Flutterwave Founder and Chief Executive Officer, Olugbenga Agboola, has stressed the need for financial infrastructure handling customer funds to be designed to withstand shocks from day one, regardless of whether transactions involve stablecoins or fiat currencies.
He also described stablecoins as a major upgrade to Africa’s cross-border payment infrastructure, noting that companies best positioned to benefit from the shift are those with strong local distribution networks and compliance expertise capable of converting digital assets into real-world value.
Agboola made the remarks during two high-profile engagements at Money20/20 Europe in Amsterdam.
At the event, he joined Clear Junction Founder and Group Executive Chair, Dima Kats, for a fireside chat titled, “Building the Rails: Stablecoin Architecture from Lagos to London,” under the “Money Stack Rewired: Stablecoins and Beyond” content pillar.
Speaking on Flutterwave’s positioning in the evolving digital finance ecosystem, Agboola explained that stablecoins are not a standalone product category but a faster settlement layer built on top of the company’s extensive local and global payout infrastructure.
For enterprises managing treasury operations across multiple African markets, he said stablecoins provide a reliable liquidity and foreign exchange management tool that continues to function even when traditional banking systems are unavailable.
“Stablecoin is completely different because money moves at the speed of the internet, not at the speed of banks closing up shop. If you pay with stablecoin, you receive that money instantly,” he said.
Addressing concerns about whether stablecoins could eliminate infrastructure intermediaries, Agboola argued that while wallet-to-wallet token transfers may appear simple, ensuring legal compliance, navigating anti-money laundering (AML) regulations, and enabling last-mile payouts into local bank accounts across multiple jurisdictions remain highly complex tasks that make Flutterwave’s infrastructure critical.
“I’ve been in payments for about 20 years, and the infrastructure that manages customer funds must be designed for shocks from day one. It doesn’t matter whether the value comes from stablecoins or fiat. This is what we’ve prioritised — giving customers one wallet address that is chain-agnostic, supported by all the major blockchains, while ensuring that customer funds are not at risk,” Agboola stated.
Speaking separately at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), Agboola used Flutterwave’s 10th anniversary celebration to outline the company’s long-term vision.
He explained that while the company spent the last decade connecting Africa’s fragmented payment infrastructure through a single API, the next decade would focus on positioning Flutterwave as the financial operating system for the continent.
According to him, the company’s recently secured microfinance banking licence in Nigeria marks a major structural evolution from being merely a “money-in-transit” provider to becoming a foundational financial infrastructure player.
Agboola said the deeper integration would reduce friction across the financial ecosystem, improve network reliability, and unlock new business opportunities across multiple sectors.
He added that the transition aligns with Flutterwave’s ambition of building a multi-rail financial infrastructure where stablecoin and fiat rails work seamlessly together to power Africa’s economic growth.
To strengthen its cross-border capabilities, Flutterwave has continued to expand its network of global digital asset partnerships, including collaborations with Circle, Polygon, Fireblocks, Flow, Nuvion, and Tempo.
According to Agboola, the growing ecosystem forms the backbone of what Flutterwave is positioning as Africa’s largest regulated stablecoin infrastructure.
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