Africa attracted a combined $4.5 billion in venture capital and venture debt investment in 2023

The Financials sector maintained its position as the best-funded vertical with 23% of deal volume and 48% of deal value.
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    AVCA – the African Private Capital Association –  today announced the release of its anticipated 2023 Venture Capital in Africa Report, an industry-leading annual report on venture capital performance in Africa. 

    The report is a comprehensive overview of Africa’s innovative ecosystem, providing critical insights into the sub-regions, countries, and sectors that have cemented Africa’s rising position as a region for venture capital (VC) activity. It analyses the latest trends and developments in Africa’s start-up investment landscape and the profile of the investors active on the continent.

    2023 was a year of significant socio-political and economic upheaval, which led to a global funding winter that saw investors prioritise safer assets rather than VC investments. The VC ecosystem has seen a steady global decline since 2022, falling to US$285 billion in deal value last year, compared to US$690 billion in 2021. The cumulative effect is a market size representing 41% of capital invested in 2021, signifying a contraction of venture funding around the globe in 2023.

    In response to these market headwinds, some trends in Africa’s VC ecosystem – which have remained relatively consistent year-on-year (YoY) – have been disrupted while other trends remained the same. For the first time in almost a decade of consistently strong growth, the number of venture capital deals in Africa decreased by 31% YoY to 545 last year from the record-setting 787 deals struck in 2022. Added to the global downward trend of venture capital, investors faced currency volatility. They continued high inflation in Africa, prompting investors to back prospects in portfolio companies with an established track record rather than new ventures. 

    However, while the value of the capital that was channelled into the ecosystem changed amidst the uncertainty, the distribution of this capital remained largely consistent with historical findings. Investors may be writing smaller cheques, but they’re doing so along the same lines as previous years. 

    Paradigm Shifts and Evolving Trends

    • Both deal volume and value decreased by close to a third – for deal volume, this was the first recorded decrease in a decade.
    • The capital free-for-all of 2021 dried up – investors were more cautious about capital allocation decisions. Equity was harder to come by, leading to a US$2 billion deficit between 2022 and 2023.
    • Investors shied away from capital-intensive deals, leading to late-stage deals falling from 16 to 9 deals between 2022 to 2023 and 15 to 10 for super-sized deals within that same period. 
    • Southern Africa was the only region to register positive (20%) YoY growth in 2023, signalling a return to the forefront of venture capital after several years of modest deal activity.
    • In contrast, North Africa – the darling of Africa’s venture capital ecosystem in 2022 – saw a 42% YoY decrease by volume and 52% decrease in value.  
    • The rise in climate action amongst VC investors – 87 deals (equal to 16% of the year’s aggregate deal count) were directed towards climate-related initiatives in 2023, up from 80 in 2022.
    • The number of unique investors participating in venture capital and debt deals in Africa fell from 1,148 in 2022 to 781.

    Trends that Held Firm

    • West Africa maintained the top spot for the third consecutive year, with Nigeria as the most active country in the region and on the continent by deal volume.
    • Financials (23%), Information Technology (20%) and Consumer Discretionary (17%) were once again the three most active sectors for venture capital investment.
    • FinTech was the leading vertical in the African tech ecosystem, and investors continued to coalesce around Clean and ClimateTech (the second most active vertical).
    • Gender-diverse and female-funded startups still lag behind their male counterparts – they accrued 27% of deal volume but just 13% of deal value for the year.
    • Despite the reduced presence of (particularly global) investors, Fund Managers, Investment Firms and Corporate Venture Capital remained the three most prominent investor types.

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