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SEC Emails suggest Ripple (XRP) is NOT a Security, HedgeUp (HDUP) Position themselves to Take over Solana (SOL)

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The realm of cryptocurrencies is abuzz with groundbreaking developments. Recent reports suggesting Ripple (XRP) is not a security have turned heads, and simultaneously, an emerging asset-backed trading platform, HedgeUp (HDUP), is gearing up to challenge the status quo, potentially outpacing Solana (SOL).

The Ripple (XRP) Controversy: An Unexpected Twist

For a while now, Ripple (XRP), the digital payment protocol, has been under the Securities and Exchange Commission’s (SEC) scrutiny, raising doubts about its status as a security. However, recent email correspondences from SEC officials suggest Ripple (XRP) might not be classified as a security after all. This revelation could potentially steer Ripple’s (XRP) legal battle with the SEC towards a favorable outcome, reinstating confidence among Ripple (XRP) holders and investors. While the final decision is yet to be pronounced, these developments undoubtedly add a layer of complexity to the debate. 

HedgeUp (HDUP) Emerges: Gearing Up to Outpace Solana (SOL)

While the Ripple controversy unfolds, HedgeUp (HDUP), a promising newcomer in the crypto space, is garnering attention. HedgeUp (HDUP), an asset-backed trading platform, is rapidly gaining traction due to its innovative model that aims to provide a more secure and less volatile form of crypto investment. The HedgeUp (HDUP) team is now strategically positioning themselves to compete with established players like Solana (SOL). 

Why HedgeUp (HDUP) vs. Solana (SOL)?

Solana (SOL) has been a hot favorite in the crypto market due to its high-speed blockchain and smart contracts platform. Yet, the recent buzz around HedgeUp (HDUP) indicates a potential challenge. Investors are increasingly attracted to HedgeUp (HDUP) asset-backed model that promises a layer of stability uncommon in the crypto world. Furthermore, HedgeUp’s (HDUP) focus on transparency and regulatory compliance makes it a strong contender in a market where investor confidence is key. 

The Potential of HedgeUp (HDUP) 

Given HedgeUp’s (HUDP) presale success and increasing interest among the crypto community, it seems poised to emerge as a significant player. However, its ability to outpace Solana (SOL) will depend on various factors, including successful platform execution, consistent community growth, and the maintenance of its unique value proposition. 

Conclusion 

As the Ripple (XRP) controversy continues and HedgeUp (HDUP) positions itself to challenge Solana (SOL), it’s clear that the world of cryptocurrencies is as dynamic as ever. The potential change in Ripple’s status could significantly impact its market presence, just as HedgeUp’s (HDUP) burgeoning success could reshape the crypto landscape.

It’s vital for investors and crypto enthusiasts alike to stay informed about these developments. However, it’s equally important to remember that the crypto market is characterized by volatility and sudden shifts. As HedgeUp (HDUP) prepares to make waves in the crypto ocean, it serves as a timely reminder of the ever-evolving and exciting world of cryptocurrencies.

 

Click the links below for more information about HedgeUp (HDUP) presale:

  • Website: https://hedgeup.io/
  • Presale: https://app.hedgeup.io/sign-up
  • Telegram: https://t.me/HedgeUpChat
  • Twitter: https://twitter.com/HedgeUpOfficial

Zeeh Africa, A Tekedia Capital Portfolio, Makes Amazon AWS’ ‘fintech in Africa’ Accelerator

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Tekedia Capital congratulates Zeeh Africa for making Amazon AWS ‘fintech in Africa’ accelerator. We knew we had a winner when we brought you into the Tekedia ecosystem.


AWS announces the 25 startups selected for its first ‘fintech in Africa’ accelerator

Cohort participants from Kenya, Nigeria , South Africa, Egypt, Ghana, Uganda, and Cameroon

Description: Sekai Ndemanga, Head of FinTech Venture Capital and Startup Business Development at Amazon Web Services (AWS), speaks at the 9th Africa Fintech Summit in Washington DC on April 12, 2023.

NAIROBI, KENYA: 25 African fintech startups have been selected for the inaugural Amazon Web Services (AWS) FinTech Africa Accelerator cohort. This cohort was selected from over 500 applications and is part of the EMEA Startup Loft Accelerator (SLA) program run by AWS.

The pre-seed and seed stage fintech startups will start the 10-week program in June. Each startup will get technical review workshop sessions and up to $25K USD in AWS technical credits, world leading sector advice and one-to-one mentorship from major industry players including the Africa Fintech Summit (AFTS), Lendsqr and Vestbee to help them build their businesses.  

Africa’s fintech ecosystem is one of the fastest growing globally reaching $2B USD in 2022, according to data from Briter Bridges. Six out of seven of the continent’s unicorns operate in the financial services industry.

The cohort includes eleven startups from Nigeria – Ashiri NG, bunce, DeemPay, Fluna, Incash, KoinWa, Stacs, Vagrent Africa, WALLX Africa, Zainnest, and Zeeh Africa. Four are from Kenya – Chumz, hela.money, Kiotapay, and Mauzo. Four are from Ghana – Asaana Pay, Edanra, Exxtra, and H28 Technologies. There are two from Uganda –  eMaisha Pay and Xazu Technologies – and two from South Africa – Abela iMali and Moya Money. Dreamcash, a startup from Cameroon and MazAid, an Egyptian startup are also part of the cohort. 

While all participating startups are fintech companies, the program welcomed a diverse array of value propositions and verticals including finance/lending for MSME’s, cryptocurrency transactions, global remittance products, freelancer payment & invoice management, export/import management, and much more. 

“At AWS, we’re thrilled to be a part of Africa’s digital transformation, making core financial services accessible to more individuals and businesses. We believe that anyone regardless of their location, should be able to access innovative technologies and realize their dreams,” said Napa Onwusah, Start-up Segment Lead at AWS. “I am excited that the accelerator will be instrumental in empowering these startups to grow and scale their businesses.”

Co-Founder and Managing Partner of First Circle Capital, Agnes Aistleitner Kisuule stated, “The program is a great opportunity for aspiring entrepreneurs to hone their ideas, get exposed to the tech industry and drive growth in Africa’s financial services industry.” 

“FinTech is imperative for Africa’s economic growth so programs like this provide the expert training and support that early-stage FinTech companies need to scale to the next level and boost the continent’s digital economy,” said Barbara Iyayi, the Founding Managing Partner at Unicorn Growth Capital

Adedeji Olowe, the Founder & CEO of Lendsqr and a Trustee with Open Banking Nigeria stated, “AWS is making a huge impact on the startup ecosystem globally. Its secure and flexible cloud infrastructure allows startups to focus on developing innovative products to attract VC funding – a real need for them. Over 90% of startups we know created their Minimum Viable Product (MVP) on AWS. Products like Compute, Amazon SageMaker among others help them to build fast-scaling products that VCs like us love to back. We are excited to provide our expertise to young startups as part of the program.”

The program is supported by major players in the African financial technology industry including the Africa Fintech Summit, Unicorn Growth Capital, Lateral Frontiers VC, First Circle, Dawn Capital, White Star Capital, Blackfin Capital Partners, Vestbee, Alma Angels, Flashpoint Venture Capital, Vertis Capital, Next Road Ventures, Afrolynk, Stripe, Zendesk Startups, Techcabal, Paga, Lendsqr, and Conduit. 

Why is everyone running away from Nigeria?

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A Nigerian YouTuber residing in the United Kingdom was interviewed by the BBC  and he disclosed the Nigerians’ strategies with their japa plans. He told the BBC that Nigerians use education as a strategy to Japa (relocate) to the UK and also bring their dependents like spouses along. He stated that Nigerians do not necessarily need the degree they came to the UK for, they are only using it as a means to an end to escape Nigeria’s hardship.

The Nigerian internet has been agog over that particular interview; several Nigerians have called out the guy for granting the interview; some called him a snitch, others are insulting him claiming that he is burning the bridge after he crossed over so that others won’t cross.

The public uproar from Nigerians, especially the ones claiming that they have been saving up to Japa too but this guy’s interview wants to block the way for them got me thinking about the number of people that want to leave Nigeria. A lot have left already in droves and it’s scary that the number of others preparing to leave too in search of greener pastures is high and above the ones that have already left. 

My question is; must everyone leave Nigeria? Yes, there is a bad government, and yes there is a lack of jobs but if we all leave, who will be left behind to help rebuild the country? 

The hard truth is that aside from the glitz and glams, the colourful social media picture posts from those that have japad, not every one of them is having a good time, some are still not surviving out there, some are still struggling; the United Kingdom itself currently facing economic hardship, inflation is on the rise, same with most economies of the world; it is not always how most of the japa enthusiasts think that it ends up being.

Although there might not be enough jobs in Nigeria there are a lot of opportunities, I can attest to that, you just need to learn how to plug in and tap into it but the enthusiasm for Japa has blinded most Nigerians’ eyes to see this. Everyone must not be gainfully employed by the government. There is no country in the world (not even communist China) where the government is the number one employer of labour; citizens sprang up, created jobs for themselves and extended employment to other persons.

This whole japa conversation is tiring, the amount the UK alone makes from Nigerian international students if invested back into the country will go a long way in helping the economy of Nigeria.

The UEA did not become what it is today by every citizen of the country fleeing the country in search of greener pastures when they are still underdeveloped economy in the late 90s and the early 2000s, same with Singapore, neither did the Chinese flee China in face of economic hardship, even post WW2 Japan. Citizens joined hands with the government to build the economy until it became a world-class economy.

Nigeria is our home and there is no place like home. Please let us stay, join hands and rebuild it.

 

The Nvidia Moment

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Nvidia chip

Microsoft is a platform company because more revenue is generated by many companies which rely on many Microsoft products than the revenue generated by Microsoft. In other words, when you examine all the companies that run on Windows and Microsoft 365, and calculate the total revenue those products support, they beat whatever Microsoft is making out of the products. That is one feature of a platform.

Today, in the hardware business, Nvidia is the most important semiconductor/ microelectronics company in America (I did not say in the world, as TSMS rules the world therein). Nvidia is a clear platform, and it has demonstrated the capacity to transmute into something new whenever necessary.

During the boom years of gaming, Nvidia led. Then Bitcoin and cousins came in the cryptocurrency mining, Nvidia was there. Today, it is all about AI and Nvidia has become the plug. Left and right, this is becoming a special company and Nvidia has a moment.

Good People, Nvidia is a great technology company which has a real chance of becoming a new generation technology leader at scale: “Sales for the quarter ending in July will come in at about $11 billion, the company reported Wednesday, far beyond analysts’ forecasts of $7.2 billion. ” You do not deliver such without having category-king products. This company is emerging as a critical company of the 21st century.

Nvidia’s sales forecast has left Wall Street’s expectations in the dust, and then some. Sales for the quarter ending in July will come in at about $11 billion, the company reported Wednesday, far beyond analysts’ forecasts of $7.2 billion. The chipmaker’s stock jumped more than 25% in after-hours trading, continuing a rally that has pushed up shares more than 100%for the year. Driving the boom: the firm’s burgeoning business making chips for AI calculations in data centers.

Those computing engines “excel at parallel processing,” Bloomberg notes, “which makes them well suited for training software by bombarding it with data.”

Jumia Losses Decline Significantly, Meets End of Year Target in Q1 2023, Following New Strategy

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Pan-African technology company built around a marketplace, logistics service, and payment service, Jumia has seen its losses decline, and met its end-of-the-year target in its first quarter (Q1) report for 2023, following the implementation of strategy from new management.

Reports reveal that the e-commerce platform reached the lowest losses in four years after the new management Jettisoned the blueprint of the previous management.

Jumia’s adjusted EBITDA loss dropped 51% year-over-year to $27 million, on track to meet the company’s end-of-year target of $100-120 million in adjusted losses. Similarly, operating loss was down 54% from Q1 2022 to $30.9 million.

The streamlining efforts of Q4 2022, where Jumia reduced its headcount by 20% affecting 900 roles across its 11 markets, were instrumental in reducing losses. However, the General and Administrative expenses for Q1 2023, which dropped by 32%, do not yet reflect the full impact of the headcount cuts of Q4 2022.

Jumia CEO Francis Dufay disclosed that more layoffs could come as the company expects to reduce G&A costs by as much as $28 million by the end of the year. 

The company’s marketplace revenue reached $27.4 million in the first quarter of 2023, up 4% on a year-over-year basis. Commissions were the fastest growing marketplace revenue stream, it said in the financial statement, increasing by 40% year-over-year. Expenses in fulfillment, sales, advertising, and technology decreased 33%, 61%, and 9%, respectively, from Q1 2022 numbers.

Speaking on the strategies implemented to improve growth, the company CEO said,

“We’re reviewing how we do the logistics and supply chain by negotiating with suppliers and saving packaging costs, for example. We have improved the truck routes, which have minimal impact on customers and vendors but enabled us to save a lot of money.

“We have also reduced marketing spend a lot which was a huge driver this quarter because we believe that we can build the right fundamental for growth with much less marketing spent going forward.”

The CEO noted Jumia will continue right sizing its business in several departments and introduce more efficiency as part of its ongoing process to create a leaner cost structure that includes fewer customers. 

He also said that the e-commerce company is pivoting to a new model of growth, which includes three things, which are, improving supply and assortment relevance (by attracting onto the platform high-quality brands and suppliers with a focus on core e-commerce categories such as phones, electronics, home appliances, fashion, and beauty), enhancing seller management tools and processes to improve the experience of sellers in Jumia, and to increase its customer base, penetrating its addressable markets more effectively by tapping into the large consumer pools located in inner cities and rural areas where usual supply and retail coverage is poor. 

It is worth noting that Jumia has been making losses since its inception, reporting $57.2 million in its 2022 second-quarter report. The company has long shared its ambition to become profitable but it has not been clear how soon that will happen, even as the company steadily decreases its losses. 

On November 2022, it announced leadership changes to support its journey toward profitability. Jumia co-founders Sacha Poignonnec and Jeremy Hodara resigned from their roles as co-CEOs, just ten days before the company’s third-quarter 2022 financial report. The end of their tenure, therefore, marked the first time a new face, Francis Dufay, the ex-chief at Jumia Ivory Coast and now acting CEO of Jumia took charge.

On the call, Dufay was quick to emphasize why the e-commerce giant’s supervisory board decided to install new management, stressing that Jumia’s approach to turning a profit after half a decade of successive losses on the NYSE (as Africa’s first publicly traded company) required more deliberate execution and a return to basic e-commerce fundamentals.

Dufay then proceeded to lay out the new business strategy for the company during the Q3 2022 earnings call, stating that the recent focus on cost discipline and return on investment speaks to an ever-increasing need to make the company profitable in the near future. Results for Q3 showed more encouraging signs that the company is on the right path.

He further stated that the company intends to bring more focus to the core business, allocating capital, resources, and teams to main areas and projects with attractive returns on investments and clear ecosystem benefits.  Dufay said he wants Jumia to become a more attractive platform for its third-party vendors to sell on.