Access Holdingsโ fintech subsidiary, Hydrogen, has recorded the highest profit growth among Nigerian bank-owned payment companies in the first quarter of 2025, overtaking long-time leader HabariPay, the fintech arm of Guaranty Trust Holding Company (GTCO) in Nigeriaโs increasingly competitive digital payments space.
According to the banking groupโs latest financial statements published on the Nigerian Exchange Limited (NGX), Hydrogen’s after-tax profit surged by 466% to โฆ283 million ($178,344) in Q1 2025, up from โฆ50 million ($31,509) in the same period of 2024. GTCOโs HabariPay posted a profit growth of 52%, rising to โฆ1.66 billion ($1.1 million) from โฆ1.09 billion ($686,910).ย
Stanbic IBTCโs Zest Payments, however, widened its loss to โฆ508 million ($320,138) in Q1, compared to โฆ436 million ($274,764) a year earlier.
Hydrogenโs strong start to the year comes at a time when independent fintechs like Flutterwave are under pressure to turn profits, and Paystack contends with regulatory pressure. By contrast, bank-backed fintechs like Hydrogen and HabariPay are gaining ground, relying on large customer ecosystems, strong compliance channels, and robust capital bases.
While Hydrogen and HabariPayโs combined Q1 profits account for just 0.44% of their parent groupsโ total profit of โฆ440.8 billion ($277.7 million), that margin has more than doubled from the 0.19% recorded in Q1 2024, signaling growing relevance within the banking groupsโ revenue mix.
โHydrogen is leveraging Access Holdingsโ extensive ecosystem of approximately 65 million customers to drive value creation,โ said Roosevelt Ogbonna, CEO of Access Bank, during the groupโs investor call on April 23.
Ogbonna added that the synergy with the parent company is expected to yield long-term returns. โProjections for 2025 are robust, and the business is already showing strong momentum in H1. While Nigeria is our launchpad, Hydrogen has pan-African ambitions.โ
Hydrogenโs product play and strategic push
An Access Holdings spokesperson told TechCabal that the launch of the Hydrogen Payment Gateway in 2024, alongside enhancements in payment card security, fueled transaction growth across switching, merchant collection, and payment infrastructure services.
Hydrogen processed โฆ49.1 trillion ($30.6 billion) in payments in 2024, a 313% increase from the previous year, and generated โฆ10.3 billion ($6.4 million) in revenue.
โThis growth underscores the shifting dynamics in Nigeriaโs financial services space, where banks and fintechs are evolving from rivals to collaborators,โ the spokesperson said.
How regulation spurred the bank-fintech pivot
The emergence of bank-owned fintech arms like Hydrogen and HabariPay follows the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN)’s 2010 directive requiring commercial banks to restructure into holding companies to offer non-banking services like payments.ย
This regulatory move paved the way for traditional banks to spin off licensed fintech subsidiaries and compete more directly with independent players like Flutterwave, Paystack, Opay, and Moniepoint.
GTCO was the first Tier-1 bank to respond, launching HabariPay in June 2022. Since then, it has become a profitable fintech focused on SMEs and retailers, offering payment collection through its Squad platform via POS, USSD, virtual accounts, and web gateways.
Access Holdings followed with Hydrogen in September 2022, initially positioning it as a backend infrastructure provider serving other fintechs, banks, and telcos, rather than a direct-to-consumer player. When it launched, the firm reported a โฆ612 million ($ 386,308) loss in Q1 2023 but swung to profitability by Q4 of that year.
Despite Hydrogenโs profit surge, HabariPay remains Nigeria’s most profitable bank-owned fintech. But the race is tightening as both platforms scale rapidly.
โMostly, they just leverage their existing users to adopt their fintechs,โ said Babatunde Akin-Moses, CEO of lending startup Sycamore.
In 2024, HabariPay processed โฆ27.4 trillion ($17.1 billion) in transactions, representing a 124.6% year-on-year increase. During GTCOโs April investor call on April 3, Segun Agbaje, GTCOโs Group CEO, said the company will double down on PoS terminal deployments to expand Squadโs reach in 2025.
โOur investment in technology has significantly increased,โ Agbaje said. โ While weโve always acknowledged its importance, weโre now accelerating our effortsโand itโs clearly starting to pay off.โ
Outlook: Can Hydrogen catch up to HabariPay?
Analysts say if Hydrogen maintains its current trajectory, it could emerge as Nigeria’s most profitable bank-owned fintech by the end of 2025, potentially overtaking HabariPay.
โHydrogen is a strong contender in the fintech space, showing impressive growth and surpassing key competitors,โ said Abimbola Adewale, a Lagos-based analyst. โIts expanding customer base and transaction volume point to a solid long-term outlook.โ
As legacy banks transform into digital-first players, Hydrogenโs breakout quarter could mark the beginning of a new phase in Nigeriaโs fintech warsโwhere balance sheet strength and regulatory alignment become critical differentiators.
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