The Future of Crypto in Nigeria Will be Built by Institutions, not Hype

14 hours ago 2

The most dangerous moment in any industry is when everyone agrees it is working. Not because it is not, but because the conviction that the hard part is over is precisely when the hard part begins.

Nigeria’s crypto adoption numbers are real. The volumes and use cases are also real. Something genuinely significant has been built here, largely by ordinary people solving ordinary problems with extraordinary resourcefulness.

However, adoption is not the same as permanence. A market can be booming and simultaneously one shock away from cracking.

Nigeria has demonstrated, beyond any reasonable doubt, that demand for crypto is real and deep. What it has not yet demonstrated is the institutional architecture that transforms demand into a durable industry.

Those are different achievements, and confusing one for the other is where we could go wrong.

The hype will not disappear, it never does. There will always be new coins, new promises, new waves of enthusiasm, but hype is not a foundation, it is a phase.

The progression from useful to trust requires a different kind of work than going from unknown to popular. The skills that built Nigeria’s adoption story got the industry here, but they will not, on their own, take it where it needs to go.

Consider what institutional engagement actually unlocks. Right now, crypto in Nigeria works well for the sophisticated and the determined, people who understand the technology, tolerate the uncertainty, and have the experience to navigate it confidently. That audience is growing but it is not nearly large enough to capture the economic opportunity that is sitting right in front of us.

Institutions create the accountability layer that gives cautious participants, like the corporate treasurer, the business owner who cannot afford to gamble, a reason to engage, and in doing so, they unlock access to the kind of capital and partnerships that only move when trust is genuinely present.

A market built only for early adopters is entrepreneurial, but a market built on institutions is economic infrastructure.

That infrastructure attracts the kind of capital that changes the geometry of what is possible. Not the rushed kind that chases narratives and exits at the first sign of turbulence, but the patient capital that builds payment networks and financial systems that outlast the people who conceived them. That capital exists and it is looking, actively, for credible homes in markets like Nigeria.

Regulation has always been a key component of institutionalization. When done right, it is not a constraint but a foundation. Every industry that has ever crossed a meaningful threshold, in scale, in credibility, in economic impact, has done so within appropriate frameworks.

Nigeria has a choice. It can remain a market defined by bursts of speculative energy, or it can become a leader in building practical, scalable crypto infrastructure for emerging economies.

Everything required to build something significant is already present in Nigeria. The talent, the demand, the demonstrated appetite for better financial infrastructure. What does not yet exist are the institutions capable of converting all of that into something durable. That is the work. It has not started yet. It needs to.

*Bidemi Oke is the chief executive officer of FlashChange, a fintech platform focused on secure digital asset exchange. He is an entrepreneur and vibrant leader, recognised for driving innovation and redefining access in the financial technology industry.

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