FinCode exits stealth in Africa

FinCode came out of a decade in stealth to lead infrastructure development behind Africa’s fintech growth, positioning itself as an enabler of scalable, ESG‑ready digital finance platforms. That acceleration matters for banks and investors seeking compliant, high‑growth fintech partners on the continent. (techcabal.com)

Lloyd Adiele is listed as FinCode’s founder and Alexander Eisl as managing director, and Crunchbase shows the company operating from London with a headcount of 11–50 employees. (crunchbase.com) TechCabal’s April 2026 release places FinCode’s announcement in Lagos and credits the firm with quietly powering wallets, remittance platforms, lending engines and payment switches used by millions across Africa. (techcabal.com) FinCode says it entered the market through a digital remittance product and now builds rails meant to underpin multiple fintech verticals rather than single-market point products. (blog.fincode.co.uk) The company pitches a time-to-market advantage by arguing bespoke rails typically take 12–18 months to build, and FinCode’s model is used by venture firms to compress traction timelines and de‑risk portfolio fintechs. (blog.fincode.co.uk) FinCode’s public materials emphasize a “compliance‑first” approach with unified compliance frameworks, multi-currency support and cross‑border interoperability as core capabilities. (blog.fincode.co.uk) The firm’s product stack includes a white‑label remittance launchpad (branded Remit Junction) and case studies cite deployments that enabled KogoPAY’s multi‑currency wallet and Stern Bank’s borderless banking platform. (blog.fincode.co.uk)

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