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HomeAfrican NewsAfrica: Dangote Nonetheless Africa's Richest Man As Forbes Unveils 2024 Listing

Africa: Dangote Nonetheless Africa’s Richest Man As Forbes Unveils 2024 Listing

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The president of the Dangote Group, Aliko Dangote, has retained his place because the richest individual in Africa with a web value of $13.9 billion within the 2024 Forbes listing of 20 of Africa’s Richest billionaires launched yesterday.

In response to Forbes, the fortunes of Africa’s wealthiest individuals rebounded barely up to now 12 months, reversing the decline of their fortunes from a 12 months in the past, although they had been nonetheless off their all-time highs.

The New Jersey-based media outfit identified that the 20 billionaires on the 2024 Forbes listing of Africa’s Richest had been value a mixed $82.4 billion, which was up $900 million from final 12 months’s $81.5 billion.

Nonetheless, government chairman of Geregu Energy Plc and a non-executive director FBN Holdings, Femi Otedola, was named among the many 20 richest individuals in Africa. Otedola was listed because the nineteenth richest individual in Africa with web value of $1.1 billion.

Particularly, Forbes attributed the development within the web value of these listed to the return of Otedola, whom, it stated, final appeared on the Forbes Africa listing in 2017 when he held a controlling stake in gasoline distributor, Forte Oil.

“Otedola phased out his oil investments throughout a authorities push to privatise the nation’s vitality enterprise in 2013, utilizing a Forte subsidiary to buy Geregu, a public energy technology plant.

“He owned about 90 per cent of Geregu when it was listed on the Nigerian alternate’s Principal Board in 2022, however has since offered shares to institutional buyers, which embrace Afreximbank’s Fund for Export Growth in Africa and the State Grid Company of China.

“His 73 per cent stake in Geregu is value greater than $850 million, about three-quarters of his $1.1 billion fortune, which places him at No. 20 on the listing.

“After taking Otedola’s comeback into consideration, Africa’s billionaires dipped barely, however nonetheless fared higher than the decline of 4 per cent final 12 months, when African markets light in sync with fairness values all over the world.

“This 12 months, African equities joined a late-year international rally, with the S&P All Africa index rising 10 per cent within the remaining two months of 2023 however nonetheless ended down greater than 9% within the 12 months by way of January 8, 2024,” Forbes acknowledged.

Nonetheless, Dangote was intently adopted by Johann Rupert and Household from South Africa, with web value of $10.1 billion; one other South African businessman, Nicky Oppenheimer and his household, with web value of $9.4 billion; Nassef Sawiris with web value of $8.7 billion; Nigeria’s Mike Adenuga with web value of $6.9 billion and the chairman of BUA Group, Abdulsamad Rabiu, with web value of $5.9 billion, in that order.

This 12 months South Africa claimed six spots on the rating, adopted by Egypt with 5 and Nigeria with 4. Algeria, Tanzania and Zimbabwe every has one billionaire on the listing, whereas Morocco has two.

Moreover, Forbes famous that Africa “stays one of many world’s hardest locations to construct – and maintain onto – a billion-dollar fortune, as international buyers stay leery of its inventory exchanges, companies wrestle in opposition to strained economies, poor infrastructure and risky alternate charges, whereas altering political winds could make, enhance or bust personal fortunes.”

It quoted head of Macro Technique at asset supervisor, FIM Companions, Charles Robertson, to have famous that entrepreneurs usually face restricted entry to capital and populations with little disposable earnings to spend money on new firms or the inventory market.

A turbulent 2023 additionally made African equities much less enticing for international buyers.

“You’ve got obtained two negatives for buyers. Weakening home [currencies], which is pushing up inflation, and tax rises, which is hurting the businesses they’re investing in,” Robertson added.