AHL Venture Partners has reached a first close of $30.5 million for its AHL Africa Credit Fund I, the firm’s first formal private credit vehicle after nearly two decades operating as an advisory arm to the AHL Charitable Foundation.
The fund is anchored by the AHL Foundation and has brought in three family offices as additional investors. It is structured to attract capital from high-net-worth individuals, family offices and foundations seeking impact-aligned exposure to African credit markets, an investor segment that remains significantly underrepresented in the continent’s private capital ecosystem.
AHL began sharpening its credit strategy in 2020, following a conviction that debt offered a more scalable and risk-managed pathway for investors than equity in many African market contexts. Since then, through the AHL Foundation and its own led syndications, the firm has deployed more than $120 million in debt investments across the continent. Priority sectors have been financial inclusion, climate action, and sustainable food and agriculture.
Rosanne Whalley, CEO of AHL Venture Partners, described the close as reflecting growing market conviction that African businesses need more flexible, long-term debt capital. The firm positions the fund as an entry point for private capital seeking both returns and measurable development impact in African markets.
The fund’s target size has not been disclosed, but the first close signals that institutional and family office appetite for structured African credit is beginning to firm up, even as broader African private equity fundraising fell 34% to $2.7 billion in 2025


