Dangote is Africa’s first $20billion man
Nigerian billionaire and Africa’s richest man Aliko Dangote has become
the first African entrepreneur to lay claim to a $20 billion fortune as
the stock value of his largest holding,Dangote Cement, leaped just about three-fourths since March when Forbes released its annualranking of the world’s richest people.
Aliko Dangote’s 93 per cent stake in the cement company is now worth
$19.5 billion. Add this to his controlling stakes in other
publicly-listed companies like Dangote Sugar and National Salt Company
of Nigeria and his significant shareholdings in other blue-chips like
Zenith Bank, UBA Group and Dangote Flour; his extensive real estate
portfolio, jets, yachts and current cash position, which includes more
than $300 million in recently awarded Dangote Cement dividends, Dangote
is now worth more than $20 billion.
Put into context, the
Nigerian billionaire is now among the top 25 richest people in the
world, richer than Russia’s richest man, Alisher Usmanov, richer than
India’s Lakshmi Mittal and running neck and neck with India’s Mukesh
Ambani. He is catching up to such Americans as Google’s billionaire
founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin.
The unprecedented surge in
Dangote Cement’s share price is largely a market response to the
company’s impressive 2013 Q1 results.
The cement manufacturer’s
unaudited results for the three months ending March 31 showed that the
company’s pre-tax profit rose to $339 million, representing an 80.6%
increase from last year and a strong indicator of the company’s future
earning potential. The results also indicate a 79.5 % rise in its
earnings per share over the corresponding period last year.
Explaining the company’s share price boost in an email to Forbes, Carl
Franklin, Dangote Cement’s Head of Investor Relations in the U.K said
that in the first quarter of 2013, the company had a huge increase in
demand across Nigeria, gas supply improved considerably and the capacity
was much more ramped up.
“So Q1 was the first sign of just how
profitable we can be in Nigeria. The amazing thing is that 66% of our
gas-fired production in Q1 was done at 84% gas. Imagine what would
happen to margins if we did the same amount at 95%. This has given
investors a good sense of what we can really do when everything goes in
the right direction,” Franklin said.
With a current market cap
of $20.5 billion, Dangote Cement becomes the first Nigerian company to
achieve a market capitalization of over $20 billion.
“It’s
certainly a landmark for a Nigerian company and we’re proud to be the
first to achieve it. Obviously we are focusing on building long-term and
sustainable value for shareholders through our investments in Nigeria
and Africa. Nigeria is a very entrepreneurial country and I can assure
you that other companies will follow us in achieving this.”
Other companies might eventually achieve this, but it’s going to take a
bit of time. Dangote Cement currently accounts for more than a quarter
of the total market capitalization of the Nigerian Stock Exchange. The
second largest company on the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE) is currently
Nigerian Breweries, West Africa’s largest manufacturer of Alcoholic and
non-alcoholic beverages. The company has a market cap of $8.5 billion.
Dangote debuted on the FORBES billionaires list in 2008 with a fortune
we pegged at $3.3 billion. His fortune dropped to $2.5 billion in 2009
and plunged further to $2.1 billion in 2010. His fortune surged 557% in
2011 to $13.8 billion after he took Dangote Cement public. He dropped
to $11.2 billion in last year’s rankings, but rebounded at $16.1 billion
this year. Since March, his fortune has jumped another 30%.
Dangote was destined to shine in business. At age 8, he apparently gave
packets of sweets he had made to the house servants to sell for him. His
father Mohammed Dangote was a successful businessman and an associate
of his maternal uncle Alhaji Sanusi Dantata. Dantata and his brother
controlled the trade in kola nuts and livestock conducted by 200 agents.
Dangote started building his fortune over three decades ago after
taking a loan from Sanusi Dantata. He started trading in commodities
like flour, sugar and cement.
He became a billionaire by later
manufacturing these items. He started making pasta, salt, sugar and
flour in 1997. But he found his gold mine in cement, when he was awarded
a government’s state owned cement business in 2000 and began building
his own plant in 2003. He listed Dangote Cement in 2010.
Today,
it is Africa’s largest cement company providing cement to Nigeria and
other African countries that otherwise would likely have to pay to
import much of the materials.
Dangote still likely has bigger
ambitions. He told Forbes Wealth Editor Luisa Kroll at Davos in 2011
that he expected his firm to have a market cap of $60 billion within
five years. At $20.5 billion, Dangote Cement still has a long way to go
to live up to that dream, and while it is quite unlikely that Dangote
Cement could hit a $60 billion Market Cap by 2016, don’t write it off as
‘impossible’. With Dangote, you never know.
7/18/2014
Dangote is Africa’s first $20billion man
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