Publications /
Opinion

Back
Successfully Transforming African Agribusiness through Private Equity Capital - Part II - What are the Key Success Factors in Private Equity Investing and how does that Apply to the African Context
Authors
Ezana Bocresion
April 23, 2015

We finished Part I - Solving the Capital Formation Issue with a question? How should institutional investors go about looking for the best partners to help them make successful investments in Africa; and fundamentally, the real question to ask is, what are the variables required for building successful investment platforms in Africa?

Whenever one meets with an allocator from an institutional investor to discuss an allocation to an Africa strategy, the first question on their checklist is track record ?  Ultimately, allocators at large institutional pools of capital, namely the pension plans, endowments and foundations, are first and foremost interested in capital preservation. The incentive structures are such that there are no prizes for taking risks, only consequences for losing capital. Therefore, when institutional investors venture into a new region/sector or new managers, they rely on their peers for support in vetting the opportunities – the point being that of a recognized investor takes the plunge, it is because thy have done the “work”. So they are “pack hunters”. Invariably what this means is what they prefer are the Blackstones, KKRs, Bains, Permiras or Doughty Hansens as managers; choices for which the institutional investor would not be criticized for selecting were the manager lose investors’ money because it is based on conventional wisdom!

In my experience speaking and working with third party marketers (firms and people who raise capital from institutional investors), institutional investors or even lay investors from more developed regions on investing Africa, they are all guilty of applying Maslow’s Hammer; or as they say of Generals in the military, they always fight the last war!

To be frank, for many investors - professional or not - Africa is not akin to anything they have seen. So they do the only thing they know and understand:

they measure it based on their current environment. Suffice to say; by that measure few investment opportunities are viable in Africa.

So the obvious question to ask is what are the drivers of returns and value creation for any private equity operation? Another way to address this issue is to look at the history of each of the firms listed above and ask what is it that all of the firms listed above have in common because when these firms started, there was no Private Equity industry the way we know it today.

PCNS

Now let us look at what are the keys to the success of this group ?

1. Buy low sell high…Valuation is the key; ultimately, in price determines returns!

- Each of these players understood valuation and knew how to value the opportunities before them. All of these players, except for Bain, come from an investment banking/restructuring background where understanding of valuation is the foundation of the business. In the case of Bain, they came to understand valuation from the operational improvement side which was the core of the work that all the people involved in Bain Capital did as consultants

2. Ability to protect themselves as an investors and incentivize people:

Protecting yourself upfront and building in the right incentives increases likelihood of success; in fact, prevent loss while retaining a call option on the upside

- Each of these players had worked on a myriad of transactions for their corporate clients. They competed on how aggressively they protected their clients – basically getting the best deal on divestitures, sales or restructurings; so when it came to doing it for their own account, they were well versed in the art

3. Network is Critical: Access to deal flow and ability to add value

- Deal flow is the life-blood of Private Equity. Each of the founders of these firms were able to develop a cross sectional view of the industries they covered working for the banks/firms they worked for. This allowed them to determine the sellers were vs not, i.e. the opportunities versus the dead ends

- This cross sectional view of industries also allowed them to compare and come to understand why one company was better than another. It also allowed them to develop relationships with the “doers”, the managers Private Equity in the US and Europe was built on resuscitating corporate orphans and underperforming/distressed businesses and fixing them

- In short, they knew where the opportunities lay, which ones were worth buying at what price and knew where to find new management to add the value need

4. Knowing how to get out: To quote Henry Kravis (Co-Founder of KKR),”…any fool can overpay and buy a company”, “…congratulate us when we sell it.”

- Having sold may companies for their clients as bankers, consultants each of these founders was intimately familiar with how to position a company for sale

- The options are selling to the players in the same industry or taking the company public; again having covered the industries to uncover the opportunity, they knew the buyers well. As bankers they had all managed divestitures and worked on IPOs

Replicating these skill sets in Africa is not as easy for the following reasons

1. Valuation; Understanding valuation in the African context is more complicated

- Issues include lack of information, fluctuating currencies and inflation,

- Valuation is a triangulation exercise and in the African context you have more variables to consider; not only does gathering the corroborating information require a local presence, but also the personnel that know how to get it

- It is important to have done it in similarly transitioning economies in other jurisdictions

2. Structuring: Comfort with the local legal systems, investor protection laws and tax efficiency issues means educating investors

- This element requires educating both the investors and target companies

- Africa has traditionally been a credit market and not an equity market.

So bringing new ways to structure agreements and getting the target companies, and the market, comfortable with the different provisions that investors will require is important to unlocking the growth

- Again experience from other changing/evolving jurisdiction is important

3. Deal flow and adding value: This is where the new entrants into the

African PE market will be most challenged

- Most of the new entrants are accustomed to using intermediaries, as they do in their home markets. Unfortunately, the intermediary market in Africa is not yet sufficiently developed; local banks and boutiques do not have the depth of experience, and in case of boutiques the critical mass, to provide the services professional investors have come to expect

- The large banks, which are the obvious intermediaries for a foreign investor, do not have an investment banking culture. They do not have the know-how, experience or the incentive structure to drive investment banking

- The best opportunities are usually not the ones being sold; these opportunities are unlikely come to market through one of these intermediaries

- Just as in Latin America when that region first came onto the world investment grid in the late 1980s/ early 1990s, investors must access targets directly (i.e. the investor knows the seller/target) or through their trusted relationships, and give birth to the deal over time

- From the perspective of adding value to portfolio companies, many investors will look to the international consulting firms to help them add value. I would actually suggest that such a approach will likely lead to failure

- The secret lies in finding local solutions…this can only be done if the investor has local relationships and understands how local businesses operate locally

- The Market for opportunities is a bifurcated one;

- There are the larger state owned enterprises that the governments are looking to privatize

- This is a restructuring exercise for the investor where it is a question of institutionalizing the operation as a private company for the benefit of its shareholders

- Then there are the smaller family owned businesses that have been operating for a generation or more that lack scale, structure, management, and often capital

- These businesses are not institution ready. Some of these businesses may even require a partner to prepare them for an institutional partner/PE investor in the US/European context

- All this is to say that US/European style PE will need to adapt to succeed in Africa

- It actually means PE firms operating in Africa will need to roll up their sleeves and invest management time in their portfolio companies more than they are accustomed to

4. Managing the exit: To be successful, the investor will probably need to manage his own exit

- As stated earlier, the Investment Banking industry in Africa is very nascent and the industry does not have the experience or reach to add value to a professional investor in a divestiture mandate

- The most important element in sell side advisory is knowing the likely buyers; at this time, the local Investment Bankers do not have these relationships; and the global Investment Banks have not yet grown sufficiently in Africa Suffice to say that there are no global PE platforms that have all these skill sets resident in the operations. The next best option is for the interested platforms to build Africa teams are fully equipped. Elements of the skills can be imported from a platform’s team(s) in other emerging jurisdictions, but it will take time build the full skill sets successfully as most of the Africans available to  populate the teams with lack the requisite experience to add value at the outset. There are some Africans with the requisite skill sets, not enough to meet the need of the market. Some of them have formed firms and are operational, but they are having difficulty raising capital for the reasons articulated earlier. So it will take time for market for both people and capital to find its natural equilibrium, as it is early days yet in the life cycle of the PE industry in Africa.

The true take away for me in all of this is the following; the large PE firms core competence/know-how was actually developed and honed over time by the global Investment Banks as part of their on going investment banking services, so there was a lot of capital invested in developing this core competence that the PE firms never paid for. Now in the Africa context, the same level of investment will be required to map the landscape for companies and people and develop the core competence. The real question is does Global PE have the capital or patience to do that now that they own the industry?

RELATED CONTENT

  • Authors
    Sous la direction de
    Muhammad Ba
    Amanda Bisong
    Rafik Bouklia Hassane
    Salma Daoudi
    Pierre Jacquemot
    Leo Kemboi
    Jacob Kotcho
    Mouhamadou Ly
    Solomon Muqayi
    Meriem Oudmane
    Mohamed Ould El Abed
    Kwame Owino
    Asmita Parshotam
    Fatih Pittet
    December 29, 2020
    Dès les premiers cas du Coronavirus relevés en Afrique, les prédictions les plus sombres ont été faites sur la catastrophe sanitaire à venir sur le continent, en raison d’un certain nombre de caractéristiques supposées favoriser la propagation de l’épidémie. Ces prévisions ont été démenties par la rapidité des ripostes des Etats et par divers autres facteurs. La progression de la Covid-19 en Afrique n’est pas le fait d’une dynamique unique mais plutôt de multiples profils de risques ...
  • Authors
    December 22, 2020
    After reaching a peak against other currencies in March this year, the dollar fell by almost 15% until the beginning of December. According to Bloomberg, asset portfolio managers have been assuming "short" positions against the dollar, that is, betting on its fall ahead. The dollar is expected to devalue against the euro, the yen, and the Chinese RMB in 2021. The peak last March, during the coronavirus financial shock, reflected the search for a safe haven in short-term US bonds or ...
  • Authors
    December 14, 2020
    This article has originally been published on OECD Development matter platform Many donor countries seem eager to see middle-income countries (MICs) “master out” and graduate to a non-client status in multilateral development institutions before fully achieving their development potential. We argue that such institutions can still significantly contribute to the sustainable development of MICs, while also seizing many benefits from this relationship (Middle income countries and mul ...
  • Authors
    December 7, 2020
    The pandemic is accelerating history, in the sense that it is leading to the speeding up of some recent trends. In the case of globalization, the pandemic will not reverse it, but it will reshape it. Here we take a bird’s eye view of global trade during the pandemic, relate it to previous trends, and guess how global value chain managers and government trade policymakers are likely to react. A Bird’s Eye View of Global Trade during the Pandemic World trade took a deep dive during ...
  • November 26, 2020
    Food security for all requires (i) sustained productivity growth and competitiveness, not only of agriculture but of the entire economy; (ii) a social safety net; and (iii) resilience in the face of periodic shocks. This is the central message of this review. Two popular concepts in food security for all are food self-sufficiency (FSS) and food sovereignty (FSY). While countries have pursued different policies to achieve FSS, the common element in their approaches is the misguided ...
  • Authors
    Youssef El Jai
    September 15, 2020
    Avant l'ère coloniale, l'émission d'argent en Afrique de l'Ouest dépendait de la traite des esclaves. Avec l'avènement du régime colonial, les pièces d'argent ont été importées puis progressivement imposées comme outil de coercition. La trajectoire postcoloniale a été différente pour les anciennes colonies britanniques et françaises. Alors que les premières ont retrouvé leur souveraineté monétaire, les secondes ont conservé une union monétaire sous l’égide de la France. La propositi ...
  • September 2, 2020
    The year 2020 is one of the most difficult years for the global automotive industry. The pandemic first appeared in a region of China known for its developed automotive sector. Initially, it was the South Asian manufacturers who first felt the impact of the shutdown in China before the pandemic shifted to Europe and the United States and before the disruption of value chains took on a global dimension. In Morocco, the sector has not remained immune to this turbulent context and its ...
  • Authors
    April 30, 2020
    La Communauté économique des Etats de l’Afrique de l’Ouest (CEDEAO) est souvent présentée comme étant le système d’intégration régionale le plus dynamique du continent africain. Les Conférences des chefs d’Etat et de Gouvernement y sont régulières, les citoyens de la Communauté disposent d’un passeport commun et les discussions sur une monnaie unique sont à l’ordre du jour. Néanmoins, le modèle de la CEDEAO souffre de deux paradoxes majeurs. Les paradoxes africains Le premier pa ...
  • April 24, 2020
    This paper aims at evaluating the virtual water content in trade in an intra-country perspective and discussing potential tradeoffs between the use of natural resources and value added creation. We develop a trade-based index that reveals the relative water use intensities associated with specific interregional and international trade flows. The index is calculated considering the measures of water and value added embedded in trade flows associated with each regional origin-destinat ...
  • April 6, 2020
    Depuis l'entrée en vigueur de l'Accord de libre-échange (ALE) entre le Maroc et l'Union européenne (UE), il y a près de deux décennies, les performances des exportations marocaines vers les marchés de l'UE ont été plutôt décevantes, tandis que le déficit commercial du Maroc avec l'UE a augmenté de manière significative. Cela a conduit de nombreux observateurs à percevoir l'accord d'un oeil critique. Cependant, les balances commerciales bilatérales ne sont pas toujours suffisantes po ...