Founder and Chief Executive Officer of Flutterwave, Olugbenga “GB” Agboola, has outlined the company’s vision for the future, declaring that the fintech giant is positioning itself to become Africa’s financial operating system while leveraging stablecoins to transform cross-border payments across the continent.
The vision was unveiled in a press release issued following Agboola’s participation in two high-profile engagements at Money20/20 Europe in Amsterdam, where he spoke on the future of stablecoins, digital payments and Flutterwave’s long-term strategy for Africa.
Agboola described stablecoins as a major advancement in Africa’s cross-border payment infrastructure, arguing that companies with deep local distribution networks and strong compliance capabilities are best positioned to unlock their full potential.
According to him, stablecoins represent “a fundamental upgrade to Africa’s cross-border payment infrastructure,” adding that businesses capable of converting digital assets into practical, real-world value will be the biggest beneficiaries of the shift.
The Flutterwave chief made the remarks during a fireside chat titled “Building the Rails: Stablecoin Architecture from Lagos to London,” where he appeared alongside Dima Kats, Founder and Group Executive Chair of Clear Junction.
Speaking on Flutterwave’s role in the evolving financial ecosystem, Agboola said stablecoins should not be viewed as a separate product category but as a faster settlement layer integrated into the company’s existing payment infrastructure.
He explained that for businesses operating across multiple African markets, stablecoins provide an effective liquidity and foreign exchange management solution that remains available even when traditional banking systems are unavailable.
“Stablecoin is completely different because money moves at the speed of the internet, not at the speed of banks closing up their house. If you pay with stablecoin, you get that money instantly,” Agboola said.
Addressing concerns that stablecoins could eliminate the need for payment infrastructure providers, Agboola argued that while wallet-to-wallet transfers may be simple, regulatory compliance and local settlement remain complex challenges.
According to him, issues such as compliance with anti-money laundering laws and ensuring seamless payouts into local bank accounts across different jurisdictions continue to make a robust payment infrastructure essential.
“I’ve been in payments for about 20 years now, and the infrastructure that manages customer funds must be designed for shocks from day one; it doesn’t matter if the value comes from stablecoin or fiat,” he said.
“This is what we’ve prioritised, giving customers one wallet address that is chain-agnostic, supported by all the biggest blockchains, ensuring customer funds are not at risk.”
Agboola also appeared live on Fintech.TV’s Market Movers programme from the New York Stock Exchange broadcast centre, where he reflected on Flutterwave’s achievements over the past decade and outlined the company’s plans for the future.
He said that while the company’s first ten years focused on connecting Africa’s fragmented payment systems through a single application programming interface (API), the next decade would be dedicated to building a broader financial infrastructure platform for the continent.
According to him, Flutterwave’s recently secured microfinance banking licence in Nigeria marks a significant transition in the company’s evolution.
He described the licence as a shift from being primarily a “transit money” provider to becoming a foundational financial infrastructure company with deeper integration across the value chain.
Agboola said the move would reduce friction in financial transactions, improve network reliability and unlock new opportunities across the African financial ecosystem.
The Flutterwave founder noted that the strategy aligns with the company’s broader goal of creating a multi-rail payment ecosystem where stablecoins and traditional fiat payment systems operate seamlessly.
To strengthen that vision, he said Flutterwave continues to expand its network of global digital asset partnerships, including collaborations with Circle, Polygon, Fireblocks Flow, Nuvion and Tempo.
According to the company, the growing ecosystem of partnerships forms the foundation of what Flutterwave is positioning as Africa’s largest regulated stablecoin infrastructure, designed to support the continent’s expanding digital economy and cross-border trade ambitions.
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