South Africa’s Secha Capital Nears $40M Milestone to Power High-Growth Businesses Across Key Sectors

Yakub Abdulrasheed
By
Yakub Abdulrasheed
Senior Journalist and Analyst
Abdulrasheed is a Senior Tech Writer and Analyst at Techparley Africa, where he dissects technology’s successes, trends, challenges, and innovations with a sharp, solution-driven lens. He...
- Senior Journalist and Analyst
7 Min Read

South African venture capital firm, Secha Capital has moved closer to cementing its place as one of the continent’s most innovative growth investors. A second close of its Secha Capital Impact Fund II, a vehicle targeting US$40 million to back high-potential businesses in sectors critical to economic development.

The latest milestone signifies growing investor confidence in Secha’s distinctive operator-investor model. It goes beyond traditional financing by embedding skilled professionals directly into portfolio companies to help founders execute growth strategies, strengthen operations and scale sustainably.

With new backing from E Squared Investments and continued support from RMB Ventures, the SA SME Fund and 27four Investment Managers, the firm is accelerating investments into agriculture, manufacturing, energy and consumer goods.

Already 40 per cent deployed across eight businesses, the fund underscores a broader shift in African private capital toward investments that pursue both strong financial returns and measurable social impact.

“Most investors provide capital and advice. We provide execution,” said Secha Capital co-founder Rushil Vallabh. “By embedding the right operators next to founders, we turn strategy into results and potential into performance.”

What Secha Capital is

Founded in 2017 by Nombuso Nkambule, Brendan Mullen and Rushil Vallabh, Secha Capital has built its reputation around a model that combines investment capital with hands-on operational support.

Rather than functioning solely as a financier, the firm positions itself as a growth partner for businesses that already have traction but need stronger systems, leadership support and strategic guidance to reach the next level.

This operator-investor approach has helped distinguish Secha in a competitive venture capital environment where many firms focus primarily on early-stage funding or passive equity stakes.

Secha instead concentrates on growth-stage businesses, companies with proven demand but needing operational muscle to expand faster and more efficiently.

Its first fund demonstrated that blending equity investments with expert talent could generate both attractive returns and meaningful developmental outcomes, particularly through backing women-founded businesses in South Africa.

How the Firm Reached the $40 Million Success Mark

Secha Capital Fund II first announced a close of ZAR300 million, equivalent to around US$18 million, in September 2023. Since then, the firm has attracted additional commitments, allowing it to achieve a second close and move closer to its final target of ZAR650 million, or approximately US$40 million, expected by July this year.

The entry of E Squared Investments, a respected impact investor founded by Allan Gray, marks a significant endorsement of Secha’s strategy. Existing investors including RMB Ventures, the SA SME Fund and 27four Investment Managers also remain on board, suggesting continued confidence from institutional backers.

In a market where raising private capital has become more selective amid global economic uncertainty, Secha’s progress reflects investor appetite for disciplined funds with clear value-creation strategies and measurable impact.

What the Money Will Be Used For

Fund II is focused on sectors considered foundational to long-term economic resilience and job creation. These include agriculture, manufacturing, energy and consumer goods, industries that support everyday life while offering scalable commercial opportunities.

Secha said the fund is already 40 per cent invested across eight companies. Current portfolio names include Barracuda, an electronics manufacturing company; Plentify, an energy startup; and Cultura Fresh, a controlled-environment farming business.

The capital will help these companies expand production capacity, improve operations, hire talent, enter new markets and strengthen leadership teams. Beyond money, Secha’s professionals work inside portfolio businesses to support sales execution, operational efficiency and strategic planning.

The model has also evolved into what Secha calls its Chief Executive Operator-Investor track, designed to help top professionals move from corporate careers into executive leadership roles within portfolio companies.

Why This is Important

Secha Capital’s progress matters because it highlights a deeper need across Africa’s business ecosystem: many promising companies do not fail for lack of ideas, but for lack of operational capacity, management depth and growth execution.

By pairing funding with experienced talent, Secha is attempting to close that gap. The model could become increasingly relevant across emerging markets where entrepreneurs often need more than just access to capital.

It also reflects the rise of impact investing, where investors seek commercial returns while supporting wider economic and social goals such as job creation, industrial development and gender inclusion.

“We invest in the businesses people rely on every day, both today and in the future,” said co-founder Brendan Mullen. “By making these companies run better and grow faster, we deliver on a dual mandate of strong financial returns and systemic social impact.”

Talking Points

Secha Capital’s progress toward a US$40 million Fund II is a credible milestone, especially in a cautious funding climate where many African investment vehicles struggle to attract commitments.

Its operator-investor model is more serious than the usual “smart money” rhetoric because many SMEs fail from weak execution, not lack of capital. Embedding talent into portfolio companies could create measurable value if properly managed.

However, the model is also expensive, hard to scale, and heavily dependent on consistently finding elite operators who can deliver inside diverse businesses. That creates execution risk at fund level.

The fund’s focus on agriculture, manufacturing and energy is strategically sound, but these sectors are capital-intensive, policy-sensitive and often slower to generate returns than software or fintech bets.

Also, Investor enthusiasm is encouraging, yet fundraising headlines should not be mistaken for success; real proof will come from exits, revenue growth, job creation and resilience of portfolio companies over time.

Overall, Secha deserves credit for innovation, but it now faces the harder task of proving that hands-on investing can outperform traditional venture capital in Africa.

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Senior Journalist and Analyst
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Abdulrasheed is a Senior Tech Writer and Analyst at Techparley Africa, where he dissects technology’s successes, trends, challenges, and innovations with a sharp, solution-driven lens. He holds a Bachelor’s degree in Criminology and Security Studies, a background that sharpens his analytical approach to technology’s intersection with society, economy, and governance. Passionate about highlighting Africa’s role in the global tech ecosystem, his work bridges global developments with Africa’s digital realities, offering deep insights into both opportunities and obstacles shaping the continent’s future.
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