Editor’s Notice
- Week 49, 2022
- Learn time: 5 minutes
This week, the Nigerian authorities takes one other stab at pushing the cashless economic system agenda by imposing limits of particular person and company money withdrawals. Will it work, or is that this one other ill-advised transfer? Let’s wait to search out out. In different information, the Central Financial institution of Kenya reinstates fees on cellular cash transactions, Chipper lays off workers, the Nigerian authorities can be seeking to tax cryptocurrencies, and Aruwa Capital closes a record-setting $20 million fund. These and extra are on this version of the Weekender.
Blissful studying!
Pamela Tetteh Editor, TechCabal.
Editor’s Picks
The Subsequent Wave Present
Within the 4th episode of TechCabal’s The Subsequent Wave present, the company discuss why Africa is changing into a number one vacation spot for worldwide recruiters, what this implies for the native expertise pipeline, the gaps that exist, and the untapped alternatives.
If you happen to missed the published on CNBC Africa, you’ll be able to catch it here.
Who introduced the cash this week?
- Kenya’s social commerce firm Kapu raised $8 million in seed funding. The spherical was led by Large Ventures and Firstminute Capital.
- Egyptian fintech firm OneOrder received $3 million in seed funding. The spherical was led by Nclude; different taking part buyers included MENA early-stage VC A15 and Supply Hero Ventures.
- Synatic, a South-African information automation startup received $2.5 million in a seed funding spherical led by Allan Grey E-Squared Ventures and UW Ventures.
- Egyptian ecommerce firm SideUp raised $1.2 million in seed funding from Launch Africa Ventures, 500 World, Riyadh Angels, Alex Angels, Al Tuwaijri Fund and Saudi angel investor Faisal AlAbdulsalam.
- Nigeria’s prop-tech firm VENCO raised 670k in pre-seed funding. The spherical was led by Zrosk Funding Administration.