Economy
Africa’s Startup Ice Age: Why leaner could mean stronger
When Nigeria’s 54gene shut down and Kenya’s Sendy folded, many saw them as casualties of Africa’s brutal funding drought. But beneath the wreckage, investors argue this winter may be exactly what the ecosystem needs: a forced reset that could finally produce startups built to last. Africa’s venture capital market has slowed to its coldest stretch in years. In the first half of 2024, startups raised just $393 million, a staggering 57% drop compared to H1 2023. By the end of the year, total funding barely touched $2.2 billion, down from nearly $5 billion at the 2022 peak. That collapse isn’t just about global risk aversion; it’s exposing which companies had solid business models and which were running on investor hype. The setbacks are stark reminders of how unsustainable “growth at all costs” can be in African markets. 54gene, once celebrated as a biotech pioneer, ran out of cash after burning through tens of millions. Sendy, a logistics darling, couldn’t keep up with the capital intensity of its model. Their shutdowns show the limits of chasing valuations instead of revenue.
Some startups, however, are finding strength in the storm. BuuPass, a digital mobility company, turned away from building a consumer ticketing app and instead built tools that bus operators actually needed. Its Bus Management System helped cut leakage, streamline fleets, and integrate with M-Pesa. The result? More than 20 million tickets processed across East and Southern Africa, and profitability baked into the model.
Logidoo, a logistics startup, went beyond software marketplaces. By investing in physical cargo consolidation infrastructure, it cut trade route transit times by 40%. That defensibility makes it harder for well-funded rivals to displace them.
“These are the founders who’ll survive,” says Gullit VC’s Hiruy Amanuel. “Not the ones chasing vanity metrics, but the ones who actually understand the market they serve.” The lesson investors are pushing is simple: capital efficiency is now a competitive advantage. Startups that can execute in one market, generate real revenue, and grow deliberately will be first in line for scarce capital. The days of burning millions for user acquisition are over. It’s a reset many say was overdue. “Vanity metrics don’t pay bills anymore,” said Hiruy. “In Africa, they never did.”
Even in a downturn, some sectors continue to attract attention:
● Fintech dominated with about 35% of funding, thanks to clearer revenue models and regulatory maturity.
● Industrial and B2B solutions proved resilient, solving unglamorous but critical problems.
● South Africa, Egypt, Kenya, and Nigeria pulled the most dollars, as investors stick to ecosystems with stronger infrastructure and regulatory frameworks. The shakeout is also sparking M&A deals. Stronger companies with cash are buying distressed rivals or scooping up undervalued assets. Expect more consolidation in 2025 as founders trade independence for survival. If 2021 was Africa’s venture gold rush, 2025 may be the year the ecosystem grows up. The hype is gone, the capital is scarce, and the winners are those who can actually make money.
It’s a brutal reset but one that could leave behind startups stronger, leaner, and better built to compete globally.
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