DD
MM
YYYY

PAGES

DD
MM
YYYY

spot_img

PAGES

Home Blog Page 697

OpenAI Set for $6bn Stock Sale at $500bn Valuation

0

OpenAI is reportedly in the market again, seeking to raise funds through stock that will see its valuation hit new level, according to Bloomberg.

At a potential $500 billion valuation, OpenAI would not only extend its lead as the most highly valued AI startup in history but also surpass the market capitalizations of many long-established public tech firms.

According to people familiar with the talks, OpenAI is preparing a secondary stock sale worth about $6 billion, with current and former employees selling shares to major investors including SoftBank, Dragoneer Investment Group, and Thrive Capital. Thrive is expected to lead the round, though discussions remain ongoing and terms could still change.

The planned sale underscores how rapidly OpenAI’s value has soared in just two years. When ChatGPT launched in November 2022, it quickly became the fastest-growing consumer application in history, drawing hundreds of millions of users and triggering a global race to build generative AI tools. That surge in adoption and enterprise demand catapulted OpenAI from a niche research lab to a multibillion-dollar powerhouse almost overnight.

By March 2025, OpenAI closed a record-setting $40 billion funding round at a $300 billion valuation — the largest capital raise ever by a private technology company. Earlier this month, it followed up with another $8.3 billion injection tied to that same round. Now, with the $6 billion secondary offering under discussion, its valuation would climb to around $500 billion, cementing its dominance in a sector where even rivals like Anthropic, Cohere, and Stability AI trail far behind in valuation and market recognition.

The company’s rise has also left it valued higher than many publicly traded technology players. A $500 billion figure would put OpenAI above legacy giants like Intel, IBM, and SAP, and not far from the trillion-dollar club occupied by Apple, Microsoft, and Nvidia. Analysts say this level of valuation makes OpenAI the single most influential private company in the AI era, giving it an outsized role in shaping how artificial intelligence is developed and deployed globally.

The surge in investor interest coincides with the rollout of OpenAI’s newest model, GPT-5, described as smarter, faster, and more versatile than its predecessors, particularly across writing, coding, and healthcare applications. The launch has drawn significant attention, though it has also sparked some frustration among users upset over losing access to older models like GPT-4o. CEO Sam Altman publicly acknowledged that the company had “underestimated how much some of the things that people like in GPT-4o matter to them, even if GPT-5 performs better in most ways.”

OpenAI has leaned heavily on secondary sales like this one to provide liquidity for employees and early backers without pursuing an IPO. The approach allows the company to keep scaling privately while giving institutional investors, such as SoftBank and Thrive, opportunities to increase their stakes.

For SoftBank’s Masayoshi Son, the deal represents another bold bet on AI after years of uneven performance in its Vision Fund portfolio. Thrive, already one of OpenAI’s largest supporters, has played a central role in past financing rounds, while Dragoneer continues to build its exposure to high-growth AI infrastructure.

Business leaders and investors describe the planned stock sale as a watershed moment in the artificial intelligence sector, one that highlights both the company’s unmatched growth trajectory and Wall Street’s unshaken belief in the future of generative AI.

If completed, the $6 billion sale would not only solidify OpenAI’s commanding valuation lead over other AI startups but also reinforce the view that the company is setting the pace for the entire industry.

Ajua Acquires Rate My Service to Create Africa’s Largest Customer Experience Platform

0

Ajua, Africa’s leading Customer Experience (CX) platform, has announced the strategic acquisition of Rate My Service (RMS), a pioneering Kenyan Customer and Employee Experience platform.

The move significantly strengthens Ajua’s expertise, reinforces its local relevance, and accelerates its mission to become the continent’s most comprehensive Experience Management platform.

The acquisition brings together two of Africa’s most prominent CX providers. RMS’s innovative feedback solutions and deep market insight combine with Ajua’s extensive reach and advanced technology. The result is a powerful, integrated platform designed to deliver more impactful and tailored CX strategies for businesses across the continent.

“This acquisition is a game-changer for the African CX landscape,” said Nyasha Mutsekwa, Ajua’s CEO. “Welcoming RMS into the Ajua family not only deepens our local expertise but also expands our reach. It’s a major step toward building Africa’s most robust CX platform—empowering businesses to understand and serve their customers with unmatched precision.”

Ajua is already well-regarded for its widespread presence across Africa and the Caribbean, offering end-to-end CX solutions that enable organizations to collect, analyze, and act on customer feedback.

In May 2025, the platform announced a strategic partnership with Amazon Web Services (AWS). This partnership marked a significant milestone in Ajua’s mission to scale world-class, insight-driven customer experiences across Africa and beyond.

As part of this collaboration, Ajua is now officially listed on the AWS Marketplace, becoming the first African CX platform to achieve this distinction. This listing provides global businesses with seamless access to Ajua’s suite of real-time customer experience solutions, enabling them to listen, learn, and act on customer feedback faster and with greater accuracy.

The platforms also offer direct integration with Google and Meta products, including WhatsApp, ensuring seamless and accessible customer interaction channels. The strategic partnership with Meta enhances the platform’s commitment to delivering hyper-local, real-time CX solutions by leveraging platforms already embedded in everyday consumer behavior.

On the other hand, Rate My Service (RMS), a customer feedback platform founded in 2017, is designed to help businesses collect, analyze, and act on customer and employee feedback to improve service quality and online reputation. Its primary focus is automating the measurement and monitoring of customer, employee, and brand experiences across various touchpoints, making it a valuable tool for businesses aiming to enhance customer satisfaction and drive growth.

The platform simplifies gathering feedback through tools like QR code widgets, email signatures, and integrations with platforms like Google and Meta (including WhatsApp). This allows businesses to collect real-time feedback from customers and employees.

Also, it monitors and manages reviews across platforms like Google My Business, Yelp, and Trustpilot, helping businesses boost 5-star reviews and address negative feedback privately.

By incorporating RMS’s specialized solutions, Ajua will enhance its ability to provide a holistic, highly localized, and sector-diverse CX offering. This acquisition underscores Ajua’s commitment to driving innovation and setting new benchmarks for customer-centric growth in Africa.

Notably, Ajua brings payment integrations and a broader client network, while RMS adds sophisticated feedback tools, enhancing the combined platform’s ability to offer holistic, localized CX solutions.

As Kenya’s CX sector is projected to grow at an 11.2% compound annual rate through 2031, driven by demand for real-time analytics and mobile-first engagement. The merger positions Ajua-RMS to compete against local rivals like Africa’s Talking and Emalify, as well as global players like Zendesk and Zoho.

Level Up Your Skills: Register for Tekedia AI Lab Technical Program

0

Are you ready to move beyond the theory of AI and dive into practical application? The Tekedia AI Lab: From Technical Design to Deployment is a new academic program designed to give you the hands-on skills you need to build and deploy real-world AI systems and agents.

This program, coordinated by Ndubuisi Ekekwe, is not a coding course. Instead, it’s a specialized, applied program focused on connecting and building code-based, open-model powered AI agents. Whether you’re a seasoned professional or a curious learner with at least a secondary school education, no prior coding or programming experience is required.

What You Will Learn:

  • Practical, Hands-on Skills: This course is all about tangible implementation. You’ll learn a code-based, cost-effective approach using open-source foundation and large language models (LLMs) to eliminate model-related costs.
  • AI System Development: Gain the knowledge to design, develop, and deploy your own AI systems and agents.
  • Deployment Expertise: Focus on creating functional, deployable AI systems that you can use in your career or personal projects.

Course Details:

  • Format: The program is entirely online and Zoom-based.
  • Duration: The course runs over four Saturdays in October 2025 (Oct 4, 11, 18, and 25), with each session lasting three hours.
  • Outcome: Upon completion, you will receive an Advanced Diploma in AI Technical Design and Deployment from Tekedia Institute.

As a bonus, participants will get access to the Tekedia AI in Business Masterclass, which covers the theory, management, and business of AI.

Ready to take the next step in your professional development? Learn More & Register Here

Paxos Reapplied for a National Trust Bank Charter in the United States

0

Paxos Trust Company, known for issuing stablecoins like PayPal’s PYUSD and Pax Dollar (USDP). Paxos has reapplied for a national trust bank charter in August 2025, aiming to convert its existing New York Department of Financial Services (NYDFS) limited-purpose trust charter into a federal one under OCC oversight.

Paxos Trust Company issues several USD-backed stablecoins, each designed for specific use cases, with a focus on regulatory compliance and transparency. A U.S. dollar-backed stablecoin issued by Paxos Trust Company, regulated by the New York State Department of Financial Services (NYDFS).

It’s fully backed by cash and cash equivalents, redeemable 1:1 for USD, and available on multiple blockchains for near-instant global settlements and low-cost transactions. USDP is used for payments, trading, and integration with exchanges, wallets, and dApps.

Paxos first applied for this charter in December 2020 and received preliminary conditional approval in April 2021. However, the application expired on March 31, 2023, as Paxos failed to meet the OCC’s 18-month deadline to establish the bank. The national trust bank charter would allow Paxos to:

Manage and hold customer assets nationwide. Settle payments faster under federal oversight. Enhance credibility with institutional clients due to stricter federal regulations. Operate uniformly across all U.S. states, moving beyond state-specific NYDFS regulation.

The application follows the passage of the GENIUS Act, signed into law by President Trump in 2025, which establishes the first federal framework for stablecoin issuers. This law requires stablecoins to be backed 1:1 by reserves (e.g., U.S. dollars, Treasuries) and mandates monthly public reports on these reserves.

A national trust bank charter does not permit Paxos to accept cash deposits or issue loans, unlike traditional banks. Instead, it focuses on custody services and asset management, aligning with Paxos’ blockchain and stablecoin infrastructure. Paxos joins other crypto firms like Circle (issuer of USDC) and Ripple (behind XRP and Ripple USD) in seeking national trust bank charters.

Currently, Anchorage Digital is the only U.S.-based digital asset company with an active national trust bank charter. Paxos has operated under NYDFS supervision since 2015, becoming the first blockchain firm to obtain a limited-purpose trust charter. It launched the first regulated stablecoin (Paxos Standard, PAX) in 2018. However, Paxos faced regulatory challenges, including:

A 2023 NYDFS order to stop issuing Binance USD due to compliance issues. A $48.5 million settlement with NYDFS in August 2025 for anti-money laundering deficiencies during its Binance partnership ($26.5 million fine, $22 million for compliance upgrades). OCC supervision ensures higher transparency, periodic audits, and stringent capital requirements.

Federal status strengthens Paxos’ credibility with international regulators (e.g., FIN-FSA in Estonia, MAS in Singapore, FSRA in Abu Dhabi), facilitating cross-border cooperation. Paxos maintains reserves at 102% of issued stablecoin value, ensuring 1:1 redemption and investor protection, which will be further reinforced under OCC rules.

The charter aligns with the growing stablecoin market (valued at $170 billion, projected to reach $3 trillion by 2030) and enhances Paxos’ ability to offer regulated blockchain solutions. The OCC will thoroughly review Paxos’ financial health, management, and compliance systems, especially given its recent $48.5 million settlement.

The Independent Community Bankers of America has raised concerns about granting bank-like privileges to crypto firms without adequate safeguards. The expiration of Paxos’ 2021 conditional approval and regulatory issues with Binance may complicate the current application process.

Paxos’ application is under review by the OCC. Paxos anticipates a smooth transition for customers, with uninterrupted services and assets fully backed by reserves.

Nigeria’s Inflation Slows Slightly to 21.88% in July — Prices Remain High Despite Downtrend

0

Nigeria’s headline inflation rate eased marginally to 21.88% in July 2025 from 22.22% in June, according to the latest data from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS).

The moderation marks a continuation of the downward trend in the year-on-year headline figure, which now sits 11.52 percentage points lower than the 33.40% recorded in July 2024.

The bureau attributed part of this significant year-on-year drop to a technical factor: the adoption of a new base year, November 2009 = 100. This statistical recalibration reduced the magnitude of the annual inflation rate even as consumers still grapple with high living costs.

On a month-to-month basis, however, inflation ticked higher. July’s 1.99% month-on-month rate exceeded June’s 1.68%, indicating that prices are still rising faster than they did a month earlier. NBS noted that this reflects an increase in the average price level during the month.

Over the twelve months ending July 2025, the average CPI rose by 25.65%, which is 5.11 percentage points lower than the 30.76% recorded over the same period last year.

Urban and Rural Price Trends

In Nigeria’s cities, inflation stood at 22.01% year-on-year in July, down sharply from 35.77% in the same month of 2024. Urban prices rose by 1.86% on a month-to-month basis, a slowdown from June’s 2.11%. The twelve-month urban average was 27.04%, lower than the 32.89% recorded in July last year.

In rural areas, inflation was 21.08% year-on-year in July 2025, a decline from 31.26% in July 2024. However, rural prices accelerated sharply on a monthly basis, rising 2.30% compared to June’s 0.63%. The rural twelve-month average was 23.84%, down from 28.86% a year earlier.

Food Prices Still Pressuring Households

Food inflation — the category most felt by households — dropped significantly in annual terms, from 39.53% in July 2024 to 22.74% in July 2025. The NBS cautioned that part of this steep drop is also due to the base year change rather than purely market-driven declines.

Month-on-month, food prices eased slightly, rising 3.12% in July compared to 3.25% in June. The modest slowdown was attributed to lower prices for vegetable oil, beans, local rice, maize flour, guinea corn, wheat flour, and millet. The twelve-month average food inflation rate stood at 26.97%, down from 36.36% in the same period last year.

Core Inflation and Persistent Cost Pressures

Core inflation, which strips out volatile agricultural produce and energy costs, came in at 21.33% year-on-year, down from 27.47% in July 2024. On a month-to-month basis, core inflation rose just 0.97%, a sharp deceleration from June’s 2.46%. The twelve-month core average was 23.63%, slightly lower than 24.65% a year earlier.

Why Inflation is Falling but Nigerians Don’t Feel It

Analysts told Nairametrics that while improved domestic food supply, relative exchange rate stability, and moderating energy costs are helping to sustain the downward trend, structural cost drivers remain entrenched. Persistent transportation bottlenecks, high borrowing costs, and weak infrastructure continue to push up production and distribution expenses.

Vice Chairman of Highcap Securities, Professor David Adonri, noted that the ongoing harvest of staple crops such as maize, yam, and cassava should boost market supply and bring short-term relief to consumers. However, he cautioned that seasonal improvements will not resolve underlying inflationary pressures without deeper reforms in agriculture, energy, and trade logistics.

The marginal slowdown in inflation also comes against a backdrop of public skepticism. Despite the statistical improvement, many Nigerians say they have not seen any tangible relief in markets, where goods and services remain prohibitively expensive.

Economists are now calling on the Central Bank of Nigeria to consider a gradual reduction in the Monetary Policy Rate (MPR) to ease borrowing costs and stimulate production, though the apex bank is expected to tread cautiously to avoid reigniting price pressures.

Understanding The Rebase-fueled Decline

Nigeria’s inflation path since 2023 is a tale of three phases: a sharp upswing through mid-2024, a plateau at very high levels, and a statistically aided step-down in 2025. The initial surge began after the mid-2023 policy resets, fuel subsidy removal, and FX market changes, pushing headline inflation steadily higher through late 2023.

By early to mid-2024, year-on-year inflation was running in the low-to-mid-30s, with July 2024 printing 33.40%. That period marked the peak zone of the cycle as food, transport, and imported components fed through with limited offsets from supply-side improvements.

From late 2024 into early 2025, momentum cooled on a year-on-year basis, but the absolute price level stayed elevated. Two things helped temper the annual rate: base effects as the very high prints from 2023/24 rolled out of the comparison window, and pockets of improved domestic food supply that softened the worst monthly spikes.

The more visible break came in 2025 when the National Bureau of Statistics adopted a new CPI base year (November 2009 = 100) and updated expenditure weights and product samples. Re-basing does not cut prices; it re-anchors the index to a new reference period and refreshes how the basket mirrors household spending. When weights shift toward items rising more slowly, or previously overweighted fast-rising items are corrected, the measured year-on-year rate can ease even if month-to-month pressures persist.

That is why July 2025’s headline rate of 21.88% sits a full 11.52 percentage points below July 2024’s 33.40%, even as monthly inflation accelerated to 1.99% from 1.68% in June. The annual decline shows the combined impact of re-basing, softer comparators, and some supply improvements. The monthly pickup shows that price pressures have not vanished and that households still face a rising cost of living.