Nigeria’s economy is changing faster than its banking system. From POS agents on street corners to online sellers shipping across borders, a new class of entrepreneurs now moves trillions of naira every year through digital channels.

Yet most of these businesses still operate on the fringes of the formal financial system — poorly served, poorly understood, and often treated as an afterthought.

As it prepares to begin operations, Traders Prime has said it is positioning itself not as a conventional microfinance institution, but as a financial infrastructure bank built specifically for Nigeria’s growing merchant economy.

The rise of a new kind of business

Over the last decade, Nigeria has witnessed a quiet economic revolution. Millions of people now earn their living as POS agents, logistics providers, e-commerce sellers, ride-hailing drivers, digital traders, and online service providers. They collect payments digitally, move money across platforms, and depend on fast settlements to keep their businesses running.

Yet the financial system that supports them remains rooted in an older era — one built for salary earners and large corporate accounts.

Many merchants still struggle with delayed settlements, frozen accounts, limited access to credit, and compliance processes that were never designed for high-volume, low-margin digital trade.

Traders Prime MFB has said it is created to solve this problem.

A bank designed around merchants

Rather than retrofitting old systems, Traders Prime is building from the ground up with merchants at the centre.

In a statement by the bank, it said Its core products are structured around virtual accounts, fast settlement rails, digital payments, and transaction visibility — the things modern businesses actually need.

For a POS operator, that means knowing  when today’s sales will hit their account. For an online seller, it means being able to receive payments, reconcile transactions, and plan cash flow without friction.

This approach turns financial inclusion from a slogan into something practical: giving small and mid-sized businesses the tools to operate like formal enterprises.

Built for compliance, scale

What also sets Traders Prime apart is how seriously it takes regulation and structure.

In a space often plagued by informal operators and weak controls, the bank is launching with strong compliance frameworks, modern transaction monitoring, and partnerships with established financial institutions to ensure it meets regulatory standards from day one.

This matters not just for regulators, but for merchants as well. Businesses can only grow when their financial partners are trusted, stable, and able to operate at scale.

According to the bank, Traders Prime’s technology backbone — from its virtual account infrastructure to its settlement and reporting systems — is designed to support high transaction volumes, real-time monitoring, and clean audit trails. In a digital economy, this is not optional. It is the foundation of trust.

More than a microfinance bank

The leadership of Traders Prime has said it is careful about how the bank is described.

“This is not meant to be a roadside microfinance institution. It is a merchant-focused financial platform, licensed as a microfinance bank but engineered for modern digital commerce.

“By combining regulatory compliance, strong partnerships and purpose-built technology, Traders Prime aims to become the financial backbone for thousands of businesses that power Nigeria’s everyday economy,” the bank stated.

As Traders Prime MFB enters Nigeria’s banking space, it is doing so with a quiet but deliberate message to regulators, investors and the wider market: this is an institution, designed for the long term.

The future of Nigeria’s economy will be built by merchants, agents, and digital entrepreneurs. Traders Prime has said it is betting that the next great banking opportunity lies not in yesterday’s corporate models, but in the people and businesses shaping tomorrow’s commerce.

It may well be ahead of the curve.

Ifeoma Okeke-Korieocha is the Aviation Correspondent at BusinessDay Media Limited, publishers of BusinessDay Newspapers. She is also the Deputy Editor, BusinessDay Weekender Magazine, the Saturday Weekend edition of BusinessDay. She holds a BSC in Mass Communication from the prestigious University of Nigeria, Nsukka and a Masters degree in Marketing at the University of Lagos. As the lead writer on the aviation desk, Ifeoma is responsible and in charge of the three weekly aviation and travel pages in BusinessDay and BDSunday. She also overseas and edits all pages of BusinessDay Saturday Weekender. She has written various investigative, features and news stories in aviation and business related issues and has been severally nominated for award in the category of Aviation Writer of the Year by the Nigeria Media Nite-Out awards; one of the Nigeria’s most prestigious media awards ceremonies. Ifeoma is a one-time winner of the prestigious Nigeria Media Merit Award under the 'Aviation Writer of the Year' Category. She is the 2025 Eloy Award winner under the Print Media Journalist category. She has undergone several journalism trainings by various prestigious organisations. Ifeoma is also a fellow of the Female Reporters Leadership Fellowship of the Wole Soyinka Centre for Investigative Journalism.

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