The Easypaisa Bank stake sale announced in June 2026 is arguably the single most consequential ownership change in Pakistan’s digital finance history. Telenor ASA is considering selling its controlling stake in its digital bank in Pakistan, and is working with Citigroup on the potential disposal of its 55% equity stake in Easypaisa Bank. For founders, developers, and everyday users who rely on Easypaisa’s payment rails every day, the question is not just who buys it, it is what they do with it.
How Telenor Built and Now Exits Pakistan
Telenor’s departure from Pakistan has been a two-chapter story. Last year, Telenor finalised the sale of Telenor Pakistan to the PTCL Group for Rs108 billion, approximately $385 million. Easypaisa, the digital financial services arm, was deliberately excluded from that transaction. The fintech business was always seen as the more valuable, higher-growth asset, and the numbers back that up.
A sale of the Easypaisa stake would mark a full withdrawal from Pakistan for the company, which has operated in the country for roughly two decades, joining a growing list of multinationals such as Procter and Gamble and Shell that have wound down local operations in recent years.
As DNB Carnegie analyst Christoffer Wang Bjørnsen noted in comments to Bloomberg, investors would likely welcome further simplification of Telenor’s Asian portfolio, and running a licensed digital bank demands capital commitments and compliance expertise that sit uncomfortably inside a telecom holding company.
Easypaisa Bank Stake Sale: The Asset on the Table
Anyone seriously bidding on the Easypaisa Bank stake sale is not simply picking up a mobile wallet app. Any buyer is acquiring more than 50 million registered users and 20 million monthly active users, distribution embedded across Pakistan through one of the country’s largest agent networks, full digital retail bank approval from the State Bank of Pakistan, and 2.7 billion transactions processed in 2024 valued at roughly Rs9.5 trillion, approximately 9% of Pakistan’s GDP.
In January 2025, the company received Pakistan’s first digital bank licence from the State Bank of Pakistan and subsequently announced the commencement of commercial operations. That licence alone took years and is not easily replicated.
The financial case for buying is strong. Easypaisa’s full-year 2025 profit after tax came in at Rs17.04 billion, and Q1 2026 profit before tax rose 4.4x year-on-year to Rs3.66 billion. Total assets stand at Rs217.6 billion. The Norwegian telecom group is seeking a buyer for the holding, which could fetch several hundred million dollars, as per sources according to Bloomberg.
Who Are the Likely Buyers?
No buyer has been named publicly, and initial bids from prospective buyers are expected to be solicited within the coming months, though no final decisions have been taken. Analysts have sketched out a realistic shortlist.
- Ant Group consolidating: Ant Group, already holding 45%, could move toward full ownership, which would align Easypaisa with its global embedded finance strategy across emerging markets. There is no public indication Ant intends to bid, but the strategic logic makes them a credible candidate.
- A Pakistani or regional bank: The most plausible outcome is a consolidation play that integrates Easypaisa’s digital capabilities with conventional products like loans and savings accounts, though large banking groups don’t always move at the speed a digital-first platform requires.
- An international strategic investor: Another possibility is a strategic international investor looking for exposure to Pakistan’s growing digital economy. Pakistan’s young, underbanked population makes a compelling investment thesis.
- Another telecom operator: This is the least likely outcome. Globally, telecoms are exiting banking, not entering it.
Any incoming buyer would enter as a majority partner alongside one of Asia’s most formidable digital finance players, Ant Group, which means the winning bidder must be able to work constructively with a sophisticated Chinese fintech co-owner.
What It Signals for Pakistan’s Mobile Money Sector
The Easypaisa Bank stake sale reflects a broader pattern of consolidation in Pakistan’s mobile money space. The development reflects a broader trend of multinational corporations reassessing their presence in Pakistan. In recent years, several international companies have reduced or exited parts of their local operations amid changing business priorities and evolving market dynamics.
At the same time, the underlying demand for digital financial services is accelerating. Pakistan remains a relatively underbanked market, with millions of adults still lacking access to traditional banking services, creating substantial opportunities for digital finance providers. The country’s young population presents significant long-term growth prospects, with younger consumers generally more receptive to digital and mobile-based financial services.
The platform’s strategic role is also deepening. In December 2025, Easypaisa switched on Ant International’s WorldFirst rail, letting customers receive money from more than 100 countries, naming freelancers and exporters explicitly. This puts Easypaisa at the centre of Pakistan’s freelance economy at precisely the moment that economy is scaling fast.
What This Means for Fintech Founders and Startups
For founders building payment products, lending tools, or merchant services on top of Easypaisa’s infrastructure, ownership change carries real risk and real opportunity. The payment rails that startups depend on could be expanded aggressively under an ambitious new owner, or disrupted if an acquirer pivots strategy or strips costs.
If you are building in the payments or embedded finance space in Pakistan, this is a good moment to think hard about API dependency. The Easypaisa Bank stake sale is a reminder that the infrastructure underneath your product is itself an asset being bought and sold. Diversifying across payment rails, including Raast’s growing P2M merchant network, is a sensible hedge.
The next owner inherits something more valuable than a payments app and more complicated than a microfinance bank: a low-cost funding base attached to 59 million customer relationships. The question is not whether those relationships can be monetised, they already are. It is whether they can be transformed into productive intermediation.
An owner with genuine ambition will have an enormous platform to build on. An owner focused on cost extraction will find the competition less forgiving than it looks. For Pakistan’s fintech startups, that distinction will determine a great deal about the next five years of building.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the Easypaisa Bank stake sale about?
Telenor ASA is exploring selling its 55% controlling stake in Easypaisa Bank to a yet-unnamed buyer, with Citigroup managing the process. The stake could be valued at several hundred million dollars. It would complete Telenor’s full exit from Pakistan, having already sold its telecom operations to PTCL Group.
Who currently owns Easypaisa Bank?
The remaining 45% of Easypaisa is held by Ant Group, the Chinese fintech giant backed by Jack Ma, which acquired its stake for approximately $184.5 million in 2018. Telenor holds the other 55% and is the majority controlling shareholder currently looking to divest.
Will Easypaisa continue operating normally during this process?
Easypaisa continues to operate independently, with customer deposits and services unaffected, and remains fully regulated by the State Bank of Pakistan. No deal has been finalised and discussions remain at an early stage.
Why does this matter for Pakistan’s fintech startups?
Easypaisa functions as critical payment infrastructure for a large part of Pakistan’s digital economy. A change in ownership could shift API access policies, partnership terms, and the platform’s strategic direction. Founders building on top of Easypaisa’s rails need to watch this closely, especially those in payments, lending, and merchant services.