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    HomeEcosystem NewsBreega Nets $8.5m From AfDB as Development Bank Ramps Up VC Appetite

    Breega Nets $8.5m From AfDB as Development Bank Ramps Up VC Appetite

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    The African Development Bank Group (AfDB) has approved a €7.5m ($8.5m) investment into the Breega Africa Seed I Fund, aiming to plug the persistent early-stage funding gap for African technology startups.

    The commitment arrives just weeks after the Bank backed Saviu II, a separate venture vehicle targeting Francophone Africa. Together, the moves indicate that under its new leadership, the AfDB intends to keep venture capital firmly within its development toolkit — relying heavily on blended finance structures to de-risk frontier markets for commercial investors.

    De-risking Early-Stage Capital

    The AfDB’s €7.5m injection into Breega is structured to provide a cushion for private limited partners (LPs).

    • Equity Capital: €5m will be deployed as straight equity.
    • Junior Tranche: €2.5m is structured as a first-loss tranche on behalf of the European Commission’s Boost Africa Initiative.

    By underwriting a portion of the downside risk, development finance institutions (DFIs) like the AfDB hope to make early-stage African tech more palatable to institutional investors navigating a cautious macroeconomic climate.

    Breega’s African Expansion

    Founded in 2015 and managing €700m in assets globally, Paris-based Breega is known in Europe for backing startups like Exotec and Moneybox. The firm is now pivoting significant resources toward the African continent.

    The Africa Seed I fund, capped at $75m, has already secured roughly 70% of its capital in a first close. Led by former entrepreneurs Melvyn Lubega and Tosin Faniro-Dada, the fund will write pre-seed and seed checks ranging from $100,000 to $2m.

    Geographically, Breega is casting a wide net. The fund targets the continent’s “Big Four” tech hubs — Nigeria, South Africa, Kenya, and Egypt — alongside Francophone markets. Sector focus includes:

    • Fintech and Insurtech
    • Agritech and Climate Tech
    • Healthtech
    • Logistics and Edtech

    Breega has already begun deploying capital on the continent. Late last year, the firm co-led a $3.4m seed round for Anda, an Angolan mobility and asset-financing startup attempting to formalize Luanda’s fragmented motorcycle taxi industry.

    The Breega deal follows closely on the heels of a similar AfDB commitment made in late February: a €6.5m ($7.6m) investment into Saviu II.

    Managed by Saviu Partners, Saviu II specifically targets seed-stage and Series A startups in historically underfunded Francophone West and Central African markets, including Côte d’Ivoire, Senegal, and Cameroon. Building on its €10m predecessor, Saviu II recently reached a €25m second close, targeting a final size of up to €50m.

    Comparing the AfDB’s Recent VC Commitments

    MetricBreega Africa Seed ISaviu II
    Total AfDB Investment€7.5m ($8.5m)€6.5m ($7.6m)
    Capital Structure€5m equity, €2.5m junior tranche€4.5m equity, €2m first-loss tranche
    Target Fund Size$75m€30m – €50m
    Ticket Sizes$100,000 – $2m€500,000 – €3m
    Geographic FocusPan-African (Big 4 + Francophone)Francophone West & Central Africa (60%+)
    Target StagesPre-Seed & SeedSeed & First Institutional Rounds

    These tandem investments serve as an early litmus test for the AfDB under President Sidi Ould Tah, who succeeded Akinwumi Adesina. Under Adesina, the AfDB expanded its role as an LP in Africa-focused private equity and venture funds. The strategy yielded uneven financial results; while stakes in funds like Janngo Capital and Verod appreciated, other exposures declined sharply, highlighting the inherent tension of a DFI backing high-risk ventures.

    By repeatedly deploying capital alongside the European Commission’s Boost Africa program — which specifically offers concessional, first-loss capital — Tah’s administration is signaling a calibrated risk appetite. The goal is clear: use public money to absorb the initial shock of startup failure, thereby crowding in the private capital necessary to scale African innovation and drive job creation.

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