Africa's richest man sat barefoot on his new yacht in a lagoon here after another night of about three hours sleep.
The
day was filled with meetings about his cement company and preparations
for a polio-fighting trip with fellow billionaire Bill Gates. His
BlackBerry buzzed every few minutes with messages from the president of
Benin, and a former U.S. ambassador wanted some face time.
"You
don't see any sign of stress on me," Aliko Dangote said with a tight
smile. The 56-year-old businessman said he was getting an energy boost
from a weeklong fast that limits him to six glasses of watermelon juice a
day.
For two decades, Mr. Dangote (pronounced DAHN-go-tay) has
turned his relentlessness, connections and entrepreneurial bets on the
rise of Africa into a fortune estimated at about $22 billion.
Most
of it comes from his controlling stake in a conglomerate of cement,
sugar, salt and noodle factories sprawled across 16 countries. Profits
in three publicly traded companies he controls hit $1 billion in the
first nine months of 2013, up 43% from a year earlier.
Mr. Dangote now has a plan to quintuple his wealth—and become one of the
five richest people in the world. He will spend $9 billion to build the
largest privately owned refinery in Nigeria, which produces more oil
than any other African country but must import most of the motor fuel
and diesel it uses because existing refineries are dilapidated and
inefficient.
Within about two years, the new refinery in a stretch of swampy
shoreline outside Lagos could start piping in crude from roughly 7 miles
offshore, bypassing a traffic jam of tankers often stuck for weeks.
Competing against four government-managed refineries that run at barely
20% of their capacity, Mr. Dangote would double the country's maximum
refinery output.
The refinery project is a bet that Africa's
economy will keep growing much faster than the rest of the world,
especially as a wave of consumerism sweeps the continent.
New
airlines are taking off so quickly that some jet-fuel sellers, hurt by a
shortage, have been caught trying to fill airplane tanks with kerosene
instead. Car imports through Nigeria's main port have risen to about 300
cars a day.
As a result, Africa now is the world's
fastest-growing oil user, and the International Energy Agency expects
oil consumption in Africa to surge about 30% to 4.5 million barrels a
day by 2018. The jump represents 15% of the world's projected rise in
oil demand.
Mr. Dangote and his supporters, including Nigeria's
president, see more than money in the new refinery. To them, it also
defies centuries of Africa exporting its most precious
resources—including gold, diamonds and humans—rather than putting them
to work at home.
Nigeria's government has collected about $1.3
trillion in oil revenue since 1980, according to the Economist
Intelligence Unit. Yet about 60% of the country's 170 million people
live on less than $1 a day, according to the government. It says as much
as 400,000 barrels of oil per day—or one-sixth of total output—are
pilfered from pipelines by bandits. Most of the stolen crude is loaded
onto barges at night and shipped abroad.
The refinery planned by
Mr. Dangote will "change the economic and industrial landscape of
Nigeria," said Doyin Okupe, senior special assistant to Nigeria
President Goodluck Jonathan. The president thanked the billionaire and
his bankers by inviting them to Mr. Jonathan's villa on a day usually
reserved for government planning sessions.
The project faces
daunting challenges. Competition will be fierce from U.S., Asian and
European companies that also want to satisfy Africa's thirst for
gasoline and other fuel products. Some energy firms are expanding
operations in Africa, and American refineries are gaining an edge around
the world as the U.S. shale-oil boom lowers their production costs.
Nigeria also subsidizes imported oil, keeping prices at the gas pump about one-third lower than they are in the U.S.
"I
don't know how he's going to do it, but I do know it's going to be
very, very tough," said Bismarck Rewane, managing director of Financial
Derivatives Co., a research firm in Lagos. He has known Mr. Dangote
since they lived near each other in the 1980s and attended
middle-of-the-night house parties together.
Despite all his
connections, Mr. Dangote hasn't won government approval for a license
needed to build the refinery. That is not unusual. From 2000 to 2010,
more than 100 refinery construction projects were announced in Africa.
Only one was built, according to consulting firm Citac Africa Ltd.
Others often fell victim to political interference or high
"We will get it," Mr. Dangote said about the license. The ministry
reviewing the license application declined to comment. Nigeria's next
presidential election is scheduled for 2015.
In an interview on
his yacht, named Mariya after his mother, the billionaire said his
refinery will have no trouble competing because it will avoid Nigeria's
costly and congested ports. He hasn't said if it will sell gasoline to
retailers for less than they pay now.
He also expects Nigeria to eventually abolish foreign-oil subsidies, which cost the government $6.5 billion last year.
In
the past decade, Africa's economy has grown by an average of 5.6% a
year, compared with the world-wide growth rate of 3.6% per year,
according to the International Monetary Fund. The surge has helped turn
some of the richest businessmen in Africa into tycoons.
Africa
now has 27 billionaires, up from 16 in 2012 and just two a decade ago,
according to Forbes magazine. Those two were white South Africans.
Mr.
Dangote was born into wealth. Near the dawn of British colonialism in
the early 1900s, his great-grandfather, Alhassan Dantata, cornered the
peanut market in drought-prone northern Nigeria. While other Nigerians
chafed at colonial rule, Mr. Dantata exported tons of peanuts to feed
Europe's growing appetite.
During the oil boom of the 1970s, an
uncle of Mr. Dangote gave him a government-issued license to import
cement. But few Nigerians had ever heard of him. Mr. Dangote spent much
of his time and earnings in Brazil, usually enjoying the Carnival
festival before Lent. In the 1990s, a friend talked him into flying to
Atlanta, where he bought a house and then swung through every other
month for jaunts at nightclubs.
He felt comfortable amid
Atlanta's historically black colleges and restaurants, far away from a
succession of military coups and botched elections in Nigeria. Startled
by a snake in his basement one day, Mr. Dangote sold the house and
bought a larger one.
But he started to feel the tug of his
homeland, the most populous country in Africa. On trips to Brazil for
Carnival, he saw signs of the economic progress the country had made:
Desperate hustlers, touts and money changers didn't swarm him at the
airport any more. And cement factories were popping up in the mountains.
“ 'If there is anything higher than the national honor that the president gave me two years ago…then he obviously needs to give me another national honor for building a refinery that we never, ever dreamt about.' ”
That gave him an idea to do something big, he said. He flew
back to Nigeria, contributed to the upstart People's Democratic Party
and made a promise after its presidential candidate won election in
1999. Mr. Dangote vowed to build one of the world's largest cement
plants if the government restricted the flow of cement through the
country's ports.
The businessman got what he wanted. The limits
on imports of cement—the most common building material in Africa—lifted
prices to twice the world-wide average. His business empire mushroomed.
Dangote Group now makes a two-thirds markup on every bag of cement it
sells.
In return, Mr. Dangote spent $1 billion on the cement
factory and an adjoining, 1.7 mile-long airstrip, borrowing some of the
money at an interest rate of 42%. They opened in 2008, and he vaulted
onto the billionaires' list for the first time.
Dangote Group now
employs about 25,000 people in Nigeria, is building cement factories in
14 countries in Africa and is buying mining licenses from Kenya to
Zambia.
A pop song in Nigeria called "Aliko Dangote Special"
includes the line "Cover of Forbes, he no be joke." The motivational
book "Dangote's Ten Commandments on Money" cites the billionaire's
advice "to make the best of your time because any time lost cannot be
regained." No. 8: "Believe in Nigeria."
"It's something he said
to me years ago: 'Only Africans will build Africa,' " said Kola Karim,
chief executive of oil-exploration company Shoreline Natural Resources
Ltd. Mr. Karim sells most of the oil from Shoreline's fields in the
Niger River delta to India but would rather do business with Mr.
Dangote.
The two men, who are friends, recently talked over the details
on a dock next to the billionaire's yacht but haven't announced an
agreement. "This is where my future lies," Mr. Karim said. "The market
is in Africa."
Mr. Dangote will soon borrow $1.5 billion to lease
about 740,000 acres, an area 50 times bigger than Manhattan. He wants
to grow sugar and rice for Dangote Group's processing plants.
The
area in northeastern Nigeria is swarming with fighters from Islamic
insurgency Boko Haram, but the fields will put so many people to work
that the insurgents will "leave us alone," Mr. Dangote predicted. Once
the farm is thriving, "Boko Haram will not have guys to recruit."
The
industrialist nudged Nigerian bankers for more than a year about his
refinery plans. Then he started telling them how much they should
lend—and at what interest rate.
"When he wants something, he gets it," said Edmund Boyo, a partner at law firm Clifford Chance LLP who worked on the deal.
In
September, Dangote Group announced a $3.3 billion syndicated loan from
banks led by Standard Chartered of the U.K. and Nigeria's Guaranty Trust
Bank PLC. Terms of the $3.3 billion loan weren't disclosed, though he
said it includes a penalty if he repays the banks too quickly.
Nowadays,
banks sometimes charge him less than 6% interest, he added, a lower
interest rate than Nigeria's government gets on its loans.
Yvonne
Ike, chief executive of investment bank Renaissance Capital's
operations in western Africa, said she has seen bankers' "eyes watering
when they thought about how much they had lent" to Mr. Dangote at
rock-bottom interest rates compared with other companies. Still, the
bankers "couldn't stand not to be a part of the biggest debt deal in
Africa," she said.
Mr. Dangote now is trying to line up oil to feed his refinery.
Chevron Corp.
CVX +0.34%
and
Royal Dutch Shell
RDSB.LN +0.40%
PLC are selling oil fields along Nigeria's coast after long battles with kidnappers and pipeline-bombing oil thieves.
The
billionaire wants to buy the two companies' tracts of oil-rich swamp.
To protect the oil from bandits, he will bury pipelines to and from the
refinery. Chevron and Shell declined to comment.
The billionaire
hasn't announced any deals to sell the gasoline, plastic and other fuel
products that will be made by his refinery.
He likely will have
to lure away customers from state-owned oil company Nigerian National
Petroleum Corp. It controls the four rundown refineries that dominate
Nigeria's oil industry. Government leaders have denounced the company as
opaque and unscrupulous.
"It's a waste pipe of corruption," said
Ken Saro-Wiwa Jr., a spokesman for Mr. Jonathan, Nigeria's president.
An NNPC spokeswoman couldn't be reached for comment.
Mr. Dangote
hasn't had a vacation since he took 18 children, grandchildren, nephews
and nieces to Walt Disney World in Florida last year. That was his first
vacation in 17 years, and he has no plans for another one. The refinery
is keeping him too busy.
"If there is anything higher than the
national honor that the president gave me two years ago, which I do
appreciate very much, then he obviously needs to give me another
national honor for building a refinery that we never, ever dreamt
about," he said.
The billionaire's private jet was landing in
Lagos at 1 a.m. last month when his pilot got a call from air-traffic
controllers. Mr. Gates, the Microsoft Corp. co-founder and one of the
world's richest men, had just spent two days with Mr. Dangote but was
stranded 400 miles away by a broken-down plane.
Mr. Dangote told
his pilot to turn around, pick up Mr. Gates and fly back to Lagos. Mr.
Dangote got home at 4 a.m. and was at his desk by 7:30.
Source: WallStreetJournal
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