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GoCab Secures $45M to Challenge Moove in the Race for Africa’s Gig-Worker Assets

GoCab Secures $45M to Challenge Moove in the Race for Africa’s Gig-Worker Assets

While the European mobility sector matures into a battle of margins, a new frontier is tightening its grip on the “drive-to-own” model in emerging markets. London-headquartered GoCab has today announced a $45m funding round ($15m equity, $30m debt) to scale its vehicle-financing platform across West Africa, the Middle East, and Latin America.

The raise comes at a pivotal moment for the sector. As global giants like Uber and Glovo expand their footprints in Africa, the bottleneck remains a lack of vehicle credit for the drivers themselves. GoCab is positioning itself as the financial plumbing for this gig economy, targeting a gap left by traditional banks that view independent couriers as high-risk.

The Model: Asset-heavy, data-driven

Founded in 2024 by former investment bankers Azamat Sultan and Hendrick Ketchemen, GoCab’s strategy bypasses the traditional leasing model. Instead of renting vehicles to drivers indefinitely, the company employs a three-year “drive-to-own” structure.

The company claims this model allows drivers to earn roughly four times the local minimum wage. Once the three-year term concludes, the driver assumes full ownership of the asset — a transition that GoCab argues provides long-term stability in markets like Côte d’Ivoire and Senegal, where vehicle ownership is a significant barrier to entry.

The Competitive Landscape: The Moove Elephant

GoCab isn’t the only player in this space. It faces stiff competition from Moove, the Uber-backed Nigerian heavyweight that has raised over $250m and is currently valued at approximately $2bn.

However, GoCab is carving out a niche by focusing on Francophone Africa and other emerging territories where Moove’s presence is lighter. By securing its own debt facilities early, GoCab is attempting to prove it can run a leaner operation with better unit economics than its venture-backed predecessors.

The Financials: Debt and Shariah Compliance

The $45m round is structured to fuel an asset-heavy business. The $15m equity portion, co-led by E3 Capital and Janngo Capital with participation from KawiSafi Ventures and Cur8 Capital, provides the operational runway, while the $30m in debt commitments (from Cur8 Capital and others) funds the purchase of the fleet.

Notably, GoCab is structuring a $60m Shariah-compliant debt facility. This move is strategic; it opens up specific capital pools in the Middle East and Northern Africa, where the company is looking to expand.

Current Performance Metrics:

The Green Pivot

A significant portion of the new capital is earmarked for electrification. Currently, electric vehicles (EVs) make up 10% of GoCab’s fleet, with a target to reach 50% by the end of 2026. In markets where fuel prices are volatile, the switch to EVs isn’t just an ESG play — it’s a move to protect the net margins of the drivers and, by extension, the reliability of GoCab’s daily repayments.

The Launch Base Africa Take

GoCab’s pedigree — led by founders with structured finance backgrounds — suggests a focus on “boring” but essential metrics: default rates, recovery values, and debt-to-equity ratios. In a high-interest-rate environment, the success of this London-based startup will depend less on “changing lives” and more on its ability to manage a massive, depreciating physical fleet across geographically fragmented markets. If they hit their $100m ARR target, they won’t just be a “purpose-led” startup; they’ll be a formidable fintech infrastructure player.

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