Bridging the Credit Gap in the Informal Economy Through Strategic Funding and High-Impact Financial Literacy
In a move that signals resilient investor confidence in African fintech, 4G Capital has raised $2 million in strategic funding from GIF Growth, the growth-stage arm of the Global Innovation Fund. The investment arrives as the Kenyan-based firm nears a historic $1 billion lending milestone, having already disbursed over $800 million to more than 755,000 micro-businesses across Kenya and Uganda.
While many fintechs prioritize pure digital automation, 4G Capital’s success stems from its touch-tech philosophy, a hybrid model that blends a sophisticated digital lending infrastructure with the localized trust of field-based officers.
The informal sector remains the heartbeat of East African commerce, yet it is traditionally underserved by formal banking institutions. 4G Capital addresses this disparity by providing more than just working capital; it integrates tailored business training and financial literacy into the lending process.
- Volume at Scale: To date, the firm has issued 6.8 million loans, focusing heavily on the missing middle of the economy.
- Sustainable Growth: The new capital will be utilized to strengthen digital systems and partnerships, ensuring the company can scale without losing its community-led essence.
The strategic focus of this funding is clear: sustainable expansion with a lens on social impact. Founder and Executive Chairman Wayne Hennessy-Barrett emphasized that the capital will prioritize access for women and youth-led businesses, demographics that often face the steepest hurdles in accessing formal credit.
“This investment provides the right kind of capital to grow sustainably,” Hennessy-Barrett noted, hinting that a Series D round is already under consideration as the firm prepares for its next phase of digital evolution.
For the broader African startup ecosystem, 4G Capital’s latest deal is a bellwether for the impact-plus-scale investment trend. Backing is increasingly flowing to businesses that can demonstrate real-world resilience and a deep understanding of the realities of informal trade, where proximity, practical support, and trust are as valuable as the capital itself.



























