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Growing Africa gets share index | Growing Africa gets share index |
(30 minutes later) | |
A financial index has been launched for sub-Saharan Africa, allowing investors to track the fortunes of the top companies in the region. | |
The index is the creation of investment bank Renaissance Capital. | The index is the creation of investment bank Renaissance Capital. |
The world's major economies all have financial indices - such as the UK's FTSE, the US Dow Jones and Hong Kong's Hang Seng. | |
Correspondents say it is a sign that Africa is beginning to provide more attractive investment opportunities. | Correspondents say it is a sign that Africa is beginning to provide more attractive investment opportunities. |
The Renaissance Capital Index will highlight the financial ups and downs of the top 50 companies in 21 countries across the continent, from Senegal to Mozambique. | The Renaissance Capital Index will highlight the financial ups and downs of the top 50 companies in 21 countries across the continent, from Senegal to Mozambique. |
It will not include South Africa, which already has its own index. | It will not include South Africa, which already has its own index. |
What we have is a huge, untapped, but not very well understood, investment opportunity John Bates Renaissance Capital | What we have is a huge, untapped, but not very well understood, investment opportunity John Bates Renaissance Capital |
Despite headlines which often focus on the continent's problems, Africa's economies are growing, thanks to investment from China and the expansion of sectors such as tourism and telecommunications. | Despite headlines which often focus on the continent's problems, Africa's economies are growing, thanks to investment from China and the expansion of sectors such as tourism and telecommunications. |
The index will provide potential investors with corporate growth benchmarks, allowing them to assess potential profits, explained John Bates from Renaissance Capital. | The index will provide potential investors with corporate growth benchmarks, allowing them to assess potential profits, explained John Bates from Renaissance Capital. |
"Sub-Saharan Africa is a particularly strong growth market," he told the BBC. | "Sub-Saharan Africa is a particularly strong growth market," he told the BBC. |
"You're talking about a region that has 15% of the world's population, 20% of the world's land mass, but only produces 2% of global output at this stage. Against that backdrop sub-Saharan Africa is actually increasing its exports to China, whereas the rest of the world is doing quite the opposite. | |
"So what we have is a huge, untapped, but not very well understood, investment opportunity in all shapes and sizes," he said. | |
Unlike several other parts of the world, sub-Saharan Africa is showing high growth rates - with the banking sector, for example, growing by 90% over the past few years. | |
Analysts say, however, that the risks of investing in Africa are still high, because of factors like poor infrastructure and corruption - but they say that also means the rewards are potentially much higher. | Analysts say, however, that the risks of investing in Africa are still high, because of factors like poor infrastructure and corruption - but they say that also means the rewards are potentially much higher. |
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