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Morocco’s Cash Plus Hits $550m Valuation as Mediterrania Capital Partners Sells Down Stake in IPO

A Cash Plus office in Rabat.

Cash Plus has become the first fintech to list on the Casablanca Stock Exchange, closing its initial public offering (IPO) on November 25. The transaction values the money transfer and payments startup at roughly $550m (5bn MAD), cementing its status as a significant mid-cap player in the North African market.

The IPO raised a total of $82.5m (750m MAD). The deal was structured as a mix of growth capital and shareholder liquidity, marking a partial exit for private equity firm Mediterrania Capital Partners (MCP), while the company’s founding families retained their full share count.

Here is the breakdown of the valuation, the cap table changes, and the numbers behind the listing.

The Deal Structure: Cash-in vs. Cash-out

The $82.5m transaction was split into two distinct tranches:

The “cash-out” component was driven exclusively by Mediterrania Capital Partners (MCP). The private equity firm sold 1.8 million shares, representing the entirety of the secondary sale.

According to breakdown figures, MCP’s primary vehicle, MC IV Money, accounted for 83% of this sale, cashing in $31.9m, while its secondary vehicle, MCIV Morocco, took home $6.6m.

Notably, the historic shareholders — the Amar and Tazi families — did not sell a single share. Their dilution (from 38.2% each to 35.1% each) is purely a mathematical result of the capital increase, signaling long-term confidence in the stock. Both families have committed to a seven-year lock-up period.

The Cap Table Shuffle

The IPO has reshuffled the ownership structure, creating a free float of 15.5% (3.8 million shares).

Post-IPO Ownership:

While the float provides liquidity, market analysts have flagged MCP’s residual stake as a metric to watch.

“There is a capitalistic element that must be monitored: the residual presence of the MCP fund,” noted one local analyst. “The document does not provide for any lock-up mechanism for these shareholders… A potential exit of the fund, even a gradual one, could lead to technical movements on the stock, especially in a limited float.”

Valuation and The “Mid-Cap” Status

Priced at $22 (200 MAD) per share, Cash Plus enters the market with a valuation of $550m. This places it well above the traditional small-cap threshold in Casablanca ($110m–$220m), positioning it as a serious institutional asset.

The pricing was derived using two primary methods:

  1. Dividend Discount Model (DDM): By projecting cash flows over five years, this method suggested a valuation of $628m ($27.83 per share). The IPO price of $22 represents a discount against this intrinsic value.
  2. Transactional Reference: Based on MCP’s entry into the capital in 2024 (at a P/E multiple of 16.3x), the valuation was modeled at $490m ($21.78 per share).

The company is positioning itself as a yield play, promising to distribute 85% of net profits as dividends annually between 2026 and 2030.

The “Phygital” Bull Case

Cash Plus operates a hybrid model. It has 5,000 physical branches (87% of which are franchised) and a digital “Super App” with 2 million users.

The growth narrative relies on using the $44m raised in new capital to expand this network and upgrade its tech stack. The company is profitable, a rarity among high-growth fintechs globally.

The Financial Trajectory:

The Risks

Despite the successful raise, the prospectus and analysts highlight three key headwinds:

The bottom line

Cash Plus has set a new benchmark for North African fintechs, proving that a local IPO is a viable exit route for private equity and venture capital backers. By listing at a $550m valuation, the company has skipped the “growth at all costs” narrative common in global fintech, pitching itself instead as a profitable, dividend-paying asset (aiming to pay out 85% of profits).

Editor’s Note:
Following the completion of the IPO detailed above, Cash Plus began trading on the Casablanca Stock Exchange on December 8, 2025 under the ticker CAP. The offering was 65× oversubscribed, generating demand for 244.1 million shares against just 3.8 million shares allocated, with subscriptions totaling 48.8 billion MAD ($5.2B). Approximately 80,759 subscribers — primarily Moroccan individuals — participated, representing 75 nationalities across 12 regions. At listing, Cash Plus entered continuous trading on the main market and ranked 34th out of 79 listed companies by market capitalization.

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