Africa

Screen Shot 2018-07-20 at 3.37.05 PM

By Sternford Moyo, Scanlen & Holderness

Decades-long political instability, sanctions and a failing economy have seen a massive decline in Zimbabwe’s international appeal. Even as global investors turned their attention to Africa in 2015 and 2016, Zimbabwe managed to exclude itself from billions of dollars of investment over its tumultuous economic trajectory.

But, the tide has turned and Zimbabwe appears to be in the Spring of life once again.

Sternford Moyo, LEX Africa’s member in Zimbabwe gave valuable insight into the private equity market in the southern African country, at a seminar held in Johannesburg in March, entitled An Outlook on Africa 2018.

Moyo described Zimbabwe as a place with enormous opportunity for private equity investors. He said while it was common knowledge that the country’s “infrastructure is broken” the upside is that there is room for rehabilitation and smart investors would capitalise on it.

“We have huge requirements, particularly, in sectors such as energy. Our industry presently is operating at roughly 40 percent capacity and despite that we don’t have sufficient power to power the industry. So if our industry had to operate at 100 percent capacity, we would [still] have a huge power deficit. We already have a power deficit. So, opportunities in areas such as solar, for instance, are huge.”

In August, Zimbabwe Energy Regulatory Authority (Zera) said the country could only meet 75 percent of its electricity requirements and that at least 60 percent of the country’s population had no access to power.

The country currently requires an estimated 1,600 MW of power, but only produces approximately 1,000 MW. The deficit is imported mainly from South Africa and Mozambique. According to the Chronicle, industry experts project that Zimbabwe needs about US$12 billion to fix the deficit and meet future needs.

On the mining front, Moyo said private equity investors could interpret the country’s flooded and unexplored mines as an opportunity to get in the untapped market of mineral potential.

In a paper published in 2014, titled Economic Overview of the Mining Sector in Zimbabwe and Key Developments, Lyman Mlambo, chairman of the Institute of Mining Research at the University of Zimbabwe said the country was sitting on an estimated US$11 billion of mineral wealth.

Screen Shot 2018-07-20 at 4.01.59 PM“We have several flooded mines at the moment, that one could capitalise on,” said Moyo “[The mines] have not been properly worked with proper equipment and proper technology. The whole of Zimbabwe is a huge gold mine.”

In February, mines minister Winston Chitando said: “The country hosts some of the world’s largest lithium deposits.” He said Bikita Minerals in the Masvingo province and the Arcadia Lithium project in Goromonzi were just two examples of successful projects.

Addressing an annual conference on investing in African mining, Minister Chitando said: “Progressive policy reviews across the entire economy are continuing. There is continuous review and improvement of ease of doing business.”

Among the reforms would be the replacement of a policy that limits foreign ownership in mining to 49 percent. With the exclusion of diamond and platinum mining — where government or its entities must hold a majority stake — foreign ownership in the mining of other minerals is proposed to be amended to 100 percent.

According to African News Agency, Zimbabwe’s mining sector is a cornerstone of the economy, accounting for over 13 percent of the gross domestic product and more than 60 percent of its export earnings.

Other than gold, diamonds and lithium, Zimbabwe also boasts large reserves of nickel, chrome and both thermal and coking coal, the second largest platinum group metals resource in the world.

The sector attracts more than half of the foreign direct into the country, and employs more than 45,000 people directly.

In 2015, Ritesh Anand, a London-based economist, fund manager and columnist wrote that the African Development Bank estimated Zimbabwe’s monetary need for infrastructure development alone at over US$14.2 billion. “Such investments require long-term capital, which is best suited to private equity,” he said.

Moyo said it was unfortunate that only a few private equity investors had seen the potential in Zimbabwe.

Said Moyo: “We also have pension funds which are quite active in private equity. Even some of the listed companies have been active in the private equity space because of the fewer players that are found in our country.

“The brokered funds is one area where opportunities are massive. You only need a few changes to take place under the new dispensation, before we see inflows starting to come in. Zimbabwe has enormous opportunity in so far as private equity is concerned. The opportunities have not really been pursued to the extent that they should and they (the opportunities) are in various sectors like infrastructure, gold mining, fast moving consumer goods (FMCG) and even industrial revival because our industries are broken at the moment and they require improving.”

 

Screen Shot 2018-03-13 at 1.28.45 PM

 

 

 

 

W: www.scanlenandholderness.com

E: moyos@scanlen.co.zw

T: (263) 4 702 561

Related Articles by Firm
Africa: The effect of Covid-19 and business resilience
Companies worldwide are, or will inevitably be, affected in the short and medium-term by the coronavirus pandemic (Covid-19). Decline in commodity prices due to the falling demand in China, travel restrictions ...
Africa: Boon for investors as Zimbabwe enacts new investment promotion law
On February 7, 2020 the Zimbabwe Government gazetted the long-awaited Zimbabwe Investment and Development Agency Act (Chapter 14;37). The new law comes in against the backdrop of promoting the ease of doing business in the country ...
Africa: Community issues and resource nationalism adding pressure on the mining industry
As if mining by its very nature is not difficult enough from a technical, financial, environmental and labour point of view ...
Opening the money taps into Africa
Akinwumi Adesina is not a name most people in Africa would recognise, yet it belongs to a man who is, arguably, doing the most to haul the continent out of a rut of underdevelopment and improve the lives of its ...
Coal-driven power train is running out of steam
The African Development Bank that it is making a surprise policy turn away from fossil-fuel investment and ploughing a new renewable energy path ...
Sun, wind and water stir up Africa’s energy mix
Obstacles to faster development of green energy abound everywhere, but the trend is clear and the momentum unstoppable.
Africa: Guinea emerging from the shadows
Recent reports from three respected international organisations sketch a relatively upbeat picture of economic prospects in the west African state of Guinea ...
AFRICA: How Nigeria is going local
Promoting “indigenisation” in the Nigerian economy was the subject of a recent Lex Africa seminar, which asked how foreign investors were forging partnerships with local players, using local content and local manufacturing capacity and transferring valuable work skills ...
Local content and participation in Ghana’s electricity supply industry
In line with the national push for a more structured approach to increasing local content and participation, the Regulations came into force on December 22, 2017 ...
One small step for Africa
On April 2 the Gambia’s parliament wrote itself into modern African history when it ratified the Africa Continental Free Trade Agreement (AfCFTA) ...
Zimbabwe’s ratification of the WTO Trade Facilitation Agreement
Recently, Zimbabwe, a member of the WTO since 1995, ratified the WTO Trade Facilitation Agreement (TFA) becoming the 139th WTO Member State to ratify this Agreement ...
African competition law developments in 2018 and the outlook for 2019
Africa is sometimes described as the “last frontier” of competition law because many African countries have only recently adopted modern competition laws ...
Blockchain, cryptocurrencies and the law in Uganda
By far the most significant headline-grabbing development in 2017 and 2018 relates to the stunning rise of blockchain ...
Tanzanian government releases Microfinance Bill
In a bid to ensure proper licensing, regulation, monitoring and supervision of microfinance business in Tanzania, the Minister for Finance has issued a draft Bill on Microfinance to be tabled in the National Assembly very soon ...
Ethiopia’s arbitration law challenges
Arbitration is perceived as one of the alternative solutions to congestion in the court system ...
Developments in competition law in Africa
At LEX Africa’s June seminar on developments in competition law in Africa, speakers discussed the increasing trend of governments to try and use competition law as an important part of their industrial policy ...
Impact of the amendment of the Legal Guarantee of Stability in respect of existing mining projects in the DRC
The Government of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) commenced the review process in respect of its Act No. 007/2002 of July 11, 2002 on Mining Code (Mining Code) in 2012. The process eventually culminated in the promulgation by the President of the Republic ...
Mozambique is addressing economic reform in a big way in 2018
Significant strides in Mozambique’s legislation and policies could see a rapid turnaround in the country’s economic situation. In 2016, inflation peaked at 26 percent ...
Increasing importance of African regulatory issues for M&A, trade and investment
It is important to remember that Africa is not a country but consists of 54 sovereign states and a huge diversity of cultures, customs, languages, ethnic groups and religions ...
Related Articles
Related Articles by Jurisdiction
Energy & Projects Report
Middle East & Africa public-private partnership (PPP) guideNeil Cuthbert and Atif Choudhary of Dentons analyse the emergence of PPP’s in the Middle East and how selected emerging markets in Africa ...
The national natural gas policy of Tanzania
In this briefing we review the evolution of Tanzania’s first National Natural Gas Policy over the last year, evaluate the key final terms and consider likely next steps.
Registration of private sector foreign loans with the Bank of Tanzania
The Bank of Tanzania requires that all foreign loans from the private sector in Tanzania are registered with them. We look at what this registration means in practice.
Latest Articles