BUJA — Nigeria’s Alhaji Aliko Dangote lost N1 trillion ($5 billion) in one year as a result of drop in prices of shares at the stock market in Dangote cement even as he retains his position as Africa’s richest man.
“South Africans made the best showing on the Africa’s richest list
this year, occupying 16 spots, up from 11 last year. Nigerians had a
smaller representation, with 10 members on the list, down from 13. Eight
members hail from Morocco, seven from Egypt, three from Tanzania and
three from Kenya. There was one each from Algeria, Angola and Uganda.”
Forbes said that the continent’s wealthiest 50 are worth $95.6 billion, a decline of $15 billion from a year ago.
The second richest African on the list is Nicky Oppenheimer, whose
estimated $6.6 billion fortune stems from the stake he inherited in
diamond miner and marketer
,
DeBeers. In 2012, Oppenheimer sold the DeBeers stake to mining giant
Anglo American for $5.1 billion in cash. He moves up the ranks from the
number three spot in 2014.
Forbes said that seven members of the 2014 list dropped off,
including mining mogul, Desmond Sacco of South Africa and telecom
tycoon, Strive Masiyiwa of Zimbabwe. Six previous list members returned
to the list after dropping off, including South Africans Michiel Le
Roux, CEO of Capitec Bank, and Raymond Ackerman, founder of retailer
Pick N Pay Holdings. The minimum net worth required to make the list
this year was $330 million, down from $510 million a year ago.
Forbes said that the one newcomer on the list this year is Kenya’s
Narendra Raval, with a net worth estimated at $400 million. A former
assistant priest at a Swaminarayan temple – a Hindu sect -Raval was
expelled from the sect when he married a Kenyan. He then got a job in
the steelmaking business and later started Devki Group, which makes
cement, reinforcement bars, and barbed wire.
There are once again two women list members: Isabel dos Santos of
Angola and Folorunsho Alakija of Nigeria. Dos Santos, the eldest
daughter of Angolan President Jose Eduardo dos Santos, sparked four
members of the European Parliament to request an investigation in
October into her investments in Portugal following a purchase in Dos
Santos made in May 2015 of a roughly $200 million stake in Portuguese
equipment supplier Efacec Power Solutions.
Agency report.
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