|
|
|
Investment in Africa starts to pay off
|
Investment in africa starts to pay off

Post Date: Mon, 18 Feb 2008 13:26:09 -0700
Read the news about civil war in Kenya, unrest in Chad, or genocide in Darfur, and you could conclude that Africa is no place to invest money....
http://money.cnn.com/rssclick/2008/02/13/magazines...
Investment in africa starts to pay off (Abstract text format)
Investment in Africa starts to pay off - Feb. 14, 2008
.cnnContinuedTitle{display:none;}
.cnnContinuedBot tom{position:relative;top:35;right:30;}
News | Markets | Technology | Personal Finance | Small Business | CNN.com
RSS
Newsletters
Video
Home
Fortune 500
Technology
Investing
Management
Rankings
Fortune
by Marc Gunther
February 18 2008: 9:39 AM EST
Email | Print Type Size
Investment in Africa starts to pay offWidespread perceptions of corruption and violence do not deter some Western firms from putting money into African nations - often with impressive results. By Marc Gunther, senior writer VideoMore video
A look at how the convergence of cell phones and PC's are changing the future of computing.
Play video
More from Fortune
Social Security a Ponzi scheme? No way
Muni bonds: Proceed with caution
Life after iPhone
FORTUNE 500
Current Issue
Subscribe to Fortune
(Fortune) -- Read the news about civil war in Kenya, unrest in Chad, or genocide in Darfur, and you could conclude that Africa is no place to invest money. But behind the headlines lies business opportunity. Africa's economy is growing at 5 to 6% a year. Inflation is down. Prices are rising for commodities like oil, copper and gold. Like all emerging markets, Africa is a risky place to invest but "the perceived risk is greater than the actual risk," says Tom Gibian, the chief executive of Emerging Capital Partners (ECP), a private equity firm based in Washington, D.C., that focuses on Africa. The firm has invested more than $1.2 billion in several Africa funds since 1999. It has invested in 48 companies, exited from 18, recouped more than $600 million and posted an average return of three times its initial investment. "The financial performance has been terrific," Gibian says. Among the big winners: --CelTel, a mobile phone company with customers in 13 countries including Kenya and Uganda, as well as such very poor countries as Niger and Chad. ECP bought $50 million of stock beginning in 2000, and received about $215 million when CelTel was sold to a Kuwaiti firm five years later.--Ecobank, a regional banking group based in Togo. ECP acquired about $12 million of stock beginning in 1999, took a seat on the bank's board, and sold for about $36 million in 2006. --Societe International de Plantations D'Heveas, a rubber exporter with operations in Ghana and the Ivory Coast that subsequently acquired a Michelin plantation in Nigeria. ECP invested $14.8 million in stock and convertible notes in 2005, and sold for $48.1 million in 2007. They've had losers, too, of course. A voice-over-Internet phone venture failed, as did a South African over-the-air television network. Broadly, though, African companies have been aided by increasing efforts by government leaders to promote capital markets, private investment and trade. "The real news in Africa," Gibian says, "is that over the last five years, virtually every country, their presidents, and even the leaders of the opposition parties, have gotten on the same page regarding the primacy of the private sector, the need to deregulate, and the importance of attracting foreign investment. Centralized planning, state control of assets and socialistic rhetoric, for the most part, are dead. Market forces have won." That's probably an overstatement. Africa's "overall level of economic freedom is weaker than any other region's," according to the Heritage Foundation's 2008 Index of Economic Freedom, which says the region "performs especially poorly in terms of property rights, freedom from corruption and business freedom." But most experts believe that the business climate is improving. To spread its risks, ECP invests in about 30 countries and various economic sectors. It has more money invested in Nigeria, Africa's most populous country, than any other. Telecom is the funds' biggest sector, accounting for about 30% of its portfolio. The firm has also invested in banks, mining companies, ports and airlines. Some of its deals could have a big impact if they play out as planned. Two years ago, ECP invested $35 million in Nortore Chemicals, which is rebuilding an abandoned fertilizer plant in the Niger Delta that will use Nigeria's abundant natural gas to make nitrogen fertilizer. If all goes well, after production begins this spring, the plant will make fertilizer for about $100 a ton, a bargain price in Africa that will benefit local farmers. But the previous plant was shuttered because of corruption and neglect, so there are no guarantees. ECP has 17 of 27 investment professionals based in five offices across Africa. Many are Africans. "You don't pay a visit and then spend $80 million," Gibian says. Gibian and his chief operating officer, Hurley Doddy, are experienced global investors. Gibian, 54, spent 12 years at Salomon Brothers and Goldman Sachs Asia before joining Emerging Markets Partnerships, an investment firm which created ECP, in 1995. Doddy, 44, worked for Sumitomo Finance and Salomon Brothers in London, Tokyo and Sao Paulo. They say they can get advantageous terms in their deals because African firms are hungry for capital. "The supply-demand equation for funding is tilted towards the supplier," Gibian says. "If you're a businessman in Kenya and you need $25 or 30 million in equity, there aren't a lot of places to go." That could change as other investors move in. At the end of a five-day visit to Africa last November, U.S. Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson said that the U.S.'s Overseas Private Investment Corp. would provide up to $250 million in seed money to start three new Africa investment funds. Doddy says that's fine: "We're building a track record that is helping to show that Africa's a good place to invest. We want more people to ask: How can we get in on this game?"
Digg
Facebook
The greening of Waste Management
Featured
Madoff: Secrets of a ScandalA CNN-Fortune Special Investigation with CNN's Christine Romans and Fortune Managing Editor Andy Serwer. Saturday and Sunday, 8 pm ET more
Dumbest Moments in BusinessWe don't know whether to laugh or cry. Our annual list of the year's most laughable moves proves that, even in moments of crisis, stupidity lives on. more
Best stocks for 2009We're mired in the grizzliest bear market in decades. The good news: Stocks have been marked down to holiday-sale levels. more
4 tech predictions for 2009The technology outlook for the new year looks pretty grim, but here are a few trends that could pay off. more
7 affordable gadgets for the holidaysWith consumers pinching pennies, prices of Blu-ray players, GPS devices and other tech toys are falling. more
The office gift guideThere's no better time to focus on relationship building at the workplace. Think of these 25 gift ideas as sound investments in your future. more
What Cuomo wants from Wall StreetNew York's top enforcement lawyer surprises by not taking a page from the playbook of his predecessor, Eliot Spitzer. more
Most Popular
MostRead
MostCommented
Editor'sPicks
Keep your job: A 10-point survival guide More
Social Security a Ponzi scheme? No way More
Google news More
Bailout rage divides the GOP More
Life after iPhone More
Social Security a Ponzi scheme? No way More
Keep your job: A 10-point survival guide More
Top 10 Macworld rumors for 2009 More
iTunes music: The cost of removing Apple’s... More
Macworld: Hoping for a Steve Jobs surprise More
Oil speculation: It's back moreThe VAT trap more5 tips for keeping your job moreGM's last stand moreWal-Mart: A bully benefactor more
Markets
Fortune 500Movers
USIndices
TechnologyMovers
CompanyPrice% Change
Charter Communications Inc D
0.16
58.04%
Lear Corporation
1.55
-22.89%
Reliant Energy Inc
5.71
-20.36%
Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc
0.07
-18.75%
Jan 7 3:56pm ET †
IndexLast% ChangeDow Jones8,769.70-2.72%Nasdaq1,599.06-3.23%S&P 500906.65-3.00%10yr110 27/32Yield: 2.49%Jan 07 5:15pm ET †
CompanyPrice% Change
Charter Communications Inc D
0.16
57.94%
Applied Materials Inc
10.58
-8.64%
National Semiconductor Corporation
10.36
-8.56%
Unisys Corporation
1.19
-8.46%
Jan 7 3:59pm ET †
Sponsored by
symbol lookup
Top News: CNNMoney.com
Stocks knocked by recession fears
Oil tumbles 12% on still-growing supply
Auto sales outlook: Running on empty
$1.2T deficit looms
Pricing in a jobs apocalypse
Same job, less pay
Chavez in low-income heating about-face
Obama keeps Republican FDIC chair
Small companies, giant job losses
Madoff should be jailed - U.S.
Today's top stories
/*
#moneySponsorBox {margin-bottom:15px;}
#moneySponsorBox .cnnmoneySponsorTitle {position: relative; top: 7px;left:4px;}
#moneySponsorBox #adContainer {border: 1px solid #999;padding:5px;}
#moneySponsorBox #adContainer iframe{margin:5px 0;}
*/
Home |
Contact Us |
Advertise with Us |
Corrections |
Career Opportunities |
Press Center |
Site Map
RSS |
Email Delivery |
Portfolio |
Podcasts |
Mobile |
Widgets |
User Preferences |
Special Sections
|
Magazine Customer Service |
Download Fortune Lists |
Reprints |
Conferences |
Business Leader Council
© 2009 Cable News Network. A Time Warner Company ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
Terms under which this service is provided to you.
Privacy Policy
* : Time reflects local markets trading time.† - Intraday data delayed 15 minutes for Nasdaq, and 20 minutes for other exchanges. Disclaimer
Copyright © 2009 BigCharts.com Inc. All rights reserved. Please see our Terms of Use.MarketWatch, the MarketWatch logo, and BigCharts are registered trademarks of MarketWatch, Inc.Intraday data provided by Interactive Data Real-Time Services and subject to the Terms of Use.Intraday data is at least 20-minutes delayed. All times are ET.Historical, current end-of-day data, and splits data provided by Interactive Data Pricing and Reference Data.Fundamental data provided by Morningstar, Inc..SEC Filings data provided by Edgar Online Inc..Earnings data provided by FactSet CallStreet, LLC.
| |
Random News - Noticias al Azar
|
Facebook connect: the masses and the fishbowl Facebook Connect, a service that allows someone to log on to Facebook from third party sites, is set to expand from its May launch... más - more | Market-wary analysts look at poor q3, q4 results Topline of Sensex constituents expected to grow 3.8% on y-o-y basis during the quarter while net profit likely to decline 4%... más - more | Egypt: septuplets' mother hopes to hold them soon
(ap)
... más - more | El consumidor exigente El espíritu de Natura es el de una empresa de belleza cuyo mejor negocio es el respeto por el medio ambiente. Es que, a futuro, an... más - more | La banque du japon lutte contre le retour de la déflation Les autorités japonaises s'efforcent de faciliter l'accès au crédit des entreprises.... más - more | Sin riquelme, a basile le sobran las dudas El entrenador del seleccionado argentino analiza qué equipo formar para enfrentar el miércoles a Chile, ya que no podrá contar con... más - more | El ballet del colón, en el coliseo ... más - more | |
|
|
|