Ghana will be a major beneficiary of Old Mutual
Emerging Market’s new investment plan for the next three to five years, targetting
water, housing and roads sectors of the economy, the company said at a
conference in Cape Town, South Africa, last week.
Old Mutual Emerging Markets is the arm of the Old
Mutual Group -- the global financial services conglomerate with interests in
banking, insurance and asset management -- concentrated on driving their
business in emerging markets.
Speaking at the conference, which was part of the
2013 Emerging Markets Roadshow, Rojie Kisten, Head, Capital Raising, Infrastructure
and Impact Funds of Old Mutual Investment, said: “The group is looking at helping
to grow Ghana’s infrastructural development. We are not taking Ghana for
granted in our investment plan; we see opportunities in Ghana, we see growth
and we are working toward this.”
He added: “I am highly surprised that when I talk to
government officials and regulators they want our relationship to be a
partnership.”
Old Mutual recently acquired a majority stake in
Provident Life Assurance Company in Ghana, and is hoping to close the agreement
with the board and management by close of the year. While Kisten did not say
how much they’ll be investing in Ghana, Old Mutual -- with funds under
management of £262.2 billion at the end of 2012 -- is believed to have enough
wherewithal to invest in strategic projects of the country’s economy.
Provident Life is the fifth-largest life insurance company
in the country, and provides life insurance and investment products mainly via
an agency force. The group’s acquisition of the company is targetted at expanding
its African presence.
Old Mutual Group has a 2015 target for emerging
markets of nine million customers, return on equity in the range of 20-25
percent, and profit from Old Mutual Africa equivalent to 15 percent of that of Old
Mutual South Africa.
Last year, the group bought the life insurance unit of
Nigeria’s Oceanic Bank, and plans to buy minority and majority stakes in
businesses in both East and West Africa over the next three to five years.
“We believe that the prospects for growth in Africa
are underpinned by sustainable, structural factors,” it said in a statement,
adding that the continent’s economic output quadrupled to US$2trillion between
2000 and 2012.
Conference bemoans intra-Africa trade bottlenecks
Speaking under
the topic “Sub-Saharan Africa: “Context and Potential”,
Dennis Dykes, an economist, said
intra-regional trade is still hampered by bureaucracy, corruption and lack of infrastructure.
“Infrastructure
is still very underdeveloped and not geared to intraregional trade. Energy and
transport infrastructure is a significant constraint. There are few development
corridors within and between countries.
“Lack of skills impedes competitiveness, and the ability to
conceive, plan and execute projects is a problem. Politics and policy remain
deterrents in many African countries, and corruption levels are still high and
patronage a problem.
“Considerable work needs to be done on regional integration
and improved governance,” he added.
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