The Pak Banker

Kenya, DRC among African nations with firms making $1b revenues

- NAIROBI, KENYA

Africa has at least 345 companies with revenues of $1 billion or more per annum of which 3 percent (11) of the firms are located in East Africa (EA) underlinin­g the region’s growing consumer market for various goods and services, according to a report by global consultanc­y firm McKinsey Global Institute.

Kenya tops its EA counterpar­ts by hosting the highest number of companies (six) that produce $1 billion in revenues per year, followed by the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) with four and Tanzania with one company.

Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi, South Sudan and Somalia missed out on the list, according to the report, ‘Reimaginin­g economic growth in Africa; Turning diversity into opportunit­y,’ which did not disclose the identity of the companies under review.

According to the report dated June 2023, a bulk (40 percent) of the African companies with $1 billion in revenues per year are located in South Africa.

Read: Tax exemptions, incentives rob Kenya of growth in revenuesCo­nsumer expenditur­e on the continent has grown at a compound annual rate of 3.9 per cent since 2010 and reached $1.4 trillion in 2015, and this figure is expected to reach $2.1 trillion by 2025, and $2.5 trillion by 2030, presenting an exciting opportunit­y for expansion in retail and distributi­on, according to an American research firm Brookings.

By 2030, the largest consumer markets will include Nigeria, Egypt and South Africa. There will also be lucrative opportunit­ies in Algeria, Angola, Ethiopia, Ghana, Kenya, Morocco, Sudan, Tunisia, and Tanzania, according to Brookings.

Africa is one of the fastest-growing consumer markets in the world, with household consumptio­n increasing even faster than its Gross Domestic Product (GDP) in recent years.

According to McKinsey, large private companies have an important role to play in rekindling economic progress in the continent because they contribute disproport­ionately to growth, innovation, employment, exports, productivi­ty, and taxes.

Research shows that emerging economies with consistent­ly high growth rates had twice as many large companies as other economies.

Large companies, too, have grown revenues faster than continent-wide GDP growth since 2015 to 2021."Africa’s big companies have proven resilient in the face of challenges over the past decade and now are well positioned to grow," says report.

Read: How economic disparitie­s undermine East Africa’s growth"Their success and growth will have positive knock-on effects among the myriad small and medium-size enterprise­s that participat­e in their supply chains and support the vast majority of jobs on the continent."About 230 of these 345 companies are homegrown, meaning they were started in an African country, often by a local entreprene­ur while 52 per cent of the continent’s $1 billion–plus companies are State-owned enterprise­s, according to the report.

These large companies operate in all major sectors on the continent, but 70 per cent of the revenues they generate come from just six subsectors— oil and gas, mining, retail and consumer goods, financial services, manufactur­ing, and telecommun­ications.

According to the report about 50 percent of large homegrown companies are publicly traded, 30 percent are privately owned and the remainder are State-owned enterprise­s.

The rest of the large companies operating in Africa are subsidiari­es of foreign firms, roughly 37 percent of which are publicly traded and the remainder private, including a few stateowned enterprise­s primarily from China.

Compared with other markets, foreign-owned companies have a disproport­ionately significan­t role in African countries by accounting for one-third of all large companies in Africa and about one-third of corporate revenues as well

The rally, attributed to fading hopes of a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas and tightening supply on Mexico’s decision to cut crude exports, sets up Kenyans for expensive fuel in the coming months.

Read: Kenya shipping costs set to risePump prices have been on a sustained drop since December last year due to the global fall in crude prices.

A litre of super petrol is going for Ksh199.15 ($1.59) in Nairobi while that of diesel is retailing at Ksh190.38 ($1.52).“In an increasing­ly bullish oil market, both WTI(West Texas Intermedia­te) and Brent, look set to continue climbing on the back of a strong demand outlook and new supply issues,” Oil Price, a global site that tracks prices of the commodity, says.

 ?? -REUTERS ?? NEW YORK CITY
Traders work on the floor at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City, US.
-REUTERS NEW YORK CITY Traders work on the floor at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City, US.

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