Log In

Ivorian-Founded Fintech Bizao Placed in Compulsory Liquidation by French Court

Published 11 hours ago3 minute read

Once seen as a promising backbone for Francophone Africa’s digital payments infrastructure, Bizao’s French parent company has entered court-mandated liquidation, marking a major setback in the continent’s fintech evolution.

The Paris-based , which operated as the holding company for the startup’s African subsidiaries, was officially placed into liquidation on , following a ruling by the . The decision was later disclosed in the on , with insolvency expert appointed as liquidator.

This development follows an earlier restructuring process launched in early 2025 in an effort to stabilize the company. However, those efforts have now been deemed unsuccessful, and the court has ruled in favor of a full liquidation.

Founded in 2019 by former Orange executive , Bizao was launched with a mission to simplify B2B payments in Africa’s fragmented digital finance landscape. Its platform connected mobile money services, banks, and telecom operators to offer seamless transaction flows across multiple countries — including , , , , and the .

The company positioned itself as an infrastructure provider, enabling other businesses to access integrated payment channels through a unified API. This model earned it widespread interest and eventually a funding round in 2022 led by , Seedstars Africa Ventures, and Adelie.

Bizao claimed strong growth figures, including a 20x increase in transaction volume and over 300 million payment requests processed monthly. However, questions around sustainability and cross-border operational complexity eventually surfaced as growth plateaued.

Despite the legal collapse of its French base, Bizao’s subsidiaries in Africa continue to function independently — at least for now. In earlier statements made during the company’s receivership period, Duval-Delort had insisted that the restructuring process was isolated to the French entity and would not impact regional operations.

But with the parent company now officially dissolved, concerns are mounting about the ripple effects. Observers note that many key assets — including intellectual property, platform management, and possibly contractual relationships — may be tied to the French entity, creating operational uncertainty for African partners and clients.

Bizao is not alone. Its failure arrives just months after Kenyan BNPL startup Lipa Later was placed under administration following aggressive expansion and mounting liabilities. Both cases point to the mounting strain on African fintechs, particularly those operating infrastructure-heavy models that span multiple jurisdictions.

The funding environment has also grown tighter. With investors becoming more cautious, even high-growth companies are being forced to rethink their burn rates, business models, and expansion timelines. The liquidation of Bizao SAS may serve as a cautionary signal to startups banking on scale without fully de-risking their cross-border dependencies.

As of now, Bizao’s key backers — including AfricInvest and Seedstars — have not released statements regarding their next steps. Industry speculation suggests options could range from attempting to preserve valuable components of the African business to fully writing down the investment.

Regardless of the outcome, the case marks a significant inflection point for Africa’s digital payment sector. While demand for reliable infrastructure is strong, Bizao’s story highlights the pitfalls of building critical systems on legally fragile foundations — particularly in regions where regulatory landscapes are still evolving.

Origin:
publisher logo
Innovation Village | Technology, Product Reviews, Business
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...

You may also like...