AMIC Member Investment Funds in Morocco: 2026 Overview
Who are the main AMIC member private equity funds in Morocco? Strategies, sectors, typical tickets and portfolios. The guide to identifying the right financial partners.
The Moroccan Association of Capital Investors (AMIC) federates the main professional private equity players in Morocco. Understanding who these funds are, how they operate, and what they look for is essential for any entrepreneur seeking to raise capital, any investor looking to co-invest, or any analyst mapping the Moroccan financial ecosystem.
This guide provides a structured overview of AMIC member funds: typical profiles, investment strategies, and how to find the right partner for your project.
AMIC: Role and Structure
Founded in 2000 with the support of CDG (Caisse de DΓ©pΓ΄t et de Gestion) and Maroc Invest, AMIC is today the reference body for private equity in Morocco. It fulfills three essential functions.
Representation and lobbying: AMIC represents the industry before regulators (AMMC, Bank Al-Maghrib), the government, and international bodies (EMPEA, Invest Europe).
Standards and best practices: AMIC publishes recommendations on fund governance, LP reporting, exit clauses, and portfolio valuation.
Statistics and transparency: AMIC publishes annual aggregated data on fundraising, investments made, and exits. This data constitutes the primary reference source on the market.
Member Fund Profiles β The Main Categories
The ecosystem of AMIC member funds is diverse. They can be grouped into several categories by strategy.
Generalist growth capital funds form the core of the market. They invest in established, profitable SMEs across various sectors (industry, services, distribution). Typical tickets between MAD 20M and MAD 150M. Holding period: 5 to 7 years. Active governance with one or two board seats.
Sector-focused funds concentrate on one or two sectors: real estate, healthcare, technology, agri-food. Their sector expertise allows them to add value beyond capital β networks, market knowledge, operational improvements.
Impact funds integrate ESG criteria into their investment thesis. Strongly growing since 2020, driven by requirements from European LPs and DFIs (Development Finance Institutions) that often constitute the bulk of their LP base.
Pan-African funds based in Casablanca use Morocco as a hub to invest across Africa. Casablanca Finance City (CFC) plays a central role in attracting these structures.
Limited Partners (LPs) in the Moroccan Market
Understanding who finances Moroccan funds illuminates their strategy and constraints.
CDG (Caisse de DΓ©pΓ΄t et de Gestion) is the historical anchor LP of the Moroccan market. Its commitment to numerous AMIC funds helped launch the industry in the 2000s-2010s. It invests via CDG Capital Private Equity.
Moroccan banks (CIH, Attijariwafa, BMCE/Bank of Africa, Banque Populaire) have progressively built private equity divisions and are present as LPs in many funds.
Insurance companies (Wafa Assurance, RMA, MAMDA) allocate a portion of their long-term assets to private equity, in compliance with Bank Al-Maghrib regulation.
International DFIs (Proparco, DEG, FMO, BIO, DFC) are recurring LPs in impact funds and pan-African funds. Their presence is often a quality and governance signal for other investors.
Moroccan family offices constitute a growing LP base, particularly in real estate funds and sector funds close to their historical activities.
How to Identify and Approach an AMIC Fund
For an entrepreneur or SME seeking to raise capital, or an investor seeking to co-invest, identifying the right counterparty is crucial.
Fund selection criteria: company's sector vs fund's sector thesis, envisaged ticket vs fund's min/max ticket, development stage (seed, growth, buyout), geographic location (some funds have regional preferences).
Typical approach process: 1. Identification of relevant funds via AMIC directory 2. Contact via network (referral) or direct application 3. Dossier presentation (teaser then full business plan) 4. Due diligence by the fund (2 to 4 months) 5. Letter of intent (LOI) and term negotiation 6. Deep due diligence and closing
SYNTA-IQ provides access to public data on these funds' portfolios β their declared investments, involved directors, and financial data for portfolio companies. This information comes from official registries and is enriched by our network of local partners.