View this email in your browser

PRESENTED BY AFRICAN ALLIANCE

02 – 05 – 2019

Hello! Welcome to today’s edition of TC Daily. If this mail was forwarded to you, please take a moment to subscribe so you don’t miss out on future editions.

A MESSAGE FROM OUR SPONSOR

Another new school session begins today and before you get the mixed feelings that come with this season, we have NEWS! It is never easy calculating new school fees, especially with school rates increasing by the day. However, you can plan ahead for your child’s next school bills by taking the African Alliance Children Education Plan. Whether you plan to have a child or you already have one, you can plan for them to have quality education by planning smart and early. You are training global treasures and should give them the education that meets these standards. Finding the right school for your child can be hard, paying the fees to attend that school should never be a problem, if you choose the Children Education Plan.

MTN is considering selling half of its 19% stake in Jumia at some point this year. This could happen anytime after the mandatory six-month lock-in following Jumia’s IPO. News of this sale has been around since last year before Jumia went public. Reports say MTN wants to sell its stake to raise funds to pay off its debt primarily in Nigeria and also for expansion. Listing Jumia, which has now happened, was one of the options MTN was reported to have considered in 2018 alongside minor investor, Rocket Internet, to sell its stake. So it appears MTN and other investors were very influential in getting Jumia to go public. MTN’s shares have gained almost 7 percent since the Jumia IPO.

Stella Ndabeni-Abrahams, South Africa’s Communications minister, says the government has now paid the telco regulator, ICASA, the first installment of its budgetary allocation. We previously reported that ICASA wanted to take South Africa’s Department of Communications to court for refusing to release its funds. Both organizations appear to be in a policy tussle over the allocation of additional spectrum especially for 5G deployment. A policy direction allowing the allocation of new spectrum was expected on April 30 but Ndabeni-Abrahams has put it on hold until after the country’s elections.

Losing $2m in Nigeria’s music industry by Jason Njoku

Equity Bank and Safaricom have signed an agreement that will allow both organizations build fintech products together. While no projects have been named yet, the focus seems to be on providing solutions to the unbanked. Equity Bank and Safaricom have been rivals for some time with the former trying to break MPesa’s monopoly.

Cafe One, a co-working space by Nigeria’s Sterling Bank which also doubles as a Café and will provide banking services is celebrating its first anniversary.  The first of many outlets to be opened across the country is located at Lennox Mall, Lekki Phase 1, Lagos. The space was set up to support Nigeria’s growing community of entrepreneurs and millennials.

Briter Bridges has put together a map of the Cameroon tech ecosystem in partnership with ActivSpaces. Check it out here.

The State of Health Tech in Nigeria is a deeply researched report that profiles 75 active and 15 inactive health tech startups across 12 subsectors. It further examines the challenges these startups face, the opportunities in the space and makes actionable recommendations for entrepreneurs, investors and regulators to consider. Get the report here.

We understand that there may have been unsuccessful attempts by interested parties to buy the report and will like to know what the challenges are. Send a reply to this email and we will attend to it. Kindly note that we are also accepting bank transfers for purchase of the reports. If you’d like to purchase the report through a bank transfer, also send a reply to this mail and we will attend to your request.

Six months ago, CcHub launched an accelerator program for clean energy entrepreneurs in Nigeria in partnership with AllOn Energy. It has announced Saja Station, a network of solar-powered kiosks for events and communities as one of the beneficiaries of the program. The names of the other beneficiaries are expected to be made public soon.

Kenya has received $173 million from Huawei to build a data center at the Konza Technology City. Last year it also secured a $94 million loan from South Korea to build the the Kenya Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST) which is part of the Konza Technology City project.

South Africa’s Competition Commission recently found that data costs in the country were so high that they were hindering economic growth. According to the report, the high data costs from two of the continent’s largest telcos affect the poor the most. Read the rest of the story in this article by Lynsey Chutel.

This tropical getaway has Airbnb’s top occupied listings in Africa

Here’s the registration link for the Digital Entrepreneurship workshop with Odun Eweniyi, PiggyVest’s COO on May 8.

From TechCabal

Egypt’s Growing eSports Industry

Rwanda Must Pick a Side in its GMO Debate

That’s It!

We’ll be back tomorrow.
 
– Olanrewaju

Someone needs to see this, share the digest.

Share

Tweet

Forward

Copyright © 2019 Big Cabal Media, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this email because you signed up on TechCabal.com

Our mailing address is:

Big Cabal Media

Plot B, Block 1, Industrial Avenue, Ilupeju Industrial Estate

Ilupeju 100252

Nigeria

Add us to your address book

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list.