Euvin Naidoo: Africa as an investment

18,957 views ・ 2007-08-01

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:26
Welcome to Africa! Or rather, I should say, welcome home.
0
26000
4000
00:30
Because this is where it all really began, isn't it?
1
30000
3000
00:33
Looking at fossils dating back several millions of years --
2
33000
3000
00:36
it all points to evidence that life
3
36000
2000
00:38
for the human species as we know it began right here.
4
38000
6000
00:44
We are on an amazing journey the next four days.
5
44000
4000
00:48
You're going to hear stories of "Africa: The Next Chapter."
6
48000
4000
00:52
Fantastic tales, anecdotes from speakers.
7
52000
2000
00:54
But I want to turn that upside down for a moment,
8
54000
4000
00:58
and get something out on the table and clear the air so to say.
9
58000
5000
01:03
What's the worst thing you've ever heard about Africa?
10
63000
3000
01:06
And this is not a rhetorical question.
11
66000
1000
01:07
I actually want answers from you.
12
67000
3000
01:10
Go for it! The worst.
13
70000
3000
01:13
Famine.
14
73000
2000
01:15
Corruption.
15
75000
2000
01:17
More.
16
77000
2000
01:19
Genocide.
17
79000
2000
01:21
AIDS.
18
81000
3000
01:24
Slavery.
19
84000
4000
01:28
That's enough.
20
88000
2000
01:30
We've all heard these things.
21
90000
2000
01:32
But this is about Africa, the story we have not heard.
22
92000
4000
01:36
The stories that we want to know,
23
96000
2000
01:38
and the stories that do exist about positive tales.
24
98000
4000
01:42
A part of my talk is going to be about investment opportunities
25
102000
4000
01:46
that exist on this continent,
26
106000
2000
01:48
to separate the rhetoric from the reality, the fact from the fiction.
27
108000
4000
01:52
To go to the actual data and statistics that exist
28
112000
3000
01:55
about the actual things that are happening on the ground
29
115000
3000
01:58
that make Africa a realistic investment opportunity and option for you.
30
118000
7000
02:05
So let's get going because Africa,
31
125000
1000
02:06
to some degree, is on a turnaround.
32
126000
4000
02:10
A turnaround in terms of how it manages its image,
33
130000
4000
02:14
and how it takes control of its own destiny.
34
134000
3000
02:17
And turnarounds are part and parcel
35
137000
2000
02:19
of what I have focused on for most of my professional career.
36
139000
4000
02:23
And it all started almost a decade ago,
37
143000
3000
02:26
as a young consultant at McKinsey & Company
38
146000
2000
02:28
at their first African office in Johannesburg.
39
148000
3000
02:31
And there we worked with leading CEOs
40
151000
3000
02:34
on African issues, and African companies on turnarounds,
41
154000
3000
02:37
making the companies not just the best in Africa
42
157000
3000
02:40
but the best globally.
43
160000
2000
02:42
But I really formalized this focus on turnarounds
44
162000
4000
02:46
when I was completing my MBA in the United States.
45
166000
3000
02:49
It all began with a fantastic phone call.
46
169000
2000
02:51
It was from Rosabeth Moss Kanter,
47
171000
3000
02:54
Harvard Business School guru and a professor of mine.
48
174000
2000
02:56
And she said, "I want to write a case, Euvin --
49
176000
3000
02:59
a case on a public-sector leader
50
179000
2000
03:01
that has lessons for the corporate world."
51
181000
4000
03:05
And the leader that came to mind was Nelson Mandela.
52
185000
4000
03:09
Because Nelson Mandela, as he took over power
53
189000
3000
03:12
as the first democratically-elected president of South Africa,
54
192000
3000
03:15
faced a situation of a country
55
195000
2000
03:17
that could have slid into the abyss of chaos.
56
197000
3000
03:20
But he started the country on a path of a positive cycle.
57
200000
4000
03:24
Now the case, "Nelson Mandela: Change Leader,"
58
204000
3000
03:27
became part of the research base for a chapter
59
207000
3000
03:30
in Rosabeth's new book called "Confidence."
60
210000
4000
03:34
And "Confidence" became a New York Times bestseller
61
214000
4000
03:38
and topped Business Week's hardcover bestseller list.
62
218000
3000
03:41
And why I tell you this story is because later, when I was interviewed
63
221000
3000
03:44
on SABC Africa, on a pan-African broadcast, they asked,
64
224000
3000
03:47
"What is your key lesson, or the key thing you enjoy the most?" --
65
227000
4000
03:51
because it was a huge privilege to be part of such a project.
66
231000
3000
03:54
The lesson from that was that it was Africa -- an African story --
67
234000
5000
03:59
that was used to share news with the rest of the world
68
239000
4000
04:03
of what the benchmark can be for corporate turnarounds.
69
243000
3000
04:06
Africa was being used as a success story!
70
246000
5000
04:11
So I want to share with you a personal story
71
251000
2000
04:13
about a turnaround or a transformation.
72
253000
2000
04:15
And that has to do with me
73
255000
2000
04:17
because in 1994, I packed a few things into a backpack
74
257000
4000
04:21
and headed off for a year of travel
75
261000
2000
04:23
in the middle of my university career.
76
263000
3000
04:26
You should have seen my parents' reaction!
77
266000
2000
04:28
(Laughter)
78
268000
1000
04:29
But very soon, I found myself from the southern part of Africa,
79
269000
4000
04:33
in South Africa -- at the very north, in Egypt.
80
273000
3000
04:36
And I sought out the most remote places.
81
276000
2000
04:38
I went to the Siwa Oasis. That was one of my stops.
82
278000
3000
04:41
And the Siwa Oasis is famous for several things,
83
281000
2000
04:43
but the key thing is that it was the place
84
283000
2000
04:45
that Alexander the Great went to
85
285000
3000
04:48
when he wanted to find out what his destiny had in store for him.
86
288000
3000
04:51
And legend has it that Alexander trekked through this desert.
87
291000
3000
04:54
Half his battalion was wiped out in the sandstorm.
88
294000
3000
04:57
And myth says that he had an audience with the oracle,
89
297000
3000
05:00
and it foretold his destiny of greatness.
90
300000
3000
05:03
This was 300 BC.
91
303000
2000
05:05
So Africa had long been seen as a place to go to for answers.
92
305000
6000
05:11
Now, the thing I remember about Siwa
93
311000
3000
05:14
was the magical view of the sky at night.
94
314000
3000
05:17
With no natural light source, Siva is one of these amazing places
95
317000
3000
05:20
that when you look up you see a perfect tapestry.
96
320000
4000
05:24
Fast forward to 2002.
97
324000
2000
05:26
I'm sitting in Cambridge, Massachusetts
98
326000
2000
05:28
at the Healthcare Development Conference.
99
328000
2000
05:30
And I see the same picture, but from the opposite side.
100
330000
3000
05:33
A satellite picture looking down at the earth.
101
333000
5000
05:38
And it was that picture that made such a profound impact on me
102
338000
3000
05:41
because I'll never forget it. I remember the very moment.
103
341000
3000
05:44
And I wanted to share that image with you of what I saw at that point.
104
344000
6000
05:50
The first thing that I saw was North America at night --
105
350000
5000
05:55
glowing, in all its glory. A warm feeling. Light.
106
355000
10000
06:05
And then I saw it -- Africa. Quite literally the "Dark Continent."
107
365000
10000
06:15
And while Africa may be dark,
108
375000
2000
06:17
the thing that brought the message home to me
109
377000
3000
06:20
was that this is the challenge we are facing,
110
380000
3000
06:23
but it's also the opportunity.
111
383000
3000
06:26
Because whilst Africa may be dark -- other than the few specks
112
386000
3000
06:29
that exist north and in the south and other areas --
113
389000
4000
06:33
it's aglow with the light in the hearts
114
393000
2000
06:35
of the millions of people that are there.
115
395000
2000
06:37
Entrepreneurs, dynamic people, people with hope.
116
397000
4000
06:41
It was George Kimble, the geographer, who said
117
401000
3000
06:44
that, "The only thing dark about Africa is our ignorance of it."
118
404000
5000
06:49
So let's start shedding light on this amazing eclectic continent
119
409000
4000
06:53
that has so much to offer.
120
413000
2000
06:55
Let's start unpacking it.
121
415000
5000
07:00
Africa is the second-largest continent, a landmass second from Asia.
122
420000
7000
07:07
It also is the second most populated continent,
123
427000
2000
07:09
with 900 million people.
124
429000
2000
07:11
In fact -- coming back to the land mass -- Africa is so big
125
431000
3000
07:14
that you could fit in the continental United States,
126
434000
3000
07:17
China, and the entire Europe into Africa, and still have space.
127
437000
5000
07:22
Africa is home to over 1,000 languages --
128
442000
3000
07:25
2,000 is another estimate that's out there --
129
445000
3000
07:28
with over 2,000 languages and dialects.
130
448000
3000
07:31
But you could say, "Invest in Africa in over 1,000 languages,
131
451000
4000
07:35
and it wouldn't make a difference."
132
455000
3000
07:38
What does the data say?
133
458000
2000
07:40
As an investment banker, I'm in the cross-flow of information
134
460000
4000
07:44
and the changes that are taking place in capital markets.
135
464000
3000
07:47
So I want to share with you some of these bellwether signals, or signs,
136
467000
3000
07:50
and winds of change that are sweeping this continent.
137
470000
2000
07:52
So let's start on that.
138
472000
2000
07:54
And let's start at the high level, on the macro-factors.
139
474000
2000
07:56
Inflation, in general, is coming down across Africa --
140
476000
3000
07:59
that's the first sign --
141
479000
2000
08:01
in many countries reaching double-digit figures.
142
481000
2000
08:03
So let's start looking at some of those.
143
483000
2000
08:05
I call it my Z.E.N. cluster.
144
485000
2000
08:07
Zambia: from 2004 to 2006, moves from the 18 percent in inflation
145
487000
5000
08:12
to the nine percent.
146
492000
2000
08:14
Egypt: from the 16 percent to about 8.4 percent.
147
494000
5000
08:19
Nigeria: a similar situation,
148
499000
2000
08:21
from the 16 percent to the eight percent. Single digits.
149
501000
6000
08:27
More fascinating, you have other countries -- South Africa,
150
507000
4000
08:31
Mauritius, Namibia -- all in single digits.
151
511000
7000
08:38
But that's just part of the story. You have a similar trend with currencies --
152
518000
3000
08:41
currencies going through an extreme time of stability.
153
521000
6000
08:47
But that's looking at the big picture.
154
527000
2000
08:49
And the first myth to dispel is that Africa is not a country.
155
529000
6000
08:55
It's made up --
156
535000
2000
08:57
(Applause)
157
537000
1000
08:58
It's made up of 53 different countries.
158
538000
4000
09:02
So the very definition -- to say "invest in Africa" is a no-go.
159
542000
4000
09:06
It's meaningless.
160
546000
2000
09:08
Each country has a unique value proposition.
161
548000
3000
09:11
You can make money, you can lose money in Africa.
162
551000
3000
09:14
But opportunities, boy oh boy, they exist.
163
554000
3000
09:17
And this is what today is about --
164
557000
3000
09:20
it's about discussing those very opportunities.
165
560000
4000
09:24
So let's start getting into the countries
166
564000
2000
09:26
and into the specific material and data.
167
566000
5000
09:31
I was recently elected, as Emeka mentioned,
168
571000
2000
09:33
as the President of the South African Chamber of Commerce in America.
169
573000
3000
09:36
And I'm very proud and happy to be in that role
170
576000
3000
09:39
because it is a fascinating position to be in.
171
579000
2000
09:41
To hear this dialogue that's just increasing in tenor and velocity,
172
581000
4000
09:45
of decisions about trade and companies wanting to come.
173
585000
4000
09:49
So the first port of call: let's talk a little bit about South Africa.
174
589000
2000
09:51
But not the South Africa we always talk about --
175
591000
2000
09:53
the gold, the minerals, the First World infrastructure --
176
593000
3000
09:56
a bit about the other side of it.
177
596000
2000
09:58
For example, South Africa was recently voted as the top destination
178
598000
4000
10:02
for the top 1,000 UK companies for offshore call-centers.
179
602000
4000
10:06
Same language, timeline, et cetera. Makes sense.
180
606000
5000
10:11
Other headlines that have recently reached South Africa
181
611000
2000
10:13
were Bain Capital and KKR, the big boys of private equity.
182
613000
5000
10:18
Headline in South Africa: "They have landed." Quite ominous.
183
618000
3000
10:21
But what were they there for? To acquire assets.
184
621000
4000
10:25
Bing Capital's acquisition of Edcon, a large retailer, is testimony
185
625000
7000
10:32
to the confidence they are starting to place in the economy.
186
632000
3000
10:35
Because it is actually a long-term play.
187
635000
2000
10:37
Being a retailer, it is a play on the belief
188
637000
2000
10:39
that this middle-class that's growing will continue to grow,
189
639000
4000
10:43
that the boom and the confidence in consumer spending will continue.
190
643000
6000
10:49
But the story of Africa, and my focus, is beyond South Africa
191
649000
5000
10:54
because there's so much happening.
192
654000
2000
10:56
Undoubtedly, Nigeria is clearly a hot spot.
193
656000
4000
11:00
Challenges -- and we will hear a lot about Nigeria in these four days.
194
660000
4000
11:04
But looking at Goldman Sachs' work -- we had the famous BRIC Report.
195
664000
5000
11:09
The new report, "The Next Eleven," highlights that by 2020
196
669000
4000
11:13
Nigeria is going to be amongst the top 10 economies in the world.
197
673000
4000
11:17
It's an investment opportunity. Think about that.
198
677000
4000
11:21
Is anyone -- our banks, our investors --
199
681000
3000
11:24
seriously thinking about going to Nigeria?
200
684000
1000
11:25
If you haven't, why not?
201
685000
2000
11:27
What's going on in Nigeria? A couple of things.
202
687000
4000
11:31
I want to talk about it from the perspective of capital markets.
203
691000
4000
11:35
Bellwether signs again.
204
695000
3000
11:38
Guarantee Trust Bank recently issued the first Euro Bond
205
698000
4000
11:42
out of Africa, and this excludes South Africa.
206
702000
3000
11:45
But the first Eurobond, the raising of international capital
207
705000
3000
11:48
offshore, off its own balance sheet,
208
708000
3000
11:51
without any sovereign backing --
209
711000
2000
11:53
that is an indication of the confidence that is taking place in that economy.
210
713000
4000
11:57
Without any sovereign backing,
211
717000
2000
11:59
a Nigerian company raising capital offshore.
212
719000
2000
12:01
It's just a sign of things to come.
213
721000
1000
12:02
Looking at the oil industry, Africa provides 18 percent
214
722000
5000
12:07
of the U.S.'s oil supply, with the Middle East just 16 percent.
215
727000
4000
12:11
It's an important strategic partner.
216
731000
2000
12:13
Let's put Nigeria in perspective.
217
733000
2000
12:15
2.2 to 2.4 million barrels of oil a day --
218
735000
3000
12:18
the same league as Kuwait, the same league as Venezuela.
219
738000
5000
12:23
But with Africa, let's start being careful about this.
220
743000
3000
12:26
And Emeka and I have had these discussions.
221
746000
2000
12:28
We have to move away from what's called "the curse of the commodities."
222
748000
4000
12:32
Because it's not about oil, it's not about commodities.
223
752000
2000
12:34
For Africa to truly be sustainable,
224
754000
2000
12:36
we have to move beyond to other industries.
225
756000
3000
12:39
So let's unpack those very quickly,
226
759000
2000
12:41
and I'm going to move through these very, very, very fast
227
761000
2000
12:43
because I can see that clock counting down.
228
763000
4000
12:47
What else is going on there? Egypt.
229
767000
3000
12:50
Egypt is launching a first large industrial zone --
230
770000
3000
12:53
2.8 billion investment.
231
773000
2000
12:55
The announcement just came out the last few weeks.
232
775000
2000
12:57
Close to the Mediterranean, near Alexandria --
233
777000
4000
13:01
textiles, petrochemicals.
234
781000
2000
13:03
It's being managed by a Singaporean-based management company.
235
783000
4000
13:07
So they want to emerge as an industrial powerhouse
236
787000
3000
13:10
across the industries -- away from oil.
237
790000
2000
13:12
Let's look at agriculture. Let's look at forestry.
238
792000
3000
13:15
What's going on there?
239
795000
1000
13:16
In Tanzania last week, we had the launch
240
796000
4000
13:20
of the East African Organic Produce Standard.
241
800000
4000
13:24
Again, gathering together farmers, gathering together stakeholders
242
804000
5000
13:29
in East Africa to get standards for organic produce. Better prices.
243
809000
7000
13:36
It ties in with small-scale farmers
244
816000
3000
13:39
in terms of no pesticides, no fertilizers.
245
819000
5000
13:44
Again, opportunity to tackle markets to get that higher price.
246
824000
5000
13:49
Uganda: the New Forest Company,
247
829000
2000
13:51
replanting and redeveloping their forests. Why is that important?
248
831000
6000
13:57
As the energy needs are met and electricity is needed [we will need]
249
837000
3000
14:00
poles for rolling out electricity.
250
840000
2000
14:02
But here is the sweetener in the deal.
251
842000
2000
14:04
They're going to be tapping into carbon credits.
252
844000
4000
14:08
Let's go back to Nigeria.
253
848000
2000
14:10
The banking sector has undergone tremendous transformation,
254
850000
3000
14:13
from over 80 banks to 25 banks. Strengthening of the system.
255
853000
5000
14:18
But what's going on there? Only 10 percent of the country is banked.
256
858000
5000
14:23
The largest population in Africa is in Nigeria.
257
863000
3000
14:26
135 million-plus people. Think about that.
258
866000
4000
14:30
There are only 700 ATMs in the country. Opportunity.
259
870000
5000
14:35
The same for telecoms across the country.
260
875000
3000
14:38
Now let's look at the continent as a whole.
261
878000
2000
14:40
People look at the roads, for example, and they'd say,
262
880000
2000
14:42
"Angola: 90 percent of roads are untarred. Ah, problem!"
263
882000
7000
14:49
It's more expensive to transport goods. Prices of goods go up,
264
889000
3000
14:52
inflation is affected.
265
892000
2000
14:54
Nigeria: 70 percent of roads are untarred. Zambia: 80 percent.
266
894000
3000
14:57
In general, more than 50 percent of roads are untarred.
267
897000
3000
15:00
This is an opportunity! Energy needs -- it's an opportunity.
268
900000
5000
15:05
So what are the signs that things are fundamentally changing?
269
905000
3000
15:08
Let's look at the stock markets in Africa.
270
908000
3000
15:11
If I had to ask you, "In 2005 what was the best performing stock market
271
911000
4000
15:15
or stock exchange in the world?" Would Egypt come to mind?
272
915000
5000
15:20
In 2005, the Egyptian stock exchange returned over 145 percent.
273
920000
8000
15:28
What's going on in some of the other countries?
274
928000
2000
15:30
Let's look at some 2006 numbers. Kenya: over 60 percent. Nigeria: over 40 percent.
275
930000
7000
15:37
South Africa: in the 20 percents. High ones.
276
937000
3000
15:40
These are the trends that are taking place.
277
940000
6000
15:46
But in any investment decision, the key question is,
278
946000
4000
15:50
"What is my alternative investment?"
279
950000
3000
15:53
Because in Africa today, we are competing globally for capital.
280
953000
4000
15:57
And global capital is agnostic -- it has no loyalties.
281
957000
5000
16:02
There's an overhang of capital in the U.S., and the key is yield pickup.
282
962000
4000
16:06
What Africa is providing is a diversification play,
283
966000
3000
16:09
and also opportunities for yield pickup for the investor
284
969000
2000
16:11
that's aware of what he or she is doing.
285
971000
4000
16:15
Now, when looking at Africa vis-a-vis other things,
286
975000
2000
16:17
and countries in Africa vis-a-vis other things,
287
977000
2000
16:19
comparisons become important.
288
979000
2000
16:21
10 years ago there, were very few countries
289
981000
3000
16:24
that received sovereign ratings from
290
984000
1000
16:25
the Standard & Poors, Moody's and Fitch's.
291
985000
3000
16:28
Today, 16 African countries and growing
292
988000
4000
16:32
have sovereign country ratings. What does this mean?
293
992000
3000
16:35
Take Nigeria again: double B-minus --
294
995000
3000
16:38
in the league of Ukraine and Turkey. Immediately we have a comparison.
295
998000
5000
16:43
The backbone of making investment decisions
296
1003000
3000
16:46
for global holders of capital.
297
1006000
2000
16:48
Some other figures. South Africa: triple B-plus. Botswana: A-plus.
298
1008000
7000
16:55
Bakino Faso: B-minus. And so on.
299
1015000
3000
16:58
In fact, one of the big agencies is setting up an office in Africa.
300
1018000
5000
17:03
Why are they doing that? Because they expect investment to follow.
301
1023000
6000
17:09
So one of the big bellwethers,
302
1029000
2000
17:11
and one of my final points I want to mention, is
303
1031000
3000
17:14
the interesting thing I read is that CNBC
304
1034000
2000
17:16
has launched their first African channel. Why is CNBC doing this?
305
1036000
5000
17:21
It's the 24-hour rolling African news channel.
306
1041000
4000
17:25
They're doing it because they are expecting things to happen.
307
1045000
3000
17:28
Me and you, the investments we are going to be making,
308
1048000
4000
17:32
the investments the world is going to be making --
309
1052000
1000
17:33
that's the 24-hour news channel dedicated to Africa.
310
1053000
4000
17:37
So that's the change that's coming down the pipeline.
311
1057000
5000
17:42
So in conclusion, I want to turn back to that very slide
312
1062000
5000
17:47
that made such a deep impact on me all those years ago.
313
1067000
5000
17:52
This time [I'll] give you the entire picture that I saw in 2002,
314
1072000
6000
17:58
and ask you that when you think about what your role can be in Africa,
315
1078000
5000
18:03
think about your journey in terms of bringing light to this continent.
316
1083000
4000
18:07
Because there are amazing opportunities available.
317
1087000
3000
18:10
And think about the concept of transformation
318
1090000
2000
18:12
in the back of your mind
319
1092000
2000
18:14
because things can be turned around rather quickly.
320
1094000
4000
18:18
In 1899, Joseph Conrad released "The Heart of Darkness,"
321
1098000
7000
18:25
a tale of grim horror along the Congo River.
322
1105000
7000
18:32
If one looks carefully, on the Congo River
323
1112000
5000
18:37
is one of those bright lights. And that's the very Congo river
324
1117000
4000
18:41
generating light -- the old heart of darkness
325
1121000
3000
18:44
now generating light with hydro-electric power.
326
1124000
3000
18:47
That is a transformation in power of ideas.
327
1127000
3000
18:50
So the next step, over the next four days,
328
1130000
2000
18:52
is us exploring more of these ideas.
329
1132000
3000
18:55
And perchance, if you can always keep this picture in your mind,
330
1135000
3000
18:58
that when we convene maybe in the distant future, in 2020,
331
1138000
5000
19:03
that picture will look very different.
332
1143000
2000
19:05
Thank you.
333
1145000
2000
19:07
(Applause)
334
1147000
2000
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7