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Program 2025

AFIS 2025

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  • (GMT+1)
    Opening Ceremony
    Speaker

    Nadia FETTAH

    Minister of the Economy & Finance, Kingdom of Morocco
  • (GMT+1)
    Opening Panel | Africa doesn’t need saving – it needs Its own savings: Unlocking domestic capital for a future we own

    “External dependency is not a good development strategy,” warns AfDB in its 2025 economic outlook. Despite last year’s 75% FDI surge, leaner times loom as US tariffs and geopolitical rifts trigger aid cuts and subdue global economic activity. Africa must look within to trillions in untapped domestic capital – in pension funds, sovereign wealth vehicles, insurance assets, commercial banks, fintech platforms, and foreign exchange reserves – while leveraging hybrid instruments and transforming 1.55bn Africans into active capital market participants. How can a debt-burdened continent harness this vast capital pool and growing population to build financial sovereignty and fund under-resourced MSMEs, vital energy infrastructure, and digital innovation?

    Key points:

    • Institutional capital: What business case will lure insurance, pension and sovereign wealth funds from their heaven of government debt into backing private sector growth?
    • How can the financial sector support local champions in sectors where international companies dominate: natural resources, energy, logistics, trade finance?
    • Where can fintech and digital platforms have the greatest impact in channelling domestic savings into productive investments?
    Moderator

    Manal BERNOUSSI

    Founder & Managing Director, Leaders on Purpose
    Speaker

    Nadia FETTAH

    Minister of the Economy & Finance, Kingdom of Morocco
    Speaker

    Jules NGANKAM

    Group Chief Executive Officer, African Guarantee Fund
  • (GMT+1)
    State of the Industry | Africa Financial Industry Barometer 2025

    Deloitte and AFIS unveil findings from the 5th African Financial Industry Barometer, an annual survey capturing the views of senior executives across banking, insurance, fintech, and capital markets.  The report highlights how the sector is responding to the many upheavals affecting global finance. 

  • (GMT+1)
    Panel | Who controls African trade finance - and why isn’t it African banks?

    Pan-African banks could become the go-to providers of correspondent banking for intra-African trade and exports to Africa – spaces dominated by international clearing banks. Yet thin FX reserves, weaker credit ratings than global peers, and risk perceptions hinder progress. As domestic banks expand into global financial hubs, fill gaps left by global bank exits, and back systems like PAPSS that bypass third-party currencies, how can they grow trade finance share without over-relying on DFIs? What past experiences, especially in former Asian emerging markets, could prove valuable? 

    Key points 

    • Trade within Africa: How can SME collateral and credit data gaps be tackled so African banks can lead in clearing cross-border SME trade finance?
    • Trade to Africa: What trust barriers and governance will make African banks the correspondent partner of choice for global exporters to Africa?
    • Which embedded finance and innovative digital offerings can position domestic banks as leaders?  
    Speaker

    Rabah RAHMANI

    Managing Director - ZENITH BANK UK (Ltd) PARIS BRANCH , Zenith Bank France
  • (GMT+1)
    Strategic Roundtable | Microfinance: Breaking free from debt-driven models

    Microfinance institutions (MFIs) face a regulatory divide across Africa: some can collect deposits, others are restricted to lending – shaping how they serve clients and fuel growth. In credit-only markets, MFIs must turn to alternative sources of capital, such as loans, bonds, or securitisation, raising important questions about long-term sustainability. Even where savings mobilisation is allowed, many MFIs still rely heavily on debt, with savings-to-loan ratios often falling below 50%. A roundtable of MFIs, DFIs and regulatory bodies explores why debt continues to dominate funding models and how the sector can shift towards a more balanced approach.

    Key Points

    • Which types of consumer protection frameworks can build trust to unlock deposit mobilisation and reduce reliance on debt?
    • How can digitalisation offer new pathways to scale up savings?
    • To what extent can regulatory reforms safely open the door to deposit mobilisation?
    Speaker

    Mona ZULFICAR

    President & Founder, Al Tadamun Microfinance Foundation
    Speaker

    Joel AFFOYON

    CEO, National Microfinance Funds, Benin (FNM)
  • (GMT+1)
    Disrupters Club Roundtable | Enabling full-proof investment ecosystems for Africa’s fintechs

    Paystack, sold to global giant Stripe for $200m, and Moniepoint, founded ten years ago and now a $1bn company, prove Africa has world-class fintech talent. As continental tech funding dipped 33% YOY in 2024 – especially for early-stage rounds – will patient, well-structured capital, and support systems be available to nurture the next generation of talent? A roundtable of startups, investors, and regulators explores how to create an environment that helps the boldest fintech ideas take root and scale.

    Key Points:

    • How can local VCs, DFIs, and public actors align efforts to create coordinated capital pipelines?
    • In a resource-tight landscape, how can fintech founders show they are investor-ready?
    • Mentorship, guidance and regulatory compliance support: What more can national and regional fintech ecosystems do to support startups beyond funding?
    Moderator

    Babacar SECK

    Founder & Managing Partner, Askya Investment Partners
    Speaker

    Lina KACYEM

    Director, Francophone Africa, Launch Africa Ventures
  • (GMT+1)
    Panel | From start-up to scale-up: Financing SMEs for jobs growth in Africa

    SMEs employ 80 percent of the African workforce, and nine out of ten new jobs on the continent are created by growing companies. How can African financial sector stakeholders become better at supporting the continental jobs agenda by increasing support for growing small and medium-sized companies, especially those run by women and youth entrepreneurs? What inspiration can we draw from other continents?

    Moderator

    Aurélie M'BIDA

    Editor-in-chief Business and Economy, Jeune Afrique
  • (GMT+1)
    Panel | From deal to listing: Preparing private equity exits through capital markets

    Only around 10% of Private Equity (PE) exits in Africa came via IPOs in 2024—undermining stock market development—while trade sales and secondaries continue to dominate. One overlooked barrier to IPOs is internal: most portfolio companies are not structured to become listed entities.  Some investors like Mediterrania Capital Partners have however engineered successful IPOs on the Casablanca Stock Exchange by embedding exit-readiness early – through governance upgrades and public-market-aligned reporting. This roundtable gathering investors and regulators explores how to turn IPOs into a credible exit path across African markets. 

    Key Points: 

    • What listing-readiness processes – governance, audit, transparency, investor engagement -should PE firms embed from day one?
    • How can African exchanges co-develop tailored exit pathways via phased IPOs, mid-cap segments, simplified disclosure regimes?
    • What collaborative tools, such as GP–stock exchange dialogues, early listing diagnostics, and capital market alliances, can accelerate IPO adoption?    
    Moderator

    Damien JACQUART

    Leader Financial Advisory, Francophone Africa, Deloitte
    Speaker

    Vasco JANUÁRIO

    Executive Director, Comissão do Mercado de Capitais (CMC) - Angola
    Speaker

    Dahlia KHALIFA

    Regional Director, Central Africa & Anglophone West Africa, IFC
  • (GMT+1)
    Insurance Supervisors Panel | How to tackle Africa's sub 3% insurance penetration rates?

    Just over two-thirds of African insurance CEOs surveyed by ContinentalRe say penetration rates do not matter to them, revealing a troubling disconnect between market behaviour and public policy priorities. African insurance penetration (2.4% for life; 1.1% for non-life) is below global norms, and much lower outside South Africa, leaving millions exposed to climate, health, and income shocks. In agriculture, less than 3% of African smallholder farmers are covered. Meanwhile, informal schemes like tontines or Harambees are still the default safety net for rural and peri-urban households. To close this gap, regulators must build capacity, digitise supervision, and connect informal practices with formal markets. What coordinated push will finally unlock inclusive, resilient insurance at scale?

    Key Points :

    • How can government–supervisor collaboration turn agriculture and informal sector penetration into a profitable private sector business opportunity?
    • What regulatory levers (mandates, digital onboarding, premium subsidies) can scale micro & agriculture insurance?
    • How can informal groups be integrated into formal systems, combining trust, reach, and supervision?
    Speaker

    Baghayo SAQWARE

    Commisioner and Director General, Tanzania Insurance Regulatory Authority
    Speaker

    Aldemiro GONCALVES

    Executive Administrator, Agência Angolana de Regulação e Supervisão de Seguros- ARSEG
  • (GMT+1)
    Strategic Roundtable | Climate shock cover: How to expand regional climate risk pools

    Deeper risk pools at regional level may be required to cover insurers’ liabilities to increasingly frequent floods and droughts amid high reinsurance costs. The African Union’s African Risk Capacity, the COMESA-backed Africa Nature Risk Pool, and Morocco’s $275 million Solidarity Fund – funded via a levy on non-life policies – have emerged to reinforce insurance underwriting capacity and expand cover. But as Old Mutual last year projected a 10% premium hike across all products due to climate events, additional capital may be needed to keep insurance affordable as weather-related claims soar. A roundtable examines how regional cooperation among insurers, reinsurers, governments and DFIs, could strengthen or establish new risk pools.

    Key points

    • Smallholder farming, corporate property damage: Which policies and insurance penetration initiatives urgently need new or expanded risk pools?
    • Levies on policies and development finance: Where will capital for risk pools come from?
    • African Risk Capacity, AU, regional blocs, BRICs: Which platforms will be the basis of future regional or pan-African risk pools?
    Speaker

    Mamadou DEME

    Director of Insurance, Ministry of Finance and Budget, Republic of Senegal
    Speaker

    Hope MURERA

    Managing Director and CEO, ZEP-RE
    Speaker

    Moubarak MOUKAILA

    Director of the Environment and Climate Finance Department, West African Development Bank
  • (GMT+1)
    Women In Finance Workshop | Addressing governance blind spots in pay parity, progression and retention

    More than 35 male African central bank governors and only three women (8%) ; hundreds of male Group CEOs of Africa’s top-tier banks and insurers, but only a few women. Despite growing awareness, gender disparities persist—particularly in pay equity, leadership progression, and board representation. Only 23% of boards include more than 25% female directors (AFIS-Deloitte Barometer), and 2025 marked the lowest women-in-leadership representation in five years. Since 2012, the Central Bank of Nigeria has mandated 40% female representation in top management at commercial banks, leading to several women Group CEOs, a rare occurrence elsewhere in Africa. A workshop gathers executives to brainstorm governance reforms for advancement and retention.

    Speaker

    Oluwatoyin SANNI

    Founder / Executive Vice-Chairman, Emerging Africa Group
  • (GMT+1)
    Panel | Mobilising domestic savings into the local economies: What's stopping institutional investors?

    African institutional investor (pension funds and deposit and consignment funds) assets now exceed $230 billion. Yet less than 10% of pension funds is invested in domestic capital markets outside South Africa and Nigeria – and just 1.5% in infrastructure or alternatives. In Uganda, listed equities represent under 1% of institutional holdings despite pension assets equalling 12% of GDP. Most capital remains in short-term government securities due to regulatory ceilings, shallow markets, and high transaction costs. By contrast, pooled consortia of pension funds, insurers and sovereign wealth funds in Kenya and South Africa have mobilised $500 million for infrastructure in just three years. In Morocco, the Caisse de Dépôt et de Gestion demonstrates how deposit and consignment funds can serve as catalysts for local financing, channeling long-term savings into territorial development, SME financing, and strategic infrastructure projects. What will it take to truly maximise African domestic institutional capital?

    Key Points 

    • Which market instruments can unlock institutional investment – green bonds, securitised infra, SME debt funds?
    • How can pooled regional platforms and credit enhancements address scale and liquidity barriers?
    • What reforms are needed to expand long-term allocations—without breaching solvency or return thresholds? 
  • (GMT+1)
    Disrupters Club Panel | Co-designing AI-driven MSME finance with bank, fintech and MFI partnerships

    Bank–fintech and microfinance institution (MFI) collaborations delivering digital banking, credit and payment products to Africa’s 44 million MSMEs live or die by how they’re structured. Some have collapsed due to profit sharing disputes and competitive tensions. Others, like Safaricom and NCBA’s M-Shwari have been vastly successful. Agreeing on profit and data sharing, allocating liability for fraud or credit risk, and ensuring seamless API integration can make-or-break partnerships. From AI-powered credit scoring to real-time digital payment systems that generate the transaction histories MSMEs need to qualify for credit, how can partnerships be structured to plug Africa’s $330 billion SME financing gap? 
     
    Key points 

    • What are the key determinants of a winning fintech-MFI-bank partnership?
    • Could fintechs and telcos growing to the scale of traditional banks, and banks enhancing their own fintech capabilities, threaten the future of partnerships?
    • How can the new frontiers for AI in credit scoring, detecting customer transaction patterns and fraud support MSMEs at scale? 
    Expert

    Mayowa KUYORO

    Partner and Head of Africa Financial Services Group and EEMA Fintech and Payments Practice Leader , McKinsey & Company
  • (GMT+1)
    Conversation With | Challenger banks: The neobanks disrupting the status quo

    Digital-only banks are booming, with unicorns like MNT-Halan, TymeBank, and Moniepoint now joined by legacy giants (Old Mutual’s OMBank, Ecobank’s Fingo) and global players eyeing the market (Revolut in North Africa). These neobanks aren’t toppling the top-tier banks but are thriving in underserved segments and edging out lower-tier banks and microfinance institutions with user-friendly digital wallets and alternative credit scoring. But with many still operating at a loss, are their models built to last? Two of Africa’s leading neobanks reveal what’s next, and how they plan to scale sustainably.

  • (GMT+1)
    Panel | Reviving African stock markets: Forging publicly-listed family businesses with pan-African ambitions

    Family-owned businesses make up 70% of Africa’s private sector yet they are underrepresented on stock markets, limiting their access to long-term capital. Boxer (raising $471m), Shri Krishana Overseas Ltd.’s recent listing on the Nairobi Securities Exchange, and WeBuyCars listings in South Africa prove investor appetite exists for family-rooted firms. On the Bourse de Casablanca, family-owned businesses like TGCC, AKDITAL and Vicenne have raised than $250 millions in the last few years. But IPOs in Francophone West Africa have been rare since NSIA Group’s 2017 listing. Fear of losing control, valuation uncertainty, and limited advisory support continue to deter IPOs. How can exchanges evolve into full-service partners- offering adapted listing structures (e.g., dual-class shares, phased IPOs), governance tools tailored to African realities, and cross-border listings through the AELP? 

    Key points: 

    • How can African family businesses access public markets while preserving strategic control and long-term decision-making power?
    • In what ways can stock market listings become effective tools for intergenerational succession, governance and the professionalisation of family-owned enterprises?
    • What frameworks and innovations must African stock exchanges implement to support the regional expansion of family businesses and attract long-term, patient capital? 
    Speaker

    Hana TEHELKU

    Director General, Ethiopian Capital Market Authority
    Expert

    Sidy DIAKHOUMPA

    Partner - Lead Consulting Financial Services, Forvis Mazars
  • (GMT+1)
    Panel | On the frontline of fiscal strain: How can financial firms manage sovereign debt exposure?

    Banks, insurers, and asset managers are increasingly exposed to sovereign debt as African governments face mounting repayment burdens – draining 50% of public revenues in 2024 alone. Fears are rising that some nations may pressure institutions to subscribe to more sovereign debt, at the expense of private sector financing. While governments securities have been seen as safe bets, deeper engagement in current conditions could leave industries locked in what academics call a “deadly embrace” with government – exposing them to the fallout of currency crashes and debt restructurings, as seen recently in Ghana. How should the financial sector mitigate these risks? What measures and tools are needed to support diversification away from sovereign debt to private sector investments?

    Key points: 

    • How far can governments lean on commercial banks without tipping the system?
    • To what extent should financial players diversify away from sovereign debt given the 2026 public debt outlook?
    • Hedging, credit insurance & portfolio diversification: What’s the strongest risk strategy banks can build? 
  • (GMT+1)
    Panel | NPL breathing room: How could expanded secondary markets ease pressure on banks?

    Secondary markets for non-performing debt could support African countries confronting high NPL ratios – ~16% in Kenya and CEMAC, 9% in WAEMU. Removing regulatory and legal hurdles would allow banks to transfer impaired assets to private sector investors- an approach that proved successful in EU states post-2008 financial crisis. Attracting buyers would require favourable regulatory and legal frameworks, addressing pricing gaps and data availability. A roundtable of banking regulators, distressed asset investors, servicers, and commercial banks will discuss building dynamic NPL markets in the continent. 

    Key points 

    • The loan data quality and debt enforcement needed to attract NPL buyers
    • Structuring investment vehicles that facilitate sales and resolution of NPLs
    • Best resolution practices and out-of-court resolution 
    Moderator

    Julians AMBOKO

    Host - Business Redefined & CFO Chat, Nation Media Group
    Speaker

    Hadiza AMBURSA

    Executive Director, Commercial Banking, Access Bank