Pakistani fintech AdalFi raises $7.5 million to tackle lending challenges

A woman (R) gets rupee notes as she collects cash through a mobile wallet in Islamabad, Pakistan on April 9, 2020. (AFP/File)
Short Url
Updated 16 February 2023
Follow

Pakistani fintech AdalFi raises $7.5 million to tackle lending challenges

  • This is the first major financing announcement this year in the country as it grapples with deepening economic crisis
  • Only 30% of Pakistan’s adult population has access to formal banking services, giving people limited access to credit

KARACHI: Pakistani digital lending platform AdalFi said on Thursday it has raised $7.5 million in funding, the first major corporate financing announcement in the South Asian country this year as it grapples with a deepening economic crisis.

The funding round was led by UAE-based COTU Ventures and Chimera Ventures, Pakistan-based Fatima Gobi Ventures and Zayn Capital, and “angel” investors including executives from US-based financial technology and services provider Plaid, AdalFi said in a statement.

As the country’s financial woes have deepened, Magnitt’s Emerging Venture Markets Report estimated Pakistani startups were only able to raise $315 million in 2022, down 5% from the record high $333 million in 2021.

AdalFi’s proprietary technology scores the financial transactional data already possessed by banks. The B2B2C fintech then enables personalized digital marketing to qualified prospects and then provides real-time loans.

According to a survey by non-profit Karandaaz, only 30% of adults in Pakistan have access to formal banking services and mobile wallets, making the country largely unbanked with limited access to credit.

“Across the board, in Pakistani banks, only 5% of deposit customers are also borrowers. So, we enable banks to tap this huge, latent customer base,” Salman Akhtar, co-founder and CEO of AdalFi, told Reuters.

Akhtar pointed to a study by the State Bank which found long lead times for loan disbursements was one factor behind consumers turning to informal credit markets instead.

“Without our platform, banks typically take 2 weeks to process a loan request.”

Akhtar said fourteen financial institutions in Pakistan have signed up with AdalFi, including United Bank Limited (UBL), Habib Bank Limited (HBL), Meezan Bank, among other banks and microfinance banks operating in the country.

“Banks have signed up with AdalFi because we offer rigorous credit scoring to ensure portfolio quality,” he says.

AdalFi monetizes through a share of the revenue made by the bank from the loan.

“We share the downside risk of non-performing loans. Loan losses are accounted for on a pro-rata basis in the fees due to AdalFi.”


QatarEnergy announces force majeure following Iran attacks: statement

Updated 04 March 2026
Follow

QatarEnergy announces force majeure following Iran attacks: statement

DOHA: Qatar’s state-run energy firm on Wednesday declared force majeure following attacks on two of its main facilities that halted liquefied natural gas production and as Iran pressed missile and drone attacks across the Gulf.

“Further to the announcement by QatarEnergy to stop production of liquefied natural gas and associated products, QatarEnergy has declared Force Majeure to its affected buyers,” the company said in a statement.

QatarEnergy invoked the clause, which shields it from penalties and potential breach of contract claims from clients, after stopping LNG production on Monday.

Iranian drones attacked two of the company’s main production hubs in Ras Laffan Industrial City, 80 km north of Doha and in Mesaieed 40 km south of the Qatari capital, Doha’s ministry of defense said at the time.

The Gulf state is one of the world’s top liquefied natural gas producers, alongside the US, Australia and Russia.

On Tuesday, QatarEnergy said it would halt some downstream production of some products including urea, polymers, methanol, aluminum and others.

Qatar shares the world’s largest natural gas reservoir with Iran.

QatarEnergy estimates the Gulf state’s portion of the reservoir, the North Field, holds about 10 percent of the world’s known natural gas reserves.

In recent years, Qatar has inked a series of long-term LNG deals with France’s Total, Britain’s Shell, India’s Petronet, China’s Sinopec and Italy’s Eni, among others.