<p style="margin-left:0px;">Nigeria-based fintech infrastructure provider Qore Technologies has expanded into Ethiopia, promising to give local banks, micro-finance institutions, and fintech start-ups the same cloud-native core-banking stack that now powers hundreds of African financial players. The fifteen-year-old company announced its plans at a ceremony attended by several bank executives at the Hyatt Regency Hotel late last week.</p><p style="margin-left:0px;">Qoreโs flagship product, BankOne, already supports more than 500 financial institutions across seven African markets, including 19 commercial banks and north of 450 micro-finance banks and fintechs. Its clientele includes prominent institutions like Zenith Bank, Access Bank, and the United Bank for Africa.</p><p style="margin-left:0px;">Martin Muchine, Vice President of International Expansion at Qore, says their market entry strategy entails deploying technology first and then receiving feedback to fine-tune their offering. He indicated plans to form long-term partnerships that leverage Qoreโs technology expertise and insights from financial institutions.</p><p style="margin-left:0px;">โWe have one of the nimblest offerings in the market,โ Martin told <i>Shega</i>.</p><p style="margin-left:0px;">Unlike traditional on-premises cores that demand large upfront licences and in-house IT teams, Qore offers a multi-tenant, Azure-hosted service that can go live in as little as 12 weeks. The shared model lowers the total cost of ownership and lets even small MFIs access tier-one functionality.</p><p style="margin-left:0px;">The platform processes transactions valued at around $11.8 billion annually and manages deposits of about โฆ155 billion (US$103 million) monthly, according to company figures.</p><p style="margin-left:0px;">Akufada, a three-year-old Ethiopian MFI, is Qoreโs first Ethiopian client, having deployed the platform across 40 of its branches. </p><p style="margin-left:0px;">โWe are delighted to be the first one,โ says Abraham Wedajo, the MFIโs CEO.</p><p style="margin-left:0px;">Qoreโs entry coincides with Ethiopiaโs increased transition to a cash-lite economy largely reliant on digital financial services. Digital transactions have overtaken cash in some of Ethiopia's <a href="https://shega.co/news/cbe-logs-77-trillion-birr-in-digital-transactions-over-eight-months"><u>biggest banks</u></a> in recent years.</p><p style="margin-left:0px;">Michael Hoodfar, Chief Operating Officer at Qore, said Ethiopian <span style="color:rgb(75,85,99)!important;font-family:"Times New Roman", serif;">financial institutions</span> โcan leapfrog the legacy phase entirely,โ focusing instead on customer experience, embedded finance, and open-API partnerships. He noted that their service is tailored for the African banking needs, eliminating costly third-party integrations, and is easily scalable.</p><p style="margin-left:0px;">If the Ethiopian deployment mirrors Qoreโs Nigerian success, <span style="color:rgb(75,85,99)!important;font-family:"Times New Roman", serif;">it </span>could accelerate the shift from branch-centric to fully digital banking<span style="color:rgb(75,85,99)!important;font-family:"Times New Roman", serif;">.</span></p>