Africa’s SWFs pledge to work together

Recent initiatives suggest a growing sophistication amongst Africa’s sovereign wealth funds as they seek to conform to international governance practices and pledge to boost co-operation and co-investment across the continent and around the world.

African funds with a collective $12.6 billion asset under management have formed the African Sovereign Investors Forum (ASIF). The new club combines investors with shared goals and missions, focusing on the internationalisation of companies, the promotion of economic and social development and pledging to increase investment in Africa.

“ASIF is expected to be a game changer for the continent. This dimension of collaboration will catalyse Africa’s anticipated growth,” said Uche Orji, managing director and chief executive officer of the Nigeria Sovereign Investment Authority, NSIA, speaking at ASIF’s launch. “Co-investing by sovereign investors has capacity to unleash growth opportunities across the continent.”

The alliance doesn’t include Libya’s Investment Authority or Botswana’s Pula Fund. But it does include two fledging African funds from Ethiopia and Djibouti. Ethiopian Investment Holdings (EIH) was founded in January 2022 as a holding company under local law. Its primary mandate is to unlock the value of the government’s assets through commercial management and optimisation and ready them for privatisation as well as acting as a reliable local partner for foreign direct investment. EIH is modelled on Temasek and Khazanah.

Djibouti’s Fonds Souverain de Djibouti (FSD), set up in March 2020, is also in the club. Its multidimensional mandate is focused on investing locally, regionally and internationally to catalyse sustainable and inclusive economic growth for the diversification of Djibouti’s economy, the creation of jobs and building reserves for future generations. Strengthening corporate governance is a key enabler to successfully partnering with domestic and foreign private sector participants and ultimately achieving its mission.

In other developments the Gabonese fund, FGIS, founded in 2012, recently make a formal commitment to net zero. FGIS manages around $ 1.7 billion of which 78 per cent is invested in the domestic economy.

Sponsored Content

Record breaking year

Africa’s ascendancy into the world of SWFs marks a record-breaking year for investment by SWF’s.  According to a June report from the International Forum of Sovereign Wealth Funds, IFSWF, the global network of sovereign wealth funds from over 40 countries, three key themes dominate investments over the last year.

2021 broke records for the number of direct investments made by sovereign wealth funds, jumping from 316 in 2020 to 429 in 2021, a 50 per cent increase year-on-year, and a 60 per cent increase in the average number of deals in any of the previous five years. The value of those deals also climbed in 2021, reaching $71.6 billion, up from $67.8 billion in 2020. In 2021, sovereign wealth funds not only invested in digital technologies but also put more capital into hard assets.

Sovereign wealth funds have been increasing allocations to unlisted assets for the best part of a decade. But now, rather than distinguishing between listed and unlisted assets, sovereign wealth funds seek to generate real durable value by backing less mature companies instead of recycling existing wealth and boosting returns by occasionally making contrarian bets in times of market dislocation.

The report also highlighted the link investors are finding between real assets and real returns. Infrastructure assets play an important role in diversifying sovereign wealth fund portfolios. COVID-19 has had a range of effects on infrastructure. For some sub-sectors, such as passenger-linked transport assets, 2020 and 2021 were difficult years. For others, such as digital infrastructure and renewables, they were standout. Sovereign wealth funds have backed these trends, which will benefit from the energy transition and rising demand for digital services.

“The COVID-19 pandemic fundamentally changed the global economy and the investment environment. Our data reveals that sovereign wealth funds have been foresighted and looking to generate robust long-term returns by taking advantage of the effects that the pandemic has had on a range of secular megatrends,” said Duncan Bonfield, IFSWF chief executive.

 

Leave a Comment

The twin forces rewriting the rules of investing

The twin forces rewriting the rules of investing

Portfolios built for the old world will be severely tested as emerging forces rewrite the rules of investing. The Fiduciary Investors Symposium heard that geopolitical and macroeconomic upheaval, together with the disruption wrought by AI, should force asset owners to rethink the structure and composition of portfolios.

Sort content by

Global critique calls for Aussie reform

A global working group of pension experts critiqued the Australian system at the recent ICPM meeting in Sydney. They emphasised a desperate need for the system to move from accumulation to retirement income, reduce complexity, focus on retirees (not 40-year olds) and be holistic. After all, they said, the purpose of a pension system is about paying pensions not investment.

Washington State’s secret sauce

A big contributor to the long-term top decile performance of the Washington State Investment Board has been its high allocation to private markets. But it is not just the high allocation that sets the fund apart from its peers, it’s also the nature of the relationships with its GPs. Amanda White speaks to retiring CIO Gary Bruebaker about the fund's secret sauce.

Denmark’s Sampension favours CLOs

Sampension, the DKK325.6 billion labour-market Danish pension fund has found a rich seam investing in AAA-rated CLOs where it earns a pick-up from traditional fixed income in loans with low default rates. The head of credit Anders Tauber Lassen says the fund feels "quite comfortable taking this type of risk".

Looking less at the scoreboard

Traditional performance monitoring reports do more harm than good, argues Phil Edwards, who suggests a more effective monitoring framework shifts the focus away from performance numbers and towards the fundamental characteristics of the stocks held in the portfolio, perhaps borrowing some elements from private markets.

NZ Super reviews reference portfolio

The NZ$43 billion ($27 billion) New Zealand Super Fund is undergoing its five-yearly review of its reference portfolio, an innovative and unique asset allocation reference point that allows the fund to benchmark the performance of its actual portfolio and any value added through active management.

Bridgewater and UTIMCO talk China

The $41 billion University of Texas Investment Management has been investing in China since 2007 and its CIO, Britt Harris says it “must be taken seriously”. Presenting at the endowment's board meeting, co-CIO of Bridgewater, Bob Prince, agreed, saying “China is too big to avoid”.

Previous