Money Markets
By KENNEDY SENELWA
In Summary
- According to Baker & McKenzie, an international law firm based in London, the number of African companies listing on the bourse could rise by a quarter this year if the firms that plan an IPO go ahead.
- African companies are most likely to go public on their domestic exchanges, with the Egyptian, Kenyan, Moroccan, and Nigerian, South African and Tunisian markets set to be the most active in 2015.
- Financials and real estate are likely to be the most active sectors, along with more well-established areas of activity such as energy and power.
Kenya is expected to have the highest number of initial public offerings in East Africa this year.
Kenya’s share of IPOs in sub-Saharan African is projected at
about 8 per cent while regional ..................
counterparts Uganda, Tanzania and Rwanda will each account for 1 per cent of the total this year.
counterparts Uganda, Tanzania and Rwanda will each account for 1 per cent of the total this year.
The East African securities regulatory authorities
have set June 2015 as the deadline for harmonisation of capital markets
laws in Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Rwanda and Burundi.
According to Baker & McKenzie, an international
law firm based in London, the number of African companies listing on
the bourse could rise by a quarter this year if the firms that plan an
IPO go ahead.
The mergers and acquisitions deal specialist said
30 firms are preparing to list this year, from 24 in 2014. The number of
IPOs last year rose by a third to the highest level since the global
financial crisis, raising over $2 billion.
African companies are most likely to go public on
their domestic exchanges, with the Egyptian, Kenyan, Moroccan, and
Nigerian, South African and Tunisian markets set to be the most active
in 2015.
“There have been several false starts for capital
markets across Africa’s economies. We see a more sustainable trend
developing,” said Baker’s global head of Capital Markets Koen
Vanhaerents.
He said there are sound policies based on a range
of factors, including improved corporate governance, better market
regulation and of course reasonable economic growth in many countries.
Financials and real estate are likely to be the
most active sectors, along with more well-established areas of activity
such as energy and power.
South Africa, Nigeria and Kenya are the countries
with the projected highest IPO value, partly driven by the exit
strategies of private equity investors who snapped up assets in the wake
of the financial crisis.
Mauritius is also a popular destination for
structuring deals. Egypt is set to be a prominent issuer as the economy
recovers from four years of turmoil, making long-delayed deals viable.
South Africa will have 23 per cent of projected top
issuers by IPO value, Nigeria (18 per cent), Egypt (15 per cent),
Morocco (13 per cent), Mauritius (12 per cent), Kenya (8 per cent),
Tunisia (5 per cent) , Zambia (2 per cent), Uganda, Tanzania, Rwanda and
Namibia (1 per cent each).
Listings by African-domiciled companies are
currently planned in London and Frankfurt, and more are likely to emerge
in the course of the year. Six cross-border IPOs are in the pipeline
compared with one completed in 2014.
Data compiled by Thomson One, the data arm of
Thomson Reuters, shows Sirrus Corporation, Flame Tree Group, New Kenya
Co-operative Ltd, Comcraft Group and Mayfox Mining Company Ltd in Kenya
could issue IPOs.
The list also includes National Development Bank of Botswana,
Groupe Slama of Tunisia, Orascom Telecom Algeria SpA, Total Maroc SA of
Morocco, Metallon Gold of Zimbabwe, Total Senegal SA and Wadi Holdings
of Egypt.
Ssafren Plc, Steinhoff-European Business, and Ubuntu –Botho
Financial Services of South Africa are on the list. Nigeria has Medview
Airline Ltd, Heritage Banking Co Ltd, Notore Chemical Industries Ltd,
Stanbic IBTC Asset Management Ltd and UBA Capital Plc.
Egyptian firms on list of Thomson One include Raya
Contract Centre Co, Emmar Misr for Development, Misr Italia for
Touristic Dvip, Suez Canal Axis Dvip Project, Edita Food Industries SAE,
Arabian Food Industries Co, Mabany for Real Estate Invest Delta Cement
Co and Integrated Diagnostic Hldg Co.
Baker’s Head of Capital Markets Europe, Middle East
and Africa, Edward Bibko said development of sub Saharan capital
markets has been picking up momentum and the continent has potential for
growth.
“Consumer economies such as Kenya are seeing
increased appetite for securities among domestic institutional and
retail investors. Governments of oil-dependent economies will look at
international debt issuance and project finance options to meet
budgetary promises,” he said.
Tanzania is expected to issue its debut Eurobond in
2015 while Nigeria is introducing an Islamic bond market. By September
2014 sub Saharan sovereign debt issuance had already exceeded every
prior full year.
International debt issuance by African entities
fell 9 per cent in value and 10 per cent in volume, raising $22.6
billion in 63 transactions. The year 2014 was dominated by sovereign
issuers and corporate bonds are expected to spike in 2015.
“Despite improving local liquidity, almost all debt
from African issuers and a significant amount of equity is bought by
international investors, meaning domestic transactions should be
documented to international standards,” said Don Guiney, Senior Counsel
for Baker & McKenzie, based in London.
African markets are exposed to global economic
sentiment of volatility, with some forecasters predicting a difficult
year for emerging markets in 2015 due to falling oil price and strong US
dollar among other factors.
“The key is building resilience... Resilience will
be a challenge as African markets becomes interconnected,” said Baker’s
Managing Partner in Johannesburg Wildu du Plessis.
International and domestic investors alike need
standards of corporate governance, market infrastructure and securities
regulation to continue to improve.
“London and Johannesburg have been markets of
choice for cross-border and domestic deals, respectively, by African
issuers over the past decade,” said Baker’s Capital Markets Partner in
Johannesburg Chris Hogan.
The EastAfrican
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