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Niteon launches first African neo-bank designed for African manufacturers to unlock $200bn digital export market
Niteon, Nigeria’s leading digital export marketplace, has launched Niteon Capital, the first neobank designed exclusively for African manufacturers. Unlike traditional banks, Niteon Capital delivers tailored solutions, including invoice financing, Sharia-compliant credit, export wallets with tax advantages, and infrastructure loans, directly within Niteon’s global trade ecosystem. With backing from Seedstars, Zenith Bank, and the Development Bank of Nigeria, plus a newly opened $1.5 million equity and $5 million debt round, Niteon is positioning itself as the financial engine behind Africa’s industrial growth. This isn’t just fintech, it’s a structural solution to one of Africa’s deepest trade constraints.
Niteon, one of Nigeria’s largest digital export marketplace, Founded by Nigerian entrepreneurs, Tony Nwose and Daniel Chukwuemelie, the US-based startup has already built a reputation for helping verified African manufacturers, spanning agriculture, fabrics and minerals products connect seamlessly to international buyers. With operational footprints in the US, UK, Canada, and South Asia, and a recent FDA Global Partner License unlocking export access to the United States, Niteon is already a formidable force in African digital trade. The launch of Niteon Capital, comes as the company gears up for its $1.5 million equity and $5 million debt seed round, signalling a bold expansion into fintech infrastructure to complement its fast-growing marketplace, and taking aim at a deeper, more entrenched problem: Manufacturers’ finance.
“African manufacturers are doing the hard work, but they’re being underserved by traditional banks. There’s no financial infrastructure built for them,” says CEO Tony Nwose. “Niteon Capital changes that.”
Unlike conventional digital banks, Niteon Capital isn’t designed for just anyone. It’s engineered specifically for manufacturers and exporters. This includes: invoice & Procurement Financing; to help factories fulfill large purchase orders without cash flow delays. Sharia-Compliant Financing: Opening access to ethical financing models for manufacturers across Northern Nigeria and other Islamic markets. Export Wallet Accounts: A revolutionary new financial tool that allows manufacturers to operate export-ready accounts with built-in tax advantages, carbon credit earnings, and multi-currency support. Infrastructure Loans: Medium-term financing to upgrade machinery, facilities, or logistics capabilities—ensuring African manufacturers can meet global standards.
The entire system is embedded directly into Niteon’s growing export ecosystem, reducing friction between buyers, sellers, logistics providers, and now… banking. The launch of Niteon Capital marks a key inflection point in Niteon’s trajectory, from a B2B marketplace into a comprehensive export ecosystem. It’s not just about matching buyers and sellers anymore. It’s about solving the systemic constraints that have stifled Africa’s trade capacity for decades. Backed by global players like Seedstars, Tomi Davis, TVC Labs, Zenith Bank, and the Development Bank of Nigeria, Niteon is now positioning itself as a TradeTech leader, building infrastructure that rivals anything on the continent. “We’re not just scaling a platform,” co-founder Daniel Chukwuemelie adds. “We’re building the financial engine behind Africa’s industrial growth story.” As Niteon rolls out Niteon Capital across its network, the team has opened its $1.5M equity and $5M debt seed round to strategic partners looking to accelerate African trade. The funding will power neobank expansion, licensing, deeper AI integration, and onboarding of over 20,000 manufacturers by Q4 2025. This is not just another fintech product. It’s a blueprint for how Africa will finance its own industrial future from factory floor to global warehouse.
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Customs seizes multi million-naira petroleum products in Adamawa
The Nigeria Customs Service under ‘Operation Whirlwind’ has seized petroleum products worth N181.6 million in eight weeks between the Nigeria and Cameroon borders.
ACG Kolapo Oladeji, national coordinator of Operation Whirlwind, disclosed this at a news conference on Thursday in Yola. Mr Oladeji said the seizures were made across various smuggling flashpoints in Adamawa in 55 separate operations.
“This operation is geared towards energy and food security to foster economic growth in line with the core mandates of the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, Bola Tinubu. In line with these mandates, the Operation Whirlwind Zone ‘D’ had repositioned all its machinery across the area of its responsibilities and ensured that the border became airtight,” he said.
He warned the smugglers to stop such acts and solicited the continued support and cooperation of all stakeholders in the state’s socioeconomic development. “We will ensure that the supply chains of these economic wreckers are truncated in accordance with enabling laws. This fight has no doubt helped in transforming the nation’s economy and strengthening the security of our borders,” he said.
He further said that the seized petroleum products would be auctioned to the public. Abidemi Adewumi-Aluko, assistant legal adviser of the attorney general of the federation, described the auction as a symbol of reclaiming resources to ensure that the benefit of petroleum remained in Nigeria. She said that such offences attracted life imprisonment because they threatened national security. NAN
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Chevron to join Nigeria oil licence auction, plans rig deployment in 2026
Chevron said on Friday it will participate in Nigeria’s next oil licensing round and plans to deploy a drilling rig in late 2026 as it seeks to expand operations in Africa’s top energy producer.
Jim Swartz, chairman and managing director of Chevron Nigeria/Mid-Africa Business Unit, said the company aims to grow its footprint in Nigeria, citing improved regulatory clarity under the Petroleum Industry Act, PIA.
“We will participate in the next licensing round. Our intention is to continue to grow in Nigeria,” Swartz told reporters after meeting the upstream regulator. Nigeria’s licensing rounds are part of efforts to attract investment and boost output after years of underinvestment. The 2025 round will offer 50 fields through a digital platform, the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC) said. TotalEnergies has also expressed interest in joining an auction.
Chevron recently agreed to acquire a 40% stake in two offshore exploration licences, PPL 2000 and PPL 2001, from TotalEnergies and is seeking regulatory approval to accelerate development.
Swartz said it plans to bring in a rig in late 2026 to drill a newly discovered resource near Agbami and extend leases on existing assets. Swartz added that Chevron had recorded no oil theft or sabotage in the past year, the longest period without disruptions in its Nigerian operations, a sign of improved security in the sector. Reuters
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Don’t patronise touts, immigration personnel available 24/7—CGIS
Comptroller General of the Nigeria Immigration Service NIS, Kemi Nandap, on Friday urged Nigerians to shun touts and middlemen when applying for passports or other immigration services, insisting that the Service operates round-the-clock channels to assist citizens directly and transparently.
Nandap made the call in Abuja while delivering the keynote address at the fourth-quarter Nationwide Sensitization Campaign against corruption and for improved service delivery.
The campaign, themed “Innovating for Transparency and Efficiency: Strengthening Service Delivery and Combating Corruption Through Reforms,” highlights the NIS’ ongoing efforts to modernize its operations and eliminate corrupt practices.
Addressing participants, the Immigration chief said the era of relying on agents or informal handlers should be over, as the Service has put in place fully digital, citizen-focused systems that allow applicants initiate and track their processes from the comfort of their homes.
She stressed that the NIS has functional 24-hour call lines, an active call centre, constantly monitored emails and social-media channels, all designed to ensure citizens are attended to promptly and without intermediaries.
“You don’t have to go to a tout, you don’t have to go to an agent. You can sit in the comfort of your home and apply for most of our facilities. Once you avoid putting yourself at the mercy of someone, you stay in control of your application and can always reach us at any time”, she stated.
Nandap noted that recent reforms, including automated passport application processes, biometric-based verification, expanded digital architecture and streamlined service-centre operations, have significantly reduced delays, improved transparency and minimised opportunities for extortion.
She explained that passport processing timelines have improved across multiple commands following the rollout of automated scheduling and digital communication platforms.
The Comptroller General also emphasized that transparency remains the foundation of effective immigration management.
She highlighted enhanced internal audits, stricter enforcement of ethical codes and redesigned workflows as key elements of the NIS’ anti-corruption strategy.
With digital payments and automated checkpoints reducing cash interactions, she said the Service is committed to stamping out malpractice at all levels.
Nandap further disclosed that the NIS has deepened collaboration with sister agencies, civil-society groups, international partners and the diplomatic community to align operations with global border-management standards.
These partnerships, she said, are helping to harmonise processes, promote accountability and support ongoing reforms.
She appealed to citizens to familiarise themselves with official procedures, follow approved channels and use the Service’s feedback platforms—including suggestion boxes, hotlines and online desks—to report challenges or offer recommendations. “We are here for Nigerians. Tell us how to serve you better,” she said.
The Immigration CG also paid tribute to officers who lost their lives in the line of duty in Mogolu, Tuga, Tula and Niger State, calling their deaths a painful reminder of the risks faced daily by immigration personnel.
She urged Nigerians and officers alike to embrace positive change, adding that sustainable reform depends on individual commitment and collective responsibility. “The change we want starts with each and every one of us,” she said.
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