Ocnus.Net
Investment Banks turn to Africa in effort to Boost Flagging Profits
By Nick Clark, The Independent, 12/5/08
May 12, 2008 - 3:48:55 PM
Banking
powerhouses including Citigroup and JP Morgan operate in sub-Saharan Africa,
but last week Russian investment bank Renaissance Capital (RenCap) showed signs
of things to come as it bought stakes in brokerages in Ghana and Zambia.
The
group called Africa "strategically important" and said the
investments in New World Investments in Ghana and Pangaea/EMI Securities in
Zambia gave the group an opportunity "to play a role in the exciting
development of both countries' financial markets and their importance in the
region as a whole".
It
said: "Sub-Saharan Africa, excluding South Africa, is expanding rapidly.
There are world class businesses, just without world scale. They need
banking services." So far, few have invested in local operations on
the ground, with only Standard Bank of South Africa buying IBTC in Nigeria.
RenCap,
however, has signalled its intentions to target the region by moving one of its
most senior bankers, Andrew Cornthwaite, to oversee its existing operation in
Nigeria.
Mr
Cornthwaite, also head of RenCap's global investment banking, said: "As
the financial centre of Sub-Saharan Africa, Nigeria is already experiencing
rapid and sustainable economic growth, with an increasingly liquid and dynamic
capital market. This growth and development is poised to continue for
several years."
Sub-Saharan
Africa is gaining in importance for financial firms as the economies develop,
often based on oil and gas discoveries such as in Nigeria and Ghana. The latter
is also trying to position itself as the financial gateway to West Africa.
Other countries interesting the banks include Kenya and Angola.
Companies
have been slow to target the region because of a perception of political risk,
uncertainty and a lack of Western resources and investment banks.
Mr
Cornthwaite said: "The situation is similar to our experience in Russia 15
years ago. There is a business opportunity here, and if you've seen the
movie before, you're in a better position to capitalise," he said.
He
continued: "The Nigerian market turns over $200m (£100m) a day. We
wouldn't be there unless we thought it would hit $1bn in the next five years."
Companies
are looking to investment banks to provide debt and equity capital market
operations, and increasingly mergers and acquisition advice, especially as the
fragmented banking market consolidates.
Mr
Cornthwaite said: "The sophistication is good in most of the existing
African brokerages, although not all are up to international standard.
I'm suitably impressed."
Few
international firms have invested on the ground. Both Citi and JP Morgan
operate on a "fly in, fly out" basis. "There's not a
flight I take, which doesn't have bankers coming into Africa, but they're
always out that night," Mr Cornthwaite said. He added that
international competitors had been slow to target the region but were likely to
target it within five years.
Source: Ocnus.net 2008