Investment activity eased into a calmer rhythm this week, with a handful of moves cutting across fintech, scientific infrastructure, mobility, and enterprise software. While the pace was lighter than usual, the updates point to focused capital backing platforms quietly building long-term relevance across African markets.
- FUNDING
- EXITS
- INVESTOR ACTIVITIES
- Swedfund Backs Helios Climate Growth Platform
- Phatisa Deepens Focus on Africa’s Food Economy
- FinDev Canada Backs African Credit Markets
- African Development Fund Secures Record Replenishment
- Luno and AltSchool Expand Digital Learning Access
- CardinalStone Launches Growth Platform for West African SMEs
- Morocco Unveils National Startup Growth Programme
FUNDING
Kayko

Funding Round: Seed ($1.2 million)
Investor(s): Burrow Capital, Luxembourg Development Agency, Hanga Ignite (BRD), develoPPP Ventures
Founder(s): Crepin Kayisire, Kevin Kayisire
Founded in: Rwanda (2021)
About Company
Kayko is a fintech platform company focused on improving access to credit for small and medium-sized businesses operating outside formal financial systems. The company aims to solve a persistent challenge in Rwanda’s SME sector, where many businesses generate steady daily income but lack the documentation required by lenders. Kayko builds structured business records by helping merchants capture everyday activity, such as sales, expenses, and inventory, in a simple digital format.
By turning routine transactions into reliable business profiles, Kayko enables lenders to better understand real business performance. Kayko positions itself as a data bridge between informal commerce and formal credit, supporting financial inclusion while strengthening lending decisions across the ecosystem.
What’s Next
The seed funding will support deeper product development and wider spread of the company’s solution across Rwanda. Kayko plans to strengthen partnerships with banks and microfinance institutions while expanding merchant onboarding. The company is focused on making SME performance more visible and verifiable, positioning itself as a core infrastructure for Rwanda’s growing small business economy.
Nawah Scientific

Funding Round: Series A ($23 million)
Investor(s): Life Ventures Holding, Den Ventures, Empire M, AfricInvest, Elsewedy family
Founder(s): Dr. Omar Shokry Saqr
Founded in: Egypt (2015)
About Company
Nawah Scientific is a deep tech company operating a cloud-based laboratory services platform. The company enables researchers, startups, and industrial clients to access advanced laboratory testing services without owning physical lab infrastructure. Clients submit testing requests digitally, while Nawah handles sample processing, experimentation, and result delivery through accredited laboratories.
Nawah Scientific’s model addresses infrastructure gaps across emerging markets, where access to advanced research facilities remains limited. By combining digital access with physical laboratory operations, the company has built a scalable alternative to traditional lab ownership.
What’s Next
The Series A funding will support the company’s geographic expansion efforts. Nawah Scientific plans to grow its presence across Africa, the Middle East, and Europe while expanding research infrastructure in existing markets. The company is positioning itself as a long-term scientific infrastructure provider, supporting research, manufacturing, and quality assurance across multiple industries.
iVoiceUp

Funding Round: Venture round (amount undisclosed)
Investor(s): A15
Founder(s): Ahmed Genedy
Founded in: Egypt (2019)
About Company
iVoiceUp is an enterprise software company providing whistleblowing and ethics reporting solutions for organisations across the Middle East and North Africa. The company allows employees and stakeholders to report misconduct securely and anonymously, covering financial wrongdoing and workplace-related issues.
iVoiceUp is used by large enterprises and institutions seeking structured, confidential reporting systems aligned with international standards. iVoiceUp has gained traction as organisations face increased regulatory scrutiny and demand stronger internal risk management tools.
What’s Next
The new investment will support the company’s regional expansion and continued product development. iVoiceUp plans to deepen its presence in key MENA markets while enhancing platform capabilities. The company aims to position itself as a leading ethics and compliance platform for enterprises navigating evolving governance requirements across the region.
Lagride

Funding Round: Financing facility ($100 million)
Investor(s): United Bank for Africa
Founder(s): Not disclosed
Founded in: Nigeria
About Company
Lagride is a mobility platform focused on structured vehicle access and ownership for professional drivers. The company operates a model that enables drivers to move from short-term rentals toward long-term ownership through predictable repayment structures tied to platform performance.
Lagride works closely with public and private partners to professionalise ride-hailing and fleet operations in Lagos. The platform aligns driver income, vehicle maintenance, and financing under a single operational framework. Its approach aims to reduce entry barriers for drivers while improving vehicle standards and income stability.
What’s Next
The financing facility will support the expansion of Lagride’s Drive-To-Own programme across Lagos. The company plans to scale vehicle access while integrating cleaner transport options. Lagride is positioning itself at the intersection of mobility, finance, and urban transport reform, with a focus on sustainable ownership models for drivers.
EXITS
CDG Invest Growth Exits Soludia Maghreb

CDG Invest Growth has completed its exit from Soludia Maghreb, marking a notable healthcare manufacturing transaction in Morocco’s private investment landscape. The exit followed the sale of the fund’s position to Sothema Group, a publicly listed pharmaceutical company with a long-standing presence in the local market. The transaction brings CDG Invest Growth’s involvement in the business to a close and represents a full exit for its growth-focused investment vehicle. The move reflects continued interest from established industry players in specialised medical manufacturing platforms with strong local roots.
Soludia Maghreb operates within the dialysis treatment supply space, serving hospitals and care centres across Morocco while maintaining limited regional export activity. Founded through a technology partnership with a European counterpart, the company has built a reputation for consistent quality and operational discipline. Its leadership team remains in place following the transaction, ensuring continuity as the business integrates into a larger pharmaceutical group. For CDG Invest Growth, the exit reinforces its strategy of backing locally anchored healthcare businesses and supporting their transition into scaled industrial platforms under strategic ownership.
INVESTOR ACTIVITIES
Swedfund Backs Helios Climate Growth Platform

Swedfund has committed capital to Helios Investment Partners’ climate-focused platform, deepening development finance participation in African businesses addressing environmental resilience. The investment will support a pan-African strategy centred on companies operating at the intersection of energy transition, resource efficiency, and climate adaptation. By joining the fund’s early backers, Swedfund adds institutional weight to a platform designed to attract long-term private capital into climate-aligned growth opportunities across the continent.
Helios brings long-standing experience in African growth investing, with a focus on businesses capable of scaling operationally while embedding sustainability at their core. The climate platform will target enterprises building solutions that reduce environmental pressure while remaining commercially viable. Swedfund’s involvement signals rising confidence in climate-aligned private equity as a driver of both economic expansion and resilience. The partnership reflects a broader shift among development financiers toward vehicles that blend commercial discipline with long-term environmental outcomes across multiple African markets.
Phatisa Deepens Focus on Africa’s Food Economy

Phatisa has launched a new food-focused investment platform aimed at strengthening value chains across Africa’s agribusiness landscape. The initiative targets businesses involved in processing, logistics, distribution, and enabling services rather than primary production. By concentrating on companies that move food from farm to market, Phatisa positions the fund to address long-standing inefficiencies while supporting commercially driven growth across the continent’s food systems.
The firm builds on a history of investing in food and consumer supply chains, with prior portfolios spanning multiple African regions. Its approach combines capital with operational engagement, working closely with management teams to improve governance, resilience, and market reach. The new fund reflects continued investor interest in food security and local processing as strategic priorities. Phatisa’s platform seeks to back businesses that can scale responsibly while contributing to stronger regional supply networks and more reliable access to essential food products.
FinDev Canada Backs African Credit Markets

FinDev Canada has committed funding to a private credit platform managed by Ninety One, reinforcing the role of non-bank capital in African enterprise financing. The fund focuses on providing structured lending to businesses and projects that sit outside traditional banking reach, supporting operational expansion and long-term stability. This approach helps bridge persistent financing gaps while maintaining disciplined investment standards.
Ninety One brings decades of experience across African markets, combining local insight with institutional investment processes. The credit platform prioritises businesses that contribute to employment, essential services, and productive capacity across multiple sectors. FinDev Canada’s participation reflects growing confidence in private credit as a tool for inclusive growth. By supporting enterprises with patient capital, the fund strengthens local economies while expanding access to financing channels beyond conventional commercial banks.
African Development Fund Secures Record Replenishment

The African Development Fund has concluded its latest replenishment cycle, mobilising its largest pool of concessional resources to date. The outcome reflects renewed commitment from both African and international partners to long-term development financing across low-income and fragile states. The Fund plays a central role in channelling grants and affordable financing into energy access, infrastructure, food systems, and human development.
The replenishment signals stronger African participation and a shift toward shared ownership of development priorities. The Fund operates as a key financing arm of the African Development Bank Group, supporting projects that attract additional capital and unlock broader economic activity. Its approach emphasises investment-led development rather than short-term aid. The latest cycle strengthens the institution’s capacity to support governments and communities while crowding in private sector participation across priority sectors.
Luno and AltSchool Expand Digital Learning Access

Luno has partnered with AltSchool Africa to roll out a large-scale digital education initiative focused on building foundational knowledge around digital assets and financial technology. The collaboration combines Luno’s global platform experience with AltSchool Africa’s learning infrastructure, delivering accessible training designed for first-time participants. The initiative reflects rising demand for practical digital skills among young Africans navigating evolving financial systems.
AltSchool Africa brings a track record in scaling remote learning across the continent, while Luno contributes industry insight and educational resources. The program emphasises responsible participation and real-world understanding rather than speculation. By removing cost barriers and leveraging online delivery, the partnership aims to widen access to digital education in Nigeria. The initiative highlights how private sector collaboration can support skills development while promoting informed participation in emerging digital economies.
CardinalStone Launches Growth Platform for West African SMEs

CardinalStone Capital Advisers has launched a new investment vehicle focused on scaling established small and medium-sized businesses across West Africa. The fund targets companies with strong fundamentals and regional expansion potential, providing both capital and operational support. The initiative reflects continued interest in professionalising locally rooted businesses and preparing them for cross-border growth.
Building on experience from its earlier fund, CardinalStone emphasises governance, leadership development, and structured growth planning. The platform works closely with founders to strengthen internal systems while maintaining entrepreneurial momentum. Its regional focus supports businesses operating in consumer services, agribusiness, and essential industries. The fund underscores the growing role of private capital in shaping West Africa’s mid-market economy and supporting companies as they transition into regional champions.
Morocco Unveils National Startup Growth Programme

Morocco has launched a nationwide initiative aimed at accelerating startup formation and ecosystem development under its broader digital strategy. The programme brings together public institutions, local operators, and international partners to support founders at early and growth stages. It places particular emphasis on regional inclusion, expanding innovation infrastructure beyond major urban centres.
The initiative will support venture creation, investor participation, and the expansion of innovation hubs across the country. By aligning public funding with private sector expertise, Morocco seeks to create a more structured pathway for founders to access capital, mentorship, and market opportunities. The programme signals a long-term commitment to entrepreneurship as a driver of economic diversification. It positions Morocco as a key North African hub for startup development and digital innovation.
