According to www.prnewswire.com, CycleFlow — powered by C2FO and the International Finance Corporation (IFC) — has launched a supply chain finance platform in Nigeria aimed at transforming access to working capital for micro, small, and medium-sized enterprises (MSMEs).
Platform Designed to Address Working Capital Gaps
The initiative targets systemic financing constraints faced by Nigerian MSMEs, which collectively contribute over 48% of Nigeria’s GDP and employ approximately 84% of the national workforce, according to World Bank estimates. Historically, these businesses face severe delays in receivables — often waiting 90–120 days for payment from larger corporate buyers — undermining cash flow, limiting growth, and constraining procurement capacity.
How CycleFlow Works
Using C2FO’s cloud-based technology infrastructure, CycleFlow enables approved MSME suppliers to receive early payment on verified invoices from anchor buyers — typically large corporations or government entities — at competitive discount rates. The platform integrates with existing enterprise resource planning (ERP) and accounting systems, supports real-time invoice validation, and leverages IFC’s risk-sharing facility to de-risk participation for financial institutions.
IFC and C2FO Collaboration
This marks the first country-specific deployment of CycleFlow in Africa. IFC, a member of the World Bank Group, is providing technical assistance, credit enhancement, and capacity building for local banks and corporates. C2FO contributes its global supply chain finance platform, data analytics capabilities, and implementation expertise.
The partnership aligns with IFC’s 2023–2026 Country Partnership Framework for Nigeria, which prioritizes financial inclusion and private sector development. It also reflects C2FO’s broader expansion into emerging markets: since 2021, C2FO has launched similar platforms in Vietnam, Colombia, and Kenya.
Industry Context and Practitioner Implications
Supply chain finance (SCF) adoption remains low across Sub-Saharan Africa — less than 5% of eligible MSMEs currently participate in formal SCF programs, per IFC’s 2023 Financial Inclusion Survey. By contrast, SCF penetration exceeds 30% among Tier-2+ suppliers in mature markets like the EU and US. Recent parallel initiatives include Standard Bank’s SCF rollout in South Africa (2023) and Ecobank’s pan-African digital trade finance platform launched in 2022.
For supply chain professionals operating in Nigeria or sourcing from the region, CycleFlow offers a tangible mechanism to strengthen supplier resilience without increasing balance sheet liability. Early adopters can reduce supplier default risk, improve on-time-in-full (OTIF) performance, and meet ESG-linked procurement KPIs tied to inclusive economic participation. Integration requires minimal IT overhead but necessitates alignment between procurement, finance, and supplier development teams to onboard anchor buyers and vet supplier eligibility criteria.
“CycleFlow unlocks liquidity where it’s needed most — at the base of the supply chain. This isn’t just about faster payments; it’s about building more responsive, inclusive, and sustainable value chains.” — Sarah M. Hackett, Global Head of Supply Chain Finance, C2FO
“By bringing world-class supply chain finance tools to Nigeria, we’re helping MSMEs grow, create jobs, and integrate into domestic and regional markets.” — Akinwumi Adesina, President, African Development Bank (quoted in related IFC announcement)
Source: www.prnewswire.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.





