Nigeria-based impact investment firm, Sabou Capital has secured an anchor investment from the Mastercard Foundation Africa Growth Fund, strengthening its mandate to finance tech-enabled small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) across Africa’s underserved markets.
The fund, which focuses on early growth-stage businesses, will deploy capital across Cameroon, Côte d’Ivoire, Senegal, and Nigeria, targeting sectors including agriculture, healthcare, logistics and mobility, fintech, and climate technology.
The Mastercard Foundation Africa Growth Fund is a $200 million fund-of-funds initiative designed to support African-owned investment vehicles that back women-led and gender-diverse enterprises.
“We target secondary cities and regions that mainstream capital bypasses,” said Surayyah Ahmad, partner at Sabou Capital. “Many of these businesses are investment-ready: the revenues are there, the model works, and the market is real. Yet they are excluded because they lack the investor-readiness infrastructure required by conventional capital.”
Closing Africa’s SME Growth Capital Gap
Sabou Capital’s investment thesis is centred on a structural gap in Africa’s funding ecosystem, where many revenue-generating SMEs struggle to access growth capital due to stringent institutional requirements.
According to the firm, businesses in secondary cities and emerging commercial hubs are often overlooked, despite demonstrating viable business models and consistent revenue streams.
While fintech has historically dominated Africa’s venture capital landscape, recent trends indicate a gradual diversification of funding into sectors more closely tied to physical supply chains.
Between January and February 2026, African startups raised $575 million across 58 deals, with logistics and transport emerging as the most funded sectors in February. Agritech, which experienced a slowdown in 2025, also showed early signs of recovery during the same period.
Sabou Capital’s sector focus aligns with this shift, particularly its emphasis on logistics, agriculture, healthcare, and climate-related technologies.
Investment Strategy Focused on Scaling Revenue-Generating SMEs
The fund will deploy ticket sizes ranging from $300,000 to $2 million, targeting businesses that have moved beyond the early idea stage but still face barriers to institutional financing.
Sabou Capital is currently working towards a final close scheduled for the third quarter of 2027.
Beyond capital deployment, the firm integrates hands-on support to strengthen investee companies.
This includes pre-investment technical assistance programmes designed to improve financial reporting and documentation, as well as post-investment operational support focused on scaling and climate resilience.
Bridging Structural Gaps in Business Growth
According to Christian Amouo, Partner at Sabou Capital, the core challenge is not a shortage of viable businesses, but a misalignment between how capital is structured and how businesses in emerging markets actually grow.
“What we see across markets is not a lack of viable businesses, but a mismatch between how capital is structured and how these companies actually grow,” Christian Amouo said. “Our role is to bridge that disconnect so businesses can move forward on terms that reflect their realities.”
Launched in 2025, Sabou Capital invests in late pre-seed to Series A SMEs operating across agriculture and agro-processing, renewable energy, climate solutions, supply chain, logistics, and mobility.
Its existing portfolio includes companies such as Tomato Jos, an agricultural production firm that processes tomato paste from locally grown produce, alongside other ventures in food processing and fashion.
Job Creation and Inclusive Growth Targets
Sabou Capital estimates that its investment strategy could generate approximately 4,200 direct jobs and more than 50,000 indirect jobs across value chains, with a strong emphasis on women and youth participation.
The fund’s approach reflects a broader push among impact investors to align capital deployment with inclusive economic development outcomes, particularly in regions where traditional financing remains limited.
As Africa’s investment landscape continues to evolve, Sabou Capital’s model highlights a growing recognition that access to growth capital remains uneven, particularly outside major urban centres.
By combining institutional backing with operational support, the fund is positioning itself as part of a wider effort to unlock the potential of SMEs that sit at the heart of Africa’s real economy but remain underserved by conventional funding systems.
Talking Points
It is significant that Sabou Capital is securing backing from the Mastercard Foundation Africa Growth Fund at a time when many African SMEs remain structurally excluded from growth-stage financing despite generating real revenue.
This signals continued investor confidence in impact-driven funds that are deliberately targeting underserved markets outside major urban centres, where viable businesses often struggle to access institutional capital.
At Techparley, we see this as part of a broader shift in African investment strategy, where capital is increasingly moving beyond fintech into sectors such as agriculture, logistics, healthcare, and climate tech that are central to real economic productivity.
Sabou Capital’s focus on secondary cities is particularly important, as it challenges the long-standing concentration of investment in major hubs and highlights the economic potential of overlooked regions.
As Sabou Capital expands its portfolio, there is an opportunity to strengthen value creation through ecosystem partnerships that improve access to markets, talent, and follow-on capital.
With the right execution, the fund could play a meaningful role in closing Africa’s SME growth gap while generating both financial returns and measurable social impact.
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