- PE surpasses VC in Africa — First time since 2019, private equity led deal volume in Q1 2026, signalling a structural market shift on the continent.
- Early-stage funding collapses — Seed deals fell 81% since 2021, threatening the pipeline of Africa’s next generation of investable startups.
- Regime change underway — Africa’s private capital market is rotating from return-driven VC to institutional PE, reshaping who funds what — and who doesn’t.
Africa’s private equity market surpassed venture capital in deal volume for the first time in six years during the first quarter of 2026, data compiled by Ecofin Agency’s Africa Private Capital Desk showed. This caps a structural rotation that gathered pace after the US Federal Reserve’s 2022 rate-hiking cycle drained risk appetite from emerging markets worldwide.
Private equity funds recorded 63 transactions in the January-March period, against 35 for venture capital and 37 for development finance institutions, or DFIs, according to the report, which analysed 8,876 transactions totalling $181 billion across more than 40 African countries between 2017 and the first quarter of 2026. The median deal size rose to $15 million from $12 million in the same period a year earlier, a shift the report attributed to institutional PE funds targeting companies with established cash flows rather than early-stage startups.
The reversal marked the clearest sign yet that Africa’s private capital market changed regime after the boom years of 2020-2022, when VC deals reached a peak of 603 transactions in 2021 before falling 59% to 246 by 2025, according to Ecofin data. Seed and pre-seed financing, the lifeblood of startup ecosystems, collapsed by 81% over the same four-year stretch — from 509 deals in 2021 to 98 in 2025 — a decline analysts said would translate into a shortage of fundable companies within 18 to 24 months.
Institutional grip
The most consequential structural shift in the decade-long dataset was not the PE-VC rotation but the rise of development finance institutions as the continent’s dominant capital provider. DFIs’ share of total African private capital deployed rose from 30.5% in 2017 to 81.5% in 2024, according to the Ecofin report, turning what were once complementary financiers into primary market makers. The shift, driven by the withdrawal of US and European private funds following the 2022 rate increases, effectively converted Africa’s private capital market into one dependent on institutional mandates rather than on return-driven investment.
That dependency carries a risk the report described as the most underpriced threat in African capital markets: a simultaneous contraction of DFI balance sheets. Cuts to USAID under the current US administration, reductions in European development aid budgets, and tightening constraints at national development banks could, if concurrent, remove a funding source for which no private substitute currently exists, according to the analysis.
The data also pointed to a parallel geopolitical reconfiguration of American capital on the continent. Before 2022, US participation in African deals was concentrated in venture capital funds and accelerators. By 2024, the US International Development Finance Corporation — a government agency whose mandate explicitly includes countering Chinese influence in strategic resource markets — had recorded 51 transactions, making it one of the most active investors on the continent that year, according to Ecofin data. The agency has accumulated 163 deals since it began operating.
The sectoral picture diverged from the tech-centric narrative that dominated coverage of African investment through 2021. Agribusiness reached a record 117 deals and $2.6 billion in capital deployed in 2024, surpassing fintech in volume for the first time, as DFIs accelerated mandates tied to food security following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and PE funds sought predictable cash flows in the post-bubble environment. Mining of critical minerals — lithium, cobalt, copper and graphite — recovered to $3.2 billion in 2025 from a trough of $264 million in 2022, driven by demand for electric vehicle battery supply chains rather than a return to the commodity cycles of the previous decade.
Geography told a similarly uneven story. South Africa, Nigeria, Kenya and Egypt absorbed 58% of total deal volume across the nine-year dataset, a concentration that left most LP portfolios more exposed to a small cluster of markets than their pan-African mandates suggested. Morocco emerged as the clearest challenger, doubling deal activity between 2021-22 and 2023-25 to 120 transactions, as Casablanca Finance City attracted fund domiciliation and Moroccan industrial groups expanded southward.
The PE comeback and DFI dominance are set to be tested by external rate dynamics in the months ahead. Any further easing by the Federal Reserve would likely accelerate reallocation by limited partners toward emerging markets, with mid-market African PE funds — those targeting deals between $10 million and $50 million — positioned to absorb the first wave of returning capital, according to the Ecofin analysis.
Fund managers currently in fundraising, however, face a harder environment: the record closes of 2022-23, when African-focused vehicles raised between $3.5 billion and $4.2 billion annually, are unlikely to recur in the near term, the report said, with GPs advised to cut target sizes by 30% to 40% and offer more flexible fee structures to retain institutional LP commitments.
Idriss Linge
