News & Updates

Tanzania Crypto: Sub-Saharan Stablecoin Series
Tanzania’s economy runs on mobile money and youthful energy – but also faces costly remittances, a gradually weakening shilling, and limited banking access. Could US-dollar stablecoins delivered via phones provide a safe haven and new financial spark for Tanzanians? We explore the opportunities and obstacles as Mukoma Mari continues the Sub-Saharan Stablecoin journey.

South Africa Crypto: Sub-Saharan Stablecoin Series
South Africa’s rand has been volatile, inflation sticky, and load-shedding a daily grind—but stablecoins are gaining ground. From FSCA licensing to USDC/USDT P2P trades, South Africans are exploring digital dollar savings, cheaper remittances, and smoother cross-border trade.

Nigeria Crypto: Sub‑Saharan Stablecoin Series
Nigeria’s naira rollercoaster has driven millions to stablecoins. From Lagos fintech hubs to diaspora remittances, Nigerians use USDT and USDC for savings, trade, and global payments—proving why Africa’s giant may become a stablecoin powerhouse.

Namibia Crypto: Sub-Saharan Stablecoin Series
Namibia’s dunes hide big economic challenges—youth joblessness, costly remittances, and reliance on South Africa’s rand. With new oil hopes rising, stablecoins could help Namibians save in digital dollars, cut transfer costs, and connect to global markets.

Kenya Crypto: Sub-Saharan Stablecoin Series
Kenya reimagines its fintech legacy with stablecoins—building on M-Pesa’s rails to deliver cheaper remittances, real-time global payments, and digital-dollar savings for fast-moving, tech-savvy Kenyans.

Mozambique Crypto: Sub-Saharan Stablecoin Series
Mozambique’s LNG revival, mobile‑money rails and currency pressures set the stage for stablecoins. See how digital dollars can cut remittance costs, smooth trade, and help households and exporters preserve value.

Zambia Crypto: Sub‑Saharan Stablecoin Series
Zambia’s Kwacha volatility, forex shortages, and high remittance costs are driving interest in stablecoins. Discover how crypto savings can help Zambians—from small farmers to copper exporters—preserve value, trade globally, and boost financial inclusion.