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What happens when finance starts with trust instead of control? In this conversation, Joy Anderson and Adeshina Adewumi explore how Trade Lenda has built financial infrastructure around the realities of informal markets across Nigeria. Rather than treating informality as a problem to be fixed, Trade Lenda recognizes existing systems of trust, accountability, and economic participation and designs financial products that work within them. The discussion traces the full supply chain, from farmers and aggregators to manufacturers, distributors, and retailers, and examines why supporting the entire value chain creates stronger, more resilient markets.

 

The conversation also explores how power operates in financial systems. Adeshina explains how Trade Lenda rethinks creditworthiness, works with community accountability structures, develops Sharia-compliant financing options, and provides capacity-building alongside capital. Together, Joy and Ade examine how trust can become infrastructure: creating financial systems that move capital faster, expand economic opportunity, and preserve the community relationships that make markets function in the first place. The result is a compelling example of how finance can support dignity, shared prosperity, and transformative systems change.

Episode Highlights

00:28 - The importance of trust in finance and community systems.

01:28 - Understanding informal markets as systems to be supported.

04:10 - Trade Lenda's approach to financing entire supply chains.

05:06 - Why agriculture, retail, and essential services matter for economic growth.

07:43 - Rethinking collateral and credit access for underserved entrepreneurs.

11:01 - How speed and capital turnover drive successful trade finance.

14:22 - Diversifying within value chains to manage risk and strengthen markets.

17:42 - Why knowledge and business support can be as important as capital.

28:02 - Using community accountability and trust as financial infrastructure.

35:13 - Capital moves at the speed of trust.

Relevant Links

Criterion Institute website and LinkedIn

Joy Anderson’s LinkedIn
Adeshina Adewumi’s LinkedIn

Dive Deeper

Advanced practices in local capital design: Trade Lenda
This case study directly examines Trade Lenda's approach to designing financial systems around informal markets, community accountability, alternative underwriting, and localized financial infrastructure. It is essentially the written companion to many of the ideas discussed in the episode.

Framework for financing the prevention of gender-based violence
This framework provides one of Criterion's core approaches to understanding how financial structures influence social outcomes and how systems can be intentionally redesigned. Mentioned in related Criterion resource descriptions.

 

If you enjoyed this episode, consider listening to:

#79: From Invitation to Trust: Rethinking Relationships in Finance
This episode explores trust as a foundational practice for leadership, collaboration, and systems change, making it the closest thematic companion to the Trade Lenda discussion.

#78: Intermediation is Not Overhead
A reframing of financial infrastructure and intermediation that connects directly to this episode's discussion of building systems that allow capital to move more effectively through markets.

#62: Pipelines of Trust: Rethinking Local Capital Mobilization in Africa

A natural follow-on episode focused on trust, local capital, African investment ecosystems, and adapting financial models to local contexts.

Part of the ImpactAlpha Podcast Network