Friday, July 18, 2025
24.7 C
Lagos

Africa Tech Start-Ups Raise $185.7m in 2O15

A new report by Disrupt Africa says a total of 125 tech African start-ups raised over $185.7 million in seed capital in 2O15.

The report looks to quantify the total amount of investment going into the continent’s tech start-ups, and to what countries and sectors specifically that funding is going to, in order to build a base from which the future development of the sector can be judged.

Below are the major 5 takeaways from the report:

1. Tech funding in Africa is clearly on the rise
The report found 125 African start-ups raised a total in excess of US$185.7m in 2015. This is merely the tip of the iceberg, however, as a large number of investments will have taken place under the radar.

Estimates of some undisclosed funding rounds were made ultra-conservatively in order not to result in an artificially large overall figure.

There were a significant number of investors, both international and domestic, institutional and individual. The continent’s tech start-up ecosystem is on the rise, and 2016 looks like it will be even bigger.

2. South Africa is top of the pile
South Africa came out on top in terms of both the amount of start-ups that raised funding (45%) and total funding of $54.6m.

There were standout deals for the likes of M4JAM and WiGroup, and start-ups across a variety of sectors raised cash. The country has a growing local angel investment scene, and is popular with overseas investors.

3. Nigeria is coming
Narrowly beaten to the top spot was Nigeria, whose start-ups raised over $49.4m in 2015. Interestingly, Nigerian start-ups actually raised more each on average than their South African counterparts.

The country has increasingly become an area of interest for investors given the sheer size of the market, while there is much buzz around the Yaba ecosystem in Lagos.

4. Is Egypt back?
For a few years Egypt was blacklisted by investors due to political instability, but there were signs in 2015 that money is returning to the North African country.

There were record funding rounds, and the average raised per start-up was high. As the new government continues its reforms, this is expected to continue in 2016.

5. There is interest elsewhere too
The big three of South Africa, Nigeria and Kenya grab the headlines, but investors are increasingly looking further afield.

The report details investments in a variety of other African countries – from Zambia to Uganda – and demonstrates that start-ups in smaller countries are also seeing an increasing amount of capital made available to them.

By Tom Jackson

spot_img
spot_img
spot_img

Hot this week

FirstBank, NLNG, Shell Back QEDNG Creative Powerhouse Summit

First Bank of Nigeria has joined forces with Mighty...

Stanbic IBTC Bank Secures CNY800m Term Loan Agreement with China Development Bank

Stanbic IBTC Bank, a subsidiary of Stanbic IBTC Holdings,...

Universal Insurance Reports N15.25bn Premium in 2024

L-R: Dr. Jeff Duru, Managing Director/CEO, Universal Insurance Plc;...

NAICOM, Insurance Industry Mourn Buhari

It is with profound sadness that we received the...

Polaris Bank Partners Woodhall Capital, UK, Lagos State in ₦1.5bn Creative Economy Fund

L-R- Abimbola Ozomah, Executive Director, Polaris Bank; Mojisola Hunponu-Wusu,...

Topics

Coronavirus: 290m Students Stuck at Home in 13 Countries

School closures in 13 countries linked to the COVID-19...

DMG Acquires Exhibition Management Services

One of the world’s leading event companies, DMG Events,...

Guinea Insurance Holds 66th AGM, Pledges a Future of Sustained Profitability

L-R: Ademola Abidogun, Managing Director, Samuel Onukwue, Non-Executive Director,...

Stanbic IBTC to Empower Customers with Smart Loan Digital Solution

Stanbic IBTC Bank, a subsidiary of Stanbic IBTC Holdings...

Yuletide: Ecobank Reassures Customers of 24-Hour Digital Banking Services

Ahead of the Yuletide holidays, Ecobank Nigeria has reassured...

African Development Bank Annual Meetings Set for May 23 at Accra

The 57th Annual Meetings of the Board of Governors...

World Bank: African Nations Should Co-operate on Trade

World Bank President, Jim Yong Kim, on April 14,...

Global Capital Standards Finalised For AIG, 8 Big Insurers

The world’s nine biggest insurance companies will have to hold more capital under new rules just finalised by global regulators that aim to prevent taxpayer bailouts of the industry in a crisis. Regulators decided to look at the multi-trillion dollar insurance industry following the massive public rescue of insurer AIG in the United States during the 2007-2009 financial crisis.
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img