Soros-backed Leapfrog raises $800m for Africa purchases

Published Dec 13, 2016

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Johannesburg -

LeapFrog Investments plans to raise $800 million for its latest fund as the

private-equity firm seeks stakes in African banks, insurance brokers and

payment companies to tap into rising demand among low-income consumers.

Overseas Private

Investment Corporation, the Washington-based development financing unit of the

US government, has approved an investment of as much as $200 million in the

fund, the buyout company’s third, said Karima Olokun-Ola, a partner at LeapFrog

in London. Billionaire George Soros invested in LeapFrog’s first fund through

his Soros Economic Development Fund because the financial-services market is

under-served, she said.

LeapFrog is

betting there’s greater scope for investments among companies that target

Africa’s emerging consumers because there are more than four times as many the

size of the continent’s middle class. New regulations requiring insurance

companies in Kenya to hold more cash will create buy-out opportunities, while

the continent’s largest population in Nigeria and more sophisticated consumers

in Ghana make those markets attractive, Olokun-Ola said.

“We are speaking

to insurance companies, ones that are looking for capital and those ones with

sufficient capital but are looking to take advantage of consolidation and grow

market share” in Kenya, she said by phone from Nairobi last week. “We’re

looking at payment companies because it’s becoming a popular tool that just offers

much cheaper ways of doing business” across the continent.

Impact investing

The company’s

previous fund, the $400 million LeapFrog Financial Inclusion Fund II, still has

some money to spend, Olokun-Ola said. It also has a $350 million joint

venture with Newark-based Prudential Financial, which is focused on similar

assets, she said. The company’s first fund raised $135 million.

Kenya has 49

insurers, five re-insurers and almost 200 brokers in a country where about 3

percent of the population has cover, according to the Association of Kenya

Insurers. The market is also overbanked, with 41 lenders serving 44 million

people, creating opportunities for mergers and takeovers because of new

interest-rate caps that are squeezing profit margins, according to

Nairobi-based Cytonn Investments Management, which oversees 73 billion shillings

($716 million)

Emerging

consumers earn between $2 and $10 a day and make up about two-thirds of

Africa’s population of more than 1.2 billion people, while the continent’s

middle class is less than 15 percent, she said.

Read also:  Leapfrog: Minority stake in tech firm

Olokun-Ola

couldn’t say how much Soros invested and his fund didn’t immediately reply to

e-mailed requests for comment. While OPIC has agreed to support LeapFrog’s fund

it hasn’t made any commitments, the company said in an e-mail. The fund forms

part of OPIC’s efforts to support investments into high-growth companies that

reach low-income consumers.

LeapFrog’s

investments average $30 million and generate internal rates of return of 25

percent, or three times the money invested, Olokun-Ola said. The company has

made two sales so far out of eight investments in its first fund, and both have

met targets, she said. The Prudential vehicle has a larger mandate and may

invest as much as $200 million in one company, she said.

A third of the

company’s new fund will be invested in health-care delivery and health

insurance, Olokun-Ola said, describing it as the next step beyond

financial services to help low-income Africans.

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