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Named after the Agege district (pronounced ‘a-gay-gay’) in Lagos, Nigeria. Sorry we don’t make the famous Agege Bread in our Labs

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Maker Faire Africa

29 May 2009, 22:37

MakerFaire Africa 2009

The idea of Maker Faire Africa was put forward by Emeka Okafor, the Director of TED Africa. The aim of the event is to “create a space on the continent where Afrigadget-type innovations, inventions and initiatives can be sought, identified, brought to life, supported, amplified, propagated, etc.”

I think this is a brillant idea and great opportunity to see how local invention and initiatives are solving local problems. You can get more information about the event here.

Date: August 14-16 2009
Venue: Ghana-India Kofi Annan Centre of Excellence in ICT in Accra, Ghana.
Price: This event is free to the general public. Sponsorship is welcomed!

For those who want to showcase their invention, you will need to register ahead of time and deadline is 15 July 2009

AL

Tags: Events, Ghana

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Babatunde Soyoye on Private equity in Africa

27 May 2009, 02:40

I was fortunate to have attended the talk by Babatunde Soyoye, co-founder of Helios Investment Partners today at Clifford Chance’s office in Canary Wharf. He spoke about the impact of the credit crisis on private equity activity in Africa. I have put together a summary of the talk based on my interpretation below. Hopefully someone will find it useful.

Impact of Credit Crunch

  • Valuations appear to be more reasonable however execution is taking much longer. Sellers are hopeful that the markets will return and continue to delay sale processes
  • Talent pool to recruit from is much bigger today. In the past, it was difficult to attract talent and even if you could attract them – you probably couldn’t afford to pay them. The credit crunch has changed that balance positively
  • Post-Lehman, companies with balance sheet constraints are seeking asset sales – it seems logical assets for sale are usually those in Africa – significant opportunities to capture value
  • Growth is still commodity-linked in most African countries. With price of most commodities taking a hit – GDP growth expected to slow across the continent
  • Overall the credit crunch has had less of an impact on Africa as a whole compared to other regions [time will tell]

On Private equity model in Africa

  • Private equity activity in Africa is less about “financial engineering” (i.e. using debt to generate huge returns like private equity houses in the US and Europe).
  • The Private equity business model in Africa is about identifying unique opportunities, creating profitable companies and executing as quick as you can! Essentially first to market takes a big chunk!
  • Relatively cheap financing is still available in Africa if aligned to infrastructure – IFC and AFD are standing by to finance the “right projects”
  • Access to financing in Nigeria is harder today compared to 3 years ago given the issues that Nigerian banks are currently facing
  • Banks in Francophone countries (e.g. Côte d’Ivoire) have tons of cash but the regulatory framework restricts how the cash can be deployed
  • Challenging to depend on local weathy individuals for funds
  • Pension funds remain small players in the Private equity in Africa. Only a number of countries (e.g Kenya, South Africa and Ghana) have pension funds which have asset allocation for private equity. In Nigeria, pension funds are banned from investing in private equity (really!)

On Exits

  • Strategic buyers are “tight”. Currently focused on internal development and regaining financial flexibility – not buying assets
  • Recapitalisation is harder to implement
  • The IPO markets across continent remain open (particularly South Africa, Kenya, Ghana and Nigeria) – obvious exit route for companies of scale and profitable growth

AL

Tags: Ghana, Nigeria, Private equity

Comment [6]

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Ashesi University

17 April 2009, 23:57

Its really great to see the progress Ashesi University has made since it was founded in 2002 by Patrick Awuah. Earlier this month, the IFC agreed to invest US$2.5m to support the construction of a permanent campus which would double the number of students admitted to 800.

Worth listening to Patrick Awuah’s TED presentation from 2007.

Related Articles
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Ashesi’s earliest years

AL

Tags: Education, Ghana

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