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with Opeyemi Folorunsho
with Opeyemi Folorunsho
Opeyemi Folorunsho (centre), Vice President of Research and Development, Moniepoint
Opeyemi Folorunsho is the Vice President of Research and Development (R&D) at Moniepoint, where he focuses on translating deep technical ideas into systems that deliver real-world impact. His background is in distributed systems and infrastructure, and his work sits at the intersection of research and execution: identifying emerging opportunities, rigorously validating them, and building the platforms that bring them to life.
Imagine you have a huge toy city where millions of people are playing every day. My job is to invent better roads, stronger bridges, and smarter traffic lights before the city gets too busy.
Sometimes I build new things myself. Sometimes I help other engineers build them. And sometimes I spend weeks figuring out a better way to solve a problem that nobody has solved before. My job is really to make sure the city keeps working even when millions more people arrive.
A typical week involves understanding a difficult business problem, reading papers or technical documentation, evaluating existing technologies, building prototypes, measuring trade-offs, and deciding whether an idea deserves to become part of the production platform.
I look for three things. First, have we actually solved the hard technical problems, or have we only built a good demo? Second, does the solution reduce complexity instead of adding it? A prototype can tolerate cleverness. A production system cannot. Third, does it solve a real problem that multiple teams have? If only one engineer understands it or only one team benefits from it, itâs probably still research.
At Moniepoint, operating at scale means designing systems that can handle billions of financial events, maintain low latency, recover gracefully from failures, and continue operating across different regions and varying network conditions. It also means investing heavily in internal platforms. As an engineering organisation grows, developer productivity becomes an infrastructure problem too.
As I moved into leadership, I realised that R&D isnât just about technology. Itâs about creating a process that turns uncertainty into informed decisions. Today, a large part of my role is helping the organization explore new ideas while ensuring the successful ones can be handed over to product teams and scaled across the business.
If I were starting over, I would spend less time chasing individual technologies and more time learning systems thinking, communication, and economics. Languages, frameworks, and databases come and go.
Modern Rails for Africaâs Economy: How Fincra is helping businesses collect, pay out, convert, and settle across African markets. Read more here.
Image Source: Tenor
Imagine telling the fastest runners to wait on the sidelines because only one contender is allowed on the track. Thatâs basically what Ghana tried to do with its 5G rollout. But the plot twist it didnât expect is that the race isnât moving fast enough. Now, itâs inviting everyone back on the track.
What happened? Ghana is preparing to sell 5G licences to mobile operators, with MTN Ghana, a subsidiary of Africaâs largest telecom, and Telecel, another operator, already saying theyâre ready to bid.
The lore behind the âonly one contenderâ: In 2024, Ghana handed Next-Gen InfraCo (NGIC), the state-backed network provider, exclusive rights to provide Ghanaians with access to the 5G network for the next decade.
The country wanted to build its 5G economy around one sole operator, NGIC, where it has a vested interest, and which would build the network while telecom companies leased capacity instead of deploying their own infrastructure.
The rollout proved slower than hoped. Although NGIC commercially launched its network in March, no major operator immediately signed on. Telecel said it was waiting to see how the government would allocate spectrum after deciding to end NGICâs exclusivity.
Expectation versus reality: With the new plan to open up the taps for 5G licences to flow to other telecoms, Ghana is gearing up for more competition. More 5G licence holders should mean more networks, better coverage, and, eventually, lower prices.
Zoom out: The NGIC currently has about 49 operational 5G sites, far lower than the governmentâs target of 1,200 by 2027. If Ghana wants to accelerate 5G adoption in its backyard, it needs to play a team sportâand it appears it has accepted this reality.
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Image Source: Tenor
If you check your bank app today, you might notice that youâre now able to send money to other African countries like Ghana or Kenya, depending on the bank you use. Fidelity Bank, a Nigerian mid-tier lender, for example, has been pushing this feature every time I open its app.
The technology making intra-African payments possible at this scale has just expanded again, bringing another part of Africa into the fold.
Explain like Iâm new here: The Pan-African Payment and Settlement System (PAPSS) is Africaâs attempt to stop African money from taking a holiday overseas before reaching another African country. Instead of routing payments through correspondent banks in New York, London, or Paris and converting into dollars or euros along the way, PAPSS lets banks settle cross-border payments directly in local currencies. It launched in 2022 and has been expanding steadily ever since.
Whatâs happened? The Bank of Central African States (BEAC) has joined PAPSS, bringing all six countries in the Central African Economic and Monetary Community (CEMAC)âCameroon, Gabon, the Republic of Congo, the Central African Republic, Equatorial Guinea, and Chadâinto the network at once. PAPSS said it now connects 28 African countries, more than 190 commercial banks and fintechs, and 16 payment switches.
Why this matters: BEACâs accession is different because it represents a regional central bank with a shared currency and monetary system. One signature brings six countries into the network simultaneously. Later this year, PAPSS also plans to begin a pilot connecting BEAC with BCEAO, the West African central bank serving eight countries, creating the first direct payment corridor between West and Central Africa.
Zoom out: Cross-border payments remain one of the biggest barriers to doing business within Africa. PAPSS says it has already reduced transaction costs by as much as 27% in participating markets. With Central Africa now connected, the network is starting to look less like a collection of national payment systems and more like the continental financial infrastructure it was always meant to become.
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Image Source: TechCabal Insights
Bridgement, a South African fintech startup, raised $20.3 million in funding from Rand Merchant Bank (RMB) and Standard Bank. (Jul 7)
Here are the other deals for the week:
Follow us on Twitter, Instagram, and LinkedIn for more funding announcements. Before you go, find out why Nigeriaâs telemedicine sector is growing again.
Source:
|
Coin Name |
Current Value |
Day |
Month |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bitcoin | $64,109 |
+ 2.76% |
+ 4.69% |
| Ether | $1,777 |
+ 1.99% |
+ 9.48% |
| XRP | $1.10 |
+ 1.15% |
â 0.29% |
| Solana | $79.11 |
+ 1.48% |
+ 23.49% |
* Data as of 06.48 AM WAT, July 10, 2026.
Looking for more opportunities? There are additional openings on TechCabalâs job board. Weâve also cleared out outdated listings to keep opportunities fresh for job seekers. If youâre hiring and would like to feature an open role, please submit it via this form.
Written by: Opeyemi Kareem and Zia Yusuf
Edited by: Emmanuel Nwosu & Ganiu Oloruntade
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