South African digital banking giant Capitec has acquired payment processor Walletdoc in a deal worth up to R400m ($23.5m), signaling a fresh offensive in the country’s fiercely contested merchant services battleground.
The acquisition, signed on December 5 and announced Monday, sees the Stellenbosch-based bank take full ownership of the 10-year-old fintech. The move is a clear bid to wrestle market share from incumbents and agile challengers like Yoco and Nedbank in the SME payments space.
The Deal Mechanics
Capitec is paying a premium for the established payment stack. The deal structure includes:
- R300m ($17.6m) in upfront cash.
- R100m ($5.9m) in deferred earn-outs payable over three years.
- The earn-out is pegged to performance milestones and Capitec’s share price, locking in the founders during the integration phase.
Subject to regulatory approval, the deal provides a definitive exit for Walletdoc’s founders, Leonard Shenker and Dan Wagner, who launched the company in 2015.
This also marks a significant exit for AlphaCode, which backed Walletdoc in its early days. Founded in 2015 and based in Johannesburg, the venture firm focuses on startups in education, financial services, healthcare, IT and agritech across Africa. Its other notable exits include iKhokha and Zoona.
What Capitec is buying
Walletdoc began life as a consumer-facing bill payment app — a way for users to pay utilities and traffic fines — but successfully pivoted into a B2B payment gateway.
For Capitec, the value lies in the backend rather than the consumer brand. Walletdoc provides a proprietary tech stack that includes:
- Payment Gateways: Processing for online and in-app transactions.
- Instant EFT: A critical feature in South Africa where card-not-present fraud is high.
- POS & Payment Links: Tools that allow merchants to accept payments without expensive hardware.
The acquisition allows Capitec to bypass years of internal R&D. Instead of building a merchant payment switch from scratch, they have bought a “plug-and-play” solution to deploy immediately to their massive business banking client base.
The Strategy: The “Merchant War”
Capitec dominates South African retail banking with over 22 million clients but has historically lagged in the business banking and merchant services sector — a gap they are aggressively trying to close.
The South African payments landscape has shifted. The battle is no longer just about issuing cards; it is about acquiring the transaction. By owning the gateway (Walletdoc), Capitec can:
- Lower Fees: Remove third-party processor costs, offering cheaper rates to merchants.
- Data: Gain granular insight into SME cash flows, allowing for better credit scoring and lending products.
- Closed Loop: Create a closed-loop system where Capitec cardholders pay Capitec merchants via a Capitec gateway, keeping all margins in-house.
The Bigger Picture: Banks eating Fintechs
This deal marks the continuation of a consolidation trend in African fintech, where traditional banks are using their balance sheets to acquire innovation rather than partnering.
It mirrors Nedbank’s August acquisition of iKhokha (a Yoco rival) for R1.65bn ($92.4m). Both deals underscore a reality for South African fintechs: with the IPO market stagnant and late-stage VC capital scarce, trade sales to local banks are becoming the primary exit route.
For Capitec, this is not their first rodeo. The bank has been active in M&A to diversify earnings, recently increasing its stake in international consumer lender AvaFin to 97%.
What’s next
The deal is subject to standard regulatory approvals. Post-closing, the challenge will be integration. Capitec’s “one app” philosophy means Walletdoc’s standalone brand will likely dissolve, with its technology absorbed into the Capitec Business offering.
For Shenker and Wagner, the deal represents a successful decade-long cycle from startup to exit. For the wider ecosystem, it is another signal that while the “funding winter” bites, strategic M&A remains very much alive.
Key Data: Walletdoc
- Founded: 2015
- HQ: Cape Town, South Africa
- Founders: Leonard Shenker (Joint CEO), Dan Wagner (Joint CEO)
- Sector: Payments / B2B SaaS
- Exit Value: R400m ($23.5m)

