Amidst the declining total crypto market capitalization, cryptocurrencies like Arbitrum (ARB) have struggled to generate significant price momentum. As a result, investors are gravitating toward promising projects like Sparklo, which is currently in its presale phase. Moreover, experts and crypto observers have forecasted Sparklo to yield returns of up to 5,000x upon its launch. Presently, the SPRK token is accessible for only $0.026, with a strong potential of increasing to $0.050 soon.
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Sparklo (SPRK) introduces fractional NFTs investment in precious metals
Sparklo is poised to transform the trading of precious metals with its upcoming platform. Through the SPRK token, investors will be able to engage, buy and sell gold, platinum, and silver. Each fractional investment will be represented by a minted non-fungible token (NFT), closely tied to the corresponding precious metal it represents.
Meanwhile, Sparklo has obtained a KYC (Know Your Customer) report from Block Audit Report, ensuring compliance with regulatory standards. Furthermore, InterFi Network has audited Sparklo’s smart contract. To promote stability and foster user confidence, Sparklo will lock the team’s tokens for 1000 days and liquidity lock for 100 years.
Currently, Sparklo is conducting its second presale phase, offering its tokens at an enticing price of only $0.026. Early adopters can take advantage of the ongoing 50% bonus on their token purchases and accumulate large amounts of the token before its price rises.
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Arbitrum (ARB) transaction volume plummets despite the increase in new addresses
Arbitrum (ARB) experienced significant gains last week as bulls attempted to reclaim the $1.20 zone. However, recent on-chain data reveals that bears have now taken control. While Arbitrum (ARB) has garnered attention for its adoption and increased network activity, transaction volume for Arbitrum (ARB) has been declining. Between May 8th and May 22nd, active addresses surged by 41%. In contrast, daily Arbitrum (ARB) transaction volumes dropped by 92% from its peak of 1.27 billion to 102.38 million ARB.
This decline in transaction volume suggests that new participants may not be engaging in transactions as frequently or at the same volume as existing users. Notably, a significant Arbitrum (ARB) whale group with balances ranging from 10 million to 100 million ARB tokens has initiated another sell-off, having unloaded over 130 million ARB tokens between May 17th and May 22nd. Unless daily ARB transaction volume sees an increase, ARB holders could experience a substantial price drop in the days ahead. By press time, Arbitrum (ARB) stands at $1.13, a 3.65% decrease over the past 24 hours.
Find out about the Sparklo (SPRK) presale using the links below:
The cryptocurrency market has experienced ups and downs in the past few days with many tokens turning bearish. In the league of tokens whose performance was below par are Immutable (IMX) and Render Token (RNDR), making holders move to more profitable projects like Sparklo.
Meanwhile, Sparklo has continued to generate excitement in the crypto space with more investors signifying their intention to purchase the token as the presale goes on. Let’s dive into Sparklo and explore why it has outpaced both Immutable (IMX) and Render token (RNDR).
Sparklo (SPRK) is bringing precious metals to the crypto market
Nobody could have expected a relationship between cryptocurrency and precious metals until Sparklo brought the idea. Sparklo is bridging the gap between cryptocurrency and precious metals by allowing investors to invest in precious metals such as Gold, Silver, and platinum. These precious metals will be minted into fractionalized NFTs of which investors can purchase a fraction of the NFTs or the whole part. Purchasing the entire NFT attracts free delivery to the desired choice of destination.
This represents an opportunity for average investors to partake in the often elusive metal industry. Having been audited by Interfil Network and undergoing KYC application, Sparklo intends to lock its liquidity for 100 years, making it a safe and secure investment for skeptical and undecided investors who are looking for the next booming crypto project.
This is a good opportunity for jewelry stores to bring their products to the crypto market with the help of Sparklo. The platform creates a meeting point for investors who are looking to purchase jewelry products and jewelry stores who are looking to sell their products. At the current price of $0.026 per token, investors can position themselves for the project that has been predicted to skyrocket by 1500% before the year runs out.
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Immutable (IMX) partners with MetaStudio to improve metaverse gaming
Immutable (IMX) – the leading Ethereum Layer 2 Scaling solution, has secured a partnership with the hugely popular Portuguese game studio MetaStudio to bring innovative changes to metaverse Gaming. With this dynamic partnership, MetaStudio can use Immutable (IMX) layer 2 infrastructure to provide players with an amazing gaming experience and secure ownership of in-game assets.
On the flip side, immutable (IMX) is currently battling the red zone, with 2% of its value dropped in the last 24 hours. With Immutable (IMX) market capitalization standing at $684 million, the recent partnership may be the pedestal for Immutable (IMX) to shoot up again. So far, Immutable holders are moving to the Sparklo presale which offers more benefits.
Render Token (RNDR) surrenders to bear market as price dips
Investors are in limbo with the Render Token (RNDR) after yet another dip caused the Render Token (RNDR) price to slump by 2.38%. Since making huge inroads in the crypto space when it was first launched, Render Token (RNDR) has failed to sustain the kind of performance that endeared it to investors in the first place.
At the current trading price of $2.54, and with Render Token’s (RNDR) 24-hour trading volume also reducing from 280 million to 250 million since the beginning of the month, the chances of Render Token (RNDR) pulling up after the struggle remains a big task. With Render Token (RNDR) not showing any sign of recovery, its investors are already moving over to the Sparklo project to make profits.
Nigeria’s Minister for Aviation Hadi Sirika on Friday, unveiled the much-anticipated Nigerian Air, barely two days before leaving office.
The Boeing 737-800 ET-AL was unveiled at the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja, where it landed.
Sirika said the airline project, which is being executed in partnership with the Ethiopian Airlines, Nigerian entrepreneurs and the federal government, will fill the gap of national carrier in the Nigerian aviation industry.
“The airline that is equal to the size of the market, the dynamics of the market of Nigeria, to its geography and the fortunes of the country. Indeed, we do need the kind of infrastructure that we’re having today in the name of Nigeria Air Limited,” he said.
“This Nigeria Air Limited, of course, obviously, it’s an entity known to Nigerian laws. There is a partnership between entrepreneurs in Nigeria and the entrepreneurs in Ethiopian Airline Consortium. Consortium is a company belonging to many partners, and it’s very long journey.
“We started in 2016 and it ended up today. There is a history behind all of these. There were challenges down to one for that matter. We didn’t allow them to make us lose focus. We stayed with the eyes on the ball and today we’re here.”
The minister explained that although the project is beginning with one plane, it will eventually increase to 35 aircraft mark in the next five years.
“You don’t come in one day to dump 35 aeroplane. You can’t come in one day and start going to London. So, it’s a gradual process. The aeroplane will be coming one after another. And until in the next five years, according to the business case, we achieve the 35 aircraft mark, from there it continues,” he said.
The chief commercial officer, Ethiopian Airline, Lemma Yadecha Gudeta, who was also at the unveiling said the Nigerian Air will become a one billion dollar investment in five years.
“As far as the initial business plan that we are working on in collaboration with stakeholders in the consortium, Nigerian air will be a 1 billion US dollar company in five years time,” he said.
Fraudulent or true?
Following the unveiling of the Nigerian Air, questions about what is really playing out have been flying around. Aviation experts have argued against the feasibility of launching the national carrier a few days before the inauguration of a new government, considering the enormous work yet to be done.
“It is practically impossible for Nigeria Air to start commercial passenger operation in two days’ time given the rigorous process involved,” aviation expert and analyst, Captain Ado Sanusi, said in an interview with ChannelsTV.
Nigerian investigative journalist in a Twitter thread alleged that Sirika is being fraudulent with the launch of the Nigerian Air by presenting a rented plane to Nigerians.
In context, this is not today's important story, but I thought to flag it up too.
He said: “I obtained the video below of the purported “Nig=20 eria Air” 737-800 from a source at Addis Ababa Bole International Airport in the Ethiopian capital. As you can see when you freeze the frame, the aircraft is clearly registered to @flyethiopian with the registration number ET-APL.
“If you put that registration number into @planespotters, you can clearly see that it is an 11 year-old Boeing 737-800 belonging to @flyethiopian. It has also briefly appeared in the colours of @MalawianAirline (@flyethiopian owns 49% of @MalawianAirline).”
If you put that registration number into @planespotters, you can clearly see that it is an 11 year-old Boeing 737-800 belonging to @flyethiopian.
“When you check @flightradar24, you can see that this aircraft is still in active @flyethiopian service, but after disappearing to Tel-Aviv for 5 days (undergoing repainting), has now resurfaced in Abuja to be fraudulently “commissioned” later today by @hadisirika,” Hundeyin added.
In June last year, Sirika disclosed that majority shares of 49 percent of the Nigeria Air project will be owned by Ethiopian Airlines, 46 percent by Nigerians while the Federal Government will own just five percent of the shares.
The minister also said that the Nigerian Air, when operational, would generate over 70,000 jobs.
However, the unveiling of just one plane not backed by operational infrastructure, has created doubts and questions about the national carrier.
“A whole national carrier is birthed without a management structure, line personnel, sales outlets, airline counters waiting to be utilized, operations backbone, maintenance structure and endless aspects that show you a semblance of something authentic,” Akin Olaoye tweeted.
I have predicted that more than 70% of existing (physical-only) microfinance banks will fade by 2025 and by 2029, Nigeria will have less than half of its current commercial banks. The fact is there: startups are disintermediating and displacing microfinance banks, rendering many useless at scale: “The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has withdrawn the license of … [many] microfinance banks.”
The $12 billion per month transaction Moniepoint does and the $billions Flutterwave pipes are part of that zero-sum game. As those funds move out of the microfinance bank domains, the non-digital natives become irrelevant. This is happening at scale and these small banks are unable to re-adjust.
After microfinance banks, the commercial banks will be next unless they change their operating protocols. The lending apps killed many physical microfinance banks (many fintechs operate with microfinance bank license, digitally). As the credit system evolves and matures, many banks will see troubles when consumer & SME lending recalibrates and these apps go ahead the opportunities.
Sure, the big corporate lending will remain with commercial banks, but you do not run a bank with one customer segment. And that means, not many will survive and compete therein.
Comment on Feed
Comment 1: Calm down Sir!
The list represents very old and former cooperatives and community banks that most of us grew up to know, and many have been defunct for decades. I wont categorise it as you have, but rather a sanitisation of the CBN data/list of operational and non-operational MFB licenses. There are regulations around operating a finance business in Nigeria, and the MFB license remains relevant where financial inclusiveness is concerned.
The brick & mortar banks will remain competitive and continue to be a strong part of our Economy for many years to come. Albeit, they will have to be stronger and evolve with the realities of our world today.
The rise of Fintech will surely bring efficiency and drive certain level of inclusiveness and break border boundaries creating a 21st century revolutionary change in the finance landscape, but that will not obliterate the place of commercial banks at corporate and individual level. Yes, they will have to evolve with the times, but they remain a strong pillar of any economy globally.
Besides, many of the Fintechs have had to leverage MicroFinance Banking licenses in recent times to be able to operate in Nigeria. The Kudas of this world comes to mind.
There is a place for regulations!
My Response:As I noted, the fintechs also need an MFB license. From the piece, I was distinguishing between a physical-only MFB and a digital MFB. That said, if there are no fintechs and the digital-native fintechs with MFB license, most of these 47 microfinance banks will still be here.
Comment 1R:Ndubuisi Ekekwe Ndubuisi Ekekwe “… most of these 47 microfinance banks will still be here”
That assumption is flawed, most of those 47 MFBs died a long time either before or shortly after the first baking reform in 2004. Many of these MFBs were cooperative banks across villages and communities.
I think there is an over assumption of digital penetration and adoption in Nigeria. First of, dont let the numbers decieve you, viable digital Nigeria is probably not up to 40% of Nigeria’s population. While there is a role for technology to drive the much needed inclusion, POVERTY and EDUCATION remains a major bane to technology adoption amongst Nigerians.
Nigeria is beyond Lagos – there are many studies to support why the Nigerian population is not qualitative.
That said, you are correct, but I’d rather put it that to drive inclusion and success, an Hybrid model (Physical + Digital) is required and this is where the Fintechs that have adjusted to this model have succeeded. We need healthy MFBs both physical and fintech driven models to boost the grassroot economy, the unbanked, the under-served, and small businesses.
I wont celebrate the disappearance of MFBs rather I’d say MFBs should be strong and purposeful.
My Response:“That assumption is flawed, most of those 47 MFBs died a long time either before or shortly after the first baking reform in 2004.” – that is not true. CBN does this regularly and this is not the first mass revocation but never at this scale (used to be 4-6 yearly or every now and then). They do not keep data but you can check here https://ndic.gov.ng/failure-resolution/closed-microfinance-banks/. When Moniepoint started posting $14 BILLION per month, these MFBs lost oxygen at scale. It is nearly impossible for these 47 to have escaped pruning since 2004 (if they’re dead as you noted) as CBN does this all the time (sure, never at this scale we are seeing)
Comment 1RR:Ndubuisi Ekekwe “lost oxygen at scale” I love your use of language.
However, Its wrong to compare Moniepoint with the MFBs, they are not in thesame sub-sector of the finance sector nor do they offer like for like services. Moniepoint as far as I know are a payment solution infrastructure and are poised to be bigger than most MFBs.
Now talking about the Moniepoint numbers, I am not a fan of throwing numbers around, and I’m not surprised these kind of numbers are moving foreign investors. As cheap money dries up globally, some sensible investors have began learning and relearning not to rely on this made-up numbers. We have seen how many of these “unicorns” fail woefully once they IPO.
Moniepoint’s $14Bn TPV monthly number in my opinion is full of double/tripple counted transaction flow. The Federal Govt of Nigeria is the biggest spender in Nigeria, and its annual spending budget was $41.8Bn in 2022, I’m intrigued how a retail payment infrastructure business is processing 35% of that number per month, when the Soverign’s GDP is about $40Bn per month.
I may be wrong, but tech businesses are quick to throw around numbers, largely for the benefit of investors. The potential exists, but thats not the reality today!!!
Comment 2: So if the core objective of micro finance banks is/was to provide accessible financial services to underserved individuals and small businesses, and Fintechs are disintermediating the micro finance realm (with Digital payment processing, digital wallets, etc) then why are the majority of payments in Nigeria still made with physical cash money? And where are the under serviced rural consumers getting their cash if not from their neighbourhood micro finance firm, that no longer exists?
My Response: First, the fintechs use microfinance licenses but they operate in different ways. The physical-only microfinance will fade while these fintechs with core digital nativity will win. These fintechs have new business models which include offering POS free unlike banks/microfinance which will ask you to pay for them. Because of that, vendors prefer them. Then why do they give things which used to be paid for free? Lean operations.
Think of app-lending. Some can release money in 5 minutes. In the physical mfb, you need to visit the office, apply, and then wait for days. With that over time, the physical-only MFB will not have customers to serve.
Comment 3: With Moniepoint numbers it seems like it could be processing about 25% of the GDP, if it maintains the charge all year round, you now wonder what is left for the rest to play with…
Well, it’s not for some of us to cry or fight for what banks should go or remain, once you cannot make a case for your relevance, you simply need to exit.
Comment 4: Thanks Prof. This was long coming though, but the pace seems to be moving faster to align with predictions few years ago, especially with the launch of BVN in 2014 Surprisingly some commercial banks are still not reading the playbook. Strangely the Data which these start ups and fintechs are using to disrupt and take the market share long resided with the Banks.
CBN however have played a major role ny creating a level playing ground for all to compete.
My Response:Yes indeed, the pace is moving really fast. The core customer and SME lending playbook in banking will likely move to these fintechs/apps and that will be significant.
Comment 5: Your postulation has stuck with me:
“The future of banking is not banks that use technology but technology companies that offer banking services”
I wonder why we are not seeing any acquisitions going on. Perhaps it’s the pride that retail banking isn’t a significant part of their earnings. What has been will always be. It’s a Goliath mindset.
David will be a shocking surprise.
The commercial banks offering NIN will scale financial inclusions much more than they anticipate.
And if telcos deeping internet access in rural Nigeria, the foundation for the entrance of fintechs into new markets would have been laid.
And like Goliath, the commercial banks will discover then, that speed is more important than size.
My Response: In the microfinance space, the old microfinance bank licenses have been bought by many fintechs. Sure, it is way too early for the big stage, the commercial banks.
In thispiece, I explain why startups win, despite the efforts of older companies who challenge them in new areas they are pioneering. The older companies can come with money, experience and technology, but most times, they are solving problems, with the wrong incentives. Consequently, they adjust the problems to accommodate their incentives and in the process, solve an entirely different problem, resulting in loss.
This week, Google isfolding Stories, a temporary video format which it cloned from Snapchat. For Snapchat, it was something pivotal to its core product, but when Google cloned it, it was for something totally different in the big world of YouTube. So, Stories failed and Google will shut it down.
You read it from me: African and specifically Nigerian startups, you can win over big brands, if you build resilience with a solid moat. Generally, your incentives are different and those are inherent advantages for you to win.
A bank may like to build a web-based global payment but remember that it will not like to cannibalize the hefty fees for international transfers its Treasury department depends on. For you, web payment is the business. For the bank, protect the Treasury margin. Magically, the incentives are different resulting in uncorrelated customer experiences – and over time, the startup wins!
YouTube ispulling the plug on Stories on June 26. The temporary video format — a Snapchat clone that auto-deleted after seven days — was first introduced in 2017 under the name Reels and offered to creators with more than 10,000 followers. The format failed to catch on and lost even more traction following the rise of TikTok. YouTube says it is now focusing its efforts on its bread and butter long-form content as well as Community posts, live video and its TikTok challenger, Shorts.
while i agree with you Ndu, our african startups don't engage in deep dive needed to fend off their legacy competitors. any startup today need more than d ideas 2 survive d landscape, why they must deepen their partnerships to win. the chinese started the mining invest 20yrs ago
My Response: “don’t engage in deep dive needed to fend off their legacy competitors” – if you check, these startups are doing well. The most valued financial institution in Nigeria is Flutterwave. Moniepoint processes more than $12 billion monthly, more than any bank. In logistics, no legacy one comes close. Across most domains, especially when digital and tech could be competitive advantages, these startups are “winning”.