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veri blog


Why the Veri MPS Is the Natural Entry Point for African Asset Managers
Africa doesn’t lack investment talent.It lacks efficient structures . Across the continent, asset managers face the same blockers:high fund setup costs, scarce seed capital, fragmented investor bases, long regulatory timelines, and complex cross-border market access. In that environment, launching a traditional fund — often requiring $5–10 million just to be viable — is frequently unrealistic. That’s where Veri’s Managed Portfolio Service (MPS) becomes transformative. An M
Feb 42 min read


Nigeria’s New FX Framework: Confidence Builder or Controlled Float?
Nigeria’s financial markets are adjusting to the Central Bank of Nigeria’s (CBN) latest move to reform its foreign exchange regime—an effort aimed at rebuilding credibility, easing currency volatility, and unlocking investor inflows after two turbulent years. The core of the change is a redesigned FX allocation mechanism that introduces greater transparency and price discovery through market-driven auctions, replacing a patchwork of official and unofficial rates. What’s New?
Feb 42 min read


Why Africa Doesn’t Need Performance Promises, but Credibility
Africa has never lacked ambition. What it has lacked — unfairly, but persistently — is trust. Too often, conversations about investing in Africa are framed around potential returns. Big numbers. Fast growth. Catch-up stories. But long-term capital doesn’t respond to promises. It responds to process . Performance attracts attention. Credibility attracts capital. Global investors don’t need Africa to outperform tomorrow. They need to believe the rules won’t change unexpectedly.
Feb 22 min read


What If Africa Had Its Own “S&P 100”?
A “what if” exploration of an Africa Market 100 index — a continent-wide benchmark that could simplify access, improve perception, and attract long-term global capital through structure and investability.
Feb 23 min read


Bringing Capital Into Africa: The Next Phase
For many years, the dominant investment narrative around Africa has focused on access — how African investors can reach global markets, how capital can be moved outward efficiently, and how portfolios can be diversified beyond domestic borders. That access matters. But it is not the end goal. The next phase — and the one we are now actively building toward — is about bringing capital into Africa . Once continental connectivity is in place, once listed, OTC, and private placem
Jan 232 min read


Completing Africa: Connectivity Without Compromise
One of the most important milestones we’re working toward this year is completing full platform connectivity across the African continent. Not partially. Not selectively. But properly — in a way that respects local markets, regulatory frameworks, and the realities institutions operate within every day. By the end of Q2, our objective is clear: to have Africa fully covered across all investment environments we provide. That starts with what already exists today — access to li
Jan 232 min read


What We’re Bringing to Africa This Year — And Why It Matters
One of the things I’m most looking forward to as we return to Kenya is the opportunity to sit down with clients and partners and talk openly about what’s coming next — not in abstract terms, but in very real, practical detail. 2026 is a pivotal year for Veri. Not just in terms of platform development, but in how we structure and deliver services to meet the evolving needs of institutions across Africa. At the core of what we already provide is live trading capability , which
Jan 233 min read


Not a Vendor. A Working Business Partner.
In Africa, context matters. No two markets are the same. No two institutions operate under identical constraints. And no serious financial business thrives by being forced into a rigid, one-size-fits-all framework. That’s why at Veri, we’ve never seen ourselves as just a technology vendor or a service provider. We see ourselves as a working business partner . When we engage with clients across the continent, the starting point is never the platform. It’s the business. We take
Jan 232 min read


Back on the Ground in Kenya: Why Presence Still Matters in Building Africa’s Financial Future
This Sunday, I travel back to Kenya with our CEO and co-founder, Craig Wetton , and it marks our first trip of the year. As always, there’s a genuine sense of excitement — not just about the journey itself, but about what lies ahead. We’re returning to continue conversations, to strengthen relationships, and to crystallise work that has been building over time with clients and soon-to-be clients we’ve met, spoken with, and worked alongside on real solutions. This trip isn’t a
Jan 232 min read


My Vision for Africa: One Connected Continent
When I think about the future of Africa, I don’t see fragments. I see connection . Not broken markets. Not isolated opportunities. Not distant capitals and siloed potential. I see one Pan-African investment ecosystem — transparent, accessible, efficient, and interoperable. This isn’t a dream. It’s a clear roadmap. At Veri, our vision is to create one truly African Continent platform that unifies capital markets across every jurisdiction, and here’s what that means in action
Jan 222 min read


From Gateway to Platform: Is Mauritius Losing or Reinventing Its Role as Africa’s Financial Hub?
For much of the past two decades, Mauritius has been widely regarded as Africa’s preferred international investment gateway. Capital flowed through its structures into Southern, Eastern, and increasingly West African markets, supported by legal certainty, treaty networks, and a well-developed professional services ecosystem. As 2026 begins, however, that long-standing role is being quietly but fundamentally questioned. Capital is becoming more direct, African markets are slow
Jan 153 min read


Mauritius at a Crossroads: Can the IFC Sustain Growth Amid Global Regulatory Pressure?
Mauritius has spent the better part of two decades positioning itself as one of the most credible international financial centres (IFCs) servicing cross-border investment into Africa and beyond. Its appeal has rested on a familiar but carefully balanced proposition: regulatory credibility, tax efficiency, political stability, and strong professional services infrastructure. As 2026 begins, however, the Mauritian IFC finds itself at a critical juncture. Global regulatory expec
Jan 153 min read


Selling the Crown Jewel: What Kenya’s Safaricom Deal Really Means
Kenya is cashing in its crown jewel. In the biggest privatisation move in nearly 20 years, the government has agreed to sell a 15% stake in Safaricom – East Africa’s most valuable company – to Vodacom/Vodafone for roughly $1.6 billion , cutting the state’s holding from 35% to 20% and handing majority control to the South African group. The deal is priced at KES 34 per share , a hefty premium to recent market levels, and includes an upfront payment of about KES 40.2 billion
Dec 15, 20255 min read


From Default to Upgrade: Is Ghana’s Comeback Built to Last?
Three years ago, Ghana was the cautionary tale of African finance. After years of heavy borrowing and external shocks, the country defaulted on its international debt in 2022 and scrambled into a $3 billion IMF programme in 2023. Eurobond coupons went unpaid, inflation blew out, the cedi plunged and confidence evaporated. Fast-forward to late 2025 and the headlines look very different. Ghana has: Completed the restructuring of its Eurobonds (around $13 billion) in October 202
Dec 9, 20256 min read


Africa’s Trillion-Dollar Shift: When the State Becomes the Biggest Investor
For decades, African finance ministers flew to Washington, London or Beijing when they needed capital. Today, a quiet reversal is underway. According to new data from state-owned investor tracker GlobalSWF, African public institutions now manage close to $1 trillion in assets – a historic high. That pool sits not in foreign aid budgets, but in: Public pension funds Central bank reserve portfolios Sovereign wealth funds (SWFs) Public development banks and social security inst
Dec 9, 20255 min read


Zimbabwe’s Dollar Bourse Booms as Harare Charts Its De-Dollarisation Roadmap
Traders on the Victoria Falls Stock Exchange (VFEX) have spent much of 2025 watching green on their screens. The United States dollar-denominated bourse has climbed about 34% year-to-date , outpacing many regional peers and last year’s already strong gains. Mining counters and export-oriented companies have led the charge, turning the tiny resort city into an unlikely focal point for hard-currency investors. Yet 700km away in Harare, policymakers are preparing for the opposit
Nov 21, 20254 min read


What's Happening in Malawi?
Malawi Stock Exchange’s 2025 Rally: Performance, Drivers, and Investor Outlook Meta Title: Malawi Stock Exchange’s Record Rally in 2025 – Analysis and Investor Insights Meta Description: The Malawi Stock Exchange (MSE) has delivered unprecedented returns in 2025, far outpacing peers. Explore the market’s history, recent reforms, sector winners, macro drivers, regional context, and what this means for local and foreign investors. Learn how the Veri Platform enables seamless
Nov 13, 20259 min read

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