Africa’s richest man, Aliko Dangote, says he’s expanding his cement empire to Asia and it will be operational in 30 months.
According
to bloomberg.com, the 58-year-old Nigerian billionaire said Dangote
Cement Plc should complete a factory in Nepal by the end of 2017. It has
received 90 percent of the regulatory approvals needed to start
construction in the south Asian nation hit by two earthquakes this year,
he said.
“It’s going to be one of the first factories
for us to build outside our comfort zone, outside Africa,” Dangote,
wearing white traditional robes, said in a June 16 interview at his
office in Nigeria’s commercial hub, Lagos. Further expansion beyond
Africa mainly “will happen through acquisition,” he said.
Dangote,
who has never visited Nepal, will invest $400 million in the country to
build a cement plant with a capacity of as much as 2 million metric
tons. He’s also eyeing South America and surveying for limestone in
Brazil, where he registered a company two years ago.
Nepal’s
government estimates reconstruction costs from April’s quake, which
killed thousands, alone will exceed $10 billion, even before the country
was hit by a separate 7.3 magnitude temblor last month.
“It
will be a major boost for them, especially with what happened,” Dangote
said. “They don’t produce cement at the moment, they import mainly from
India.”
There is room for Dangote to move into Nepal,
said Andy Gboka, a fund manager at Bellevue Asset Management AG, which
manages more than $5 billion and holds Dangote Cement shares.
“There
is not enough production capacity and unfortunately you saw what
happened with the earthquake and the infrastructure that was damaged,”
Gboka said by phone from Zurich. “Even though this is coming from a
negative event, there is a strong growth story in the Nepal region.”
The
tycoon, with a net worth of $15.4 billion according to the Bloomberg
Billionaires Index, has made the vast majority of his fortune in African
cement production. He also has interests including sugar and more
recently oil refineries in Nigeria.
Dangote’s charity
gave $1 million to Nepal’s government after the deadly earthquakes. He
said he has made more than 20 billion naira ($100 million) of donations
in more than two years, mainly in African countries such as Nigeria,
Niger, Kenya, Tanzania and Ebola-hit nations in West Africa.
He
denied that his foundation gave only to countries where he has business
interests, citing a $2 million donation given to Pakistan in 2010
through the United Nations World Food Programme after the country was
hit by flooding.
“I’ve only been to Pakistan on transit maybe 20 years ago,” Dangote said.
Dangote
Cement has been expanding in new African markets to tap demand for
building materials as governments invest in infrastructure. The company
is planning $1 billion in capital expenditure this year to increase
capacity from 29 million tons.
His moves to dominate
the African market haven’t been without some snags. Dangote said the
building of a $350 million cement plant in Niger, announced in 2013, was
delayed after some “internal fault” at the company, which has been
addressed. He declined to elaborate further.
Construction on the Niger factory will start this year and will take 26 months to complete, he said.
Dangote
has also seen his wealth decline $3.1 billion this year as the share
price in his cement business has fallen 13 percent in the same period,
more than the Nigerian Stock Exchange All Share Index, which has slumped
3.4 percent. Nigeria’s local currency, the naira, is down 7.8 percent
so far in 2015 against the dollar.
“In the future we
will try and replicate the other businesses outside Nigeria,” Dangote
said, referring to his interests other than cement. “But we have so much
we’re invested in right now, so we want to continue with just cement,
cement, cement for the next two, three years.”
No comments:
Post a Comment