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Aliko Dangote, Africa’s richest man, gains $915 million in Q1, now worth $20 billion

 

 

 

 

Aliko Dangote, Africa’s richest man, gains $915 million in Q1, now worth $20 billion - Photo/Image
Aliko Dangote

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Aliko Dangote, the richest man in Africa, posted decent gains in Q1 despite increased geopolitical uncertainty and high inflation.

Bloomberg Billionaires Index data shows that the wealthiest black man in the world now has an estimated net worth of $20 billion and posted gains of about $915 million in the first quarter. Additionally, he ended the first quarter as the only African among the top 80 richest people in the world after launching a fertilizer plant last week.

The 64-year-old billionaire’s current net worth is the equivalent of 10.4 million troy ounces of gold or 191 million barrels of crude oil.

Nigeria’s wealthy tycoon recently opened the continent’s largest fertilizer plant in Lagos. Fertilizers produced at the newly opened plant are already being shipped to the U.S., Brazil, and India.
Up to 2.8 million tonnes of urea can be produced at his fertilizer plant annually.

As evidenced by data, Dangote’s main source of wealth is his 86% stake in publicly traded Dangote Cement. Dangote Industries, his conglomerate, owns the shares directly and indirectly.

In 2020, Dangote Cement, the biggest cement producer in sub-Saharan Africa, generated revenues of 1.03 trillion naira ($2.7 billion).

A third of the Nigerian Stock Exchange’s market capitalization is attributed to the publicly traded companies in the Dangote Group, such as Dangote Cement, Dangote Sugar, and Nascon Allied Industries.
In Nigeria, a crude oil refinery being built at a cost of $19 billion is not included in his wealth valuation because it is not yet operational and construction costs outweigh its current value.

Dangote was born into a wealthy Muslim family of traders in the northern part of Nigeria from where he set up his own business selling cement when he was 21 years old. His switch to manufacturing building materials in the 1990s was prompted by government policies encouraging reductions in imports. (Nairametrics)

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