Bloomberg’s “Startups to Watch 2026” list has included four Nigerian companies that investors say are addressing structural gaps in public services across health, finance and security.
The firms named — 10mg Health, Remedial Health, Sycamore and Terra Industries — reflect a trend in African venture capital toward businesses that provide alternatives where public infrastructure or formal markets are weak or absent.
10mg Health, founded in 2022 by pharmacist Christian Nwachukwu, offers a financing product called 10mgCredit that extends working capital to hospitals and pharmacies.
The service is designed to reduce treatment delays caused by patients’ inability to pay upfront, a frequent barrier to timely care in many Nigerian communities.
The company uses data-driven underwriting that incorporates medical and behavioural signals alongside traditional credit measures to assess risk and channel funds to providers.
Remedial Health, established in 2021 by Samuel Okwuada and Victor Benjamin, focuses on pharmaceutical supply-chain integrity and inventory management. Its software enables pharmacies and healthcare providers to verify suppliers, manage stock, and access financing for drug procurement. The startup works with more than 14,000 providers in Nigeria and reports it has facilitated over $40 million in medicine financing, aiming to reduce reliance on informal supply channels and limit the spread of counterfeit or substandard medicines.
Sycamore, launched in 2019 by Babatunde Akin-Moses, offers digital lending and investment products intended to broaden formal credit access for individuals and small businesses. By using digital onboarding and rapid disbursement, the platform targets workers and enterprises that are often excluded by conventional banks due to limited credit histories, aligning with broader efforts to formalise segments of the economy that remain largely cash-based.
Terra Industries, founded in 2024 by Nathan Nwachuku and Maxwell Maduka, operates in the securetech sector, developing pilotless aircraft and defence systems. The company’s technology responds to growing security challenges in parts of West Africa, and it has drawn investor interest, including a recent $34 million raise led by firms such as 8VC. Terra has announced plans to expand manufacturing capacity with a second factory planned in Ghana.
Analysts say the presence of these Nigerian startups on Bloomberg’s list underlines investor appetite for ventures that address persistent system failures rather than solely consumer-focused conveniences. The companies’ activities span financing, logistics, and security — areas where private innovation is increasingly filling gaps left by under-resourced public systems.
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