CAIRO, Feb 16 – Egyptian e-commerce platform Breadfast has secured 50 million dollars in a pre Series C funding round backed by major global and regional investors, including Abu Dhabi sovereign wealth fund Mubadala Investment Co., Saudi Arabia’s Olayan family investment vehicle and Japan’s SBI Investment Co.
The funding round highlights growing investor interest in Africa’s fast expanding digital commerce sector, particularly in Egypt, which has emerged as one of the continent’s most active startup ecosystems. Breadfast plans to use the capital to expand its infrastructure, scale existing business lines and prepare for expansion into new African markets.
Chief Executive Officer and co founder Mostafa Amin said the company has already begun early discussions with growth investors for a larger Series C round expected in the first half of 2026. The company is exploring entry into additional North and West African countries as part of its regional expansion strategy.
Global Investors Position for Africa’s E Commerce Growth
The latest financing attracted a mix of sovereign wealth funds, global venture capital firms and development finance institutions. Investors in the round include Mubadala Investment Co., Olayan Financing Company, venture capital firm Y Combinator and the International Finance Corporation, the World Bank’s private sector investment arm.
Other participants include Novastar Ventures, 4DX Ventures and the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, underscoring strong institutional confidence in Breadfast’s growth trajectory.
The company’s valuation was estimated at nearly 400 million dollars during its previous fundraising round in 2025, reflecting rapid expansion and strong investor demand for African technology platforms with scalable business models.
From Bread Delivery to Full Scale Digital Commerce Platform
Founded in Cairo nine years ago as a bread delivery service, Breadfast has evolved into a vertically integrated digital commerce platform offering groceries, ready made meals, pharmaceuticals and financial services, including prepaid payment cards.
The company controls key parts of its supply chain, including private label manufacturing, logistics and delivery operations. It has also expanded into physical retail through company owned coffee shops, strengthening its direct relationship with consumers.
Private label products now account for approximately 40 percent of Breadfast’s grocery sales, supporting stronger margins and helping the company manage currency volatility and inflation risks in Egypt’s challenging macroeconomic environment.
Breadfast aims to capture up to 3 percent of Egypt’s grocery market, which is estimated at roughly 100 billion dollars, over the next three years.
African Expansion and IPO Ambitions
The company’s leadership sees significant opportunity beyond Egypt, driven by demographic trends across Africa, including rapid urbanisation, growing smartphone adoption and a young, digitally native population. These factors are accelerating demand for fast, reliable and integrated digital services across sectors.
Breadfast’s long term strategy includes expanding into key African markets while positioning itself for a global public listing.
“Our long term objective is to become a multibillion dollar company originating from Africa,” Amin said, noting ambitions to follow the path of major emerging market technology champions that scaled into global platforms.
The investment reflects broader momentum behind Africa’s digital economy, as sovereign wealth funds and global investors increasingly back scalable technology platforms capable of serving the continent’s large and growing consumer base.