Chief Technical Officer, Michael Nze Terungwa (left); Chief Executive Officer, Lai Labode; Chairman of the board, Taiwo Olashore; Director, Dr Israel Ovirih and Vice President, Head, Business Development and Expansion, Simileoluwa Adeoye, all of CashToken Rewards Africa during celebrations to mark the fifth anniversary of CashToken Rewards Africa in Lagos.
By Benjamin Alade
•Investors are bullish on regional outlook
Despite uncertainty in the global financial market, investors are confident in the outlook of the...
continent even as West Africa pooled a total of $843 million in venture capital inflow last year.These are contained in
the 2022 Venture Capital in Africa Report compiled by the African Private
Capital Association (AVCA) and released yesterday.
The report, which
captures venture capital performance in Africa by deals, volumes, value, and
investment stage, indicates the industry’s resilience despite global uncertainty.
According to the report,
of the 786 venture capital deals, 235 were in West Africa, again recording the
highest volume of deals across the continent, followed by North Africa (178)
and East Africa (168).
With $1.1 billion, North
Africa led deal values across the continent, as East Africa attracted $899
million, while West Africa secured inflows of $843 million.
Powerhouse economies –
Nigeria, Egypt, South Africa and Kenya – remain the most attractive locations
for venture capital investment, accounting for 64 per cent of deal volume and
51 per cent of deal value combined.
The new report is a
comprehensive overview of Africa’s innovation ecosystem, providing critical
insights into sub-regions, countries and sectors that have cemented Africa’s
rising position in venture capital activity and the increasing importance of
early-stage investment on the continent.
The report stated that
in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic and the resulting capital injection,
central banks responded to loose monetary policy while interest rates climbed
throughout the year as efforts to rein in inflation intensified.
Owing to the restrictive
environment, it said, the global venture funding landscape shrunk by 32 per
cent, from $681 million invested in 2021.
The report noted that
despite the cautious capital deployment around the globe, commitments in Africa
remained strong.
By comparison, Africa’s
21 per cent year-on-year growth in deal volume was three times the growth
recorded in Asia (seven per cent), the only other region to record positive
year-on-year growth in deal volume.
According to the report,
Africa’s venture funding market was valued at $6.5 billion across 853 deals,
including $1.3 billion of venture debt. Deal volume in Africa last year
experienced an industry record, highlighting a near-decade of continuous growth
and a compound yearly growth rate (CAGR) of 31 per cent between 2014 and 2022.
Commenting on the
report, Chief Executive Officer of AVCA, Abi Mustapha-Maduakor, said:
“Resistance against rippling effects of COVID-19 and global economic headwinds
is a reminder of the high-quality investment opportunities on the continent.
Despite lower
participation by impact investors last year, as experienced globally, the
impact continues to be achieved in Africa through a more connected marketplace
that drives tech-enabled solutions from healthcare to education.”
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