Kenya is Grey Listed, Disruptive Innovations in Fintech
Here's what you need to know to start you week
The Weekly Brief, by The Kenyan Wall Street, is a newsletter that goes out to 26k+ subscribers every Monday morning at 9 am (EAT).
This is the last Monday of February, it turns out.
Once January is over things move fast: NSE has a new CEO starting in May, Kenya got grey listed, and the shilling seems to have settled in its exchange rate.
Kenya Grey Listed for Money Laundering
Last Friday, the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) listed Kenya as one of the countries that did not properly exercise its recommendations to stamp out money laundering and terrorist financing.
Other countries that will no longer be subjected to heightened monitoring include Uganda, Barbados, and Gibraltar.
"The countries have demonstrated the necessary political will to sustain and continue these changes," said the FATF president Mr. Raja Kumar.
Why it Matters
Countries in the grey list are not restricted. The anti-money laundering body simply alerts financial institutions like banks to take necessary precautions when dealing with individuals within that jurisdiction.
“At this Plenary, the FATF added Kenya and Namibia to the list of jurisdictions subject to increased monitoring,” said the FATF in a statement. The development comes a decade after the FATF removed Kenya from its grey list, to which it had first been added in 2010.
"Kenya remains fully committed to implementing the FATF Action Plan comprehensively," said Treasury Cabinet Secretary Prof. Njuguna Ndung'u. "We will develop a comprehensive strategy to address remaining deficiencies."
Next Steps
The FAFT will also guide grey-listed nations to improve legislation on financial control, supervision of registered companies, and identification of suspicious elements and renowned criminals. Some countries like South Africa and Vietnam are still on the grey list but have reported improvements in their anti-money laundering efforts.
On the flip side, blacklisted countries are havens for money laundering and terrorist financing because they remain uncooperative in the interglobal effort to control dirty cash.
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Disruptive Innovations in Africa’s Digital Payments
Many businesses across Africa depend on bank partnerships and Fintech solutions to facilitate cross-border payments.
However many Fintech options are still localized payment solutions that do not transcend their regions of origin. For cross-border payments, a majority of businesses prefer banks for security and efficiency.
There is a need for a Fintech solution that would integrate all forms of payment and accept transactions in every currency. This would help Small and Medium-sized enterprises (SMEs), International Trade Companies, and E-commerce businesses attract customers from anywhere in Africa.
Kora is one Pan African payment infrastructure that can help businesses in Africa grow beyond their borders. The firm was founded in 2017 to help businesses accept payments from their customers and perform seamless transactions. It has grown immensely to benefit businesses in other ways. In the dawn of its expansion into Kenya and Ghana, the firm has set its sights on unveiling revolutionary solutions that would provide scalability to your business.
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