United Bank for Africa Plc (UBA) has unveiled a new diaspora banking and investment platform aimed at connecting Africans living abroad with structured wealth and investment opportunities across the continent.
Launched at UBA House in Lagos under the theme “Beyond Banking: Powering the Global African Lifestyle,” the platform shifts diaspora engagement from remittances to long-term financial growth.
Developed in partnership with:
- United Capital Plc
- Africa Prudential Plc
- UBA Pensions Custodian Limited
- Afriland Properties Plc
- Heirs Insurance Group
- Avon Healthcare Limited
The ecosystem integrates:
- Banking and cross-border payments
- Investments and asset management
- Securities services
- Real estate ownership
- Insurance protection
- Pension planning
- Healthcare access
UBA said the goal is to provide diaspora Africans with a single, trusted platform to manage financial commitments across borders with transparency and professional governance.
Anant Rao, UBA’s Head of Diaspora Banking, noted that African diaspora remittances exceed $100 billion annually, describing diaspora capital as a strategic growth driver rather than just money transfers.
“For decades, engagement focused on remittances. Now we are building a financial ecosystem where Africans globally can bank, invest, protect their families, and build long-term wealth seamlessly,” Rao said.
Alero Ladipo, UBA’s Group Head of Marketing and Corporate Communications, added that the initiative reflects the realities of a globally mobile African population seeking structured and secure investment pathways back home.
The bank linked the initiative to its Africapitalism philosophy championed by Tony O. Elumelu, UBA’s Founder and Chairman, which advocates long-term private-sector investments that generate both financial returns and social impact.
UBA said mobilising diaspora capital through trusted financial institutions will be central to Africa’s next phase of development.
“Africa will increasingly be financed by Africans themselves, including Africans abroad,” Rao said.

