This year, a record 1,426 billionaires made it to FORBES’ annual ranking of the world’s richest people. African billionaires occupied a little over 1% of the positions on the list. Here are the 20 Africans who made the cut:
Aliko Dangote, $16.1 billion
Nigerian. Sugar, Cement, Flour
Nigerian-born Aliko Dangote retains his position as Africa’s richest man for the 3rd
year in a row. He is $4.9 billion richer than he was last year on
account of the soaring value of his publicly-listed holdings in Nigerian
blue chips like Dangote Cement, Dangote Sugar, National Salt Company of Nigeria
and Zenith Bank among others. This year, FORBES also accounted for
other assets including his personal portfolio of homes, jets and yacht.
Dangote started building his fortune over three decades ago by trading
in commodities like cement, flour and sugar but became a billionaire by
manufacturing these items. Venerable philanthropist has given away over
$100 million to causes in health, education, flood relief and poverty
alleviation.
Johann Rupert & family, $6.6 billion
Johann Rupert is now South Africa’s
richest man. In the month of March, Rupert is expected to step down as
CEO of Swiss-based luxury goods outfit, Compagnie Financiere Richemont,
which controls premium brands such as Vacheron Constantin, Cartier,
Alfred Dunhill, Montblanc and ChloƩ and which is the source of the bulk
of his fortune. Co-CEOs Richard Lepeu (currently deputy CEO) and Bernard
Fornas (currently head of Cartier) will replace him. Johann Rupert also
owns stakes in investment holding companies Remgro and Reinet.
Nicky Oppenheimer & family, $6.5 billion
In November 2011, Oppenheimer sold his family’s 40% stake in De Beers, the world’s largest diamond producer to mining behemoth Anglo American
for $5.1 billion in an all-cash deal that marked the end of the
Oppenheimer family’s age-long control of De Beers, a relationship that
began when Nicky’s grandfather, Ernest Oppenheimer, took over the firm
in 1927. The Oppenheimer family invests through Tana Africa Capital, a
$300 million private equity joint venture with Singapore state investor
Temasek.
Nassef Sawiris, $6.5 billion
Nassef Sawiris heads Orascom Construction Industries
(OCI), Egypt’s most valuable publicly-traded company. In January, he
announced that OCI was exchanging all global depositary receipts of the
company for newly issued shares of OCI NV on the NYSE Euronext in Amsterdam. Bill Gates
was part of a consortium of U.S investors who provided $1 billion to
help cover payments to shareholders who prefer to tender their OCI
shares for cash.
Reclusive Nigerian billionaire Mike Adenuga
owns Globacom, Nigeria’s second largest mobile phone network. It has 24
million customers in Nigeria and operates in the Republic of Benin. It
also holds licenses in Ghana and the Ivory Coast. Adenuga also owns
Conoil Producing, one of Nigeria’s largest independent
exploration companies as well as a controlling stake in Conoil PLC, a
petroleum marketing company.
Christoffel Wiese is the chairman and the largest individual
shareholder of African low-price supermarket chain, Shoprite. He also
owns a large stake in discount clothes, shoes and textiles chain Pepkor,
where he is executive chairman. His other assets include Lanzerac Manor
& Winery, a five-star hotel that produces its own wine, a private
game reserve in the Kalahari and a significant shareholding in Brait, a
private equity firm.
Born in Swaziland, Nathan Kirsh derives his fortune from Jetro Holdings,
which operates Jetro Cash and Carry stores and Restaurant Depots in the
New York City area. Jetro enjoys a near monopoly in supplying wholesale
goods to small stores and restaurants in the New York City area. Kirsh
is keen on philanthropy and focuses his philanthropic endeavors on
Swaziland. To date, he has supplied more than 10,000 people with
start-up capital for small businesses.
His father was a major shareholder in a small Moroccan insurance
company. Benjelloun took over a small Moroccan insurance company his
father owned in 1988 and built it into RMA Watanya, one of Morocco’s
largest insurance companies. He also owns BMCE Bank, a commercial bank
which has operations in more than a dozen countries.
Patrice Motsepe is the Chairman of African Rainbow Minerals (ARM), a
publicly-traded mining conglomerate which has interests in platinum,
nickel, chrome, iron, manganese, coal, copper and gold. Other assets
include a stake in Sanlam, a publicly traded financial services company
outside Cape Town and South African football club, Mamelodi Sundowns.
The eldest son of Egyptian billionaire Onsi Sawiris, Naguib has sold
off nearly all his shares in Vimpelcom, the Russian telecom giant which
had acquired the Sawiris family’s Orascom Telecom in a cash and stock
deal in 2011. His Orascom Telecom Media and Technology owns a 75% stake
in Koryolink, North Korea’s only cell network.
The second richest man in Morocco sits atop Ynna
Holding Company, which has holdings in hotels, supermarkets and
renewable energy. Chaabi has committed to building a university in
Casablanca in partnership with Indiana State University.
Onsi Sawiris is the legendary patriarch of Egypt’s most powerful
business dynasty. The eponymous Orascom conglomerate, which he helped
found, is involved construction, telecoms and hotels. The companies are
all run by his three sons- Naguib, Samih and Nassef.
The oldest daughter of Angola’s president, Jose Eduardo dos Santos,
Isabel dos Santos owns stakes in several Angolan and Portuguese
companies. Her largest holding is a $1 billion stake in Angolan mobile
phone company, Unitel.
Egyptian. Diversified
With his two brothers, Mohammed Mansour runs the world’s largest GM
dealership. The Mansour Group also owns the largest supermarket chain
in Egypt, the country’s second largest real estate developer, Palm
Hills, and the Philip Morris franchise in Egypt.
The youngest of Egypt’s three Mansour brothers, Yasseen derives the
bulk of his fortune from the family business, the largest seller of GM
vehicles in the world. Yasseen is also the chairman of Palm Hills,
Egypt’s second largest real estate developer.
The eldest of the Mansour brothers owns stakes in real estate
developer Palm Hills, Egypt’s largest supermarket chain, Metro, and
Mansour Group, which is the largest seller of GM vehicles.
Sacco’s father, Guido Sacco, ventured into mining in 1928 when he
established Gloucester Manganese Mines. He went on to acquire other
mining assets across South Africa which formed the larger Assore Group.
The company was listed on the Johannesburg Stock Exchange over 60 years
ago. Desmond, a trained geologist, joined the company in 1968 and was
appointed to the group’s board in 1974. When Guido retired in 1992,
Desmond became chairman and managing director. He is Assore’s single
largest shareholder.
Mohamed Al Fayed, $1.4 billion
Mohammed Al-Fayed previously owned the Harrod’s department store in London, which he sold in 2010 to Qatar Holding for a reported $2.4 billion. He owns the famed Hotel Ritz in
Paris which he closed in August 2012 to start construction on what will
be the hotel’s biggest redo since it was built in 1898. Al Fayed also
owns Fulham Football club and a castle in Scotland.
Anas Sefrioui, $1.3 billion
In 1998, Anas Sefrioui’s real estate development company, Groupe
Addoha, was awarded a contract to build 20,000 units of
government-subsidized housing under the patronage of Morocco’s late King
Hassan II. In 2005, his company won another $1 billion state contract
to build more housing units. Groupe Addoha went public in 2006 and
Sefrioui owns over 60% of the company’s preferred stock.
Stephen Saad became a millionaire at the age of 29 after he sold his
stake in the drug business Covan Zurich for $3 million. He went on to
co-found Aspen Pharmacare in 1997 which among other things, manufactures
GlaxoSmithKline’s smaller brands. Aspen is now the largest
publicly-traded drug manufacturer on the Johannesburg Stock Exchange.
Stephen is the largest individual shareholder in Aspen, while
GlaxoSmithKline is the company’s largest institutional shareholder.
Aspen’s share price has soared in the past year, transforming Saad into a
billionaire.
Source: Forbes
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