Bok,
Victoria from Techpoint here,
Here’s what I’ve got for you today:
- MTN Nigeria hands over MoMo to its parent for ₦95.5B
- Amazon files to launch satellite Internet in Kenya
- Airtel Money eyes $10B London listing
MTN Nigeria hands over MoMo to its parent for ₦95.5B

MTN Nigeria dropped a big update just before its April 30, 2026, Annual General Meeting, and it could reshape its fintech future. The company confirmed that its parent, MTN Group, plans to acquire 60% stakes in both its mobile money arm, MoMo Payment Service Bank, and Y’ello Digital Financial Services for a combined ₦95.5 billion. It’s not just a sale; it’s a restructuring designed to shift control of these fintech units up to the group level while easing pressure on MTN Nigeria’s books.
The structure is a bit complex, but the idea is simple. MTN Group is taking the driver’s seat while MTN Nigeria keeps a minority stake. Over time, both fintech businesses will sit under a new holding company — Fintech HoldCo — owned 60% by the group and 40% by the Nigerian unit. In practical terms, MTN Nigeria steps back from fully funding these businesses, while the parent company consolidates its fintech bets across markets.
The real reason for this move shows up in the numbers. MTN Nigeria booked a ₦62.56 billion impairment on its fintech investments in 2025, effectively admitting the units are still loss-making. After years of funding growth alone, the company is now offloading some of that burden. This frees up capital to defend its core telecom business, where competition is heating up, while still keeping exposure to fintech upside.
This has been years in the making. Ralph Mupita has talked about spinning off MTN’s fintech operations since 2021, but execution has been slow, and market conditions haven’t helped. In the meantime, MTN has been quietly restructuring similar operations in places like Ghana and Uganda. Nigeria, being its largest and most complex market, was always going to be the toughest piece to move.
Zoom out, and this looks like a long game. MTN isn’t just fixing a balance sheet issue; it’s building a continent-wide fintech platform under one roof. By centralising ownership and bringing in partners like Mastercard, the group is setting itself up for a much bigger play down the line, possibly even an IPO. With Nigeria’s massive market at the centre of it, getting this structure right could define MTN’s next decade.
Amazon files to launch satellite Internet in Kenya


Jeff Bezos is officially stepping into Kenya’s satellite Internet race, and it’s setting up a direct showdown with Elon Musk. On April 29, 2026, the Communications Authority of Kenya confirmed that Amazon has applied for a licence through a local entity, Amazon Kuiper Kenya Limited, to roll out its low-earth orbit broadband service. If approved, the licence would allow Amazon to build and operate communications infrastructure across the country, essentially giving it the green light to bring its satellite internet play directly into Kenya.

Victoria Fakiya – Senior Writer
Techpoint Digest
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What it means: This is Amazon running a familiar playbook. It already secured approval in Nigeria earlier in 2026, and Kenya now looks like the next stop. The tech itself is promising: Amazon says its Project Kuiper service could deliver speeds up to 400 Mbps for regular users and even higher for enterprise customers, putting it right up against Starlink. But the bigger move is strategic. Through a partnership tied to Vodafone, and by extension Safaricom, Amazon could plug directly into existing telecom infrastructure, giving it a local advantage from day one.
Why it matters: Kenya still doesn’t have a clean solution to its rural connectivity problem, and that’s where this gets interesting. Starlink has been in the market since 2023, but adoption is still small, just over 22,000 users in a country with millions of internet connections. The issue isn’t demand; it’s cost. Satellite internet can reach places fibre and mobile networks can’t, but the hardware is still expensive for most people. So while Kuiper could expand coverage, it doesn’t automatically solve affordability.
How we got here: Amazon hasn’t rushed this. Over the past year, it’s been quietly laying the groundwork across Africa, rebranding Project Kuiper, securing licences, and signing partnerships to extend reach into underserved areas. After getting clearance in Nigeria and testing infrastructure collaborations across the continent, Kenya becomes the next logical step. This isn’t a one-country play; it’s a regional rollout strategy.
The bigger picture: This is a high-stakes infrastructure battle between two global tech giants, playing out over Africa’s connectivity gap. Both Amazon and SpaceX are betting that the continent’s millions of unconnected users represent the next big frontier. The question now isn’t whether satellite Internet will scale in Africa; it’s who gets there first, how affordable it becomes, and whether regulators can keep up with companies moving this fast.
Airtel Money eyes $10B London listing


Airtel Money is getting ready for a big moment, and it’s looking like London will be the stage. On April 28, 2026, Bloomberg reported that Airtel Africa is planning to list its mobile money unit on the London Stock Exchange, aiming to raise between $1.5 billion and $2 billion at a valuation that could hit $10 billion. If it lands, this would be one of the biggest IPOs Europe has seen in years.
This isn’t just another listing; it’s Airtel trying to put a proper price tag on one of Africa’s fastest-growing fintech businesses. Airtel Money has quietly scaled into a major player, processing close to $200 billion in transactions and growing its user base past 52 million. It’s also starting to chip away at M-Pesa’s dominance in markets like Kenya, which tells you this isn’t just growth, it’s competition at scale.
Over 350 million adults in sub-Saharan Africa are still unbanked, and mobile money is filling that gap faster than traditional banks ever could. A successful IPO here doesn’t just bring in fresh capital for Airtel — it sends a signal to global investors that African fintech is ready for the public markets, not just private funding rounds.
How we got here: This has been a long time coming. Airtel Africa started carving out its mobile money business back in 2021, bringing in investors like Mastercard and TPG to validate the story. The IPO timeline kept slipping, from 2023 to 2026, thanks to market conditions and internal prep, but the business itself kept growing, adding millions of users and expanding across 14 countries.
The bigger picture: At the centre of it all is Sunil Mittal, who’s clearly betting big on Africa’s digital future. Spinning off Airtel Money gives the business room to grow into something bigger, potentially a full digital banking platform, while unlocking value for investors. If this IPO lands anywhere near its target, it won’t just be a win for Airtel. It could open the floodgates for a new wave of African fintech listings.
In case you missed it
What I’m watching
Opportunities
- Flutterwave is hiring for several roles in Nigeria, the UK, and the US. Apply here.
- ABDS 2026 will take place April 29–30, 2026, in Lagos, gathering founders, investors, developers, and policymakers shaping Africa’s blockchain and Web3 ecosystem. The summit focuses on industry insights, partnerships, and investment opportunities in one of the world’s fastest-growing crypto markets. Secure your pass or sponsorship here.
- As one of Techpoint Africa’s most engaged readers, you have a direct hand in shaping what we publish next. Take our quick, 3-minute survey to tell us the stories and features you value most. Your responses are anonymous, and your feedback will help guide our editorial focus in the months ahead. Fill the survey here.
- Moniepoint is hiring for over 100 roles. Apply here.
- Building a startup can feel isolating, but with Equity Merchants CommunityConnect? You can network with fellow founders, experts, and investors, gaining valuable insights and exclusive resources to help you grow your business. Click here to join.
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Have a superb Thursday!
Victoria Fakiya for Techpoint Africa


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