Raising capital is the biggest constraint facing private equity firms seeking to invest in potential projects in sub-Saharan Africa, the chairman of Egyptian private equity firm Citadel Capital said.

Citadel, which has focused on the Middle East and north Africa but is also looking to expand its portfolio in sub-Saharan Africa, has $4.3 billion of assets under management.

The firm has a 51 per cent stake in Rift Valley Railways, the railway running from Kenya’s Mombasa port to Uganda, two gold mining concessions in Ethiopia and some projects in South Sudan, including a tract of land being cultivated for food crops.

Chairman Ahmed Heikal told Reuters in an interview at the World Economic Forum in Addis Ababa that Citadel was looking at further investments, just in east Africa at this point.

“Power is certainly very important, energy, especially distribution of energy, not necessarily upstream oil and gas, transportation and food processing,” he said, declining to give details on potential deals in the pipeline.

“The central idea is build companies in Egypt and use them as a platform to invest in the region,” he said.

But Haikal said raising capital was difficult, especially given the global economic backdrop and the relatively small size of local banking markets in sub-Saharan Africa.

“The European banking sector is retrenching, there is a deleveraging that is taking place in Europe. That will impact availability of finance for Africa, there are no two ways about it,” he said.

There is growing interest among private equity firms in sub-Saharan Africa, where economies are growing fast at a time developed nations, especially in Europe, are still struggling with the fallout from the financial crisis.

“Financing today is a significant constraint. You have local banking sectors across Africa that cannot support the type of projects that are needed, and hence you need to get outside capital in a global environment that is not benign,” he said.

According to the World Bank, sub-Saharan Africa is expected to grow 5.4 per cent this year. Stripping out South Africa, expansion will be running at more than six per cent.

But economists and African leaders recognise the continent still suffers from huge obstacles thanks to poor infrastructure, while vast tracts of idle potential arable land are also the focus of foreign investors.      

 — Reuters