LAGOS
- Bomb blasts, gun attacks, airline crashes, kidnappings, industrial-scale oil
theft, armed robberies and fraud costing billions of dollars.
Such
things might give pause to anyone thinking of opening a business. In Nigeria,
they happen with alarming frequency, and yet investors just keep coming.
The
reasons are many: alluring returns in this high-risk frontier market; a huge
and growing population with latent potential for a consumer boom; light crude
oil ideal for making motor fuel; and sophisticated financial markets.
"We
know it's not risk free," says Charles Robertson, global Chief Economist
at Renaissance Capital. "But look around the world and find another
economy with 160 million people growing at 7 percent with such potential. It's
a struggle to find them."
Nigeria
can look like it's teetering on the cusp of chaos, but it is also Africa's
second biggest economy and top oil producer.
"Nigeria
is the best kept secret in the world. Anybody who doesn't invest in Nigeria only
has himself to blame, going forward, if he misses out," industrialist Aliko
Dangote told Reuters in an interview at his Lagos office.
"I
don't really know of any place where you can make as much money as you make in
Nigeria."
As
Africa's richest man, he should know. Last year, the cement tycoon's Nigeria
investments boosted his personal fortune more than fivefold - a bigger rise
than anyone else on the Forbes list of world billionaires - to $13.8 billion.
Dangote
is from northern Nigeria, where Islamist insurgents of the Boko Haram movement
have killed hundreds in daily gun and bomb attacks this year in a bloody
anti-establishment offensive.
Dangote,
whose interests are mostly in the south, with some exposure to the north, does
not let the violence affect his business decisions.
"Boko
Haram have not destroyed any business here. They have not gone to any factory
and planted a bomb," he said.
"Because
of drugs barons fighting with the Mexican government, does it mean no one will
go and invest in Mexico? No. People are rushing there."
"DEMOGRAPHIC
DIVIDEND" TRUMPS INSTABILITY?
Still,
if you want an example of how violence and political instability in Nigeria can
slice millions of dollars off your profit margin, look no further than PZ
Cussons.
The
soap maker announced two profit warnings in the first quarter of this year,
blaming a hit to sales from social unrest in Nigeria, its biggest market, where
it makes a third of its revenue.
The
country erupted into strikes and protests in January when President Goodluck
Jonathan's government made an abortive attempt to end a popular fuel
subsidy. The strikes lasted only a week, but the central bank said they cost
$617 million a day.
The
violence in the north also worsened around that time.
"Insurgency
in the north clearly had a detrimental impact on PZ's business, and on (food
maker) UACN, which has distribution hubs there," Matthew Pearson, Standard
Bank's head of African Equity Product, told Reuters on a visit toLagos.
But
in the longer term, both firms are betting Nigeria's big population will turn
into a massive consumer market.
"The
demographic dividend is colossal," Pearson said.
A
failure to recognize such long-term opportunities in emerging markets astounds
Stephen Jennings, CEO of investment bank Renaissance Group.
"Whether
we are talking about political evolution in Russia, or economic development in
Africa, there remains a clear overemphasis on current difficulties and
constraints, and an under-appreciation of the pace and magnitude of
modernization and structural change," he told an investor conference this
week.
Some
clearly appreciate it. The CEO of South Africa's Shoprite, Whitey Basson, said
in February he saw scope for 700 stores in Nigeria, up from two now, arguing
that even if 60 percent live in poverty, the other 40 percent still outnumber
South Africans.
And
oil companies like Shell are making enormous profits in Nigeria - and renewing
onshore licenses - despite the fact that armed gangs steal a growing portion of
their oil.
Foreign
direct investment into Nigeria has hovered between $6 billion and $8.5 billion
since 2007, World Bank figures show, apparently unresponsive to its various
crises.
FEAR
OF OFFICIALDOM
Business
people say the risk from such insecurity pales compared with that of government
interference.
Jonathan's
administration says it is working to remove impediments such as corrupt
officials and onerous bureaucracy, but they admit it is a huge task.
"Look
at the port. That's a bigger investor concern than bomb blasts or plane
crashes," said Tony Elumelu, chairman of Lagos-based Heirs Holdings, a
fund that invests across Africa.
Corrupt
officials at Lagos port - one of the busiest in Africa - slow down deliveries
to extort money from importers, a bottleneck to growth and cause of Nigeria's
high living costs.
"For
many businesses, the difficulty of getting goods cleared ... is their biggest
complaint," Elumelu said. "The good news is the government is now
taking action to improve it."
Such
"official risk" is what oligarchs like Dangote can use political ties
to mitigate. Not everyone has such connections, but players with dominant positions
in markets that don't require much government cooperation can still fare well.
"If
you look at Nigeria Breweries, short of expropriation, it's going to continue
to effectively print money, because of the size of the market ... irrespective
of the management of the country," said Fola Fagbule, Vice President of
Origination and Coverage at Africa Finance Corporation.
Other
sectors, such as infrastructure, face daunting hurdles from obstructive
officials. Telecoms firms need licenses. They need land to put up masts. They
need permits to set up base stations.
All
complain of extortion by officials to keep stations open.
The
downside was enough to persuade Vodacom to pass up investing in Vmobil - now
owned by Bharti Airtel - in 2005, citing an "inappropriate level of
risk".
Yet
telecoms is now one Nigeria's most profitable sectors, and Nigeria is Bharti's
most profitable African market.
In
his last year as Vodacom CEO in 2008, Alan Knott-Craig said he regretted the
decision not to set up shop in Nigeria. Vodacom is now making moves to come
back.
Rival
MTN had no such qualms, and today it is Nigeria's leading operator.
Among
the risks it faces are "poor infrastructure, lack of security, vandalism,
multiple taxation, over-regulation ... unlawful interference with telco
infrastructure by government agencies and ... prejudicial court
judgments," says Funmilayo Omogbenigun, MTN Nigeria's corporate affairs
manager.
Despite
that discouraging litany, Nigeria remains MTN's biggest cash cow, making $2.5
billion in core profit in 2010 and again in 2011.
The
telecoms success has raised hopes for Nigeria's moribund power sector, if the
government gets round to privatizing it.
"Nigeria's
often surprised on the upside, and telecoms is a classic example. People are
looking at power in the same way," Fagbole said.
"It
looks messy, it looks difficult, but if you sit on the sidelines and it turns
out to be this massive honey pot, you'll live to regret it."
Source: yahoo.com (Tim
Cocks | Reuters)
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