Good morning. 
And welcome back to work. We never left; we hope you didnât.
Last Saturday, we published the milestone tenth episode of our talk show, Headlines by TechCabal, where our hosts broke down Africaâs creator economy spat, a South African airline now accepting Bitcoin payments (weâre officially in our âpay the milkmanâ era), and why your Bolt and Uber drivers were probably nonchalant last week. Spoiler: it wasnât a you problem; they just want a better system.
If you missed it, you can watch the episode here.
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Letâs dive in.
Image Source: Business Daily Africa
For years, every M-PESA transaction message has carried the phone number of the sender, allowing merchants to confirm payments and small businesses to build customer lists. But Safaricom, Kenyaâs largest telecoms operator, is redesigning that.
Whatâs changing: Starting with peer-to-peer (P2P) transfers and now expanding to merchant payments and bank integrations by late 2026, the telco will begin masking phone numbers across transactions. Merchants will still get payment confirmation messages, but the phone number of the paying customer will become partially visible in those messages.
Why are they doing this? To prevent potential data mining by fraudulent actors who can tap into the phone books of merchants. Fraudsters could commit SIM-swap fraud, where they lock the legitimate owner out of their line. In 2024, Kenyaâs mobile banking fraud caused a loss of KES 810.7 billion ($6.2 billion). Safaricom is trying to close that loop.
This will inconvenience people: Merchants, especially small ones, will no longer be able to pull numbers from alerts to follow up or build customer lists, which could put a stop to unwarranted marketing spam calls to buyers just because they previously purchased an item. But it is friction that Safaricom expects in upholding the privacy of its users.
Fincra has secured a PSP licence in Canada, adding a regulated connection between Africa and one of the worldâs most trusted financial systems. See what this means for your business.
Image Source: The Guardian Nigeria
On March 16, the Nigerian Exchange Group (NGX), the countryâs stock exchange, rolled out two shortâdated index futures tied to its NGX 30 and Pension indices, giving investors a way to take a view (or bet) on the market without touching a single underlying share. Those contracts will expire on September 18, 2026.
It is not the exchangeâs first brush with derivatives, but the emphasis this time is clearer: short tenors, simple index exposure, and a product that openly acknowledges speculation alongside hedging.
Between the lines: NGXâs real problem has never been a lack of instruments; it has been a lack of energy. Retail money has drifted to faster, flashier venuesâcrypto futures, offshore FX platforms, and, recently, prediction markets are competing for the pockets of young investorsâwhere leverage, 24/7 trading, and big swings are the norm. These contracts look like an attempt to meet that behaviour halfway, by offering directional, timeâboxed trades inside a regulated wrapper instead of on a dodgy app.
On paper, everyone wins. Institutional investors, like pension funds, get a straightforward way to protect the value of the portfolios they already hold, and retail traders get a simple way to bet on where the overall market is headed instead of scrambling to buy and sell lots of individual stocks when prices move.
The catch: Leverage cuts both ways, and Nigeriaâs investor education has not kept pace with its risk appetite. Which is why the timing feels less like a technical upgrade and more like a competitive answer.
Regulators openly say more young Nigerians now trade crypto than local equities. NGXâs new futures sit squarely in that reality, and leave us with a simple question: is this about deepening the capital market, or about trying to win back a generation that already decided the real action lives elsewhere?
Image Source: Tenor
The Independent Communications Authority of South Africa (ICASA), the countryâs telecoms regulator, has hiked telecom fees by 3.2%. The increase, kicking in from April 1, will change how South Africans access telecom, satellite, and mobile services.
This hike is a system-wide adjustment.
Why this is happening: The increase is tied to changes in the Consumer Price Index (CPI), an economic metric tracking monthly retail price changes for goods and services to determine inflation. In February 2026, South Africaâs CPI eased to 3.0% from 3.5% in January.
It may sound like prices dropped, but a CPI easing doesnât necessarily mean that; it just means that prices of goods are rising more slowly than they did before. Things are still expensive, and ICASA is adjusting its fees to match those already higher prices.
What this means for you: When it becomes more expensive to import devices, certify them, run networks, or tweak infrastructure, companies absorb some of it and pass some of it on. That could look like slightly higher device prices or gradual increases in service costs over time. And if fees are now moving in step with inflation, then this might actually become an annual ritual.
Source:
|
Coin Name |
Current Value |
Day |
Month |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bitcoin | $68,219 |
â 1.45% |
+ 0.29% |
| Ether | $2,062 |
â 1.93% |
+ 4.74% |
| World Mobile Token | $0.08815 |
â 1.53% |
+ 9.99% |
| Solana | $86.75 |
â 1.68% |
+ 2.08% |
* Data as of 03.45 AM WAT, March 23, 2026.
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Written by: Opeyemi Kareem and Emmanuel Nwosu
Edited by: Emmanuel Nwosu & Ganiu Oloruntade
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BitGoâs move creates further competition in a burgeoning European crypto market that is expected to generate $26 billion revenue this year, according to one estimate. BitGo, a digital asset infrastructure company with more than $100 billion in assets under custody, has received an extension of its license from Germanyâs Federal Financial Supervisory Authority (BaFin), enabling it to offer crypto services to European investors. The company said its local subsidiary, BitGo Europe, can now provide custody, staking, transfer, and trading services. Institutional clients will also have access to an over-the-counter (OTC) trading desk and multiple liquidity venues.The extension builds on BitGoâs previous Markets-in-Crypto-Assets (MiCA) license, also issued by BaFIN, and adds trading to the existing custody, transfer and staking services. BitGo acquired its initial MiCA license in May 2025, which allowed it to offer certain services to traditional institutions and crypto native companies in the European Union.Read more