UBA pushes deeper bank-fintech collaboration at pan-African conference

by · The Eagle Online

United Bank for Africa Plc (UBA) has reinforced its commitment to deepening collaboration between banks and fintechs across Africa, following the successful hosting of its inaugural Fintech Conference, themed: “Navigating Regulatory Milestones: The Future of Bank–Fintech Partnerships.”

The conference convened more than 20 leading fintechs and ecosystem stakeholders, including PalmPay, OPay, PayAza, Mastercard, Visa, Nigeria Inter-Bank Settlement System, and representatives of the Central Bank of Nigeria. 

Discussions at the conference focused on regulation, innovation, security, and the evolution of payments across the continent.

Opening the event, UBA’s Executive Director, Digital Banking, Emmanuel Lamptey, called for a shift from competition to deliberate partnership.

Lamptey said: “The future is not banks versus fintechs, but banks with fintechs. 

“When we combine scale, trust, and regulatory depth with innovation and agility, we unlock a financial system that works for far more Africans.”

From an industry perspective, Peter Ehizogie of Mastercard pointed to Nigeria’s payments evolution as both a catalyst and a caution.

Ehizogie said: “Each wave of innovation—instant payments, cards, gateways, and now AI—has expanded opportunity while introducing new risks. 

“Collaboration is what ensures progress is sustained, not disrupted.”

Echoing this, Seyi Ebenezer, the Chief Executive Officer, PayAza, emphasised urgency around ecosystem integration.

Ebenezer said: “Collaboration is no longer optional. 

“The priority now is speed—how quickly we can remove the barriers between fintechs and banks to unlock scale.”

UBA also highlighted its own execution, with the Head of Mobile Banking, Gideon Iheama, outlining advancements in Leo, the bank’s AI-powered assistant. 

The platform now supports conversational transactions, including transfers of up to ₦5 million and foreign currency operations, reflecting increased customer adoption and investment in intelligent banking infrastructure.

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Closing the conference, UBA’s Head of Digital Banking Sales, Shamsideen Fashola, underscored the growing importance of cybersecurity in an AI-driven ecosystem.

Fashola said: “Cybersecurity is now AI versus AI. 

“As institutions innovate to improve customer experience, they must invest just as aggressively in defending against evolving threats.”

The conference concluded with a unified call for sustained collaboration as the primary lever for scaling financial inclusion, strengthening resilience, and unlocking long-term growth across Africa’s financial ecosystem.

United Bank for Africa is one of the largest employers in the financial sector on the African continent, with 25,000 employees group-wide and serving over 45 million customers globally. 

Operating in 20 African countries, the United Kingdom, United States of America, France and United Arab Emirates, UBA provides retail, commercial and institutional banking services, leading financial inclusion and implementing cutting-edge technology.

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