Foreign money is flowing back into Africa’s biggest economies. Nigeria’s inflows jumped sharply, Tanzania drew $1.5 billion for a new industrial park, and a Kenyan bank pushed deeper into Congo.
At the same time, the world’s health agency declared a serious Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of Congo a global emergency. It is spreading across the border into Uganda.
Today’s Africa Intelligence Brief covers the continent’s finance, markets, economy, and politics. We pulled it together from English, French, Arabic, Portuguese, Swahili, and Afrikaans sources.
Nigeria — Money Flows Back In
A Big Jump in Foreign Inflows
Nigeria attracted $10.37 billion of foreign money in the first three months of 2026. That was an 83.8% jump from a year earlier, a strong sign that confidence is returning.
The naira has firmed too, with the gap between its official and street rates nearly closed. Foreign reserves have climbed to about $50 billion, enough to cover more than nine months of imports.
Steadier, but Still Slow
The improvement has let the central bank begin cutting interest rates carefully. After years of painful tightening, that is a notable shift.
Even so, the economy grew just 3.89% in the first quarter, which many say is too slow to create enough jobs. Stability is returning faster than strong growth.
Tanzania — A $1.5 Billion Build-Out
A New Industrial Park
Tanzania attracted $1.5 billion in industrial investment as work began on a new business park at Bagamoyo. The park is meant to draw factories and create jobs.
A separate gas deal worth $1.35 billion was also signed in the region. These are long-term projects that build real things, not quick trades.
Part of a Bigger Trend
The investment fits a wider pattern of money flowing into African construction and industry. More of that money is now coming from within the continent itself.
Global lenders are increasingly lining up to help pay for these projects too. The theme of the week is home-grown money funding Africa’s own growth.
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Kenya — A Bank Pushes Into Congo
Equity Group Expands
Kenya’s Equity Group is expanding deeper into the Democratic Republic of Congo. It plans to launch two insurance businesses there to go with its existing bank.
The move makes sense on the numbers, with its Congo bank’s profit jumping 58%. Congo is a large, fast-growing market that many African banks are chasing.
African Banks Going Regional
The expansion is part of a broader push by African banks beyond their home countries. They are following trade and customers across borders.
It is another example of African companies betting on Africa. Regional growth is increasingly seen as the next big opportunity.
Health — A Serious Outbreak in Congo
A Global Emergency Declared
The World Health Organization has declared an Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of Congo a global health emergency. As of early June, there were 363 confirmed cases and 62 deaths.
The outbreak has spread across the border into Uganda, which has reported 15 cases. Health teams are working to trace contacts and isolate the sick.
Why This One Is Harder
This outbreak involves a strain of the virus for which there is no approved vaccine or treatment. That makes it harder to control than past ones.
The affected area also sits along the Congo River, a major trade and transport route. Health officials are watching border crossings closely to limit the spread.
Banking and Markets — Deals Pick Up
A Big Cross-Border Bank Deal
South Africa’s Nedbank is taking over Kenya’s NCBA Group in a major cross-border banking deal. Kenya’s well-known Kenyatta and Ndegwa families stand to receive more than $170 million in cash and stock.
It is one of the larger African banking deals in recent months. It also shows South African finance reaching deeper into East Africa.
Capital Markets Stir
In Ghana, the drinks maker Kasapreko closed a large share sale worth about 700 million cedi. The company is set to list on the stock market on June 17.
In South Africa, the payments firm Yoco bought an artificial-intelligence startup to build smarter tools for small businesses. African deal-making is clearly picking up.
Around the Continent — A Wider Map
Resources and New Ties
Namibia approved a Chinese company’s uranium project, a sign of continued interest in African resources. Tanzania and Sweden agreed to deepen ties in trade, education, and technology.
Not every story was upbeat, though. In South Africa, the retailer Clicks has lost about 19.7 billion rand in value over five months after a weak outlook.
Looking Ahead
The African Development Bank is backing shared digital systems for aviation and health. The focus is on building lasting institutions, not just one-off deals.
Across the region, leaders are talking up growth, investment, and expansion. The mood, outside the health emergency, is cautiously upbeat.
The Bigger Picture — Home-Grown Money
A Real Shift
The week’s news points to a genuine change in how Africa funds itself. African money is increasingly paying for African factories, banks, and infrastructure.
Nigeria’s returning inflows, Tanzania’s new park, and Equity’s Congo push all tell the same story. Global lenders are helping rather than leading.
The Test Ahead
The question is whether this momentum lasts and spreads beyond a few strong countries. Old problems like slow growth, high debt, and health shocks have not gone away.
The Ebola emergency is a stark reminder of that fragility. For now, though, the direction on investment is encouraging.
The Read
Foreign money is flowing back into Africa‘s biggest economies, with Nigeria’s inflows jumping 83.8% to $10.37 billion as the naira firmed and reserves climbed to about $50 billion. Tanzania drew $1.5 billion for a new industrial park at Bagamoyo, and Kenya’s Equity Group is expanding into Congo with two new insurers.
At the same time, the World Health Organization declared an Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of Congo a global emergency, with 363 confirmed cases and 62 deaths and spread into Uganda. The strain involved has no approved vaccine, and the affected area sits on a major river trade route.
Deal-making picked up too, with South Africa’s Nedbank taking over Kenya’s NCBA, Ghana’s Kasapreko raising money before a June 17 listing, and Yoco buying an AI startup. The thread is home-grown money funding the continent, though slow growth and health shocks are reminders of the fragility underneath.
What to Watch
Today · Nigeria’s foreign inflows jump 83.8% to $10.37 billion
Today · Tanzania draws $1.5 billion for a new industrial park
Today · Kenya’s Equity Group expands into Congo with two insurers
Today · WHO declares the DRC Ebola outbreak a global emergency
Today · South Africa’s Nedbank takes over Kenya’s NCBA Group
Jun 17 · Ghana’s Kasapreko set to list after a large share sale
Ongoing · Whether home-grown investment spreads beyond a few countries
Ongoing · The Ebola outbreak and efforts to contain it across borders
View original source — Rio Times ↗
