The Cairo-based company raised $50 million in a pre-Series C round led by the UAE sovereign fund Mubadala Investment Company, Japan’s SBI Investment, and Saudi Arabia’s Olayan Financing Company.
Established in 1947 by Suliman S. Olayan, Olayan Financing Company oversees a portfolio of more than 32 businesses across the Middle East, spanning sectors such as food, healthcare and technology, and employs over 14,500 people.
Additional participants in the round included Y Combinator and the World Bank’s private-sector arm, International Finance Corporation.
Co-founder and chief executive Mostafa Amin said the company is already in early discussions with growth investors ahead of a full Series C planned for the first half of 2026.
Funds from the latest raise will be used to strengthen logistics infrastructure, expand business lines and explore launching operations in other North and West African markets.
The company also produces its own private-label goods and operates branded coffee shops, controlling much of its supply chain from production to last-mile delivery.
That structure, Amin said, helps protect margins in Egypt’s volatile inflation and currency environment. Private-label items now generate roughly 40% of grocery sales, and Breadfast aims to capture about 3% of the country’s estimated $100 billion grocery market within three years.
The company’s growth has been driven by Egypt’s young, digitally engaged consumers, whose preference for convenience and mobile services mirrors trends in other rapidly urbanising African economies, a dynamic Breadfast hopes to replicate as it expands regionally.
Amin added that the long-term goal is a global initial public offering, positioning the firm as a multibillion-dollar technology champion from Africa.
Source: Africabusinessinsider
