Fincra, a cross-border payments infrastructure provider, has secured a Payment Service Provider (PSP) licence in Canada, a move… The post Fincra secures CanadianFincra, a cross-border payments infrastructure provider, has secured a Payment Service Provider (PSP) licence in Canada, a move… The post Fincra secures Canadian

Fincra secures Canadian PSP licence to bolster Africa–Canada payment links

2026/03/14 16:31
4 min read
For feedback or concerns regarding this content, please contact us at [email protected]

Fincra, a cross-border payments infrastructure provider, has secured a Payment Service Provider (PSP) licence in Canada, a move set to transform how capital moves between the two markets. For years, cross-border transactions between Africa and Canada have remained slow, costly, and operationally complex; Fincra’s new regulatory standing aims to bridge that gap.

The approval allows the company to carry out regulated payment activities under the country’s financial framework, including holding funds on behalf of users, maintaining accounts, initiating electronic transfers, facilitating payment instructions, and supporting clearing and settlement.

Wole Ayodele, CEO of Fincra, describes the milestone as an important step in our mission to build the rails for an integrated Africa.

“Securing a PSP licence in Canada is an important step in our mission to build the rails for an integrated Africa. We have so much potential in Africa; we are the fastest-growing continent. When you look at statistics in terms of the young population and the future of the workforce, a lot of that is true. But to really tap into that growth, we still need some infrastructure to get there.”

Fincra secures Canadian PSP licence to bolster Africa–Canada payment linksFincra-HQ

For businesses and individuals sending money between Africa and Canada, the move provides a stronger compliance footing and a clearer operational pathway for transactions that often rely on multiple intermediaries.

The announcement marks another step in Fincra’s broader effort to build financial rails that connect African businesses to global markets.

Fincra’s Canadian PSP licence expands cross-border infrastructure

Cross-border payments between Africa and North America frequently involve a patchwork of correspondent banks, foreign-exchange spreads and settlement delays. Those frictions can complicate everything from supplier payments to freelance income.

This license gives the company the regulatory backing to operate more directly within Canada’s payment ecosystem. That matters for practical use cases: a Lagos-based importer paying a Canadian supplier, an African freelancer receiving income from a Canadian client, or a fintech platform enabling collections and payouts across borders.

Fincra secures Canadian PSP licence to bolster Africa–Canada payment linksWole Ayodele, CEO of Fincra

By operating with local regulatory recognition, Fincra can support these flows with greater transparency and compliance. For companies moving funds between the two regions, that translates into more predictable settlement processes and fewer structural barriers.

The company’s model focuses on providing infrastructure rather than consumer-facing payment apps. It supplies APIs and payment rails that businesses, fintech platforms, and marketplaces can integrate into their own products.

That infrastructure approach has become increasingly common among African fintechs looking to serve global markets without building retail financial services in each jurisdiction.

Fincra already supports payment operations across more than ten African countries and nine currencies. Its network includes licences, registrations, and partnerships in markets such as Nigeria, Tanzania, South Africa and Kenya.

The Canadian PSP licence adds another regulatory node to that network.

Infrastructure has become a central theme in Africa’s fintech sector. While early startups focused heavily on consumer payments and wallets, a newer generation of companies is building the underlying systems that enable businesses to move money internationally.

Those systems include foreign-exchange infrastructure, settlement networks, and regulatory frameworks that make cross-border transactions possible at scale.

The timing is notable. Trade links between Africa and Canada continue to expand, supported by diaspora remittances, freelance work, digital commerce and business supply chains.

Fincra secures Canadian PSP licence to bolster Africa–Canada payment linksFincra

Yet the financial plumbing connecting the regions often lags behind the economic activity.

Companies sending funds between the two markets typically navigate a mix of local banks, correspondent banking relationships and third-party payment processors. Each step adds cost, compliance requirements and potential delays.

Fincra’s strategy is to simplify that chain by acting as a single infrastructure layer capable of handling cross-border payment initiation, foreign exchange, and settlement.

The new Canadian licence strengthens that strategy by placing the company within a regulated framework in one of the world’s largest financial markets.

For African businesses seeking global reach, reliable payment rails are often the first barrier to overcome. Fincra is betting that deeper regulatory coverage will help remove that barrier and make cross-border commerce less complicated.

The company says its focus remains on expanding that infrastructure footprint while enabling African businesses to transact globally with fewer frictions.

The post Fincra secures Canadian PSP licence to bolster Africa–Canada payment links first appeared on Technext.

Market Opportunity
Movement Logo
Movement Price(MOVE)
$0.02089
$0.02089$0.02089
-3.59%
USD
Movement (MOVE) Live Price Chart
Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact [email protected] for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

Analyst Predicts ‘Uptober’ Rally for BTC Regardless of FOMC Decision

Analyst Predicts ‘Uptober’ Rally for BTC Regardless of FOMC Decision

The post Analyst Predicts ‘Uptober’ Rally for BTC Regardless of FOMC Decision appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Bitcoin traded at $116,236 as of 14:04 UTC on Sept. 17, up about 1% in the past 24 hours, holding above a key level as markets await the Federal Reserve’s policy announcement. Analysts’ comments Dean Crypto Trades noted on X that bitcoin is only about 7% above its post-election local peak, while the S&P 500 has risen 9% and gold has surged 36% during the same period. He said bitcoin has compressed more than those assets, making it likely to lead the next larger move, though it could form a “lower high” before extending further. He added that ether could join in once it breaks $5,000 and enters price discovery. Lark Davis pointed to bitcoin’s history around September FOMC meetings, saying every September decision since 2020 — except during the 2022 bear market — has preceded a strong rally. He stressed that the pattern is less about the Fed’s rate choice itself and more about seasonal dynamics, arguing that bitcoin tends to thrive in this period heading into “Uptober.” CoinDesk Research’s technical analysis According to CoinDesk Research’s technical analysis data model, bitcoin rose about 0.9% during the Sept. 16–17 analysis window, climbing from $115,461 to $116,520. BTC reached a session high of $117,317 at 07:00 UTC on Sept. 17 before consolidating. Following that peak, bitcoin tested the $116,400–$116,600 range multiple times, confirming it as a short-term support zone. In the final hour of the session, between 11:39 and 12:38 UTC, BTC attempted a breakout: prices moved narrowly between $116,351 and $116,376 before spiking to $116,551 at 12:34 on higher volume. This confirmed a consolidation-breakout pattern, though the gains were modest. Overall, bitcoin remains firm above $116,000, with support around $116,400 and resistance near $117,300. Latest 24-hour and one-month chart analysis The latest 24-hour CoinDesk Data chart, ending 14:04 UTC on…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 12:42
XRP Moves Above $1.40 as Traders Watch Bullish Signals

XRP Moves Above $1.40 as Traders Watch Bullish Signals

The post XRP Moves Above $1.40 as Traders Watch Bullish Signals appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. XRP climbed above $1.40 with $3.5B volume as traders highlight
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2026/03/14 18:54
Paramount-WBD 2027 movie slate could dominate. Can it sustain?

Paramount-WBD 2027 movie slate could dominate. Can it sustain?

The post Paramount-WBD 2027 movie slate could dominate. Can it sustain? appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Paramount Skydance CEO David Ellison speaks during
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2026/03/14 19:06