Africa’s biggest economic constraint isn’t a shortage of ideas. It’s a shortage of affordable capital. Across the continent, businesses routinely face borrowing costs that would be unthinkable in developed markets, even when their growth prospects are strong. That gap between opportunity and access to capital is the problem Stafford Masie of the Africa Bitcoin Corporation (ABC) says they want to close, with an unusual tool: Bitcoin.
The standard narrative about African business growth tends to focus on innovation or infrastructure gaps.
ABC’s pitch starts somewhere different. Among the top 15 nations the IMF expects to be fast-growing in 2026, 12 are African. Despite this, lending rates in and to Africa are some of the highest in the world.
Lending rates in South Africa are at about 11.5%, 14.6% in Kenya, over 19% in Nigeria and as high as 43% in Zimbabwe.
Between these high lending rates, thin credit markets, currency instability, and limited access to formal financing, growth for any business is expensive.
Ideas have died at the altar of cost before they even get off the ground. Growth in Africa isn’t constrained by lack of innovative ideas. The constraint is not just limited infrastructure but also capital.
In Masie’s words;
Bitcoin Treasuries mostly do the same thing. They raise capital to buy Bitcoin, hold it and allow the value to appreciate for their investors.
ABC wants to do something different. Rather than simply accumulating Bitcoin, the company wants to use it as collateral to borrow cheaper fiat capital against BTC holdings. ABC then plans to deploy that capital into African businesses and earn the spread between the cost of borrowing and the rate it earns on local lending.
In this model, Bitcoin stops being purely an investment and starts functioning as financial infrastructure.
In his interview, Strafford Masie discusses the friction associated with traditional collateral options in African markets.
Real estate is illiquid and hard to value quickly. Local currencies can depreciate fast. Physical gold is difficult to move across borders. Bitcoin, by contrast, is globally recognised, highly liquid, verifiable in real time, and available to trade 24/7 anywhere in the world.
ABC argues that Bitcoin’s borderless nature makes it a more practical collateral asset than the alternatives many African lenders and borrowers currently rely on. Masie and ABC are also betting that collateralization, not payments, could be Bitcoin’s most useful application in this context.
The opportunity ABC is chasing is essentially a capital arbitrage. Developed markets tend to have abundant capital, lower yields, and cheap borrowing costs.
This is not the case in African markets. Here, there is a scarcity of capital, higher yields, and expensive financing. Using Bitcoin as a bridge, ABC aims to connect global liquidity to regions with high capital demand.
This will allow Bitcoin holders to access liquidity, investors to gain exposure to African yields, and local businesses to access funding at lower cost than they’d otherwise find.
If ABC’s strategy works as intended, the benefits are wider access to credit, lower financing costs, more room for SME growth, and increased investment inflows. But “if it works” is doing a lot of work in that sentence.
Bitcoin-backed lending at this scale hasn’t been proven, let alone across diverse African regulatory environments. The mechanics of turning a global capital arbitrage into reliable, affordable local credit are far from simple.
In theory, it could. In practice, it remains to be seen.
Masie and ABC are at least aware of the crypto regulatory climate in Africa and the problems and benefits they present.
The company says its current focus is less on technology and more on regulatory engagement, compliance frameworks, and cross-border lending structures.
In the interview, Masie notes;
He also adds;
There are open questions that matter to the lender and borrowers alike. How is collateral managed? Who holds custody? What happens in a default? How are lenders protected if Bitcoin’s price moves sharply against them? Regulatory clarity, not blockchain capability, is likely to determine whether this model can scale beyond a pilot.
Despite Masie’s optimism, there are risks to this plan.
The first risk is Bitcoin’s price volatility. In July 2025, Bitcoin reached a record high of over $120,000. Today, Bitcoin is trading at a little over $63,000 as of the time of publishing this piece.
The value of Bitcoin’s price shifts affects its utility as collateral. How will loan-to-value calculations be done with such price shifts?
The second is regulation. Regulation for cryptocurrency and crypto exchanges across the world is still evolving, especially in Africa.
There is no uniform regulation for cryptocurrency on the continent. Globally, regulatory frameworks for crypto-backed lending are still in infancy. It becomes difficult to see how ABC would create a cross-border structure with these uncertainties.
Managing compliance across multiple African jurisdictions will be complex, to put it lightly. The entire model depends on Bitcoin retaining liquidity and broad acceptance among institutional lenders. Neither of these things is guaranteed.
For years, the dominant Bitcoin narrative has centred on it as “digital gold.” Investors treat it as a store of value to hold and wait on. ABC’s thesis is a shift away from this narrative.
To ABC, Bitcoin can be more. Bitcoin can serve as collateral, lending infrastructure, and a capital markets tool. If this use case succeeds or at least gains traction, Bitcoin’s next phase of adoption may be driven by its ability to function within formal finance.
Will African regulators engage with and ultimately support Bitcoin-backed lending structures? Will institutional lenders be willing to participate at scale?
Can the risks around volatility and custody be managed in practice? And will African businesses actually adopt this kind of financing if it becomes available?
The answers to these questions are important. Bitcoin won’t single-handedly solve Africa’s financing gap, and treating it as a guaranteed fix would be a mistake. But ABC’s approach reframes the conversation from whether Bitcoin is money to whether Bitcoin can function as infrastructure.
Whether that thesis survives contact with regulation, volatility, and on-the-ground lending realities is the real test ahead.
Originally published at https://cryptoafrica.news on June 19, 2026.
Can Bitcoin Reduce Africa’s Borrowing Costs? ABC’s Stafford Masie Thinks So was originally published in Coinmonks on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.


