For Peter Thoms, founder and portfolio manager of Africa Capital Group in Coronado, California, the idea of investing in Africa as a natural resources play is somewhat passé.
Sure, the continent is blessed with an abundance of metals and is rich in bauxite, salt, oil, cocoa beans and wood, but in recent years, the massive global demand for those commodities from China and other nations has created new wealth for numerous African countries and given rise to different growth dynamics that make for compelling investment themes. Thoms' favorite: The rise of the African middle class and the growth of the consumer economy.
"We want to invest in growth, and we believe the greatest growth in Africa is happening within the consumer sector," Thoms said. "Our fund invests in 20 to 30 companies from across the continent, and we look for little segments where a company has a competitive advantage. We find that the best opportunities are in the consumer sectors."
Take South Africa's Calgro M3 Holdings, for instance.
The real estate developer is "fulfilling a desperate and unmet need in South Africa for affordable housing," Thoms said, "and while the broader South African economy is puttering along, Calgro is growing very quickly."
Ditto for Choppies, Botswana's dominant supermarket chain, which not only has a 34% market share in that country, but is now expanding into South Africa and eastward into Kenya, taking advantage of "the general trend in Africa toward formal retail," Thoms said.
As wealth has increased in Africa, Thoms said "people want to go into stores and shop. They want to know that their food is clean and safe, so as a broad category, formal retail is increasing."
Finding Gems Where American Investors Don't Tread
But finding companies like Calgro M3 Holdings and Choppies isn't easy. Uncovering such opportunities requires being willing and able to engage deeply with Africa and put in the legwork to dig up interesting investment stories, a process that, with the exception of South Africa, most American investors have not undertaken, Thoms said. This is also why, aside from a handful of specialized funds like his, a few broad-based Africa ETFs and a smattering of South African ADRs that can be bought directly in the U.S., there aren't a lot of investment vehicles for Africa.
Thoms has an edge over many of his peers because of his longstanding relationship with Africa: His father was a U.S. diplomat and Thoms spent his high school years in Addis Ababa, the capital of Ethiopia. He's traveled extensively in Africa (he insists that everyone on his team does, too) and he feels very comfortable on the ground there. But that isn't the case for most U.S. investors, he agreed, mainly because of the physical distance between the U.S. and the continent that still shrouds Africa in mystery. Many investors have yet to learn the basics about Africa, he said; that it is a continent made up of 54 different and diverse countries, each with its own colonial history and legacies, and all at different stages of development.
Still, in a world that's getting flatter and where growth opportunities are harder to find, Africa has plenty of potential, says Vito Sciaraffia, co-CIO of Innealta Capital.
The New Latin America?
Sciaraffia said he likes to compare Africa today to Latin America 30 years ago. "No one was interested" in Latin America as an investment opportunity then, he recalled, "and now there are over 15 ETFs for Brazil alone," Sciaraffia said. "I see the same thing happening with Africa over the next few years."
Undoubtedly, the broader African story is compelling for the longer term. Natural and mineral wealth apart, Africa has 60% of the world's uncultivated arable land, said Seelan Gobalsamy, CEO of STANLIB, a Pan-African, multi-specialist investment company based in Johannesburg. That means the continent will play a key role in meeting the world's rising food requirements in coming years.
Sub-Saharan Africa has an estimated population of 949 million, with an average age of around 20 years (in Asia, the median age is just under 30), he said, and at around 37%, the region's urban population remains extremely low by global standards.
Africa, particularly sub-Saharan Africa, has managed to sustainably lift its economic growth rate, Gobalsamy said.