Guinea-founded fintech Cauridor has secured a $2 million equity investment from Proparco, the private sector arm of the French Development Agency, as it works to scale payment infrastructure connecting global money transfer operators to Africa’s fragmented last-mile networks.
The investment was announced on the sidelines of the Africa Forward Summit, co-organised by France and Kenya in Nairobi, and forms part of Cauridor’s ongoing Series A round, which also includes participation from Flourish Ventures and LoftyInc Capital. The latest funding brings the company’s total capital raised to $13 million, with Cauridor targeting a full Series A close before the end of 2026.
Founded in 2022 by Guinean entrepreneurs Oumar Barry and Abdoulaye Bah, Cauridor builds the backend infrastructure that connects international money transfer operators — including Western Union, MoneyGram, RIA, Taptap Send, and Sendwave — to local payout networks such as mobile money platforms, banks, and cash agent networks.
Rather than building a consumer-facing app, Cauridor operates at the infrastructure layer, solving the backend problem that makes cross-border remittances slow and costly. When a diaspora user in Europe sends money home via a global operator, Cauridor’s platform routes the transfer to the recipient through the correct local channel — mobile wallet, bank account, or cash agent — reducing the delays and failures that currently plague the process.
The new funding follows a $3.5 million seed round and will support engineering, integrations, and expansion across West and Central Africa, as Cauridor positions itself as a key infrastructure player in the continent’s $54 billion remittance market.
Modest by venture capital standards, the transaction signals something larger: development finance institutions are increasingly placing catalytic bets on infrastructure-focused fintechs, rather than only the consumer-facing apps that have dominated African fintech headlines.


