs very likely a scam.
Thatâs the message from Nigeriaâs capital markets regulator to every would-be investor, as the Nigerian Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), the countryâs capital markets regulator, steps up efforts to prevent Nigerians from falling prey to yet another Ponzi scheme.
The regulator has flagged Tofro, the latest sketchy âcrypto trading platformâ promising unsuspecting investors outsized returns on investments.Â
Tofroâs not registered. Itâs got no app. No known team. And itâs definitely not an SEC-licenced asset manager. Itâs just a hastily thrown-together website and vibes.Â
The SECâs early warning is a win for consumer protection, especially as Ponzi schemes keep mushrooming across the country like rainy season weeds.
Reports say Tofro has been quietly operating since October 2024âand hereâs the kickerâit looks an awful lot like CBEX, the now-infamous platform that vanished with millions of dollars in investor funds. Coincidence? Maybe. But the timingâs a little too perfect.
Meanwhile, law enforcement agencies have been working hard to arraign the suspects who promoted CBEX. The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Nigeriaâs anti-graft agency, declared nine persons wanted over the CBEX scamâfour Nigerians, four Kenyans, and one mystery foreign national. Yet CBEXâs website is still up, and heartbroken investors are flocking to Telegram groups hoping to ârecoverâ their money.Â
Spoiler alert: theyâre probably just lining up for another scam.
So yes, kudos to the SEC for calling out Tofro early. But hereâs a thought: maybe itâs time regulators start shutting down these fraud factories before they go viral. Because once the word spreads, Nigerians will swarm faster when they hear âguaranteed returns.â
To you reading this, hereâs your warning.
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Fintech
Oxygen X rakes in $501,000 profit in first year
For a newcomer, hitting these milestones in the first year is remarkable.
Since it launched last year, Oxygen X, the digital lending subsidiary of Access Holdingsâ, turned a pre-tax profit of âŠ850 million ($501,000).
ICYMI: Last year, Access Holdings became the first major bank group to launch a standalone digital lending company, which meant that Oxygen X could acquire users who didnât have accounts with Access Bank.
How did they pull it off? The digital lender, which offers loans to consumers and micro, small, and medium-sized enterprises (MSMEs), made revenue of about âŠ4.1 billion ($2.6 million).
The lender, which has about 1,211 users, received 685 loan applications in the previous year, disbursing âŠ152 million ($95,000) in consumer loans. Its âŠ4.1 billion ($2.6 million) revenue was largely driven by the launch of its cash loan offerings and the rollout of its Credit Lifecycle Management Product (CLMP) in Q4 of 2024. Oxygen X also reported total assets of âŠ7.5 billion ($4.7 million) and liabilities of âŠ2 billion ($1.2 million).
While Oxygen X revenue is impressive for a first timer, it dwarfs established incumbents like Fairmoney which made âŠ7.9 billion ($5 million) profits after tax in 2024 and disbursed âŠ68.5 billion ($43 million) loans to its customers in the same year.Â
Oxygen X: Built on the backbone of Access Bankâs earlier Quickbucks platform, which served around seven million users, Oxygen X was Access Holdingâs answer to growing competition in Nigeriaâs digital lending space. The lender now goes head-to-head with digital lenders like FairMoney, Carbon, and OPay. Its services now target individual consumers and micro, small, and medium-sized enterprises (MSMEs), with lending options including personal loans, solar and device financing, car loans, and payday advances.
As a part of Access Corporation subsidiariesâARM pensions, Hydrogen, Access Bank, and Access Insurance Brokers Limitedâthe digital lender is contributing its own share to the group&rsq uo;s overall profit, albeit on a smaller scale. While the group posted âŠ4.88 trillion ($3 billion) in gross earnings for 2024, Oxygen Xâs revenue was the smallest at âŠ4.1 billion ($2.6 million). In comparison, Hydrogen recorded âŠ5.7 billion ($3.6 million) in operating income, Access ARM Pensions generated âŠ16.1 billion ($10 million), and Access Insurance Brokers brought in âŠ8.3 billion ($5.2 million) in gross written premium.
However, with a strong first year result, OxygenX is showing signs that it can outpace some subsidiaries in revenue contribution as it scales.
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Banking
You could start paying more for your bankâs SMS alert charges
In a not-so-rare showing of solidarity, Nigerian commercial banks have announced that SMS alerts will now be charged at âŠ6 ($0.003) per text message, up from âŠ4 ($0.002).Â
At least three banksâGTBank, Fidelity, and Union Bankâhave implemented this increase. This follows the telecom tariff hike from mid-February that increased the cost of data, voice calls, and SMS across telecom networks in the country. The charge will apply to every SMS alert you receive, but it is optional; you can opt out of SMS alerts from your bank.Â
What does this mean for you? You could start paying more in SMS alert charges, which are billed monthly by your bank. The fees from SMS alerts are typically collected by banks and remitted to telecom operators. Alert fees are minor sources of revenue for banks; they typically donât itemise it in their financial reports, unless it is significant.Â
For example, in GTBankâs half-year 2024 financial report, revenue from SMS charges was reported under âaccount services, maintenance, and ancillary bank charges,â which brought in âŠ16.18 billion ($10 million)âhowever, this was a combination of multiple services, not just SMS alerts. The real cake for banks comes from transfers, especially as e-payments are becoming the norm in this digital world.
The move was possibly designed by regulators to ensure banks remit the full amounts to telecom operators and avoid another prolonged debt fiasco, like the pending one over unpaid USSD fees.
Why now? One reason could be that the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) only recently approved the new rate for banks to implement. Itâs also likely that banks waited to avoid customer outrage, especially after the backlash over the cybersecurity levy and the EMTL fee from 2024. Although inflation accelerated to 24.4% in March 2025, the small fee increase of âŠ2 ($0.0012) may not immediately impact customers, at least in the short-term.
On the flip side, the extra cost, if summed up annually, could still weigh on wallets already strained by rising prices. Yet, banks are not expected to lose customers to fintechs like OPay, which charge no SMS or maintenance fees, since the fee hike isnât significantâand customers can even opt out of it. What keeps people loyal, in the end, is trust, and banks have that edge.
Moreover, a hike in telecom service charges from banks was expected, as itâs simply a ripple effect of the telecom tariff increase.
CRYPTO TRACKER
The World Wide Web3
Source:
Coin Name |
Current Value |
Day |
Month |
---|---|---|---|
$96,946 |
+ 2.12% |
+ 14.71% |
|
$1,841 |
+ 1.74% |
â 1.99% |
|
$0.05978 |
+ 1.95% |
+ 42.22% |
|
$150.21 |
+ 1.15% |
+ 20.41% |
* Data as of 06.00 AM WAT, May 2, 2025.
Events
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- âTech has become an equaliser in the industryâ: Chocolate City Musicâs CEO on AI, virality, and the future of music
- In a sparse fintech landscape, two new startups prepare to make their mark in Botswana
- Why Nigerian banks keep suffering system glitchesâand whatâs at stake
- Ethiopiaâs state-owned Ethio Telecom records lackluster IPO
Written by: Emmanuel Nwosu and Opeyemi Kareem
Edited by: Faith Omoniyi
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