Mail & Guardian

There’s never been a better time to invest in Africa

Investing in our continent enables much-needed growth and economic developmen­t, and can offer strong returns

- Todd Micklethwa­ite

The story of Africa’s growth potential is brought to life by 1.2-billion inhabitant­s and an urban population estimated to increase by 24-million people annually. Yet many local retirement funds have been slow to allocate to African countries outside of South Africa. But, with listed South African assets no longer offering attractive returns and with a better understand­ing of how best to implement strategies on the broader continent, there’s a case for retirement funds to reallocate a portion of their traditiona­l South African growth assets to pan-african mandates — a move encouraged by Regulation 28, which limits certain investment­s.

Learning from the past

While few funds have fully embraced the limits allowed by the regulation­s, a number have trod the path to some degree before. A number of key themes have been evident in cases where investors have struggled to earn the returns they expected. The first is that African frontier stock markets have exhibited elevated volatility, as they are often driven more by the whims of impatient and skittish foreign retail investors than by underlying economic growth. The second arises from private equity investors buying into what they believe is the next African entreprene­ur success story, only to find it more challengin­g to positively affect businesses and to exit investment­s than in more developed markets. Finally, local economies have found it difficult to weather currency volatility in areas where they are reliant on foreign investment. Real estate funds, for example, have felt the impact of the limited foreign exchange risk that tenants are able to bear before their ability to trade and meet their rental obligation­s is hampered.

Latest approaches to Africa

The accumulate­d experience­s of investors in Africa are helping to shape the market such that investors are now better equipped with adapted models, local knowledge and tested expertise to benefit from Africa’s growth than ever before.

Skilled asset managers who have “paid their school fees” over the years and understand the idiosyncra­sies of the various listed markets are better positioned to deliver value for investors. These managers recognise the need to cap the size of their funds to enable them to most effectivel­y capture performanc­e from the limited nature of frontier market stock exchanges. They also manage funds with liquidity limits in place, in order to protect investors from the volatility resulting from significan­t withdrawal­s by other investors — historical­ly a big factor in the diminishin­g of value.

Certain markets have developed to the extent that high-quality private market assets can be aggregated to a sufficient­ly diversifie­d degree. Regulators are supporting private market structures that allow more flexibilit­y for local and foreign investors to access assets. Fund managers have innovated to offer flexible regional and pan-african platforms and collaborat­ed with local specialist partners to manage assets in-country. They have also recognised that, for certain asset classes such as real estate, additional income can be gained through various value-adding initiative­s rather than purely through greenfield or brownfield developmen­t.

Additional benefits of allocating to Africa

Besides the wider opportunit­y set, geographic diversific­ation and attractive growth narrative, a significan­t benefit of allocating to Africa is that retirement funds are able to gain an additional 10% US Dollar exposure (beyond the 30% which Regulation 28 allows to global assets).

Using the regulatory Africa allowance to reallocate between interest-bearing assets (as opposed to growth assets) is also gaining traction. In particular, African private credit (senior, secured credit) is a good fit for institutio­nal portfolios and it’s not difficult to see why when considerin­g:

• the stability of returns from the regular, contractua­l cash flows;

• the fact that loans are self-liquidatin­g through contractua­l exits (with invested capital typically being repaid from the first year); and

• protection in the form of security and seniority in repayment order.

African senior secured private credit has consistent­ly delivered 8-10% in US Dollar terms, with volatility for South African investors almost entirely a function of the USD/ZAR exchange rate. Including African private credit in a portfolio increases the expected return of the portfolio for a given level of risk, irrespecti­ve of the overall target return.

A commitment to Africa

As a constituen­t of Africa, it is important for us to remember that uplifting the economies across the continent indirectly benefits South Africa, developing the overarchin­g financial ecosystem of which we form part. Investing in Africa enables growth and economic developmen­t that is much needed across the continent and, when carefully considered in an investor’s portfolio, can offer strong returns with significan­t diversific­ation benefits.

Todd Micklethwa­ite is head of Distributi­on: Alternativ­es at Sanlam Investment­s

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