The Guardian (Nigeria)

Private capital flows to Nigeria, other African countries fall by 28 per cent

- By Benjamin Alade

THE African Private Capital Associatio­n ( AVCA), yesterday, announced the release of the 2023 African Private Capital Activity Report, providing insight into deal- making, fundrais - ing, exits and the key trends shaping Africa's private capital landscape.

In 2023, the global economy faced a series of interconne­cted shocks, including political tensions, increasing fragmentat­ion in trade, escalating interest rates and tightening monetary policies to address high inflation.

Deal- making in Africa was not shielded from the global slowdown in private capital, leading to reduced investment activity on the continent.

However, Africa experience­d more robust performanc­e than other regions, such as North and Latin America, which noted comparativ­ely larger declines in deals, the report said.

In the new report, AVCA found that Africa's total private capital deal volume declined for the first time since 2016, falling by 28 per cent year- over- year ( YOY) to 450 deals.

Despite a reduction in the number of transactio­ns, Africa showed resilience, returning to the steady growth trajectory the region drove until 2022 when investors deployed large reserves of capital that were not allocated during the COVID- 19 pandemic, it noted.

Compared with activity throughout the last decade, 2023 was the second- strongest year on record for deal volume in Africa. Notably, deal volume on the continent surpassed the annual average of 264 deals from 2012 to 2022 and the average of 387 deals from 2019 to 2022, it stated.

Continuing establishe­d trends, investors, it stated, favoured venture capital ( VC) as the route to back promising African businesses with innovative, tech- enabled solutions in rapidly developing markets.

VC maintained its four- year streak as Africa's leading asset class, accounting for 68 per cent of the total investment volume of private capital activity across the continent, the study disclosed.

The report noted that infrastruc­ture had an impressive year for capital raising and deployment as the only asset class to benefit from increased funding in 2023, with deal value surging to $ 1.8 billion – a threefold YOY increase.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria