Tuesday, May 12, 2026

FORTY YEARS ON: ARE WE FORGETTING HOW WE GOT HERE?

Tomorrow, President Yoweri Museveni takes his seventh oath of office.

Politics aside, the last forty years represent the longest period of sustained economic growth in our country's recorded history. And if you ask observers to name the two biggest achievements of the NRM era, the answers converge quickly: the restoration of security, and the revitalisation of the economy. What is less often appreciated is how deeply the two fed off each other.

In 1986, Uganda was not merely poor. It was dangerous. Investors do not build factories in war zones. Farmers do not plant crops they cannot be sure of harvesting. Security was not just a political achievement — it was the precondition for everything that followed. And as stability returned, the economy began to breathe. And as the economy grew, it gave the state resources to consolidate security further. Growth and stability became mutually reinforcing — a virtuous cycle now so established that we have forgotten it was ever built.

In 1986, the economy was worth roughly $3.5–4 billion. Today it stands at over $50 billion. Exports have grown from under $500 million to nearly $14 billion. VAT alone now contributes Shs8–10 trillion annually — more than the entire tax take of 2006. That is not a footnote. That is a transformation.

But transformations have authors. When VAT was introduced, Kampala City Traders Association (KACITA) shut down shops in protest across Kampala for a week. The reform held anyway.

When Nile Breweries was privatised — after fierce, protracted debates the President presided over personally it was producing 2,000 crates a month. Today that output disappears over a long weekend on Bandali Rise.

When agricultural liberalisation came, farmers began earning 70–80 percent of world prices instead of the fraction they had received under state monopolies.

Behind all of it the government forced discipline at a time when indiscipline would have been far easier, and far more popular. And we have begun, rather dangerously, to take what was built for granted.

But here is the part the numbers do not tell you.

The gains have not been shared equally. Uganda remains one of the more unequal economies in East Africa, and the gap between those who have benefited from four decades of growth and those still waiting is wide and, in some places, widening.

The answer starts in agriculture, where the majority of Ugandans still earn their living. Better incentives for farmers, investment in rural infrastructure, access to inputs and markets — these are not new ideas. They are ideas that have not been implemented with the seriousness they deserve. An economy growing at 6 percent while most farmers operate at subsistence level is an economy running on one engine.

The business environment matters too. Corruption — at the counter, in the procurement office, at the border remains a tax on ambition. Every shilling lost to a bribe is a shilling that does not become a job or an export. Fighting corruption is not a moral exercise. It is an economic one.

And then there is oil.

Uganda is edging toward first oil, and the temptation will be to treat the revenues as a solution — a cushion against fiscal pressures, a substitute for the harder work of broadening the tax base and improving the investment climate. That would be a mistake.

Oil revenues, without extraordinary discipline, concentrate wealth rather than distribute it. The resource curse is not a myth. Rents flow upward. Politics become more transactional. And there is a deeper risk — that oil money disrupts the very virtuous cycle that sustained Uganda for forty years, funding patronage rather than institutions, rewarding loyalty rather than productivity, and quietly hollowing out the foundations that made growth possible.

Uganda cannot afford to let oil scuttle four decades of hard-won progress. The revenues must serve the economy, not replace it.

Forty years is long enough for an entire generation to grow up knowing only stability. The battles that produced it — over VAT, privatisation, liberalisation — are ancient history to a 25-year-old in Kikoni. The architecture of the economy is taken for granted, like electricity that only becomes remarkable when it goes off.

The restoration of security and the revitalisation of the economy is a genuine achievement. It should be acknowledged clearly and without embarrassment.

But the next forty years will be defined by whether those gains reach the farmer in Kapchorwa, the trader in Arua, the graduate in Lira who is talented, ambitious, and running out of patience.

That is the real measure of the milestone. And it remains unfinished business.


Thursday, May 7, 2026

MTN PROFITS MARGINALLY DOWN, BUT MOMO TRANSACTION VALUE RACES AHEAD

MTN Uganda’s first quarter results reflect a business that absorbed a political and operational shock—but still kept its core engines running.

Profit after tax fell 3.8 percent to Shs174 billion, while margins softened under pressure from higher costs, increased depreciation from heavy network investment, and rising finance charges. Yet EBITDA still rose 4.3 percent to Shs462.9 billion, signalling underlying operational resilience.

The defining event of the quarter was the January internet shutdown during the general elections. The disruption curtailed both data services and mobile money access, affecting usage, transaction flows and new customer onboarding.

That impact is evident in the numbers: revenue growth slowed to 7.8 percent, while fintech performance—though positive—was uneven. In a normal operating environment, these segments would likely have posted stronger gains.

Even so, mobile money delivered the standout metric of the quarter.

Transaction values surged 31.2 percent to Shs55.1 trillion, far outpacing the 7.0 percent growth in volumes to 1.25 billion transactions.

This divergence points to a deeper shift: users are increasingly transacting larger amounts on the platform, signalling growing trust and the migration of more substantive economic activity onto mobile money rails.

Fintech revenue rose 7.4 percent to Shs274.5 billion, suggesting monetisation is still lagging usage growth. Data revenue grew 13.6 percent to Shs267.6 billion, supported by a 16.4 percent rise in users—though even here, growth was tempered by the shutdown.

Meanwhile, MTN ramped up investment, with capex (ex-leases) jumping nearly 70 percent to Shs201.5 billion, reinforcing its long-term digital infrastructure play.

Summary of results

MetricQ1 2026Q1 2025% Change
Total Revenue (Shs bn)914.5848.0+7.8%
Service Revenue (Shs bn)905.9841.4+7.7%
Data Revenue (Shs bn)267.6235.6+13.6%
Fintech Revenue (Shs bn)274.5255.6+7.4%
EBITDA (Shs bn)462.9444.0+4.3%
Profit After Tax (Shs bn)174.0180.9-3.8%
Capex ex-leases (Shs bn)201.5118.7+69.8%
MoMo Value (Shs tn)55.142.0+31.2%

The takeaway is straightforward: the shutdown dented momentum, but did not derail it. If anything, the surge in mobile money values suggests that once normal conditions resume, MTN’s growth story—anchored on data and fintech—remains firmly intact.

Tuesday, May 5, 2026

THE SOVEREIGNITY BILL & THE IMPORTANCE OF THE RIVER

Believe it or not, there was a time when foreign aid accounted for as much as 70 percent of Uganda’s national budget.

It is a statistic that sounds almost implausible today. Yet for those who lived through the late 1980s and early 1990s, it was the lived reality of a country on its knees—fiscally constrained, policy-dependent, and negotiating its priorities as much as defining them.

That reality has been decisively reversed.

And it did not happen by accident.

It happened because Uganda made a series of bold, often unpopular decisions to liberalise its economy—opening up to foreign direct investment, incentivising production, and, perhaps most importantly, unleashing the initiative of its own citizens. The shift from state control to market orientation was not ideological fashion; it was economic necessity...

Today, the numbers tell the story.

In the early 1990s, donor support financed roughly half of Uganda’s national budget. In some sectors, particularly recurrent expenditure and debt servicing, dependence was even more acute. Fast forward to the 2024/25 financial year, and total external support has fallen to about 15.2 percent of the Shs 72.1 trillion budget. Direct budget support accounts for just 1.9 percent (Shs 1.39 trillion), while project support contributes another 13.3 percent (Shs 9.58 trillion). Domestic revenue now finances 44.3 percent of the budget, with the balance coming from domestic borrowing and refinancing.

That is not just a statistical shift.

It is a structural transformation.

And it is the context within which the current debate on the sovereignty bill must be understood.

As Mwesigwa Rukutana—who served as State Minister for Finance during those years of peak dependency reflected last week, Uganda’s policy autonomy was once severely constrained. Budgets and development plans were subject to approval by institutions such as the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund. The path out required not just compliance, but conviction: increase production, expand exports, manage inflation, and fully liberalise capital flows.

Uganda chose that path.

And we were fortunate in the calibre of minds that guided it. The steadying hands and intellectual conviction of Emmanuel Tumusiime-Mutebile, Chris Kassami and Keith Muhakanizi were central to the reforms that brought us to this point. They were not just technocrats; they were custodians of discipline in a period when indiscipline would have been politically easier...

We miss them.

And perhaps more importantly, we have begun to take what they built for granted.

That is the double-edged sword of success. On the one hand, it is a sign that sound policy has become so embedded in our daily lives that it feels natural. On the other, it breeds complacency—the dangerous illusion that progress was inevitable, automatic.

Only the other day, an armchair pundit on radio made precisely that claim.

It was not inevitable.

We had come from such a deep hole that even Lee Kuan Yew, the man who led Singapore from a third-world backwater to a first-world economy remarked in 1988, that Uganda would not recover in a hundred years. That was the scale of the collapse. That was the depth of the scepticism.

And yet, here we are.

Not perfect. Not finished. But undeniably transformed.

There was, at the time, a chorus of dissent. Armchair socialists warned against “kowtowing” to Bretton Woods institutions, advocating instead for a more insular, state-controlled model. In hindsight, that would have been a grave mistake. 

Had Uganda chosen that route, we would likely still be grappling with shortages, rationing essentials, and navigating an economy where access depended more on connections than on markets. The indignity of needing a minister’s chit to access basic goods would not be a distant memory—it would be current affairs.

That was not sovereignty.

That was stagnation.

The growth of the last four decades—exports rising from about $711 million in the mid-1990s to over $13 billion today, inflation largely stabilised, and a vibrant private sector taking root, was neither inevitable nor accidental. It was earned.

"Which is why the sovereignty bill should give us pause.

Because what has been built is not irreversible...

And because some of the signals emerging from this debate suggest that its framers may not fully appreciate the journey that got us here. It is difficult to avoid the conclusion that they do not know, rather than have forgotten, what it took to pull Uganda back from the abyss. It is the only explanation for why we would contemplate legislation that risks incinerating decades of progress without a clear appreciation of the consequences...

Take the concerns raised by central bank governor Michael Atingi-Ego in his representation to Parliament last week. His warning was not ideological; it was technical—pointing to the risk that broadly framed provisions could disrupt financial flows, unsettle investor confidence, and complicate macroeconomic management.

The danger lies in the detail.

Clauses that seek to tightly control or pre-approve foreign funding, impose sweeping disclosure requirements, or grant wide discretionary powers to restrict external partnerships may appear politically appealing. But economically, they risk undermining the very foundations of Uganda’s liberalised economy.

This economy runs on predictability.

Foreign direct investment, portfolio flows, and development financing all depend on a regulatory environment that is transparent and consistent. Introduce uncertainty, whether through discretionary approvals or ambiguous restrictions and capital responds accordingly. It hesitates. It retreats. It demands higher returns to compensate for higher risk.

The consequences are not abstract: a weaker shilling, higher borrowing costs, reduced investment, and ultimately slower growth.

Money, as they say, goes where it is treated best—and stays where it is predictable.

Disrupt that, and you undermine not just foreign inflows, but domestic confidence as well.

To be clear, the ambition to reduce reliance on foreign funding is both legitimate and, indeed, already underway. Donor support has declined in recent years, partly due to geopolitical shifts and policy disagreements. Uganda has responded by strengthening domestic revenue mobilisation and expanding its reliance on domestic borrowing.

This is progress.

But it also comes with pressures—higher interest costs, tighter fiscal space, and a more delicate balancing act for policymakers.

As Rukutana cautioned, the transition to self-reliance must be gradual and deliberate. Not a shock. Not a statement. But a strategy.

There is a cautionary tale in Eritrea, which, after independence from Ethiopia, pursued a more insular economic path. Three decades later, the result is an economy that has struggled to grow or attract investment. Isolation, even when framed as sovereignty, has come at a cost.

Uganda’s success has been built on balance, opening where necessary, regulating where prudent, and learning from its mistakes.

The sovereignty bill must be approached in that same spirit.

Yes, insulate—but do not isolate. Regulate—but do not repel. Assert sovereignty—but do not undermine credibility.

Because if the last 40 years have taught us anything, it is this: sovereignty is not declared.

It is earned.

And it can just as easily be squandered, because as they say the importance of the river was not known until it dried up


Wednesday, April 29, 2026

MTN VS AIRTEL: SCALE VERSUS RETURNS IN UGANDA'S MOBILE MONEY WARS

There was a time when telecom companies in Uganda fought over voice minutes and, later, data bundles. Today, the real battle is being waged in something far more lucrative: the movement of money. And if the latest 2025 numbers are anything to go by, the contest between Airtel Money and MTN MoMo is no longer about who has the biggest network—but who makes the most from the flows that ride on it.

Start with the headline numbers. MTN Mobile Money Uganda grew revenue by a robust 20.2% to Ushs 1.2 trillion, with profit after tax jumping 23.5% to Ushs 308.9 billion . Airtel Money, on the other hand, posted Ushs 334.1 billion in profit, ahead of MTN in absolute terms, but on a smaller revenue base of Ushs 1.02 trillion, growing at a slower 14.4%.

At first glance, MTN looks like the runaway winner. But look a little closer, and a more interesting story begins to emerge.

MTN is clearly winning the scale game. Its ecosystem now boasts 14.7 million subscribers, 241,000 agents and 115,000 merchants, with transaction values hitting a staggering Ushs 195.5 trillion . These are not just big numbers—they are the building blocks of a platform. The more users, agents and merchants you have, the harder it becomes for anyone else to dislodge you. In fintech, scale is not just an advantage; it is a moat.

But scale, as any seasoned investor will tell you, does not always translate into superior returns—at least not immediately.

That is where Airtel Money’s numbers begin to turn heads. Generating higher profits than MTN on lower revenue suggests a business that is squeezing more out of every shilling that passes through its system. In other words, Airtel may not yet match MTN in breadth, but it is arguably ahead on efficiency.

Part of the explanation lies in strategy. MTN is playing the long game. Its own disclosures show that advanced services now contribute over 30% of revenue, driven by lending, savings and payment innovations . It is investing heavily to turn MoMo from a payments pipe into a full-service financial supermarket.

Airtel, by contrast, appears more disciplined—less flashy, perhaps, but highly focused on the core business of transactions and fee extraction. That discipline shows up in the bottom line.

The balance sheet tells a similar story. MTN’s total assets surged 30% to Ushs 1.87 trillion , compared to Airtel’s 13.1% growth to Ushs 1.16 trillion. MTN is building muscle; Airtel is building margins.


Summary Comparison

MetricAirtel Money (2025)MTN MoMo (2025)
RevenueUshs 1.02 tnUshs 1.2 tn
Revenue Growth+14.4%+20.2%
Profit After TaxUshs 334.1 bnUshs 308.9 bn
Profit Growth+7.4%+23.5%
Total AssetsUshs 1.16 tnUshs 1.87 tn
Asset Growth+13.1%+30.0%
SubscribersNot disclosed14.7m (+6.5%)
AgentsNot disclosed241k (+13.5%)
MerchantsNot disclosed115k (+33.6%)
Transaction ValueNot disclosedUshs 195.5 tn (+23.3%)

In the end, this is shaping up to be a classic market contest. MTN is building the rails of Uganda’s digital financial system—wide, deep and increasingly indispensable. Airtel is running a leaner operation, extracting more profit per transaction.

If history is any guide, both strategies can win. But rarely do they win equally. The real question is whether, over time, scale will swallow efficiency—or efficiency will force scale to behave.

AIRTEL MOBILE MONEY PROFIT UP 7.4 PCT

The company reported a 7.4% increase in profit after tax to Ushs 334.1 billion for the year ended 2025, up from Ushs 311.0 billion in 2024, underpinned by strong growth in mobile money transactions and sustained operating efficiency.

Total income grew by 14.4% to Ushs 1.02 trillion, compared to Ushs 893.0 billion the previous year, reflecting increased uptake of digital financial services and higher transaction volumes across its platform. The performance reinforces the company’s positioning as a key player in Uganda’s fast-expanding fintech ecosystem.

Operating profit rose by 7.4% to Ushs 477.3 billion from Ushs 444.3 billion, supported by scale efficiencies, although cost pressures were evident. Total expenditure increased by 21.0% to Ushs 549.2 billion, largely driven by higher sales and marketing spend, which climbed to Ushs 459.0 billion as the company invested in customer acquisition and retention.

Despite the rise in costs, margins remained strong, highlighting the resilience of the company’s platform model.

On the balance sheet, total assets expanded by 13.1% to Ushs 1.16 trillion, driven primarily by growth in mobile money trust balances, which rose 14.0% to Ushs 969.5 billion. Equity remained largely flat at Ushs 114.4 billion, underscoring the firm’s asset-light structure, where customer balances fund a significant portion of operations.

Analysts note that the results demonstrate the scalability of digital financial services, with revenue growth continuing to outpace profit expansion, suggesting a period of strategic reinvestment.


Summary of Key Results

Metric2025 (Ushs bn)2024 (Ushs bn)% Change
Total Income1,021.2893.0+14.4%
Operating Profit477.3444.3+7.4%
Profit After Tax334.1311.0+7.4%
Total Expenditure549.2454.0+21.0%
Total Assets1,155.81,022.0+13.1%
Mobile Money Balances969.5850.4+14.0%
Equity114.4113.4+0.9%

The results point to a business leveraging scale in digital payments to drive growth, even as rising costs signal an increasingly competitive push for market share.

Tuesday, April 28, 2026

FINANCIAL LITERACY, INSURANCE AGAINST POVERTY

How does a man like Floyd Mayweather—arguably the most successful prizefighter of his generation, with career earnings said to exceed $1 billion, find himself dogged by tax liens, lawsuits and whispers of cash flow strain? And yet, that is precisely the narrative emerging: vast wealth tied up in property, but pressure on liquidity; assets in abundance, but cash in short supply.

It is easy to dismiss such accounts as the excesses of celebrity life. But to do so is to miss the more useful lesson. Strip away the scale the private jets, the Manhattan duplex, the Las Vegas real estate, and what remains is a problem that is far more familiar, even mundane.

It is the gap between earning money and understanding it.

That gap is where fortunes are made—and lost.

We tend to frame poverty as an income problem. Raise incomes, the thinking goes, and poverty recedes. There is truth in that, of course. But it is an incomplete truth.

"Because across income levels—from the salaried professional to the trader in Owino you encounter the same pattern: money comes in, but very little stays...

The issue is not just how much is earned. It is what is done with what is earned.

Money, left unmanaged, has a way of evaporating.

This is why financial literacy is not a luxury. It is not something to be acquired after one has “made it.” It is, quite simply, the only reliable insurance against poverty. Not because it guarantees wealth, but because it reduces the probability of losing it.

The distinction matters.

Consider the difference between income and wealth. Income is a flow—a salary, a fee, a profit margin. Wealth is a stock—the accumulation of assets that continue to generate income even when the primary source of earnings slows or stops. Too often, a rising salary is taken as evidence of rising wealth. It is not.

Without deliberate allocation, income turns into consumption.

And consumption, however justified, does not compound.

This is where many high earners come unstuck. The trappings of success—houses, cars, lifestyle upgrades arrive early. The discipline of asset building arrives late, if at all. The result is a life that looks prosperous on the surface but is structurally fragile underneath.

A single disruption—a job loss, a business downturn, a delayed payment, exposes the fragility.

Seen through this lens, the Mayweather story is less an outlier and more an exaggerated version of a common reality. Assets that cannot easily be converted into cash. Obligations that demand immediate settlement. The uncomfortable space in between.

Liquidity, it turns out, matters as much as net worth.

For the ordinary Ugandan, the numbers are smaller but the dynamics are identical. The teacher who builds a house over 20 years but has no savings to fall back on. The entrepreneur whose capital is locked up in stock that cannot move. The professional whose lifestyle expands in line with income, leaving no room for investment.

Different circumstances, same outcome.

Financial literacy is about three disciplines.

The first is allocation—deciding, in advance, how income will be split between consumption, saving and investment. This is less about theory and more about habit. A standing instruction that channels a portion of income into treasury bonds or a collective investment scheme each month does more for long-term wealth than any sporadic investment inspired by market chatter.many of the assets we celebrate—land held indefinitely, high-end consumption goods are either illiquid or non-productive. They may preserve value. They rarely grow it.

The second is asset selection—understanding what constitutes a productive asset. In Uganda’s context, this increasingly includes government securities offering double-digit yields, dividend-paying equities on the USE, and well-run businesses. These are assets that generate cash flow. They work, quietly and consistently.

By contrast, The third is reinvestment. This is where compounding, often described but rarely experienced, does its work. Returns, whether in the form of bond coupons or dividends, must be redeployed. Over time, the effect is transformative. Modest sums, consistently invested and reinvested, begin to scale in ways that defy intuition.

Miss one of these disciplines, and the system begins to falter.

What makes the absence of financial literacy particularly dangerous is that it does not announce itself early. In the initial stages, everything appears to be working. Income is rising. Consumption is improving. The outward indicators are positive. It is only later, when obligations accumulate and income becomes uncertain, that the underlying weakness becomes visible.

By then, adjustment is difficult.

Uganda today is at an interesting inflection point. Financial instruments that were once the preserve of institutions are increasingly accessible to individuals. Treasury bonds can be purchased in relatively small denominations. The stock market, while still shallow, offers entry points. Digital platforms are lowering transaction costs.

In principle, the architecture for broad-based wealth creation is taking shape.

But access without understanding is a risk.

Without financial literacy, participation in these markets tends to veer towards speculation. Investors chase price movements rather than underlying value. Entry and exit decisions are driven by sentiment rather than analysis. Losses, when they come, are attributed to the market rather than the method.

In such an environment, the market performs a different function. It transfers wealth—not from the rich to the poor, but from the uninformed to the informed...

Which is why the conversation on financial literacy needs to move from the margins to the centre. Not as an abstract concept, but as a practical toolkit. How to allocate income. How to identify productive assets. How to reinvest returns. How to think about risk.

In the end, the most valuable asset an individual can possess is not a piece of land or a portfolio of properties. It is the capacity to manage money—consistently, rationally, over time.

Because incomes fluctuate. Markets move. Opportunities come and go.

But financial literacy endures.

And in a world where the line between comfort and crisis can be thinner than it appears, it remains the only insurance that reliably holds.


Thursday, April 23, 2026

MOMO PROFIT UP 23.5% TO SH308.9BN ON TRANSATION GROWTH

MTN Mobile Money Uganda (MoMo) delivered a strong set of results for 2025, with profit after tax rising 23.5% to sh308.9 billion, up from sh250.2 billion in 2024, but the real story lies beneath the headline numbers — in the rapid expansion of its lending business, which is beginning to redefine the platform’s economics.

At the heart of MoMo’s growth is a sharp surge in its loan book. Loans disbursed through the platform jumped 86.2% to sh2.7 trillion, reflecting accelerating uptake of digital credit products under its Pay, Borrow, Invest ecosystem.

This matters because lending changes everything.

For years, mobile money has largely been a transaction-driven business — dependent on fees from transfers, withdrawals, and payments. That model, while scalable, is inherently limited by pricing pressure and the cost of maintaining agent networks. Lending, by contrast, introduces a high-margin revenue stream that is less dependent on transaction volume and more on balance sheet utilisation and risk pricing.

In simple terms:

Payments bring volume. Lending brings margins.

The significance of the sh2.7 trillion in loans disbursed is not just its size, but what it signals — that MoMo is successfully leveraging its data, distribution, and customer base to move into financial intermediation. With over 14.7 million active wallets, the platform has a unique advantage in assessing creditworthiness through transaction histories, enabling it to scale credit faster than traditional banks.

Over time, this could become the single most important driver of profitability.

Revenue growth anchored on scale and service diversification

Against this backdrop, total revenue grew 20.2% to sh1.2 trillion, up from sh981.9 billion, supported by increased usage across the ecosystem.

Transaction activity remained robust:

  • Transaction volumes rose 16.8% to 5.0 billion

  • Transaction value increased 23.3% to sh195.5 trillion

  • Active wallets grew 6.5% to 14.7 million

More importantly, MoMo is beginning to shift its revenue mix. Advanced services — including payments, lending, and savings — now contribute 30.6% of total revenue, up from 28.7% in 2024.

This shift is subtle but critical. It signals a move away from reliance on basic transfer fees toward a more diversified, and potentially more profitable, fintech model.

Operating leverage begins to emerge

Operating profit rose 26.2% to sh454.1 billion, outpacing revenue growth and indicating early signs of operating leverage.

However, the cost base remains heavy:

  • Selling and distribution costs climbed to sh502.7 billion from sh425.5 billion

  • Agent commissions and marketing expenses continue to absorb a significant portion of revenue

This reflects the structural reality of mobile money — scale comes at a cost. But as lending and other digital services grow, they offer a pathway to decouple revenue growth from distribution costs, improving margins over time.

Deposits grow to sh1.47 trillion, strengthening funding base

MoMo’s balance sheet tells an equally important story.

Customer deposits — the mobile wallet balances — rose to sh1.47 trillion, up from sh1.37 trillion, a 7.4% increase.

This growth provides the foundation for its lending ambitions.

In traditional banking, deposits fund loans. In MoMo’s case, while regulatory structures differ, the accumulation of customer balances creates a stable liquidity base and opens opportunities for partnerships in credit provision.

The implication is clear:

As deposits grow, the capacity to support lending — directly or through partners — expands.

At the same time, cash and bank balances surged to sh214.2 billion, up from sh78.4 billion, reflecting strong liquidity and improved cash generation.

Assets expand as platform deepens

Total assets increased 14.6% to sh1.87 trillion, driven largely by higher trust balances and cash holdings.

The balance sheet remains highly liquid, but its composition increasingly reflects a financial services platform rather than a pure payments business.

Equity and cash flows signal maturity

Equity rose sharply to sh152.2 billion, up from sh42.2 billion, despite dividend payments of sh198.9 billion during the year.

Meanwhile, operating cash flow rebounded strongly to sh190.9 billion, from a negative sh9.9 billion in 2024 — a clear sign that the business is now generating sustainable cash from its operations.

Why lending is the future of MoMo

The surge in digital lending is not just another growth metric — it is the pivot point for MoMo’s next phase.

If sustained, it could:

  • Lift margins, as credit products typically yield higher returns than transaction fees

  • Increase customer stickiness, as borrowers are more likely to remain active users

  • Unlock cross-selling opportunities, including savings and investment products

  • Position MoMo as a financial intermediary, not just a payments platform

But it also introduces new risks:

  • Credit risk and potential defaults

  • Regulatory scrutiny as the business moves closer to banking

  • The need for more sophisticated risk management systems

The bigger picture

The 2025 results show a business at an inflection point.

MoMo is still driven by transaction growth — sh195.5 trillion in annual value processed — but it is increasingly being defined by what sits on top of that infrastructure: lending, savings, and digital financial services.

The expansion of the loan book to sh2.7 trillion in disbursements is the clearest indication yet of that shift.


Summary of Key Financial Results

Metric2025 (Ushs)2024 (Ushs)Change (%)
Total Revenue1.2 trillion981.9 billion+20.2%
Operating Profit454.1 billion359.8 billion+26.2%
Profit After Tax308.9 billion250.2 billion+23.5%
Total Assets1.87 trillion1.63 trillion+14.6%
Customer Deposits (Float)1.47 trillion1.37 trillion+7.4%
Cash & Bank Balances214.2 billion78.4 billion+173%
Total Equity152.2 billion42.2 billion+260%+
Net Operating Cash Flow190.9 billion(9.9 billion)Turnaround
Loans Disbursed2.7 trillion~1.45 trillion+86.2%

Bottom line:
MoMo’s 2025 results are not just about profit growth — they mark the emergence of a new business model. The surge in digital lending, backed by a growing deposit base and vast transaction data, positions MoMo to evolve into a high-margin financial platform. If executed well, lending could become the engine that transforms scale into sustained profitability.

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