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Tech Deploys Low Latency Edge AI to Solve Payment Failures in High-Growth African Markets
As fintech valuations in Africa face pressure from currency volatility and rising infrastructure costs, one bootstrapped infrastructure company is carving out a defensible niche by solving a problem every Nigerian commuter and Kenyan trader knows intimately: transaction timeouts in dead zones.
Insolify, a software firm with operational hubs in Abuja, Nairobi, and Dubai, has announced the broad deployment of a new low-latency AI payment layer built specifically for markets with intermittent connectivity. While the company initially described the system as “offline-first,” engineers on the project have clarified that the innovation lies in predictive edge computing allowing financial apps to finalize user intent and manage risk locally during network brownouts, rather than fully disconnecting from the grid.
For a region where a dropped signal can mean a missed sale or a stalled supply chain, the distinction is critical.
Traditional payment gateways rely on a roundtrip to a central server. In dense urban areas like Lagos Island or during peak hours on Safaricom’s network, latency spikes cause a cascade of failed transactions.
Insolify’s architecture addresses this by shifting lightweight AI decisioning to distributed nodes and device-level SDKs. The system pre-positions risk data and balance snapshots. When connectivity falters to 3G or fluctuates, the local environment can confidently render a transaction “successful” to the user while queuing the final settlement for when the packet of data sneaks through.
A Senior Software Engineer at Insolify, Femi Alex, said: “Think of it less as ‘offline cash’ and more as ‘graceful degradation of the network. We are not trying to rewrite the laws of distributed computing. We’re making sure the user in a moving danfo bus doesn’t have to press ‘pay’ three times.”
The system is already integrated into Insolify’s flagship product, FinCore, a cloud-native core banking engine that the company reports is now in use by over 300 banks, microfinance institutions, and fintech lenders across Africa and the Middle East.
Behind this quiet expansion is a founder who has studiously avoided the founder-celebrity track. Billah Muayyat, who serves as Insolify’s chief architect, is a self-taught engineer who began programming at age nine and has since built a reputation among peers as a deeply technical systems thinker fluent in the low-level languages (C++, Go, Lisp) required to optimize financial middleware.
While many of his contemporaries in the African fintech scene have become prolific public speakers, fundraisers and social media presences, Billah has turned down virtually all interview requests, including for this story. His focus, according to colleagues, remains on the logic gates rather than the limelight.
However, his influence is measurable. Beyond Insolify, Muayyat is known to advise and angel-invest in a small cohort of engineering-heavy startups across Africa and Southeast Asia, with a specific focus on digital inclusion and localized AI language models including Insolify’s own Safi platform, which processes financial instructions in Pidgin, Igbo, Hausa, Yoruba, and Swahili among others.
Insolify remains privately held and has not publicly disclosed a funding round to date, operating instead on a revenue-efficient model typical of enterprise SaaS providers. According to analysis of comparable transactions in the core banking and fintech infrastructure space (benchmarked against recent deals for firms like Mambu, Oradian, Safaricom (MPesa) and Intuit), and based on Insolify’s verified transaction volumes, industry analysts estimate the company’s implied valuation to be in the range of $1.5 billion USD.
Public incorporation documents and secondary market filings reviewed by this publication indicate Mr. Billah retains a direct ownership stake of approximately 10 percent in the entity, alongside equity interests in other regional technology ventures. Based on the current estimated valuation, Muayyat’s paper net worth is projected at approximately $200 million.
Importantly, this figure represents illiquid, private equity tied directly to the operational performance of the underlying financial infrastructure. It is a reflection of enterprise value creation, not venture capital hype.
As central banks across Africa particularly the CBN in Nigeria and the CBK in Kenya push for greater resilience in digital payment rails, the demand for localized, latency-tolerant architecture is expected to surge.
Insolify’s approach positions it as a critical behind-the-scenes layer for any bank or fintech hoping to expand beyond the fiber-optic loops of city centers and into the peri-urban and rural economies where the majority of the continent’s commerce actually occurs.
While Muayyat remains out of sight, the systems he builds are becoming increasingly difficult to ignore.







