Finance
CBN fined Paystack N250m for violating financial regulations
Central Bank of Nigeria has slammed a N250 million fine on a Nigeria-based payment processor, Paystack, for launching Zap app without approval and facilitating international transfers without the relevant licences. According to sources cited by Tech Cabal, the apex bank imposed the stiff financial penalty on Zap over the consumer app’s unsanctioned operations of storing customers’ funds without obtaining the licence of a deposit bank. Paystack’s Zap, launched in March, was tested by co-founder and CEO Shola Akinlade before a live audience to transfer funds to another account. Paystack, established in 2016, only has CBN’s approval to process money transfers but lacks the right and licence to keep funds like a commercial bank.
Zap by Paystack first got on the CBN’s radar after a trademark war erupted between the Stripe-owned company and Zap Africa. Both entities clashed with each claiming to be the first company to register ‘Zap.’ But the trademark conflict soon ballooned into a bigger crisis for Paystack after financial regulators found that Zap was operating without approval and performing transactions beyond its scope. International payment processors must first be licensed as International Money Transfer Operators (IMTO); a category Paystack’s Zap has yet to attain.
-
News21 hours agoECOWAS to scrap regional air taxes, paving way for cheaper flights from January 2026
-
News2 days agoNASS members vow to delay Tinubu’s 2026 budget over constituency projects funding
-
Economy2 days agoAfrexim says Africa must raise factoring volumes to at least €240bn to support SME led transformation
-
Oil and Gas21 hours agoU.S. energy agency raises crude oil price forecast, Heirs Energy strike flare-gas deals to curb emissions, boost energy
-
Uncategorized21 hours agoIMF urges China to take the ‘brave choice’: curb exports, boost consumption
-
Finance21 hours agoAccess Bank champions Africa’s payment integration at PAPSS cOWRY 2025 forum
-
Uncategorized2 days agoKogi unveils Free Trade Zone, set to attract $2–$5bn FDI in seven years
-
Economy21 hours agoNiger Delta MSME empowers entrepreneurs with N3m grant
