Source: www.cnbcafrica.com
Buoyed by rising stock markets and commodity prices, Africa’s billionaires are collectively wealthier than a year ago. The 23 billionaires that Forbes found in Africa – up from 21 billionaires last year – are worth a combined $75.4 billion, compared to $70 billion in January 2017.
The richest African, for the seventh year in a row, is Nigerian cement and commodities tycoon Aliko Dangote, with a net worth that Forbes pegs at $12.2 billion. That’s up $100 million from a year ago. Dangote is looking beyond cement – his most valuable asset – and has been investing in a fertilizer production company and a large oil refinery. Dangote Fertilizer is expected to start operations in the second quarter this year.
Number two on the list is diamond mining heir Nicky Oppenheimer of South Africa, with a net worth of $7.7 billion, up $700 million from last year. Oppenheimer is one of eight South Africans on the list, making it the African country with the most billionaires.
Last year, South Africa and Egypt tied with six billionaires each. Boosting the South African ranks this year: newcomer Michiel le Roux, the founder and former chairman of Johannesburg-listed Capitec Bank Holdings, whose stock has climbed more than 50% in the past year, making Le Roux a new billionaire worth $1.2 billion. South African mining tycoon Desmond Sacco, chairman of listed Assore Group, returns to the list following a stock price surge of some 60% in the past 12 months. Sacco last appeared as a billionaire on the Africa’s Richest list in 2012 with a $1.4 billion fortune. (He also appeared on the 2014 Forbes list of the World’s Billionaires, worth $1.3 billion.)
One South African list member wouldn’t have made the cut a month ago. In December 2017, the share price of retailer Steinhoff International plunged after the company divulged accounting irregularities. That pushed the net worth of Steinhoff’s then-chairman Christoffel Wiese below $1 billion on December 7. (Wiese resigned as chairman in December.) In early January the company said it would restate its financial results as far back as 2015 and the share price rebounded enough to put Wiese back in billionaire territory, at least for the moment. Forbes calculated his net worth on January 5 (the day we measured all the billionaires fortunes) at $1.1 billion, down substantially from $5.5 billion a year ago. (As of Jan. 10, Steinhoff stock dropped again, knocking Wiese’s net worth below $1 billion.)
Zimbabwe gets its first billionaire this year: telecom magnate Strive Masiyiwa, who chairs the Econet Group. Shares of Zimbabwe-listed mobile phone network Econet Wireless Zimbabwe have surged in value over the past year; Masiyiwa owns more than half of that company. He also has a majority stake in fiber optic firm Liquid Telecom, which raised $700 million in a bond offering in July 2017. Forbes estimates Masiyiwa’s net worth at $1.7 billion.
Just two of the 23 list members are women, unchanged from last year. Isabel dos Santos, the daughter of Angola’s longtime former president, Jose Eduardo dos Santos, is worth an estimated $2.7 billion this year, down from $3.2 billion a year ago. Her net worth dropped in part due to a lower value for Banco BCI, an Angolan bank; its book value plunged in 2016 amid a tough year for the oil producing country. The other woman is Nigeria’s Folorunsho Alakija, whose estimated $1.6 billion fortune lies in oil exploration firm Famfa Oil, which is partnered with Chevron and Petrobras on a lucrative offshore oil field.
Mohammed Dewji of Tanzania is the youngest on the list, at age 42. He inherited a textile and edible oils group from his father and has expanded its operations. Forbes puts his net worth at $1.5 billion. The oldest list member is Onsi Sawiris of Egypt, age 88; he started Orascom Construction in 1950. It was nationalized by the government of Abdel Nasser and Sawiris created another construction firm from scratch. Two of his three sons are also billionaires, including Nassef Sawiris, who at $6.8 billion is Egypt’s richest man. That’s an increase from $5.3 billion a year ago thanks to upticks in the share price of several of his holdings: shoemaker Adidas, cement giant LaFargeHolcim, and fertilizer maker OCI.
One person dropped off since last year’s list: Anas Sefrioui of Morocco. The share price of his homebuilder, Douja Promotion Groupe Addoha, fell about 30% in the past year, pushing his net worth down to $950 million.
Fortunes rose since last year for 13 of the 23 list members, fell for four people and stayed the same for three people. The list members hail from a total of eight countries: eight from South Africa, six from Egypt, three from Nigeria, two from Morocco and one list member each from Algeria, Angola, Tanzania and Zimbabwe.
Africa’s Billionaires List;
1. Aliko Dangote
Net worth: $12.2 billion
Origin of wealth: Cement, sugar, flour
2. Nicky Oppenheimer
Net worth: $7.7 billion
Origin of wealth: Diamonds
3. Johann Rupert
Net worth: $7.2 billion
Origin of wealth: Luxury goods
4. Nassef Sawiris
Net worth: $6.8 billion
Origin of wealth: Construction, chemicals
5. Mike Adenuga
Net worth: $5.3 billion
Origin of wealth: Telecom, oil
6. Issad Rebrab
Net worth: $4 billion
Origin of wealth: Food
7. Naguib Sawiris
Net worth: $4 billion
Origin of wealth: Telecom
8. Koos Bekker
Net worth: $2.8 billion
Origin of wealth: Media, investments
9. Isabel dos Santos
Net worth: $2.7 billion
Origin of wealth: Investments
10. Mohamed Mansour
Net worth: $2.7 billion
Origin of wealth: Diversified
11. Patrice Motsepe
Net worth: $2.4 billion
Origin of wealth: Mining
12. Aziz Akhannouch
Net worth: $2.2 billion
Origin of wealth: Petroleum, diversified
13. Yasseen Mansour
Net worth: $1.9 billion
Origin of wealth: Diversified
14. Strive Masiyiwa
Net worth: $1.7 billion
Origin of wealth: Telecom
15. Folorunsho Alakija
Net worth: $1.6 billion
Origin of wealth: Oil
16. Othman Benjelloun
Net worth: $1.6 billion
Origin of wealth: Banking, insurance
17. Mohammed Dewji
Net worth: $1.5 billion
Origin of wealth: Diversified
18. Youssef Mansour
Net worth: $1.4 billion
Origin of wealth: Diversified
19. Michiel le Roux
Net worth: $1.2 billion
Origin of wealth: Banking
20. Stephen Saad
Net worth: $1.2 billion
Origin of wealth: Pharmaceuticals
21. Desmond Sacco
Net worth: $1.1 billion
Origin of wealth: Mining
22. Onsi Sawiris
Net worth: $1.1 billion
Origin of wealth: Construction, telecom
23. Christoffel Wiese
Net worth: $1.1 billion
Origin of wealth: Retail
Source: www.cnbcafrica.com
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