Saturday, December 21, 2024
25.3 C
Lagos

Nigeria, SA, Kenya Lead M & A Deals in Africa

After several years of steadily increasing M&A activity, African deal making has made the final step to firmly entrench itself into the global marketplace.

Despite political turmoil in many countries, a prolonged downturn in the commodities cycle and related currency risk, Africa’s top economies have maintained investor interest with strong momentum in M&A across the majority of sectors.

This is one of the key findings of the fourth edition of “Deal Drivers Africa”, published by Merger-market in collaboration with Control Risks, the leading business risk consultancy.

Key Findings:
South Africa, Nigeria and Kenya are seen as the most attractive target countries for M & A activity on the continent
100% of respondents believe that cross-border deal making between African countries will continue to increase
Respondents expect most foreign buyers of African companies in 2016 to come from Europe (41%), Asia-Pacific (39%) and North America (16%)
Energy, mining and utilities are expected to generate the most M&A activity in Africa (79%), with industrial & chemicals being viewed as the second busiest sector in the next 12 months (72%)
Regulatory uncertainty, particularly compliance and integrity issues, are highlighted as the principal obstacle to M&A activity in Africa (86%), followed by operational and security risks (77%)
Cyber security is given highest importance by 60% of respondents when doing an M&A deal in Africa

George Nicholls, Senior Managing Director for Southern Africa at Control Risks, comments on the findings:

“M&A activity in Africa is currently driven by many factors: Downturns in more established markets make international buyers look out for new targets; capital is more easily available and high-quality targets are offered at very attractive prices. Despite all the enthusiasm over this positive development, major obstacles remain. Regulatory, operational, security and increasingly cyber risks are major risks that should be considered when undertaking M&A activity on the continent.

“While most actors (88%) acknowledge the fact that external advisers are crucial to the success of a deal, still only 19% use external support for due diligence assessments. Hence, many deals fail at the step of the very initial due diligence, as lack of transparency and local knowledge leads to lack of clarity in the ownership structures.

“Only 9% reach out for help on anti-bribery and corruption programmes. Ignoring or under-estimating these issues can not only lead to failure of a deal, but almost more importantly to serious reputational damage for the buyer.”

spot_img
spot_img
spot_img

Hot this week

PenCom Targets N22tn Pension Contributions by End 2024

The National Pension Commission (PenCom) says it expects pension...

PalmPay, Jumia Launch Holiday Campaign to Reward Users

This holiday season just got a whole lot more...

Adekunle Gold, Wande Coal, Young Jonn Set to Thrill Fans at Lagos Shopping Festival

Lagosians are in for the most exciting music extravaganza...

Mediacraft Associates Continues to Blaze the Trail in Awards

  Group CEO Voted ‘Legend of Marketing Comms’ John Ehiguese, CEO...

Committee of Banks in Nigeria Donates Multimillion Naira Relief Materials to Jigawa Flood Victims

The Committee of Banks in Nigeria on Thursday lifted...

Topics

Independents to Account for 25% Oil Production by 2020

Independents are projected to account for about 500kbpd by the year 2020, representing 25% of crude oil production in Nigeria, from the current level of 10%. The development is seen as a reflection of the changing landscape of the oil and gas industry in Nigeria. Key Recommendations: • Integration of the upstream to other parts of the value chain may eventually be driven by the independents. • Challenges such as security, especially for independents operating in shallow waters. Local companies reiterated that security and community challenges have greatly altered their cost of production which cannot be fully ascertained. When coupled with Government take and interest from loans the cost per barrel increases. • Government is to ensure that an enabling environment is created - independents need to be able to deliver on capacity growth and funding.

NCC: ‘We’re Making Progress in Enthroning 5G for Digital Economy’

L-R: Lead Consulting Strategist, DigitalSENSE Africa/Group Executive Editor, ITREALMS...

Buhari Renames Comms Ministry to Ministry of Comms & Digital Economy

The President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria Muhammadu...

NLNG Unveils New Logo in Rebranding Move

Nigeria LNG Limited (NLNG) has unveiled a new logo...

Dividend Payment Awards for Quoted Firms on Feb 10

The maiden edition of Dividend Payment Awards for listed...

AIICO Insurance Organises Children’s Day Celebration for the Less Privileged

From left: Stevens Olusola, Founder, Vine Heritage Home Foundation;...

DigitalSENSE Africa Honours Ekuwem, Odusote, Nwannenna, Adebayo, Uzor, Others @NDSF’24

NDSF@15 Awards: From left, chairman, Association of Licensed Telecommunications Operators...

$1tn Economy: CBN, BOI, UBA, NDIC Set for FICAN 2024 Conference

The Nigeria Deposit Insurance Corporation (NDIC), the Central Bank...
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img