In a year of market correction, Abi Mustapha-Maduakor provided the ecosystem’s steady hand. As the chief custodian of African private capital, the African Venture Capital Association (AVCA) CEO spent 2025 pivoting the industry’s focus from fundraising to the “second-order” problems that actually determine long-term success: institutional alignment and exit structures.
Her convening power was on full display in May, when she returned AVCA’s flagship conference to Lagos for the first time in over a decade, positioning Nigeria as a focal point for renewed private-capital engagement amid macroeconomic recalibration.
Throughout the year, Mustapha-Maduakor used AVCA’s platform to push a clearer message: Africa’s capital challenge is no longer just fundraising, but alignment between fund structures, exit pathways, and domestic institutions. Her work in 2025 centred on convening fund managers, DFIs, pension funds, and policymakers around those second-order problems.
In 2025, Mustapha-Maduakor didn’t deploy capital herself but she strengthened the institutional plumbing that determines whether capital—once raised—can actually flow, exit, and compound across African markets.








