TechCrunch News 02月11日
QED leads $11M investment in Nigerian fintech Raenest
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非洲科技生态蓬勃发展,越来越多的人才开始为大型科技公司和全球初创企业远程工作。然而,收款仍然是许多自由职业者和远程工作者面临的挑战。Raenest应运而生,旨在解决非洲跨境支付难题。该公司最近获得了由QED Investors领投的1100万美元A轮融资,以扩大其在非洲的影响力。Raenest通过其零售产品Geegpay,为自由职业者提供虚拟美元、英镑和欧元账户,帮助他们收款、管理多币种钱包和兑换货币。Raenest还为非洲企业提供相同的金融服务,允许他们发送和接收国际付款。自2022年推出以来,Raenest已处理超过10亿美元的支付量,服务于非洲大陆的自由职业者和企业。

🌍 Raenest是一家非洲金融科技公司,通过Geegpay为自由职业者提供虚拟USD、GBP和EUR账户,解决收款难题,并提供虚拟和实体借记卡,支持多币种支付。

💼 Raenest不仅服务于自由职业者,还通过Raenest for Business平台为非洲企业提供国际支付服务,帮助他们简化跨境交易,起因是美国金融科技公司Mercury限制了非洲部分地区的商业账户。

📈 自2022年推出以来,Raenest的支付量增长迅速,已处理超过10亿美元的支付,服务超过70万个人用户和300家企业,客户包括Moniepoint、Helium Health等非洲初创公司。

🚀 Raenest的未来目标是创建一个安全无缝的非洲金融生态系统,帮助非洲人在全球范围内赚钱、投资和增长财富,计划在尼日利亚深化业务,并扩展到埃及、加纳、肯尼亚和美国,同时吸引顶尖人才。

As Africa’s tech ecosystem booms, more local talent is landing remote jobs with Big Tech firms and global startups. But getting paid remains a challenge for many of these freelancers and remote workers. They struggle to open accounts that accept US dollars, with foreign employers using incompatible payment platforms, and face slow invoicing and payment processes.

Enter Raenest, one of the many local fintechs that has stepped in to fix this. The company just raised $11 million in Series A funding, led by QED Investors, to expand its reach across Africa.

Through its retail product, Geegpay, launched in early 2022, Raenest offers freelancers virtual USD, GBP, and EUR accounts. These accounts help them receive payments, manage multi-currency wallets, and convert currencies. Raenest also provides virtual and physical debit cards that accept multiple currencies like U.S. dollars.

Last March, the Lagos-based Raenest expanded beyond freelancers with Raenest for Business, a platform that provides the same financial services to African businesses, allowing them to send and receive international payments.

Interestingly, Raenest didn’t start with freelancers in mind. Victor Alade, along with co-founders Sodruldeen Mustapha and Richard Oyome, launched the company in 2022 as an Employer of Record (EOR)— assisting foreign companies to pay African employees compliantly.

However, a couple of months in, the founders realized the real problem wasn’t with companies sending payments, it was with individuals struggling to receive them.

“A U.S. company might not care if a payment is delayed by five days. But for someone in Nigeria or Kenya, that’s a big deal—especially when converting to local currency becomes another hurdle,” CEO Alade, a former software engineer at Jumia and Andela, told TechCrunch.

Also drawing from his remote work experience, Alade and his co-founders, who also bring experience working with African fintechs like LemFi and FairMoney, pivoted Raenest’s focus to addressing this pain point.

Geegpay quickly gained traction among freelancers, but business signups began to rise as well. The team realized that African companies also needed foreign accounts to streamline cross-border transactions. “Businesses started asking if they could get fixed bank accounts to simplify payments,” Alade added. “That’s when we started thinking: How big is this opportunity? Who else is building for Africa?”

The addition of business banking couldn’t have come at a better time. Around the same period, U.S.-based fintech Mercury started restricting business accounts from several countries, including parts of Africa. This created a gap in the market, giving local fintechs like Raenest an opportunity to serve business customers.

Meanwhile, the EOR space was quite competitive with major players like Deel starting to look into the continent more closely.

These events made Raenest lean into what it saw as a better opportunity: offering African businesses a way to receive and send international payments.

That bet is paying off. Since launching in 2022, Raenest has processed over $1 billion in payment volume — a 160% growth between 2023 and 2024 — serving freelancers and businesses across the continent. Today, more than 700,000 individuals use the platform to receive payments from global platforms like Upwork, Fiverr, and Gusto. They also use it for online shopping and subscriptions.

On the other hand, over 300 businesses rely on Raenest to collect payments from international customers, raise capital from investors, and make cross-border payments. Its client list includes African startups like Moniepoint, Helium Health, Fez Delivery, and Matta.

Image Credits:Raenest

Raenest competes with several fintech startups offering multicurrency accounts to customers in Africa, including Afriex, Cleva, Grey, Verto, and Leatherback. Alade argues that Raenest has an edge because it targets individuals and businesses, unlike most players that cater exclusively to one customer type. Beyond its dual approach, Raenest prioritizes speed, security, reliability, and compliance to retain users, Alade said.

Raenest’s ambitions extend beyond cross-border payments. “We want to create a safe and seamless financial ecosystem for Africans — helping them earn, invest, and grow their wealth, no matter where they are in the world,” Alade said, hinting at upcoming product launches.

Currently, the three-year-old fintech operates in Nigeria under a money transfer license. As part of its next growth phase, the company will look to deepen its presence in Nigeria while securing licenses for expansion into Egypt, Ghana, Kenya, and the U.S. This move will allow Raenest to serve Africans on the continent and in the diaspora.

With banking partnerships in the U.S. and U.K., Raenest is also working to secure more in these regions as it scales. Along the way, the company aims to attract top talent to support its expansion even as it brings Geegpay and Raenest for Business under a single brand, Raenest.

The latest $11 million Series A round brings Raenest’s total funding to $14.3 million.

Lead investor QED, one of the world’s top fintech VC firms, has been steadily increasing its footprint in Africa since 2022. It has backed five startups providing financial services on the continent: Moniepoint, Remedial Health, Precium, Cedar Money, and now Raenest.

“We firmly believe that by bridging the gap between local and global markets, Raenest will unlock new opportunities for African entrepreneurs, freelancers and businesses, ultimately driving greater economic empowerment across the continent,” said Gbenga Ajayi, partner and head of Africa and the Middle East at QED Investors.

Other investors in the round include pan-African early-to-growth-stage VC firms, such as Norrsken22, Ventures Platform, P1 Ventures, and Seedstars.

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Raenest 跨境支付 非洲金融科技 Geegpay
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