Fintech partnerships and AI-driven fraud management reshape trust, inclusion and digital commerce across Nigeria and emerging markets
Global payments giant Visa has unveiled a new suite of artificial intelligence-powered dispute resolution tools aimed at reducing fraud losses, cutting operational costs and improving consumer trust across the global digital payments ecosystem. The development comes at a critical moment for Nigeria, Africa and emerging economies where the rapid expansion of fintech, mobile money and e-commerce has also triggered a sharp rise in payment disputes, cyber fraud and transaction reversals.
At the same time, Nigerian telecom operator Vitel Wireless has entered strategic partnerships with OPay and Moniepoint to deepen telecom access and digital financial inclusion through seamless airtime and data purchases. Together, both developments point to a broader structural shift in Africa’s digital economy where payments, telecommunications, AI and financial services are becoming increasingly interconnected.
The implications stretch beyond Nigeria. They affect banks in London, payment processors in New York, telecom operators in Johannesburg, regulators in Nairobi and global investors tracking the future of Africa’s fast-growing digital consumer market.
Why Visa’s AI Move Matters
According to Visa, global payment disputes rose to 106 million cases in 2025, representing a 35 per cent increase since 2019. The surge reflects the explosive growth of digital transactions globally, especially accelerated by e-commerce, fintech apps, subscription services and cross-border online purchases.
For years, dispute management has remained one of the most expensive pain points in the payments ecosystem. Merchants lose billions annually to chargebacks, fraudulent claims and administrative costs, while consumers often experience delays, frustration and weak transparency.
Visa’s new AI-powered solutions are designed to address this challenge through automation, predictive intelligence and faster decision-making.
Among the major innovations are:
AI-Driven Fraud Intelligence
Visa’s new Dispute Intelligence platform deploys predictive models and transaction analytics to identify suspicious activities earlier and support banks in making faster dispute decisions.
This represents a strategic shift from reactive fraud management to predictive fraud prevention. In practical terms, AI systems can now identify behavioural anomalies before losses escalate.
For Nigerian banks and African fintech operators, this is significant because fraud risks have become one of the biggest threats to digital banking expansion. As mobile transactions rise across Africa, fraudsters are increasingly exploiting weak identity verification systems, social engineering tactics and regulatory loopholes.
The integration of AI into fraud resolution therefore strengthens confidence within the financial system.
Generative AI Enters Payments Infrastructure
One of the most notable developments is Visa’s introduction of generative AI into dispute management processes. Its new Visa Dispute Recovery Manager uses AI-generated responses and predictive scoring systems to automate merchant dispute responses and improve recovery outcomes.
This signals a broader transformation already happening globally: AI is no longer limited to customer service chatbots or marketing automation. It is now becoming embedded inside critical financial infrastructure. For the global payments industry, this could significantly lower operational expenses while improving transaction efficiency.
For Africa, it creates opportunities and risks simultaneously. While AI can improve trust and reduce financial leakages, it also raises concerns around data governance, algorithmic bias, cybersecurity vulnerabilities and digital regulation. African regulators may soon face mounting pressure to establish stronger AI governance frameworks for financial services.

