Els: MBN360 Business
The formal decoupling of MobileMoney Fintech Limited (MoMo) from its parent, MTN Ghana, marks the definitive end of the “telecom-led” era and the birth of a sovereign fintech giant, with the CEO of MobileMoney Fintech Limited, Mr. Shaibu Haruna, addressing the structural divorce that has been five years in the making.
For the millions of Ghanaians who rely on the platform for daily survival, Mr. Haruna’s message in a recent interview was one of complete reassurance: the legal separation is a move toward regulatory maturity that will leave the user experience untouched while unlocking a new tier of industrial innovation.
“We became a standalone entity because it was necessary due to the regulations of the country. The Payment Systems and Services Act requires that we operate as a separate company and be regulated by the Bank of Ghana”Mr. Shaibu Haruna, CEO of MobileMoney Fintech Limited
This transition is a significant strategic pivot for the Ghanaian digital economy. It evolves MoMo into a standalone entity regulated directly by the Bank of Ghana, shedding its identity as a value-added service of a mobile network operator (MNO) to become a Tier-1 financial institution in its own right.
This structural independence is not merely a corporate rebrand; it is a fundamental realignment of the digital financial services (DFS) ecosystem in West Africa. Mr. Haruna noted that the driver behind this separation is the Payment Systems and Services Act, a piece of legislation that safeguards the integrity of Ghana’s financial borders
As mobile money grew from a niche utility to a critical national infrastructure, the regulatory oversight required a move away from the “nested” model – where fintech lived inside a telco – to a standalone model. This ensures that the financial liabilities of the fintech arm are ring-fenced from the operational risks of the telecommunications side.

According to Mr. Haruna, the five-year transition involved big structural changes to meet the capital adequacy and governance standards set by the central bank. This independence allows the Bank of Ghana to exercise direct supervisory authority, ensuring that the billions of cedis circulating within the MoMo ecosystem are protected by the same rigorous standards applied to commercial banks.
“This is the regulatory merit of the move: it de-risks the financial sector while giving MoMo the legal autonomy to innovate outside the constraints of a traditional telecom license,” the CEO explained.
MTN Backbone Remains
A primary concern for market observers has been the potential friction created by the split. However, the technical merit of the transition lies in its invisible execution. Mr. Haruna confirmed that the company would continue to leverage the MTN distribution network, which includes the vast web of agents and the underlying signal infrastructure.
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In essence, the pipes remain the same, but the entity managing the flow of value is now an independent specialist. From a customer perspective, the transition is positioned to be frictionless. The USSD interfaces, the mobile application, and the agent-customer interactions will remain identical.
The CEO emphasised that the separation is a backend governance event that does not disrupt the front-end utility. This stability is crucial for maintaining consumer confidence in a market where any perceived disruption to digital wallets can trigger immediate liquidity panics.
“Our customers will not experience any change in the way we serve them. They will continue to access our services through the MTN distribution network. From their perspective, the only change will be the level of innovation that we will deliver”Mr. Shaibu Haruna, CEO of MobileMoney Fintech Limited

The most compelling industrial merit of this independence is the ability to scale beyond the wallet. As a standalone fintech, MoMo is now positioned to form strategic partnerships that were previously complicated by its status as a subsidiary.
MoMo can now engage in deeper API integrations with third-party providers, insurance firms, and international remittance hubs without the bureaucratic overhead of the parent company by operating as a distinct legal entity. This shift suggests a move into high-value financial services, including micro-credit, wealth management, and sophisticated merchant payment systems.
As an independent entity, MoMo can pivot its engineering and product teams to solve financial problems with the agility of a startup but the scale of a legacy bank. The goal is to move from being a facilitator of transfers to becoming the central operating system for Ghanaian commerce.
The most significant takeaway for the Ghanaian investor class is the planned listing of MobileMoney Fintech Limited on the Ghana Stock Exchange (GSE). Mr. Shaibu Haruna’s disclosure of a three-to-five-year timeline for an IPO is a major move toward the localisation of the fintech economy.
For years, the massive profits generated by the mobile money revolution have largely flowed to the parent company’s shareholders in South Africa. A local listing changes that narrative, allowing the Ghanaian public to own equity in the platform that drives their economy.
Listing on the GSE provides a dual benefit: it raises local capital for further expansion and provides a layer of public accountability that ensures the company remains aligned with national interests. This sovereign merit cannot be overstated. It represents the final step in the maturity of a local industry – moving from a foreign-owned utility to a publicly-traded national asset.

The independence of MobileMoney Fintech Limited is the final confirmation that digital finance is no longer a subset of telecommunications. It is its own industrial pillar. Under the leadership of Mr. Shaibu Haruna, the entity is moving from a period of regulatory transition into an era of aggressive market expansion.