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Flutterwave CEO Signals Path to Profit After Cost Reset

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KEY POINTS


  • Flutterwave profitability is now in sight after cost cuts and margin gains.
  • Asia corridor growth is lifting enterprise volumes and earnings.
  • Stablecoins are central to Flutterwave profitability strategy from 2025.

Flutterwave’s chief executive says the African fintech unicorn is closing in on profitability after a year spent tightening costs, pruning weaker lines and pushing harder on margins across its core businesses.

Speaking in an interview on Dec. 19, Olugbenga “GB” Agboola said the payments company has shifted from growth at all costs to capital discipline, with some product lines already profitable. The goal, he said, is to have the full group in the black by 2026, a milestone that would mark a turning point for one of Africa’s most prominent venture-backed startups.

Flutterwave profitability gains from Asia corridor

Agboola said Flutterwave’s Asia corridor has become a bright spot, driven by trade flows between Africa and markets such as China. Enterprise transaction volumes on the corridor are up about 50 percent he said, while margins have nearly doubled after pricing and cost adjustments.

Flutterwave is best known for its payments infrastructure, which allows merchants and large companies to accept payments and make payouts across African markets through a single set of application programming interfaces.

The platform supports dozens of payment methods, processes transactions in more than 150 currencies and operates in over 34 African countries. Consumer-facing products, including its Send remittance service, sit alongside the enterprise tools.

Flutterwave profitability linked to stablecoin plans

According to Billionaires Africa, Stablecoins are moving from concept to commercial strategy. Agboola said Flutterwave is working on what he described as the largest stablecoin deployment in Africa, aimed at helping businesses and individuals settle cross-border payments faster than traditional banking rails allow.

Merchants importing goods from Asia want quicker settlement and lower friction, he said, adding that Flutterwave plans to begin a stablecoin pilot with select enterprise customers in 2025, followed by a broader rollout in 2026.

The push comes after years of heavy fundraising. Flutterwave raised $35 million in 2020, followed by additional rounds that lifted disclosed funding to at least $475 million and pushed its valuation above $3 billion in 2022. Founded in 2016, the company says it has processed more than 200 million transactions worth over $16 billion for more than 900,000 businesses, including Uber and Booking.com.

Agboola said Flutterwave is not actively seeking fresh capital, arguing that profitability brings independence. An eventual IPO remains an ambition, he said, but not a fixed deadline.

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