African industry is reaching real scale and pulling in money from around the world. Nigeria’s giant Dangote refinery ran past its full capacity for the first time, just as a record stock-market listing nears.
A pan-African lender closed its largest-ever loan, and a $1.35 billion gas terminal was signed in South Africa. The main test now is a rising oil price that squeezes economies reliant on imported fuel.
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 — A Refinery Hits Full Stride
Past Its Own Limit
Nigeria’s Dangote refinery, the largest in Africa, ran past its rated capacity for the first time. In an official test, it processed 700,000 barrels of oil a day.
That is a milestone for a project that took a decade and about $20 billion to build. It means Nigeria can refine more of its own fuel instead of importing it.
A Record Listing Nears
The timing matters, because the refinery is preparing a huge stock-market listing. The sale could value the business at $40 billion to $50 billion.
The plan is to sell up to a tenth of the company, possibly raising as much as $5 billion. There is already around $2 billion of early demand from private investors.
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Pan-Africa — A Record Infrastructure Loan
The Biggest Yet
The Africa Finance Corporation, a lender that funds big projects across the continent, closed its largest-ever loan. The deal was worth $2 billion.
What stood out was who lent the money. Banks from Asia and Europe each made up about a third of the lenders.
Global Money for African Building
That mix shows how much global appetite there now is for African infrastructure. Money from abroad is increasingly willing to fund roads, power, and ports here.
It is a strong sign of confidence in the continent’s long-term build-out. The cash will help pay for projects that take years to complete.
South Africa — A $1.35 Billion Gas Terminal
A Big Energy Deal
In South Africa, a $1.35 billion gas-terminal deal was signed at the Port of Ngqura. It was agreed between Tamasa Energy and the state transport firm Transnet.
The project is set to reshape the energy landscape of the Eastern Cape. It is one of the largest single commitments by a South African businesswoman.
Building Energy Capacity
The terminal would help bring more natural gas into the country. That matters for a nation that has struggled with unreliable power.
It also fits the week’s wider theme of building real energy capacity. The continent is investing heavily in the things that power industry.
Nigeria — A Firmer Currency Lifts Fortunes
The Naira Steadies
Nigeria’s currency, the naira, has been firming after years of turmoil. As it strengthens, the value of big Nigerian companies rises with it.
The banker Jim Ovia’s stake in Zenith Bank has climbed to about $643 million. A steadier currency makes Nigerian assets worth more in dollar terms.
A Market on the Rise
The wider Nigerian stock market has been rallying too. The industrialist Aliko Dangote has added several billion dollars to his wealth this year.
His gains come from cement, refining, and the market’s strong run. The recovery is real, even if everyday growth remains slow.
Egypt — A Tie-Up With Saudi Arabia
Crossing the Red Sea
Egypt’s largest developer, TMG, signed a preliminary deal with Saudi Arabia’s giant wealth fund. The fund manages roughly $925 billion.
The plan is to develop mixed-use property across Saudi Arabia. It extends a long run of expansion for the Egyptian company.
Regional Ambitions
The deal shows African firms reaching into the wealthy Gulf markets. Egyptian builders are exporting their skills beyond their borders.
It also brings the promise of Gulf money flowing back the other way. Ties between North Africa and the Gulf keep deepening.
Nigeria — An Award-Winning Energy Deal
A Landmark Financing
Tony Elumelu’s Heirs Energies won an industry award for its financing deal. The $750 million arrangement was made with the African trade bank Afreximbank.
It was one of the largest energy deals led by an African company. Such deals show local firms taking charge of the continent’s oil and gas.
More Home-Grown Output
Another Nigerian firm, Petralon, has exported more than 350,000 barrels of oil from its fields. Local companies are steadily lifting their production.
This points to a bigger role for African firms in energy. They are no longer leaving the sector mainly to foreign giants.
Ethiopia — Steady Currency Reform
Selling Dollars to the Market
Ethiopia’s central bank has scheduled two foreign-currency sales for June. Together they are worth about $200 million.
The sales are part of a push to free up the country’s tightly controlled currency. The aim is a more open and predictable system.
Reform Across the Region
Ethiopia is not alone in reshaping how its economy works. In West Africa, a recent fall in food prices has helped ease the cost of living.
Several countries are pushing reforms to attract more investment. Steadier prices and currencies are the goal across much of the continent.
The Pressure Point — Costly Oil
An Import Bill That Hurts
The biggest worry for many African economies is the price of oil. Conflict in the Middle East has pushed fuel and shipping costs higher.
Most African countries import their fuel, so higher prices hit hard. They raise the cost of transport, goods, and travel across the continent.
Who Feels It Most
Economies that rely on tourism and imports are the most exposed. Egypt, Kenya, and Tanzania all feel the strain of dearer fuel.
It is the clearest risk to an otherwise improving picture. Cheaper oil would ease the pressure, but for now costs remain high.
The Read
Nigeria’s Dangote refinery, the largest in Africa, ran past its rated capacity for the first time, processing 700,000 barrels a day just as it prepares a stock-market listing that could value it near $50 billion. A pan-African lender, the Africa Finance Corporation, closed its largest-ever loan at $2 billion, with Asian and European banks each making up about a third of the lenders.
In South Africa, a $1.35 billion gas-terminal deal was signed at the Port of Ngqura, while Nigeria’s firming currency lifted the fortunes of bankers and industrialists. Egypt’s largest developer signed a property deal with Saudi Arabia’s giant wealth fund, and an award-winning $750 million energy financing showed African firms taking charge of their own oil and gas.
The clearest risk is a high oil price, driven by Middle East conflict, that squeezes the many African economies reliant on imported fuel. The thread of the week is African industry reaching real scale and drawing global money, even as costs test the more import-dependent countries.
What to Watch
Today · Dangote’s refinery runs past its full capacity at 700,000 barrels a day
Soon · The refinery’s planned listing, valued at $40-50 billion
Today · The Africa Finance Corporation closes a record $2 billion loan
Today · A $1.35 billion gas terminal signed at South Africa’s Port of Ngqura
Today · Nigeria’s firmer currency lifting company values
Today · Egypt’s TMG signs a property deal with Saudi Arabia’s wealth fund
This month · Ethiopia’s $200 million foreign-currency sales
Ongoing · The high oil price squeezing fuel-importing economies
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