TechCrunch News 01月29日
This fintech has a fix for the biggest cross-border payments issues in Francophone Africa
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非洲支付领域长期面临跨境支付难题,Cauridor是一家科特迪瓦的金融科技公司,致力于解决非洲地区碎片化、高费用和基础设施落后的跨境支付问题。该公司通过建立支付轨道,让商户、银行、电信运营商和汇款公司能够更便捷地在非洲进行资金转移。Cauridor的平台支持移动钱包、银行转账和现金提取,覆盖几内亚、塞内加尔等多个国家。其混合模式结合了现金网络和数字基础设施,并与Ria、MoneyGram等大型机构合作,业务量快速增长,已成为非洲跨境支付领域的重要参与者。

🌍Cauridor通过构建支付轨道,解决非洲跨境支付难题,使商户、银行等能够更便捷地进行资金转移,其平台覆盖几内亚、塞内加尔等多个国家。

📱Cauridor采用混合模式,结合现金网络和数字基础设施,支持移动钱包、银行转账和现金提取,并通过25000多个代理点提供服务,满足当地支付需求。

🤝Cauridor与Ria、MoneyGram等大型机构建立合作关系,并与Orange和MTN等电信运营商合作,扩展其支付网络,并为客户提供更具竞争力的外汇汇率和客户服务。

🚀Cauridor在2023年处理了200万笔交易,总支付额达到3亿美元,并在2024年增长至5亿美元,其支付轨道业务收入占比超过90%,展现出强劲的增长势头。

Until a few years ago, it used to be difficult to make payments across borders almost anywhere in the world. But it’s still a big problem in Africa, where fragmented, disconnected systems, high fees, and poor infrastructure make it tough for businesses and individuals to move money quickly and affordably.

The majority of people and businesses still rely on outdated agent networks or grapple with mobile wallet integrations. But there is tangible demand for cheaper and easier alternatives, particularly in underserved regions like Francophone Africa.

Ivorian fintech Cauridor is setting out to solve that, and it recently raised $3.5 million in seed funding to continue building its payment rails that let merchants, banks, telecom operators, and money transfer companies move funds in and out of Africa.

Cauridor says its platform supports mobile wallets, bank transfers, and cash pickups through a network of more than 25,000 agents across Guinea, Senegal, Ivory Coast, Sierra Leone and Liberia. These agents are part of a popular distribution method in the region — they’re usually small business owners equipped with point-of-sale (POS) devices and enable cash deposits, withdrawals and bill payments.

Cauridor is adopting a hybrid approach to solving the money transfer problem — the same way other fintechs in the region combine cash networks with digital infrastructure for local payment needs. Still, the approach has enabled it to operate remittance corridors to key markets like Ghana and Nigeria, and establish group-level contracts with major players such as Ria, MoneyGram, and Western Union, alongside partnerships with Orange and MTN.

Cauridor’s founders Oumar Rafiou Barry and Abdoulaye Bah experienced first-hand the challenges of sending money back home to Guinea when studying in Canada. They faced slow, expensive remittance options in Francophone Africa, a region long underserved by the global remittance industry.

In 2019, this frustration drove them to start BNB CashApp, a consumer-focused remittance platform for users in Canada to send money to Africa. The app integrated directly with banks, mobile wallets like MTN, and an agent network equipped with a mobile portal to facilitate cash payouts.

But as the platform grew, the founders encountered a larger challenge: Africa’s fragmented and inefficient payment infrastructure. “We realized early on that the rails in Francophone Africa were almost non-existent. So we had to go in and start building payment rails in the region since the payments there were fragmented,” CEO Barry told TechCrunch. 

Sensing an opportunity, the team pivoted in 2022 to build payment rails for the region. By 2023, the company had merged its consumer remittance business and B2B payment infrastructure under the Cauridor brand, much like Tanzania’s Nala and Rafiki’s operational model.

The shift paid off: Over 90% of the company’s revenue now comes from its payment rails business. In 2023, Cauridor processed 2 million transactions and recorded total payment volume (TPV) of $300 million, which grew to $500 million in 2024, the company said.

While Barry references more prominent players like Onafriq and Thunes as Cauridor’s main competition, he says his company has remained relevant because it built payment rails in markets “no one was looking at,” like Guinea and Liberia.

He noted that hands-on customer service and pricing have also helped it retain customers. The fintech provides customer service to resolve common issues like rejected mobile money transactions due to incomplete KYC. For example, if a recipient can only receive $10 out of a $700 payment, Cauridor steps in to help upgrade their account and ensure the transaction goes through. 

Barry thinks Corridor’s strong local presence gives it an edge in securing better forex margins, which it passes on to its customers. He said this advantage has helped the company attract major clients like MoneyGram, which switched from competitors for better rates and improved customer support.

Interestingly, competition in the cross-border payments space doesn’t rule out collaboration. Some of Cauridor’s competitors rely on its infrastructure in specific regions, just as it partners with companies like Thunes for a global reach.

Cauridor employs about 200 people globally and has offices in Ivory Coast, Senegal, Guinea, Sierra Leone, and Liberia.

The seed round was led by pan-African VC firm Oui Capital, and saw participation from Rally Cap, BKR Capital, and some angel investors.

With the fresh cash, the company plans to expand into new markets (it has new offices in Mali and Nigeria opening this year), flesh out its teams, and boost marketing efforts. Barry told TechCrunch that Cauridor is also preparing for a Series A round and exploring blockchain integration to streamline settlements and tap into the growing adoption of stablecoins in Africa’s cross-border payment space.

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Cauridor 跨境支付 非洲金融科技 支付轨道
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