Neves, São Tomé and Príncipe – 14th Feb 2026 – Financial institutions are increasingly reassessing how they evaluate fintech licenses, placing greater emphasis on the scope of authorized activity and the ability to independently verify licensing claims, according to guidance released by the Neves Financial Services Authority.

The Authority said banks, payment providers, and financial infrastructure partners are moving away from speed-focused licensing assessments and instead prioritizing clarity around what a license permits and how that information can be confirmed through official systems. The shift reflects broader changes in institutional due-diligence practices as fintech business models grow more complex and cross-border operations become more common.
For much of the past decade, fintech licensing discussions were often centered on how quickly approval could be obtained. Rapid expansion and competitive time-to-market pressures led many firms to treat licensing primarily as an entry requirement. Institutional counterparties now appear to be taking a more detailed approach.
According to the Authority, counterparties increasingly evaluate whether licensed permissions align precisely with a firm’s actual operations. This includes assessing whether activities such as brokerage execution, proprietary trading, digital asset services, or payment processing fall clearly within the scope of authorization.
“When licensing categories are broadly defined or loosely interpreted, institutions face difficulty assessing exposure,” the Authority said in its guidance. “This has led to greater scrutiny during onboarding and periodic reviews.”
Industry participants report that onboarding delays and extended compliance reviews are frequently linked to ambiguity around licensed scope rather than jurisdiction alone. Institutions may request additional documentation or decline engagement where permissions cannot be clearly mapped to operational activity.
Move Toward Activity-Based Licensing
In response to these concerns, activity-based licensing frameworks are receiving increased attention. Under such models, financial licenses are issued according to defined service categories rather than broad financial permissions.
The Neves Financial Services Authority said its licensing framework adopts this approach, aligning authorizations with specific operational functions. Each license category is supported by published guidance describing typical authorized activities, intended to reduce interpretive uncertainty for counterparties conducting due diligence.
Compliance professionals note that this structure allows institutions to assess risk more efficiently by distinguishing between principal trading, agency execution, asset handling, and payment-related functions.
The Authority said the emphasis on activity classification reflects a wider international trend toward precision in licensing, as firms increasingly operate across multiple service lines.
Verification Becomes Central to Due Diligence
Alongside scope clarity, verification has emerged as a central requirement in institutional reviews. Counterparties increasingly expect to confirm license status through authority-maintained systems rather than relying solely on documentation provided by applicants.
Public verification tools allow third parties to independently validate whether a license is active, suspended, or withdrawn, and to identify the category under which it was issued. Institutions say this reduces reliance on intermediaries and supports consistent assessment across jurisdictions.
According to the Authority, verification infrastructure plays a critical role in cross-border environments, where counterparties may be unfamiliar with the issuing jurisdiction. Public registers and published guidance provide shared reference points that reduce ambiguity.
The Authority also noted that verification supports broader market integrity by helping distinguish licensed entities from those making unauthorized or misleading claims.
Ecosystem-Level Coordination
Observers point to the growing role of licensing ecosystems rather than isolated authorities. In such structures, sector-specific bodies issue licenses, while umbrella institutions coordinate verification, public disclosure, and governance standards.
These arrangements are intended to improve consistency without replacing specialized oversight. Financial services authorities retain responsibility for licensing decisions, while centralized systems support transparency and accessibility.
Within these ecosystems, verification frameworks serve as a unifying layer, allowing counterparties to confirm licensing status without navigating fragmented sources.
Implications for Fintech Firms
For fintech firms, the shift has practical implications. Licensing is increasingly viewed as an ongoing operational consideration rather than a one-time milestone. Firms expanding into new activities or markets may face renewed scrutiny if licensed permissions do not clearly reflect their operations.
Industry analysts say licenses that accurately map to real-world activity can reduce repeated compliance reviews and support more stable banking and payment relationships. Conversely, misaligned permissions often lead to recurring documentation requests and extended assessment cycles.
The Authority indicated that as international standards continue to converge, tolerance for ambiguity is shrinking. Institutions are increasingly treating clarity, verification, and public accessibility as baseline expectations.
Broader Regulatory Context
The developments reflect broader changes in global financial oversight, where system-based assurance is replacing relationship-based confirmation. As financial activity becomes more distributed, institutions rely more heavily on standardized verification tools.
Observers say licensing frameworks that prioritize precision over speed are likely to play a growing role in cross-border market participation. For institutions assessing risk, the question is no longer simply whether a firm is licensed, but whether its license can be clearly understood and independently verified.
Reference
Financial licensing framework administered by the Neves Financial Services Authority: https://nevesfinancialauthority.org/
Institutional Contact
Neves Financial Services Authority
Neves, São Tomé & Príncipe
Email: info@neveslicensingauthority.org
Website: neveslicensingauthority.org




























