Wave is Africa’s only startup on Y-Combinator’s list of top earners

For the second year running, Francophone fintech Wave is the only African company listed on Y-Combinator’s top 50 earning startups in 2024. The global accelerator has 92 African startups in its portfolio.

YC, which previously ranked its startups by valuation, stopped sharing company valuations in 2023 after many tech giants saw significant haircuts in their valuations. Startups and VCs have begun emphasising revenue, unit economics and profitability over hefty private market valuations.

“Revenue is the clearest indicator of a startup’s success,” reads an excerpt from Garry Tan’s blog post, Y-Combinator’s CEO. In 2022, Wave was the second most valuable African company in YC’s portfolio after Flutterwave.

This year’s list is sorted alphabetically because startup revenue is often confidential and includes AirBnB, Deel, Doordash and Stripe.

Wave launched its mobile money product in Senegal in 2018 as a challenger to telcos like Orange and Free Senegal, which control 77% of the telco market combined.

At the time, the telcos charged between 5%-10% per transaction. Wave’s market entry saw it reduce these prices by as much as 70% and offer free deposits and withdrawals via its mobile application. It also introduced a fixed transaction fee of just 1% for money transfers between individuals. Its competitors followed suit and dropped prices by as much as 80%, even limiting their customers from purchasing airtime via Wave’s mobile app as they sought to challenge Wave’s dominance.

In 2023, it claimed to have 6 million users—roughly 75% of the adult population—in Senegal and 10 million users across Senegal, Côte d’Ivoire, Burkina Faso, Mali, Uganda and Gambia. It recorded 12 billion transactions in Senegal alone in 2022.

Wave’s consistently high revenue makes it stand out in Africa’s fintech ecosystem after three fintechs shut down in 2023 due to dried-up funds. While Wave is still at least two funding rounds from an IPO (startups typically IPO after a Series C, and Wave has only raised a Series A round), there are hopes that it can list on a global exchange in the coming years as private investors can already buy shares in the company.

In 2022, to increase profitability amidst the global economic downturn, Wave laid off 300 employees—a 15% reduction of its 2,000 employees. It now has 850 employees. The startup, backed by IFC, Stripe and Sequoia, also had to reverse its expansion plans that same year.

“The company is still growing rapidly but we have to slow down the pace of entry into new markets to ensure we’re focused on serving the 10 millions+ active users in existing markets,”  Sid Sridhar, the company’s global head of business, told TechCabal.

Wave has raised over $300 million and is one of Africa’s unicorns—private companies worth over $1 billion. The startup was founded by Drew Durbin and Lincoln Quirk after they exited for $500 million for Sendwave, their first startup.

Get the best African tech newsletters in your inbox

ObadeYemi

Adeyemi is a certified performance digital marketing professional who is passionate about data-driven storytelling that does not only endear brands to their audiences but also ensures repeat sales. He has worked with businesses across FinTech, IT, Cloud Computing, Human Resources, Food & Beverages, Education, Medicine, Media, and Blockchain, some of which have achieved 80% increase in visibility, 186% increase in month on month sales and revenue.. His competences include Digital Strategy, Search Engine Optimization, Paid per Click Advertising, Data Visualization & Analytics, Lead Generation, Sales Growth and Content Marketing.

Share
Published by
ObadeYemi

Recent Posts

Kenyan court orders Twiga Foods to pay ex-employee $7,800 for unfair dismissal

Twiga Foods, a Kenyan B2B startup, has been ordered to pay a former sales representative…

14 hours ago

AI email subject lines that drive 3x more revenue and actually convert [+ exclusive insights]

Email subject lines determine whether your carefully crafted campaigns ever see the light of day…

21 hours ago

Why SurveyMonkey’s Marketing Leader Says Your Foundation Is Broken

The way most marketing teams approach AI is probably the way I approach my inbox…

23 hours ago

Why most go-to-market playbooks fail internationally — and what to do instead

I first worked across borders in the mid‑90s, interpreting Spanish calls for AT&T. What struck…

23 hours ago

Enterprise generative AI tools that actually work

TL;DR: Enterprise generative AI tools are advanced software platforms designed to automate and enhance marketing,…

4 days ago

Can music influence what we buy? To find out, I dove into the psychology of music

In the first episode of my Nudge podcast, I interviewed the fantastic psychologist Dr. Adrian…

5 days ago