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LemFi Launches “Send Now, Pay Later” to Empower Immigrants With Flexible Remittance Credit

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LemFi, an international payments platform, has launched a groundbreaking financial service, “Send Now, Pay Later” (SNPL), an innovative payment solution that merges credit and remittance to help immigrants send money home even when their cash flow is tight.

The new feature allows users to leverage their LemFi credit line to make international money transfers instantly and repay later, addressing one of the most common challenges faced by immigrants worldwide.

Every year, immigrants send nearly £150 billion to their families back home. However, many face a timing mismatch between urgent financial needs and their earning cycles, forcing them to delay critical transfers or resort to costly and unregulated credit options. Traditional remittance providers typically require upfront payment, leaving little room for flexibility.

LemFi’s Send Now, Pay Later aims to close this gap by providing financial relief and flexibility for customers who are new to their host countries and may lack an established credit history.

According to Ridwan Olalere, LemFi’s Co-founder and CEO, the new service was inspired by the success of Buy Now, Pay Later (BNPL) models across the globe.

Speaking on the launch of the feature, he said,

The rise of Buy Now, Pay Later means people across the world can buy products and stagger the payments depending on their cash flow. However, this has never been possible before with remittance, despite it being such a core part of the immigrant financial experience. With Send Now, Pay Later, we’re integrating credit directly into the remittance experience, ensuring financial support is never delayed by cash flow timing.”

Behind this innovation is LemFi’s Ensemble AI model, an intelligent credit assessment engine that combines diverse data sources from national credit bureaus and open banking data to LemFi’s own remittance insights. The system dynamically adapts to each user, offering risk-adjusted credit limits and fair repayment plans that evolve alongside the customer’s financial journey.

How Send Now, Pay Later Works

1. Activate LemFi Credit: Eligible customers receive a personalized credit line ranging from £300 to £1,000, based on their credit assessment.

2. AI-powered Assessment: The Ensemble AI model reviews users’ financial data across multiple touchpoints including remittance history, international credit records, and alternative metrics to offer equitable credit access, especially for recent immigrants.

3. Credit Visibility: Customers begin with smaller credit limits, which grow as they build their UK credit profile and demonstrate repayment reliability.

4. Send Now, Pay Later: Users can instantly send money to over 30 LemFi-supported countries, using their available credit and repaying later through flexible plans.

It is understood that access to traditional banking and credit remains a persistent challenge for immigrants. In the UK alone, an estimated five million people are considered “credit invisible,” with immigrants disproportionately affected. Studies show that 90% of immigrants report increased difficulty in accessing credit, while 13% are excluded from banking services compared to just 3% of the general population.

LemFi’s Send Now, Pay Later directly tackles these systemic barriers by introducing a more inclusive and adaptive credit model that aligns with the unique financial realities of immigrant communities. Following its UK debut, the fintech plans to roll out the SNPL service to the United States, Canada, and Europe, expanding its mission to become the world’s most trusted financial services platform for immigrants.

LemFi’s launch of the SNPL service comes after The State Bank of Pakistan (SBP), last month, approved its partnership with United Bank Limited (UBL) and other trusted and strategic partners to operate remittance services into Pakistan. Founded in 2021 by Ridwan Olalere and Rian Cochran, LemFi’s core mission is to break financial barriers and provide trusted, reliable access to comprehensive financial services for immigrant communities worldwide, empowering them to manage money seamlessly across borders.

This includes remittances, credit building, and multi-currency banking to support diaspora users in running businesses back home and achieving financial inclusion.

The company aims to become the financial services hub for immigrants globally, addressing persistent challenges like high remittance costs and limited credit access.

Stocks Tumble as Trump Threatens 100% Tariffs on Chinese Imports

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Chinese technology stocks trading in the United States plunged sharply on Friday after President Donald Trump threatened to impose sweeping new tariffs on Chinese imports and accused Beijing of becoming “very hostile” in its economic dealings with Washington.

The remarks reignited fears of another trade war between the world’s two largest economies and rattled markets that had been climbing earlier in the day.

Shares of major Chinese firms listed in New York were among the hardest hit. Alibaba and Baidu each dropped about 8 percent, while JD.com fell 6.6 percent and PDD Holdings slipped 5.2 percent. The iShares MSCI China ETF (MCHI), which tracks leading Chinese companies trading in the U.S., sank 5.2 percent. Even after the selloff, the ETF remains up 32 percent year-to-date, having rebounded earlier this year on signs of economic stabilization and renewed investor optimism.

Trump’s comments came in a post on Truth Social, where he revealed he no longer plans to meet Chinese President Xi Jinping at the upcoming Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) summit in South Korea.

“I was to meet President Xi in two weeks, at APEC, in South Korea, but now there seems to be no reason to do so,” Trump wrote. “One of the policies that we are calculating at this moment is a massive increase of tariffs on Chinese products coming into the United States of America.”

The president accused Beijing of holding the world “captive” through its control of rare earth metals, materials essential for the production of advanced technologies ranging from electric vehicles to defense equipment. Earlier this week, China tightened export controls on rare earth elements, mandating that foreign companies obtain licenses from the government to export any goods containing more than 0.1 percent of the minerals’ total value.

Trump’s warning triggered a broad selloff across U.S. markets. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 649 points, or 1.4 percent, while the S&P 500 dropped 2 percent and the Nasdaq Composite slid 2.7 percent. Before Trump’s statement, stocks had been rising strongly, with the Nasdaq reaching a new all-time intraday high, per CNBC.

“Friday served as a reminder of how emotion and uncertainty can drive markets,” said Mark Hackett, chief market strategist at Nationwide. “It is too early to say with confidence if the comments will trigger the next phase of the trade conflict between the U.S. and China or more negotiating in public, but investors have chosen a wait-and-see tactic.”

The renewed tension comes at a time when both countries are tightening restrictions on sensitive sectors such as technology and semiconductors. Washington has limited U.S. exports of advanced chips to China, while Beijing has responded with measures targeting American firms and curbing the export of critical materials used in chipmaking and green technologies.

“Expectations for a China trade deal just got swept off the table,” said Jeff Kilburg, founder of KKM Financial. “Profit takers are out in full force.”

The fallout extended to American technology firms with deep ties to China. Nvidia shares fell more than 2 percent, AMD dropped over 5 percent, and Tesla declined by 4 percent, as investors worried that renewed trade barriers could hit production lines, sales, and global supply chains.

“It’s not surprising to see technology-related stocks down the most today as they have significant exposure to China in both manufacturing and as a large customer,” said Art Hogan, chief market strategist at B. Riley Wealth. “Clearly, our relationship with the second largest economy in the world just got more difficult.”

The market turmoil was compounded by domestic political uncertainty as the U.S. government shutdown entered its 10th day on Friday. The Senate on Thursday failed for the seventh time to pass competing funding proposals, leaving federal agencies shuttered and negotiations between Republicans and Democrats at a standstill.

With no breakthrough in sight, Trump administration budget chief Russell Vought confirmed on social media that layoffs of federal workers “have begun.”

Friday’s declines erased the S&P 500’s gains for the week, with the benchmark now on track to lose more than 1 percent over the period. The Nasdaq and Dow Jones Industrial Average were also pacing for weekly losses of more than 1 percent and over 2 percent, respectively.

Analysts say the combination of Trump’s tariff warning, Beijing’s tightening export controls, and Washington’s ongoing political paralysis has rekindled investor fears reminiscent of the 2018–2019 trade war — a period marked by sharp market volatility, disrupted supply chains, and tit-for-tat tariff escalations.

The return of such rhetoric, analysts warn, could again test the resilience of global markets already grappling with inflation, high interest rates, and slowing growth.

Prezent Raises $30m to Accelerate AI-Powered Enterprise Presentations, Acquires Prezentium

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Prezent, the Los Altos-based startup developing AI-powered enterprise presentation tools, has raised $30 million in a new funding round led by Multiplier Capital, Greycroft, and Nomura Strategic Ventures, with participation from existing investors Emergent Ventures, WestWave Capital, and Alumni Ventures.

The new round brings Prezent’s total fundraising to over $74 million and pushes its valuation to $400 million.

The startup, founded by former McKinsey executive Rajat Mishra, plans to use the capital primarily for acquisitions. The company’s first move in that direction is its purchase of Prezentium, a presentation services company focused on life sciences clients. The deal effectively brings Mishra’s two ventures under one roof, as he had previously co-founded Prezentium and served as its non-operating president.

Prezent and Prezentium already had an existing partnership, with Prezentium serving as a go-to-market partner for the AI startup. Now, the acquisition gives Prezent direct access to an established enterprise customer base, enabling it to deliver its AI suite to a wider network of clients.

Mishra told TechCrunch the merger will allow Prezent to accelerate its mission of transforming business communication with AI.

“There are plenty of tools that are trying to make presentations pretty. We want to provide the best tools for business communications. Presentation is one of the frontiers in business that’s still not automated. We want to help data scientists and designers communicate effectively through automation,” he said.

The company is taking a specialized approach to AI development, training its models for industry-specific applications. It also embeds “presentation engineers” — professionals who understand both the client’s sector and Prezent’s AI systems — inside organizations to help teams adopt the platform effectively.

“The reality of AI in enterprise is that while AI can do many things, it can’t teach people how to use AI,” Mishra noted. “That is why we want to place presentation engineers in companies to help customers adopt the product faster.”

Prezent’s move reflects a broader trend in the AI industry, where startups are acquiring service-based companies to scale faster and combine technology with domain expertise. D-ID, for instance, acquired Berlin-based Simpleshow to expand into explainer videos, while Google-backed Lawhive acquired a U.K. law firm to integrate AI into legal workflows.

Prezent plans to follow the same path by targeting companies in executive communications, medical writing, and consulting — all sectors where professional presentation and storytelling are critical.

Mark Terbeek, a partner at Greycroft, told TechCrunch the firm’s continued backing of Prezent is driven by its belief that AI can fundamentally reshape how companies communicate.

“We like to find areas where businesses have historically used expensive agencies for communication needs. Now, there are AI tools that can do those same jobs more efficiently. We saw that Rajat and Prezent are solving a clear and growing enterprise pain point — automating business communications with speed and intelligence,” Terbeek said.

However, while investor enthusiasm for AI startups like Prezent remains intense, some analysts are beginning to warn that the current wave of capital flowing into AI may be unsustainable. The AI boom has driven valuations to historic highs across Silicon Valley, with even early-stage startups raising tens or hundreds of millions of dollars at multibillion-dollar valuations.

But some believe that while AI is transforming many industries, the rush of speculative funding could mirror past technology bubbles, where valuations far outpaced actual profitability. Analysts at several investment firms have described the ongoing wave as reminiscent of the dot-com era, when investors overestimated the speed at which new technologies could generate meaningful revenue.

Yet for now, investors are unrelenting in their belief that AI represents the next great platform shift — one that will create trillion-dollar opportunities across sectors from enterprise communication to healthcare and manufacturing. Prezent’s latest round underscores that confidence, showing that investors continue to pour money into companies offering real-world AI applications.

Looking ahead, Prezent aims to enhance its platform by adding personalization features that allow the AI to learn each user’s individual communication style. It is also working on multimodal presentation tools that accept text, voice, or video inputs — and plans to introduce digital avatars similar to those used by Synthesia and D-ID.

The competition in this space is heating up. Rival startups like Presentations.ai, Lica, Gamma, and Chronicle — all backed by venture firm Accel — are also racing to dominate the AI presentation market. But unlike most of its competitors, Prezent remains focused exclusively on enterprise clients, with a particular emphasis on the life sciences and technology sectors before expanding into finance and manufacturing.

Nigeria Abolishes Cost-of-Collection Deductions in Major Fiscal Reform to Boost Transparency and Revenue

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Nigeria’s federal government has scrapped the long-standing “cost-of-collection” policy that allowed revenue-generating agencies to retain a percentage of the funds they collected before remitting proceeds into the Federation Account.

The decision, approved by President Bola Tinubu and announced Thursday in Abuja by the Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of the Economy, Wale Edun, marks a major shift in fiscal management and transparency policy.

Edun made the announcement during the launch of the National Development Update, describing the reform as part of President Tinubu’s broader effort to enforce fiscal discipline, strengthen transparency, and ensure that every naira collected by federal agencies flows directly into the national treasury.

“Funds have flowed to the Federation Account, but the point is this — efficiency of that spending is critical,” Edun said. “We have been mandated by His Excellency, Mr President, to take a look at deductions — not just those for the cost of collection, but deductions generally. When you look at the gross figure, you see all kinds of deductions before you get to the net distributable figure which goes to the federal, state, and local governments. And I must inform you that even during the last FAAC allocation, most of those deductions have been removed once and for all.”

For years, top revenue agencies such as the Nigeria Revenue Service (formerly the Federal Inland Revenue Service), the Nigeria Customs Service (NCS), and the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC) have kept back portions of their collections to fund their operations. While the arrangement was meant to incentivize performance, it became a major source of controversy amid mounting allegations that many of the agencies routinely under-declared revenues, depriving the government of huge sums that should have gone into the Federation Account.

The practice also distorted the revenue-sharing process at the Federation Accounts Allocation Committee (FAAC), where subnational governments often complained about dwindling funds despite strong revenue inflows.

Until this new directive, the Nigeria Revenue Service received N254.8 billion as its cost-of-collection for 2024, with N43.8 billion projected for the first half of the year. The Nigeria Customs Service, which previously retained seven percent of total collections, was recently placed under a four percent Free on Board (FOB) levy on imports by order of the House of Representatives in August. The NUPRC, which regulates the upstream oil and gas sector, had been allowed to keep roughly four percent of royalties and rents collected from operators.

The government said the abolition of the practice would not only plug revenue leakages but also ensure that all funds are properly accounted for before being shared among the federal, state, and local governments. The measure, Edun noted, aligns with Section 162 of the 1999 Constitution, which mandates that all federally collected revenues must be remitted in full to the Federation Account.

Fiscal experts believe the reform could significantly raise government revenue and improve liquidity at all tiers of government, especially at a time when Nigeria is struggling to fund its budget amid rising debt and limited oil earnings. The removal of the deductions, they argue, could free up hundreds of billions of naira monthly that were previously withheld under opaque cost-of-collection arrangements.

However, the move has also sparked skepticism over the government’s own record of financial transparency. Critics say while agencies have often been accused of shortchanging the treasury, the government itself has not demonstrated much accountability in managing public funds. Many economists note that despite periodic increases in revenue, Nigeria’s fiscal position remains weak due to excessive borrowing, wasteful expenditure, and limited visibility into how funds are utilized.

Some insiders at the affected agencies have also expressed concern that the move could disrupt operations unless the government creates a clear funding framework. Without their cost-of-collection provisions, these agencies will now depend entirely on budgetary releases from the Ministry of Finance — a process often hampered by bureaucratic delays and political considerations.

Nonetheless, the policy underscores President Tinubu’s ongoing fiscal reform drive, which includes unifying exchange rates, removing petrol subsidies, and auditing government-owned enterprises for unremitted revenues. It reflects a growing determination by the administration to widen the fiscal space and restore confidence in the management of public resources.

Edun maintained that the policy is part of a long-term restructuring effort aimed at promoting transparency and rebuilding trust in public finance.

“Every naira collected by government belongs to the people of Nigeria,” he said. “We are restoring order and discipline to ensure that public revenue truly serves the people — through development, not deductions.”

Although the reform marks a turning point in Nigeria’s fiscal management, the challenge remains whether the government can translate increased remittances into real economic impact.

Trump Administration Approves $20bn Currency Swap with Argentina

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TOPSHOT - Argentine presidential candidate for the La Libertad Avanza alliance Javier Milei waves to supporters after winning the presidential election runoff at his party headquarters in Buenos Aires on November 19, 2023. Libertarian outsider Javier Milei pulled off a massive upset Sunday with a resounding win in Argentina's presidential election, a stinging rebuke of the traditional parties that have overseen decades of economic decline. (Photo by Luis ROBAYO / AFP) (Photo by LUIS ROBAYO/AFP via Getty Images)

The United States has taken an extraordinary step to bolster Argentina’s embattled economy, finalizing a $20 billion currency swap line and directly purchasing Argentine pesos in a move that signals growing alignment between Washington and Buenos Aires.

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent confirmed the agreement Thursday, describing it as part of a broader effort to stabilize markets and reinforce confidence in a key Latin American partner.

The decision marks one of the largest direct currency operations the U.S. Treasury has undertaken in recent decades. The deal comes after four days of intensive negotiations in Washington between Bessent and Argentina’s Economy Minister Luis Caputo, who thanked the U.S. government for its “steadfast commitment.”

President Javier Milei, the right-wing libertarian who has forged a close ideological bond with U.S. President Donald Trump, swiftly celebrated the development. In a post on X, Milei thanked both Trump and Bessent for their “powerful leadership and steadfast support,” saying the agreement was the beginning of a new hemisphere of economic freedom and prosperity.

“Together, as the closest of allies, we will make a hemisphere of economic freedom and prosperity,” Milei said.

Milei’s warm reception in Washington underlines his growing favor among American conservatives, who have lauded his unflinching free-market agenda and his fierce opposition to socialism. Trump has repeatedly praised Milei as “a brilliant mind with courage to save his country,” while several figures in his administration have described Argentina’s economic experiment as “a model for the Western Hemisphere.”

This latest U.S. intervention offers Milei a much-needed reprieve. Argentina’s economy, though showing faint signs of stabilization, remains mired in deep distress. While monthly inflation has fallen significantly, Argentina’s annual inflation rate is still high, hovering around 200%. The government’s fiscal adjustment put an end to years of monetary financing of deficits, which helped curb inflation from its peak of over 211% in December 2023. The country’s foreign reserves, which were nearly depleted midyear, have inched upward due to a combination of export reforms and austerity measures. Industrial production has improved slightly, and the trade deficit has narrowed for the first time in over two years.

Yet, despite these early signs of progress, Argentina’s economic reality remains grim. Concerns remain about the country’s long-term economic stability and the high poverty rate, which official data showed as having decreased in late 2024. The peso continues to lose value in parallel markets and unemployment is rising. Milei’s aggressive spending cuts have slashed subsidies and government programs, fueling discontent among unions and low-income groups. With a critical midterm election looming on October 26, the U.S. credit line may prove essential in averting a full-blown financial collapse that could derail his reform agenda.

The political calculus behind Washington’s move has drawn sharp criticism at home. Democratic lawmakers and U.S. farmers have accused the Trump administration of hypocrisy for aiding a foreign government while facing budgetary gridlock domestically. Senator Elizabeth Warren led a group of Democrats in unveiling the No Argentina Bailout Act, which seeks to prevent the Treasury from using the Exchange Stabilization Fund to assist Buenos Aires.

“It is inexplicable that President Trump is propping up a foreign government while he shuts down our own,” Warren said. “Trump promised ‘America First,’ but he’s putting himself and his billionaire buddies first and sticking Americans with the bill.”

Treasury Secretary Bessent pushed back, insisting the arrangement is not a bailout but a market-stabilizing measure.

“U.S. Treasury is prepared, immediately, to take whatever exceptional measures are warranted to provide stability to markets,” Bessent said.

Argentina’s markets responded with immediate optimism. The Buenos Aires stock exchange jumped 15%, while dollar-denominated bonds surged 10% on the news of the swap line. Economy Minister Caputo said the deal would provide “breathing room” for Argentina’s financial system.

Analysts, however, warned that the absence of disclosed terms raises questions about transparency and timing. Many believe the deal looks less like a financial intervention and more like a political reward, designed to strengthen Milei before the elections and reinforce Trump’s ideological influence in the region.

Milei, who has styled himself as a disciple of Reaganomics and Austrian free-market theory, has rapidly emerged as a conservative icon in the Western Hemisphere. His administration’s focus on eliminating the fiscal deficit, reducing the central bank’s influence, and pushing massive deregulation has drawn praise from Washington but hardship at home.

Still, with U.S. backing now firmly secured, Milei’s government gains both financial and political momentum. For Argentina, the infusion of dollar liquidity could slow capital flight, strengthen the peso temporarily, and buy time for reforms to take hold. But it is not clear for now whether this partnership will stabilize the crisis-plagued economy — or simply postpone another collapse.