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Delta40 Secures $20M for Africa’s First Integrated Studio-and-Fund Model

Delta40 Team

Delta40, a venture studio and seed-stage fund, has announced a $20m institutional fundraise to build and scale startups across Africa. While venture studios — which co-found companies by providing internal product, legal, and operational teams — are common in Europe and the US, Delta40 claims this is the continent’s first institutional-grade raise specifically for this integrated model.

The round drew a diverse cap table of 54 investors, including:

Moving beyond the “Passive” Model

Traditional VC firms often provide capital and a few quarterly board meetings. In contrast, venture studios like Delta40 act as an extension of the founding team. They offer “embedded” expertise in product development, fundraising, and commercial strategy from the idea stage through to Seed and Series A.

Delta40, led by CEO Lyndsay Holley Handler, focuses on three core sectors:

  1. Energy & Mobility
  2. Agriculture & Food Systems
  3. Fintech (with an emphasis on AI integration)

“Over 75% of our investors and team have built ventures in Africa,” Handler said in a statement. This operator-heavy approach is designed to mitigate the high failure rates often seen in early-stage African tech, where access to talent and technical infrastructure can be as scarce as capital.

The Numbers: $20m for “High-Touch” Support

The studio typically writes initial checks between $100k and $500k. However, the real value proposition is the “capital leverage.” Delta40 reports it has already realized a 5.5x capital leverage across its existing portfolio of 16 companies.

The studio’s model aims to solve two specific gaps in the African market:

Key MetricDelta40 Data
Total Raised$20m
Portfolio Size16 companies
Initial Check Size$100k – $500k
Geographic FocusNairobi and Lagos
Sector FocusEnergy, AgTech, Fintech, AI

The involvement of DFIs (Development Finance Institutions) like FMO and SEDF suggests a growing institutional appetite for “market creation” — building companies from scratch rather than just bidding on existing deals.

“Delta40’s venture studio model… [pairs] appropriate capital with hands-on support to help founders build resilient businesses,” said Andrew Shaw, Manager at FMO.

By bringing 25 founders onto the cap table, Delta40 is also betting on a “recycling” of expertise and capital. This trend, where successful entrepreneurs reinvest in the next generation, is a hallmark of a maturing tech ecosystem and provides the studio with a deep bench of mentors for its portfolio companies.

What’s Next?

With the $20m close, Delta40 plans to expand its presence in its dual hubs of Nairobi and Lagos. The studio will also look to deepen its AI integration across its portfolio, aiming to help African startups leapfrog legacy technologies in agriculture and finance.

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