Finance

Private Equity Investment in Africa Drops Significantly, Except in West Africa

Private Equity Investment in Africa Drops Significantly, Except in West Africa
Friday, 23 August 2024 18:26

Local and international private equity players invested $900 million in African companies during the first half of 2024, the African Private Equity and Venture Capital Association (AVCA) reported. This amount marks a 66% decrease compared to the same period in 2023. However, West Africa saw a 3% increase in investments.

From January 1 to June 30, 2024, there were 182 transactions across the continent, representing a 17% decline from the previous year.

12uio

The "Q2 2024 Private Capital in Africa Report" attributes the decline in both value and volume of transactions to ongoing macroeconomic uncertainties. These include persistent restrictive monetary policies, high inflation, and geopolitical tensions, which have led many industry players to adopt a more cautious approach and make smaller investments. Notably, transactions over $100 million fell by 91% year-on-year in the first half of 2024. Conversely, transactions under $50 million accounted for 88% of the total investment value. Consequently, the average transaction size decreased from $20 million in 2023 to just $8 million in the first half of 2024.

11uio

In terms of regional investment distribution, West and East Africa together received 60% of the transaction value, with each region accounting for 30%. Southern Africa followed with 10%, North Africa with 9%, and Central Africa with just 1%. Additionally, 20% of investments were made in companies operating in Africa but based in other regions of the world.

1uio

The sectoral breakdown shows that the financial services sector captured 39% of the total transaction value, followed by the industrial sector (12%), consumer staples (10%), information technology (10%), communications services (7%), and utilities (6%).

The report also notes that Africa-focused fund managers raised a total of $1.3 billion in the first half of 2024. This amount includes $1 billion from final closes and $300 million from interim closes. This period proved particularly challenging for new fund managers entering the African market, with none achieving a final close.

In addition, private equity firms in Africa executed 22 exits in the first half of 2024, compared to 17 exits during the same period last year. In a cooling market, fund managers have relied on established exit strategies. The most common exit route remains sales to trade buyers, followed by asset sales to other private equity firms, management buy-outs, and initial public offerings (IPOs).

On the same topic
SMEs drive up to 40% of GDP and most jobs but face regulatory and financial constraints Power shortages and limited access to finance remain major...
BOA Niger warns net profit to drop 92% in 2025 Decline driven by high provisions amid rising non-performing loans Sanctions and weak lending...
Togo minister opens talks with private sector to boost growth Businesses cite financing gaps, debt, and energy costs as...
British International Investment and Deutsche Bank launch a $150 million facility to support trade finance across Africa. The program...
Most Read
01

Togo parliament adopts WAEMU law against currency counterfeiting Bill defines offences including ...

Togo Passes Law to Criminalize Counterfeiting of West African CFA Franc
02

Since its 2019 IPO, Airtel Africa paid Deloitte over $37 million in audit and non-audit fees,...

Airtel Africa and Deloitte: A Seven-Year Relationship, $37 Million in Fees and a Planned Handover
03

CCR-UEMOA presents mid-term review of private sector competitiveness efforts Reforms, AfCFTA trai...

Strengthening the Business Climate in WAEMU Countries: CCR-UEMOA Reviews Its Midterm Record
04

World Bank announces $137 million to boost West Africa digital economy Program expands broad...

Benin, Liberia and Sierra Leone Receive $137M to Expand Digital Access for 5.2 Million People
05

ECOWAS is proposing a regional digital platform for passengers to file and track complaints online...

ECOWAS Considers Regional Platform to Enforce Air Passenger Compensation
Enter your email to receive our newsletter

Ecofin Agency provides daily coverage of nine key African economic sectors: public management, finance, telecoms, agribusiness, mining, energy, transport, communication, and education.
It also designs and manages specialized media, both online and print, for African institutions and publishers.

SALES & ADVERTISING

regie@agenceecofin.com 
Tél: +41 22 301 96 11 
Mob: +41 78 699 13 72


EDITORIAL
redaction@agenceecofin.com

More information
Team
Publisher

ECOFIN AGENCY

Mediamania Sarl
Rue du Léman, 6
1201 Geneva
Switzerland

 

Ecofin Agency is a sector-focused economic news agency, founded in December 2010. Its web platform was launched in June 2011. ©Mediamania.

 
 

Please publish modules in offcanvas position.