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    Tuesday, February 11, 2020

    Dangote Retains Position as Africa's Richest Man, Adenuga Makes Top Three

    Africa’s billionaires are as a group richer than a year ago. Altogether, the continent’s 20 billionaires are worth a combined $73.4 billion, up from $68.7 billion a year ago.

    For the ninth year in a row, Nigeria’s billionaire businessman and President/CEO of Dangote Group, Aliko Dangote, has topped Forbes Africa’s Billionaires list for 2020, worth an estimated $10.1 billion, down from $10.3 billion a year ago amid a slightly lower stock price for his Dangote Cement, his largest holding. The much-heralded oil refinery that Dangote is building in Nigeria is still at least a year away from completion.

    The list according to Forbes captures only eight countries who have billionaires; Egypt and South Africa are tied with five billionaires each, followed by Nigeria with four and Morocco with two.

    See the full list of Africa’s billionaires below:


    • Aliko Dangote $10.1 billion
    • Nassef Sawiris $8 billion
    • Mike Adenuga $7.7 billion
    • (3) Nicky Oppenheimer $7.7 billion
    • Johann Rupert $6.5 billion
    • Issad Rebrab $4.4 billion
    • Mohamed Mansour $3.3 billion
    • Abdulsamad Rabiu $3.1 billion
    • Naguib Sawiris $3 billion
    • Patrice Motsepe $2.6 billion
    • Koos Bekker – $2.5 billion
    • Yasseen Mansour – $2.3 billion
    • Isabel dos Santos – $2.2 billion
    • Youssef Mansour – $1.9 billion
    • Aziz Akhannouch – $1.7 billion
    • Mohammed Dewji – $1.6 billion
    • Othman Benjelloun – $1.4 billion
    • Michiel Le Roux – $1.3 billion
    • Strive Masiyiwa – $1.1 billion
    • Folorunsho Alakija – $1 billion
    The Forbes list tracks the wealth of African billionaires who reside in Africa or have their primary businesses there, thus excluding Sudanese-born billionaire Mo Ibrahim, who is a U.K. citizen, and billionaire London resident Mohamed Al-Fayed, an Egyptian citizen. (Strive Masiyiwa, a citizen of Zimbabwe and a London resident, appears on the list due to his expansive telecom holdings in Africa; Isabel dos Santos, a citizen of Angola, has been living in Europe but retains assets in Angola—although they were recently frozen by a court in Angola).

    The net worths is calculated using stock prices and currency exchange rates from the close of business on Friday, January 10, 2020. To value privately held businesses, we couple estimates of revenues or profits with prevailing price-to-sales or price-to-earnings ratios for similar public companies. 

    Some list members grow richer or poorer within weeks—or days—of our measurement date.

    1. Aliko Dangote
    Net worth: $10.1 billion
    Origin of wealth: Cement, sugar
    Age: 62
    Country: Nigeria
    Residence: Lagos
    Education: Al-Azhar University, Bachelor of Arts/Science
    Dangote, Africa’s richest man, founded and chairs Dangote Cement, the continent’s largest cement producer. He owns nearly 85% of publicly-traded Dangote Cement through a holding company. Dangote Cement produces 45.6 million metric tons annually and has operations in 10 countries across Africa. Dangote also owns stakes in publicly-traded salt, sugar and flour manufacturing companies. Dangote Refinery has been under construction for three years and is expected to be one of the world’s largest oil refineries once complete. 

    Did You Know?
    Dangote’s grandfather was a successful trader of rice and oats in Kano, Nigeria’s second largest city.
    Dangote told Forbes that when he was young, he bought sweets, gave them to others to sell, and he kept the profits.

    2. Nassef Sawiris
    Net worth: $8 billion
    Origin of wealth: Construction, chemicals
    Age: 58
    Country:  Egypt
    Residence: Cairo
    Education: University of Chicago
    Nassef Sawiris is a scion of Egypt’s wealthiest family. His brother Naguib is also a billionaire. Sawiris split Orascom Construction Industries into two entities in 2015: OCI and Orascom Construction. He runs OCI, one of the world’s largest nitrogen fertilizer producers, with plants in Texas and Iowa; it trades on the Euronext Amsterdam exchange. Orascom Construction, an engineering and building firm, trades on the Cairo exchange and Nasdaq Dubai. His holdings include stakes in cement giant Lafarge Holcim and Adidas; he sits on the supervisory board of Adidas.

    Did You Know?
    A University of Chicago graduate, he donated $24.1 million to the school in 2019 to aid Egyptian students and fund an executive education program.
    Nassef Sawiris teamed up with Fortress Investment Group’s Wes Edens to purchase a majority stake in Aston Villa Football Club.

    3. Mike Adenuga
    Net worth: $7.7 billion
    Origin of wealth: Telecom, oil
    Age: 66
    Country: Nigeria
    Residence: Lagos
    Education: Pace University, Master of Business
    Adenuga, Nigeria’s second richest man, built his fortune in telecom and oil production. His mobile phone network, Globacom, is the third largest operator in Nigeria, with 43 million subscribers. His oil exploration outfit, Conoil Producing, operates six oil blocks in the Niger Delta. Adenuga got an MBA at Pace University in New York, supporting himself as a student by working as a taxi driver. He made his first million at age 26 selling lace and distributing soft drinks.

    4. Nicky Oppenheimer & family
    Net worth: $7.7 billion
    Origin of wealth: Diamonds
    Age: 74
    Country: South Africa
    Residence: Johannesburg
    Education: Oxford University Christ Church, Master of Arts/Science
    Oppenheimer, heir to his family’s fortune, sold his 40% stake in diamond firm DeBeers to mining group Anglo American for $5.1 billion in cash in 2012. He was the third generation of his family to run DeBeers, and took the company private in 2001. For 85 years until 2012, the Oppenheimer family occupied a controlling spot in the world’s diamond trade. In 2014, Oppenheimer started Fireblade Aviation in Johannesburg, which operates chartered flights with its fleet of three planes and two helicopters. He owns at least 720 square miles of conservation land across South Africa, Botswana and Zimbabwe.

    Did You Know?
    Oppenheimer owns Tswalu Kalahari Reserve, the largest private game reserve in South Africa.
    Oppenheimer is a sports fan and plays squash, golf and cricket. Notepads in his office read: “Things I must do before cricket”.

    5. Johann Rupert & family
    Net worth: $6.5 billion
    Origin of wealth: Luxury goods
    Age: 69
    Country: South Africa
    Residence: Cape Town
    Rupert is chairman of Swiss luxury goods firm Compagnie Financiere Richemont. The company is best known for the brands Cartier and Montblanc. It was formed in 1998 through a spinoff of assets owned by Rembrandt Group Limited (now Remgro Limited), which his father Anton formed in the 1940s. He owns a 7% stake in diversified investment firm Remgro, which he chairs, as well as 25% of Reinet, an investment holding co. based in Luxembourg. In recent years, Rupert has been a vocal opponent of plans to allow fracking in the Karoo, a region of South Africa where he owns land.

    Did You Know?
    He also owns part of the Saracens English rugby team and Anthonij Rupert Wines, named after his deceased brother.
    Rupert says his biggest regret was not buying half of Gucci when he had the opportunity to do so for just $175 million.

    6. Issad Rebrab & family
    Net worth: $4.4 billion
    Origin of wealth: Food
    Age: 76
    Country: Algeria
    Residence: Algiers
    Issad Rebrab is the founder and CEO of Cevital, Algeria’s biggest privately-held company. Cevital owns one of the largest sugar refineries in the world, with the capacity to produce 2 million tons a year. Cevital owns European companies, including French home appliances maker Groupe Brandt, an Italian steel mill and a German water purification company. After serving eight months in jail on charges of corruption, Rebrab was released on January 1, 2020. He denies any wrongdoing.

    Did You Know?
    Rebrab is the son of militants who fought for Algeria’s independence from France.
    Cevital helped finance a biopic on Algerian resistance hero Larbi Ben M’hidi, who was executed by the French in 1957.

    7. Mohamed Mansour
    Net worth: $3.3 billion
    Origin of wealth: Diversified
    Age: 71
    Country: Egypt
    Residence: Cairo
    Education: Auburn University, Master of Business Administration
    Mansour oversees family conglomerate Mansour Group, which was founded by his father Loutfy (D.1976) in 1952 and has 60,000 employees. Mansour established General Motors dealerships in Egypt in 1975, later becoming one of GM’s biggest distributors worldwide. Mansour Group also has exclusive distribution rights for Caterpillar equipment in Egypt and seven other African countries. He served as Egypt’s Minister of Transportation from 2006 to 2009 under the Hosni Mubarak regime. His brothers Yasseen and Youssef, who share ownership in the family group, are also billionaires; his son Loutfy heads private equity arm Man Capital.

    8. Abdulsamad Rabiu
    Net worth: $3.1 billion
    Origin of wealth: Cement, sugar
    Age: 59
    Country: Nigeria
    Rabiu is the founder of BUA Group, a Nigerian conglomerate active in cement production, sugar refining and real estate. In early January 2020, Rabiu merged his privately-owned Obu Cement company with listed firm Cement Co. of Northern Nigeria, which he controlled. The combined firm, called BUA Cement Plc, trades on the Nigerian stock exchange; Rabiu owns 98.5% of it. Rabiu, the son of a businessman, inherited land from his father. He set up his own business in 1988 importing iron, steel and chemicals.

    9. Naguib Sawiris
    Net worth: $3 billion
    Origin of wealth: Telecom
    Age: 65
    Country: Egypt
    Residence: Cairo
    Education: Swiss Federal Polytechnical Institute, Master of Science; Swiss Federal Polytechnical Institute, Bachelor of Arts/Science
    Naguib Sawiris is a scion of Egypt’s wealthiest family. His brother Nassef is also a billionaire. He built a fortune in telecom, selling Orascom Telecom in 2011 to Russian telecom firm VimpelCom (now Veon) in a multibillion-dollar transaction. He’s chairman of Orascom TMT Investments, which has stakes in a major asset manager in Egypt and an Italian internet company, among others. Family holding La Mancha has stakes in Evolution Mining, Endeavour Mining and Golden Star Resources, which operate gold mines in Africa and Australia. Sawiris is a majority owner in Euronews. He’s also developed a luxury resort called Silversands in Grenada.

    Did You Know?
    Sawiris helped found The Free Egyptians, a liberal political party, at the onset of Egypt’s uprisings in 2011. 
    In 2015, he offered to buy a Greek or Italian island to house Syrian refugees, but Greece and Italy turned him down.

    10. Patrice Motsepe
    Net worth: $2.6 billion
    Origin of wealth: Mining
    Age: 57
    Country: South Africa
    Residence: Johannesburg
    Motsepe, the founder and chairman of African Rainbow Minerals, became a billionaire in 2008 – the first black African on the Forbes list. In 2016, he launched a new private equity firm, African Rainbow Capital, focused on investing in Africa. Motsepe also has a stake in Sanlam, a listed financial services firm, and is the president and owner of the Mamelodi Sundowns Football Club. He became the first black partner at law firm Bowman Gilfillan in Johannesburg, and then started a contracting business doing mine scut work. In 1994, he bought low-producing gold mine shafts and later turned them profitable.

    11. Koos Bekker
    Net worth: $2.5 billion
    Origin of wealth: Media, investments
    Age: 67
    Country: South Africa
    Residence: Cape Town
    Education: Columbia Business School, Master of Business Administration; University of Witwatersrand, LLB
    Bekker is revered for transforming South African newspaper publisher Naspers into an ecommerce investor and cable TV powerhouse. He led Naspers to invest in Chinese Internet and media firm Tencent in 2001 – by far the most profitable of the bets he made on companies elsewhere. In 2019, Naspers put some assets into two publicly-traded companies, entertainment firm MultiChoice Group and Prosus, which contains the Tencent stake. It sold a 2% stake in Tencent in March 2018, its first time reducing its holding, but stated at the time it would not sell again for three years. Bekker, who retired as the CEO of Naspers in March 2014, returned as chairman in April 2015.

    Did You Know?
    His Babylonstoren estate, nearly 600 acres in South Africa’s Western Cape region, features architecture dating back to 1690, a farm, orchard and vineyard and more.
    Over the summer of 2015, he sold more than 70% of his Naspers shares.

    12. Yasseen Mansour
    Net worth: $2.3 billion
    Origin of wealth:  Diversified
    Age: 58
    Country: Egypt
    Residence: Cairo
    Education: George Washington University,
    Bachelor of Arts/Science
    Mansour is a shareholder in family-owned conglomerate Mansour Group, which was founded by his father Loutfy (d.1976) in 1952. Mansour Group is the exclusive distributor of GM vehicles and Caterpillar equipment in Egypt and several other countries. His brothers Mohamed and Youssef are also billionaires and part owners of Mansour Group. He’s chairman of Palm Hills Developments, one of Egypt’s biggest real estate developers.

    Did You Know?
    Mansour Group is the sole franchisee of McDonald’s in Egypt, as well as the distributor of Gauloises cigarettes.

    13. Isabel dos Santos
    Net worth: $2.2 billion
    Origin of wealth: Investments
    Age: 46
    Country: Angola
    Education: King’s College London, Bachelor of Arts/Science
    Dos Santos is the oldest daughter of Angola’s longtime former president, Jose Eduardo dos Santos, who stepped down in fall 2017. Her father made her head of Sonangol, Angola’s state oil firm, in June 2016, but Angola’s new president removed her from that role in November 2017. Forbes research found that while Isabel’s father was president, she ended up with stakes in Angolan companies including banks and a telecom firm. She owns shares of Portuguese companies, including telecom and cable TV firm Nos SGPS. A spokesperson for Isabel told Forbes that she “is an independent business woman and a private investor representing solely her own interests.” In December 2019, an Angolan court issued an order freezing her stakes in Angolan companies, part of a suit about funds she owes to the state oil firm.

    Did You Know?
    Isabel dos Santos is nicknamed “the princess” in Angola.
    Santos’ mother, Tatiana Kukanova, met her father while he was a student in Azerbaijan. The couple later divorced.

    14. Youssef Mansour
    Net worth: $1.9 billion
    Origin of wealth: Diversified
    Age: 74
    Country: Egypt
    Residence: Cairo
    Education: Auburn University, Master of Business Administration; North Carolina State University, Bachelor of Science in Engineering

    Mansour is chairman of family-owned conglomerate Mansour Group, which was founded by his father Loutfy (d.1976) in 1952. Mansour Group is the exclusive distributor of GM vehicles and Caterpillar equipment in Egypt and several other countries. He oversees the consumer goods division, which includes supermarket chain Metro, and sole distribution rights for L’Oreal in Egypt. Younger brothers Mohamed and Yasseen are also billionaires and part owners of Mansour Group.

    Did You Know?
    Former Egypt President Gamal Abdel Nasser nationalized his father’s original cotton trading business.
    Mansour is a founding member of the American Egyptian Chamber of Commerce.

    15. Aziz Akhannouch & family
    Net worth: $1.7 billion
    Origin of wealth: Petroleum, diversified
    Age: 59
    Country: Morocco
    Residence: Casablanca
    Education: Universite de Sherbrooke, Master of Business Administration
    Aziz Akhannouch is the majority owner of Akwa Group, a multibillion-dollar conglomerate founded by his father and a partner, Ahmed Wakrim, in 1932. It has interests in petroleum, gas and chemicals through publicly-traded Afriquia Gaz and Maghreb Oxygene. Akhannouch is Morocco’s Minister of Agriculture and Fisheries and the president of a royalist political party.

    Did You Know?
    His wife Salwa Idrissi runs her own company, which has franchises for Gap, Gucci and Ralph Lauren in Morocco.

    16. Mohammed Dewji
    Net worth: $1.6 billion
    Origin of wealth:  Diversified
    Age: 44
    Country: Tanzania
    Residence: Dar es Salaam
    Mohammed Dewji is the CEO of MeTL, a Tanzanian conglomerate founded by his father in the 1970s. MeTL is active in textile manufacturing, flour milling, beverages and edible oils in eastern, southern and central Africa. MeTL operates in at least six African countries and has ambitions to expand to several more. Dewji, Tanzania’s only billionaire, signed the Giving Pledge in 2016, promising to donate at least half his fortune to philanthropic causes. Dewji was reportedly kidnapped at gunpoint in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, in October 2018 and released after nine days.

    Did You Know?
    Dewji retired from Tanzania’s parliament in early 2015 after completing two terms.
    Dewji, who is known as Mo (short for Mohammed), launched Mo Cola several years ago to compete with Coca Cola.

    17. Othman Benjelloun & family
    Net worth: $1.4 billion
    Origin of wealth: Banking, insurance
    Age: 87
    Country: Morocco
    Residence: Casablanca
    Education: Ecole Polytechnique de Lausanne, Diploma
    Benjelloun is CEO of BMCE Bank of Africa, which has a presence in more than 20 African countries. His father was a shareholder in RMA Watanya, a Moroccan insurance company; Benjelloun built it into a leading insurer. Through his holding company FinanceCom, he has a stake in the Moroccan arm of French telecom firm Orange. He inaugurated in 2014 a $500 million plan to build the 55-story Mohammed VI Tower in Rabat. It will be one of the tallest buildings in Africa. FinanceCom is part of a project to develop a multibillion-dollar tech city in Tangiers that is expected to host 200 Chinese companies.

    Did You Know?
    He co-owns Ranch Adarouch, one of the biggest cattle breeders in Africa.
    Benjelloun and his wife received the David Rockefeller Bridging Leadership Award for building schools in rural Morocco in 2016.

    18. Michiel Le Roux
    Net worth: $1.3 billion
    Origin of wealth: Banking
    Age: 70
    Country: South Africa
    Residence: Stellenbosch
    Le Roux of South Africa founded Capitec Bank in 2001 and owns about an 11% stake. The bank, which trades on the Johannesburg Stock Exchange, targets South Africa’s emerging middle class. He served as chairman of the board of Capitec from 2007 to 2016 and has continued on as a board member. Le Roux previously ran Boland Bank, a small regional bank in Cape Town’s hinterland.

    Did You Know?
    The bank has more than 800 branches and over 13,000 employees.
    Fellow South African Jannie Mouton’s PSG Group owns a 30% stake in Capitec Bank.

    19. Strive Masiyiwa
    Net worth: $1.1 billion
    Origin of wealth: Telecom
    Age: 58
    Country: Zimbabwe
    Residence: London
    Education: University of Wales, Bachelor of Engineering
    Masiyiwa overcame protracted government opposition to launch mobile phone network Econet Wireless Zimbabwe in his country of birth in 1998. He owns just over 50% of the publicly-traded Econet Wireless Zimbabwe, which is one part of his larger Econet Group. Masiyiwa also owns just over half of private company Liquid Telecom, which provides fiber optic and satellite services to telecom firms across Africa. His other assets include stakes in mobile phone networks in Burundi and Lesotho, and investments in fintech and power distribution firms in Africa. He and his wife Tsitsi founded the Higherlife Foundation, which supports orphaned and poor children in Zimbabwe, South Africa, Burundi and Lesotho.

    Did You Know?            
    After studying at university in Britain, Masiyiwa worked at ZPTC, Zimbabwe’s phone company.
    He left ZPTC to start an engineering services firm, then sold it and founded Econet Wireless Zimbabwe, but had to battle the government in court for years

    20. Folorunso Alakija
    Net worth: $1 billion
    Origin of wealth: Oil
    Age: 69
    Country: Nigeria
    Residence: Lagos
    Folorunso Alakija is vice chair of Famfa Oil, a Nigerian oil exploration company with a stake in Agbami Oilfield, a prolific offshore asset. Famfa Oil’s partners include Chevron and Petrobras. Alakija’s first company was a fashion label whose customers included the wife of former Nigerian president Ibrahim Babangida. The Nigerian government awarded Alakija’s company an oil prospecting license in 1993, which was later converted to an oil mining lease. The Agbami field has been operating since 2008; Famfa Oil says it will likely operate through 2024.

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