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TTO | Dec 11, 2025

WiPay’s Caribbean-built digital engine and five-pillar ecosystem revealed during WiDay 2025

/ Our Today

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Aldwyn Wayne. (Photo: Contributed)

The WiPay Group concluded the fifth staging of WiDay at the Hyatt Regency Trinidad with a full reveal of its regional ecosystem. 

For over ninety minutes, group CEO Aldwyn Wayne set out how the group has moved beyond “payments as a product” to an integrated operating system for Caribbean life and business, spanning communications, finance and lending, travel and logistics, and government services, with payments as the backbone connecting them all.

Wayne framed the transformation as a shift from startup to infrastructure built for the realities of the region. 

“We did not patch the past, we built a new network here,” he said. “One engine, one mission, designed for how the Caribbean earns, pays, travels, communicates, and accesses public services.” He emphasised that WiPay’s strength lies in how the divisions interlock to remove friction for citizens, merchants, and ministries.

(Photo: Contributed)

Across the programme, WiPay leaders detailed how the pillars operate as one network. Payments enable fast, traceable acceptance and settlement for merchants, creators, and institutions. Finance and Lending, via WiLoan, delivers responsible, salary-linked micro-credit with clear terms and rapid decisions. On communications, Abraham Sutherland, chief product officer for Nimble Mobile, affirmed that connectivity is now a basic utility for a generation that learns, earns, and creates on the go, with immediate activation, simple plans, and service that reflects the cultural rhythm of Caribbean life. Travel and logistics, through WiTravel, addresses long-standing checkout and settlement failures so more value stays in Caribbean supply chains. Government services unify court payments, national eKYC, permits, licensing, vouchers, reconciliation, and reporting on modern rails that launch in weeks, with auditability and standards built in.

National payments fireside chat

A dedicated national payments fireside chat moved the programme from vision to application.

Economic Affairs Minister Dr Kennedy Swaratsingh, alongside his public administration and AI counterpart Senator Dominic Smith, joined Jason Julien, group CEO, First Citizens Group Financial Holdings, and Keino Cox, acting chief executive of TSTT. The discussion focused on digitising public services at scale, applying AI to front-line and back-office processes, and enforcing shared standards and security across identity, payments, and registries.

Financial inclusion remained a core theme. Wayne underscored WiPay’s role in bringing the unbanked online through a cash-to-digital voucher network. Citizens purchase a top-up code at authorised outlets, enter the code on a phone, and load value to complete payments or fund a wallet. Merchants receive settled funds, citizens gain a receipt trail, and agencies gain auditable flows. Cash in, digital out, using rails built for Caribbean realities.

(Photo: Contributed)

Group chief marketing officer, Kibwe McGann, connected the strategy to everyday life. “The stakes are human, not transactional. Behind each payment is a person, a face, a family. When the rails work, people move with dignity. We are global where needed, regional by design, local in impact,” he said.

WiDay 2025 served as WiPay’s most comprehensive statement of intent to date. The ecosystem presented was engineered for the region’s currencies, compliance requirements, and cultural tempo, creating one network that public and private partners can rely on at scale.

Wayne concluded, “A fully digital Caribbean economy is not a future promise. It is here, working, and ready to scale.”

(Photo: Contributed)
(Photo: Contributed)
(Photo: Contributed)

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