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Business & Economy

Afreximbank Moves to Build Africa’s Digital Trade Infrastructure with Accelerator Launch

BrandiQ Analyst
Last updated: March 27, 2026 11:03 am
BrandiQ Analyst
March 27, 2026
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2 Min Read
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The African Export-Import Bank has taken a decisive step toward reshaping intra-African commerce with the launch of its inaugural Afreximbank Accelerator Programme, positioning itself not just as a financier – but as a builder of Africa’s digital trade architecture.

The first cohort, unveiled in Cairo during a high-level kick off week, brings together eight high-growth startups selected from over 1,600 applications. These ventures span critical layers of the trade ecosystem – from cross-border payments and digital logistics to AI-powered enterprise solutions and supply chain finance – signalling a clear shift toward digitally enabled trade infrastructure.

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BrandiQ Analysis: From Trade Finance to Trade Infrastructure

This is a strategic evolution.

Afreximbank is moving beyond traditional trade financing into platform-building, supporting startups that are effectively creating the “digital rails” for the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA).

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  • Startups = Infrastructure: These companies are not just businesses – they are foundational layers for cross-border trade.
  • Capital + Market Access: With up to $250,000 in funding plus access to Afreximbank’s network, the programme addresses Africa’s biggest startup bottleneck—scale across borders.
  • Policy + Execution Bridge: By linking startups to regulators and policymakers, the bank is solving the fragmentation that has historically slowed intra-African trade.

Why This Matters for Africa’s Economy

The selected startups already demonstrate traction:

  • Capsa Technologies: Over ₦70 billion in supply chain financing
  • Fluna: $50 million+ in trade facilitated
  • Timon: Payments infrastructure across 15 countries

Collectively, they represent a new class of African trade enablers – digital-first, cross-border, and scalable.

Strategic Implication

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Africa’s trade future will not be driven by policy alone – but by platforms, payment rails, and logistics intelligence.

By integrating startups into systems like PAPSS (Pan-African Payments and Settlement System) and the Africa Trade Gateway, Afreximbank is positioning itself at the centre of a continent-wide digital trade ecosystem.

Bottom line:
Afreximbank is quietly becoming one of the most important architects of Africa’s economic integration – not just funding trade, but engineering how trade happens.

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