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DealMakers AFRICA Annual 2025 issue

Contents
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CONTENTS

FROM THE  EDITOR'S DESK

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At the time of writing, the effects of the Trump administration’s trade and foreign policy stance continue to create a degree of global uncertainty. Escalating tensions between the United States and Iran have added further turbulence to the geopolitical landscape, with inevitable knock-on effects for markets and investor sentiment.


Regional analysis by DealMakers AFRICA for 2025 shows that the number of deals and transactions recorded across the continent (excluding South Africa) declined by 17% year-on-year to 356. Despite the drop in deal volume, aggregate deal value increased by 18% to US$17,33 billion (page 4), reflecting the presence of several large transactions during the year.


Once again, private equity (PE) activity accounted for approximately half of total deal flow, reinforcing a trend that has emerged over several years, in which private capital plays a pivotal role in supporting M&A growth across the continent. No longer viewed as an unconventional source of funding, private equity is increasingly regarded as a reliable engine for scale, consolidation, and long-term value creation.

West Africa, and in particular Nigeria (page 3), led M&A activity with 110 deals, representing nearly a third of all transactions captured for the year. Nigeria alone accounted for 60 of these deals. East Africa followed with 87 transactions (Kenya contributing 58), while North Africa recorded 81 deals, of which Egypt accounted for 51.

Activity in General Corporate Finance (GCF) – which includes equity issues, placements and listings (excluding bonds) – remained broadly consistent with the previous year. DealMakers AFRICA recorded 123 transactions in 2025, compared with 127 in 2024. The aggregate value, however, differed markedly, with 2025 recording $7,15 billion – significantly lower than the $16,5 billion recorded in 2024.

The largest deal by value recorded for the year (page 6) was the disposal by Diageo of its 100% shareholding in Diageo Kenya – which holds a 65% stake in East African Breweries and a 53.68% stake in UDV (Kenya) – to the Japanese conglomerate, Asahi Group. The $3 billion transaction was shortlisted as a nominee for Deal of the Year 2025.

Second on the list of largest M&A deals was Vodacom’s acquisition of a further 20% stake in Safaricom, valued at $2,4 billion. The transaction was ultimately recognised as Deal of the Year 2025, reflecting its strategic significance within the African telecommunications landscape.

While such uncertainty often prompts investors to pause, African M&A activity is expected to remain relatively resilient in 2026. The continent is increasingly viewed as a strategically neutral source of critical minerals and energy exports, both of which are essential to global supply chains. That said, a number of headwinds remain. Rising inflation, driven (in part) by fuel price spikes, could place upward pressure on interest rates, increasing the cost of financing transactions. At the same time, major African economies face heightened exposure to currency volatility, a factor that can complicate deal structuring and valuation.

For investors, the outlook presents a dual narrative. On the one hand, manufacturing and export sectors face increased risk as tariff policies evolve and trade relationships shift. On the other, the continent’s critical minerals, energy and infrastructure sectors may see renewed investment as global players navigate what has increasingly been described as a more “transactional” US foreign policy environment.

Despite these complexities, market sentiment suggests that 2026 could remain a robust year for African dealmaking, supported by ongoing structural reforms in key markets, such as South Africa and Nigeria, as well as the gradual but meaningful implementation of the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA).

 

This year, we celebrate the 2025 achievements of the M&A and capital markets industries at our DealMakers AFRICA Awards events in Nairobi (East Africa Awards) and Lagos (West Africa Awards).

Congratulations to the dealmakers across North, East, West and Southern Africa, whose hard work, perseverance and long hours to bring transactions to completion should never be underestimated. Their accomplishments continue to highlight the depth of talent and resilience within Africa’s dealmaking community.

 

The results of the Awards events are recorded in the pages of this magazine.

Editors Note

Marylou Greig

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Reginal Analysis
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East Africa Rankings
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Individual DMoY East
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DoY EA
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PE DoY EA
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West Africa Rankings
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Ind DM WA
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DoY WA
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PE DoY WA
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Thorts: the 2026 reawakening

THORTS  

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The 2026 reawakening: Why sub-Saharan Africa M&A is
primed for significant growth

Krishna Nagar

As the curtain closed on 2025 and we headed into 2026, the sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) M&A landscape appears to be gearing up for a level of momentum not seen in several cycles. 


For years, dealmakers in the region have navigated a thicket of macroeconomic headwinds, including currency volatility, high interest rates and benign economic growth, due to structural challenges such as electricity and water shortages, as well as rail and logistics failings. Encouragingly, the outlook for 2026 indicates a fundamental shift may be underway. 


Underpinned by improving macro factors and the resilient performance of equity markets across key hubs such as Johannesburg, Nairobi and Lagos, 2026 is shaping up to be the year that cautious optimism finally translates into positive execution.

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Krishna Nagar

AN ERA OF INTRA-AFRICAN SCALE
One of the more important structural shifts is the maturing of regional integration efforts. The African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) is no longer just a diplomatic talking point; it is increasingly an impetus to dealmaking, as we face a world of uncertainty related to tariffs.
Historically, SSA has been criticised for its fragmented markets, resulting in frictional costs which often limited the scalability of investments. In 2026, however, we expect to see much improved volumes of cross-border M&A as both multinationals and regional champions look to augment their pan-African strategies. Businesses are looking beyond their domestic borders to unlock new consumer markets and achieve operational efficiencies in Africa that were previously impossible. This trend is particularly evident in the financial services, TMT, consumer goods and logistics sectors, where regional connectivity is the new benchmark for valuation.


GLOBAL APPETITES: GROWTH MEETS DIVERSIFICATION
While intra-African activity provides the engine, global capital continues to provide the fuel. The 2026 narrative for international investors is dual-focused. For developed market players (North America and Europe), the primary driver is growth. With traditional markets facing stagnation, SSA’s demographic dividend – a youthful, urbanising and increasing population – offers an attractive long-term growth profile that is hard to ignore. 


Conversely, for emerging market investors, particularly from Asia and the Middle East, the focus is on strategic diversification and supply chain security. We are seeing more “South-South” tie-ups, where capital from the Gulf or India is being deployed into African healthcare, consumer goods companies, infrastructure and resources, treating the region as a vital node in the global trade architecture.


THE SECTORAL SPLIT: FROM DIGITAL DISRUPTION TO ENERGY TRANSITION
The deal flow of 2026 is likely to be dominated by two distinct “speeds” of investment:
1.    The digital evolution: The fintech and technology sectors remain the darlings of the M&A world. However, the nature of these deals is evolving. We are moving away from speculative seed-stage investments toward mature consolidation. Established financial institutions are increasingly looking to acquire agile start-ups in digital payments and micro-lending. This is not just a grab for market share; it is a defensive and offensive move to ensure survival in a mobile-first economy.


2.    The resource realignment: In the natural resources space, a “great restructuring” is underway. Global demand for critical minerals, including copper, lithium, nickel and cobalt, is driving aggressive M&A in the resources sector. The consolidation race amongst the large, multinational, diversified players looking to capture these scarce opportunities is on. Simultaneously, the energy transition is creating a bifurcated market in oil and gas: international majors are divesting mature onshore assets, creating space for ambitious “African independents”, while simultaneously pivoting their own African portfolios toward large-scale renewable energy and green hydrogen projects.


THE RISE OF THE INSTITUTIONAL “NEW GUARD”
The 2026 M&A ecosystem is also being professionalised by the growing influence of private capital. Private equity firms, family offices, and increasingly active sovereign wealth funds are increasingly stepping in where other forms of traditional financing may be sitting on the sidelines.


These institutional investors are bringing a long-term value creation mindset. They are attracted by assets that, due to recent currency adjustments, are currently undervalued relative to their intrinsic potential. Furthermore, 2026 is expected to be a bumper year for “secondary” sales—where one private equity firm sells to another—as funds look to return capital to limited partners following a period of holding-pattern stagnation. Their presence is mandating a higher standard of due diligence and governance, which in turn makes the entire market more attractive to risk-averse global players.


ESG CONSIDERATIONS FORM PART OF BUSINESS AS USUAL
If the last few years were about talking about ESG, 2026 will be about pricing it. 
The hype around environmental, social and governance considerations has transitioned to being seen as a critical part of transaction evaluations, and is increasingly embedded in sourcing capital. Acquiring entities in 2026 will prioritise targets that can prove a net-positive impact, whether that’s through clean energy adoption, inclusive healthcare models, or sustainable agri-business practices. 


NAVIGATING THE REGULATORY FRONTIER: 


A HEIGHTENED ENFORCEMENT ERA
As we move into 2026, the regulatory landscape has become significantly more robust. Several critical developments in key SSA markets mean a heightened focus on anti-trust issues in M&A, as well as specific public interest factors that authorities must consider. This year, a deal’s success won’t just depend on its competitive impact, but on its contribution to environmental sustainability and its effect on small local businesses.


Furthermore, several governments across SSA are refining their local content requirements. In certain sectors, we are seeing a move away from generic ownership quotas towards more sophisticated value-retention models. 


This requires acquirers to demonstrate, as part of their post deal plans, how they will integrate local suppliers and transfer technical expertise. Successful market participants in 2026 will be those who view regulatory diplomacy not as an administrative hurdle, but as a core component of their strategic value proposition.


CONCLUSION
As the year unfolds, the combination of the above factors suggests that SSA is not just open for business, but is ready for a period of significant corporate activity. 

 

The 2026 M&A opportunity set in SSA represents one of the most compelling in the global landscape.


Krishna Nagar is head of Corporate Finance | RMB

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Thorts: Africa's Digital Backbone

THORTS  

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Africa’s digital backbone

Khanyisile Malebe and Nomsa Sibanyoni

The infrastructure behind Africa’s digital future


The global economy is being reshaped by rapid advances in artificial intelligence (AI), cloud computing and digital services. At the centre of this transformation lies an often-invisible but critical layer of infrastructure: data centres and high-capacity fibre networks. Data centres – warehousing computer servers that store, process, and transmit data – have become the backbone of the modern digital economy.

While global investment in digital infrastructure has accelerated, Africa currently accounts for less than 1% of global data-centre capacity. This disparity highlights both a structural weakness and a compelling opportunity. As Africa’s digital adoption accelerates, scalable, reliable and locally based data infrastructure is no longer optional; it is essential to economic competitiveness, financial inclusion and long-term growth.


THE CHALLENGE: soaring digital demand and insufficient infrastructure


Africa’s demand for digital services is growing at unprecedented speed, and mobile connectivity has been a key driver of this shift. As of January 2024, mobile devices accounted for approximately 74% of all web traffic on the continent – around 14% higher than the global average. This reflects both the affordability and accessibility of mobile connections relative to fixed-line broadband, reinforcing Africa’s mobile-first digital ecosystem.

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Khanyisile Malebe
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Nomsa Sibanyoni

At the same time, the continent’s internet user base is expanding rapidly. Internet users grew from approximately 181 million in 2014 to around 646 million by 2025, with projections indicating that this figure could reach 1,1 billion by 2029. This surge is fuelling demand for digital content, fintech platforms, e-commerce, cloud-based services, and data-intensive applications such as AI.


However, the pace of infrastructure development has struggled to keep up. Limited local data-centre capacity forces reliance on offshore hosting, increasing latency, costs and regulatory risk. Fibre networks remain unevenly distributed, and power reliability continues to constrain expansion. Without accelerated investment, these bottlenecks risk slowing Africa’s digital momentum and undermining the scalability of its fastest-growing sectors.


THE OPPORTUNITY: a new infrastructure asset class emerges


Despite these constraints, Africa is making progress. The continent is seeing steady growth in Tier III and Tier IV data centres across key markets. While Tier I and II facilities offer basic or partial redundancy, Tier III sites provide fully maintainable power and cooling paths, and Tier IV facilities deliver full fault tolerance and maximum uptime. This shift toward enterprise-grade infrastructure is essential for supporting cloud computing, fintech platforms, AI workloads, and other mission-critical digital services.


The commercial case is particularly strong in fintech. According to BDO’s June 2024 Fintech in Africa report, innovation across the sector is accelerating, with Northern Africa currently leading, and Egypt alone accounting for 9.6% of new fintech start-ups. Driven by markets such as South Africa, Nigeria, Egypt and Kenya, Africa’s fintech sector is projected to reach an estimated US$65 billion in revenue by 2030, reflecting a compound annual growth rate of approximately 32%. As these platforms scale across borders, their dependence on secure, resilient, and locally hosted data infrastructure increases.


THE SOLUTION: capital, capability and coordinated policy


Unlocking Africa’s digital infrastructure potential requires a coordinated response across three dimensions: investment, skills and energy.
First, sustained capital deployment is essential. Recent investments signal growing confidence in the sector. The International Finance Corporation’s USD 100 million commitment to Raxio Group, for example, is aimed at expanding data-centre capacity to support AI, cloud computing and digital financial services across sub-Saharan Africa.


Second, infrastructure development must be matched with skills development. Scaling data centres requires engineers, operators and digital professionals capable of managing complex, high-availability environments. Building this talent pipeline is critical to long-term sustainability.
Third, energy availability remains decisive. Data centres are power-intensive assets, and markets with reliable, cost-effective and renewable energy sources are best positioned to attract investment. Integrated infrastructure models offer a compelling solution. Uganda’s Buheesi project – co-financed by the World Bank, development finance institutions, and two South African commercial banks – combined electrification with fibre connectivity. The results were tangible: schools gained access to digital learning, clinics submitted real-time health data, and public services became more efficient.


The broader socio-economic impact is equally compelling. A 2023 World Bank report found that in Nigeria and Tanzania, expanded internet coverage sustained over three or more years reduced extreme poverty by approximately 7%, while labour-force participation and wage employment increased by up to 8%.


THE ENABLING FRAMEWORK
Regulatory alignment is reinforcing the case for local infrastructure. Governments across Africa are strengthening data-protection and localisation frameworks to ensure that sensitive data remains within national borders. For example, South Africa’s National Data and Cloud Policy requires government data linked to national security to be stored on locally based infrastructure; Kenya’s data-protection regime mandates local hosting for personal data tied to strategic state interests; and Zambia’s Data Protection Act similarly restricts offshore storage of certain personal data.
These measures reflect a broader shift toward digital sovereignty, reducing reliance on foreign cloud providers and increasing demand for domestic data-centre capacity. In parallel, several jurisdictions are moving toward clearer and more streamlined licensing and approval processes for digital infrastructure, reducing regulatory uncertainty and shortening timeframes for market entry.


For investors and operators, greater regulatory clarity, both in data requirements and in licensing frameworks, would serve as a further enabler for investment and growth.


BUILDING AFRICA’S DIGITAL UTILITIES
Africa’s economic resilience and competitiveness are increasingly tied to the strength of its digital backbone. Data centres and high-capacity fibre networks are no longer peripheral assets. Instead, they are the continent’s new utilities, and must be supported by reliable energy infrastructure and coherent regulatory frameworks.


Investing in digital infrastructure is not merely a technology play. It underpins innovation, enables financial inclusion, supports job creation, and anchors Africa more firmly in the global digital economy. As capital, policy and capability converge, Africa’s digital infrastructure is emerging as one of the continent’s most compelling and impactful investment themes.


Malebe and Sibanyoni are  Corporate Financiers | PSG Capital


REFERENCES:
https://www.statista.com/statistics/1124283/internet-penetration-in-africa-by-country/?srsltid=AfmBOoqnvZ4gRnNgDfqrX2CDSRMIysfjHXyW42jOw9HIuKZThE0pJabo
https://www.bdo.co.za/getmedia/0a92fd54-18e6-4a18-8f21-c22b0ae82775/Fintech-in-Africa-Report-2024_June.pdf
https://www.raxiogroup.com/raxio-secures-100-million-from-ifc-to-develop-leading-sub-saharan-african-data-center-platform

https://extensia.tech/in-africa-the-data-center-market-will-grow-by-11-8-per-year-by-2030 
https://itif.org/publications/2025/06/09/south-africa-localization-regulation 
https://www.gov.za/sites/default/files/gcis_document/202104/44389gon206.pdf 

https://www.weforum.org/stories/2025/04/how-shared-digital-infrastructure-can-bridge-the-gap-in-africa
https://www.worldbank.org/en/results/2024/01/18/digital-transformation-drives-development-in-afe-afw-africa
https://fintechmagazine.africa/2025/04/04/policy-and-regulatory-developments-shaping-africas-fintech-landscape-2024-2025-and-projections-for-the-coming-years-part-iii 
https://www.ainvest.com/news/regulatory-shifts-african-fintech-markets-central-bank-leadership-investor-confidence-2509 

 

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The DealMakers AFRICA Oval Table

Representatives of the firms make up the Advisory Board which meets twice a year.
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