Balad, a Cairo-based fintech startup focused on remittances, has received a pre-seed investment of seven figures in USD led by Acasia Ventures, an Egyptian venture capital firm. Launch Africa, Future Africa, V&R, Magic Fund, First Circle, Sunny Side, and several family offices also participated in the round.
Founded in 2022 by Adham Azzam, Sally Asaad, and Mohamed Assem, Balad is a RemTech financial service provider that caters to migrants and their families. The startup aims to simplify digital remittances for this segment by offering reduced transfer fees and instant delivery of inward remittances via Balad prepaid cards, allowing recipients instant access to transferred funds at lower fees.
One in seven people globally is involved in sending or receiving remittances, with $700 billion circulating worldwide each year. Egypt ranks as the fifth-largest country receiving remittances, and a significant portion of its underbanked population relies on these transfers as their primary source of income. However, current transfer fees range between 4–11%, and in some cases, transfers can take over a week to reach recipients. Moreover, migrants in host countries and families in home countries are largely underbanked and often lack access to basic financial services.
Balad’s founders aim to break down financial barriers for this segment and align their vision with the UN’s 10th Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) to reduce the global average fee for remittances from 7% to 3% within a decade and improve the financial inclusion of excluded communities.
read also Key Directors Resign from the Board of Egyptian Transport Startup Swvl
The investment will be used to launch Balad’s remittance platform, develop the necessary technology, hire new team members, obtain required licenses, and complete integrations with its banking partner. Balad’s founding team has extensive backgrounds in the investment, technology, and financial sectors, with Azzam, Asaad, and Assem bringing their experience to the table.
Azzam, in particular, has been a successful entrepreneur in Egypt and the UAE for the past five years and has worked in the financing and investment sector for 15 years in organizations such as the International Finance Corporation (IFC), and various European institutions. Asaad spent 17 years at Commercial International Bank (CIB), where she led innovation management and fintech and startup partnerships, among other roles. Assem has over 20 years of experience in software engineering and technical management across Europe, the Middle East, and Africa and has led technology teams in several Egyptian fintech companies.
“Acasia Ventures has been an instrumental lead investor for our pre-seed round, as it supported the founders from the start and facilitated our access to other funding partners,” said Azzam. “We are excited to leverage Acasia Ventures’ expertise, African connections, and synergies with its portfolio companies.”
read also What Does Nigeria’s New SEC Regulatory Incubation Program Mean for Fintech Startups?
“This is Balad’s first funding round. Its offering is very unique and distinctive in that it provides remittance receivers with a quick and cheap solution to financial access, broadening the umbrella of financial inclusion across Egypt and the GCC,” said Aly El Shalakany, Managing Partner at Acasia Ventures.
Balad platform Balad platform
Charles Rapulu Udoh
Charles Rapulu Udoh is a Lagos-based lawyer, who has several years of experience working in Africa’s burgeoning tech startup industry. He has closed multi-million dollar deals bordering on venture capital, private equity, intellectual property (trademark, patent or design, etc.), mergers and acquisitions, in countries such as in the Delaware, New York, UK, Singapore, British Virgin Islands, South Africa, Nigeria etc. He’s also a corporate governance and cross-border data privacy and tax expert.
As an award-winning writer and researcher, he is passionate about telling the African startup story, and is one of the continent’s pioneers in this regard