Africa Fixed Income. Why now? (2024)

Pre HIPC, borrowed money was generally squandered, funding civil wars and preserving political oppression. This was during the post-colonial era from the 1960’s up to the 1990’s. During this period, high debt service costs constrained these countries from making the necessary investments (social and economic) to grow their economies. With this initiative, they could grow their economies and they did. Since then, HIPC growth has averaged 6.5% and has remained superior on a global relative basis despite the 2008 financial crisis and even more recently the end of the commodity super-cycle.

Africa’s sustainable growth story is essentially driven by lower debt levels, the “demographic dividend”, a large commodity base, improving governance, strengthening institutions and technology. In our analysis and investment process, the most important assumption is that growth is a key enabler for issuers to borrow at stable or falling costs in the debt capital markets in the long-term. African countries are borrowing between 6-10.5% in USD in the Eurobond market and typically between 10-20% in their domestic markets

Progress of the Africa Fixed Income Market

The recent global pursuit for alternative streams of income post the 2008 crisis has motivated investor interest for niche asset classes which are typically under researched and provide higher yields. Africa debt is one of these. International investors (excluding South Africa) searching for yield in sustainably growing regions are frustrated with increasing lower or negative yields and poor visibility on growth in developed markets. South Africa based asset managers have been investing in African equities for close to a decade but that is remotely the case with Africa fixed income. The main reasons cited for not investing are bygone in our view and the landscape has significantly changed since 2011.

The rapid proliferation of regional (including SA banks) and international banks, in recent times, has significantly improved financial intermediation and thus debt market access. The Eurobond market gives investors confidence as securities are listed on developed market exchanges and clearing is done by reputable international houses, even though the issuers are all based in Africa. The size of the region’s Eurobond market is currently USD45bn and the 10 investable domestic markets are USD350bn.

Benefits to Investors

We believe the African debt; among the other Frontier Market regions (LATAM, Europe and Asia) has the best fundamentals. The most favourable growth dynamics, the fastest improving debt metrics, superior yield pick- up and thus the best risk/return profile. Also, this is an exciting time and bold opportunity for South African investors to tap into this fast growing asset class in Africa. Typically, this is for clients wishing to invest into a high growth market, with relatively lower overall risk, liquid, an alternative exposure to other regional asset classes, or simply for income and capital growth. Preserving capital and limited or no currency risk (USD investments and thus cash flows) are also potential benefits for SA investors.

In that regard, our flagship South African CIS/Unit Trust structured fund (ALUWANI Africa Fixed Income Fund previously the Momentum Africa FI fund) not only seeks to deliver an absolute return of 3M USD Libor + 5% but to outperform the more appropriate Standard Bank Africa ex-SA USD Index.

In 2015, the fund (Momentum Africa FI Fund) strongly outperformed its peers and marginally, the benchmark, setting our strong credentials in this nascent market. The fund returned -4.7% (USD) or 20.5% (ZAR) for the full year 2015. Meanwhile, the benchmark returned -4.9% (USD) or 20.3% (ZAR) whilst the second best peer returned -10.6% (USD) or 14.6% (ZAR) over the same period.

Still in their infancy, African debt markets are not without risk but offer a compelling investment opportunity when managed by experienced specialists. The fact that these markets are less developed has allowed well informed active managers to achieve outsized returns for investors in the past. This asset class has also been exploited for its major benefit of low correlation to other major global debt assets including US treasuries.

It is also worth noting, that isolated cases of heightened risk do not at all mean elevated contagion risk on regional peers and because we have a wider universe with different idiosyncrasies per country, we are still able to achieve a “best ideas” portfolio that helps us achieve our objectives for the client.

Ultimately, the ALUWANI Africa Fixed Income fund is an additional route by which clients can be a part of the Africa story in the broader sense (more investable countries). This offering should also appeal to institutional investors because it provides both structure and added transparency. This innovative product is one of the first of its kind in South Africa.

Africa Fixed Income. Why now? (2024)

FAQs

Why is there fixed income right now? ›

In general, prices rise as yields fall in fixed income. So, investing in higher-yielding fixed income today could capture yield with the potential for positive price performance should market yields continue to fall, tracking cash investment yields lower along with Fed rate cuts.

Why fixed income is the best? ›

Active fixed income management not only offers the potential for enhanced returns but can also add value by aligning an investor's objectives with risks in several key areas — market structure, credit deterioration, dislocations, and dispersion — where index-tracking approaches may fall short.

Why is Africa a good investment? ›

Vast Natural Resources: Africa is rich in natural resources, including minerals, oil, gas, and agricultural land. These resources can offer significant investment opportunities in industries such as mining, energy, and agriculture. Growing Population: Africa has a young and rapidly growing population.

What are investors looking for in Africa? ›

Investors Looking for Projects

Africa is a continent that is rich in natural resources and offers a wide range of investment opportunities. Some popular sectors for investment include mining, oil and gas, real estate, technology and infrastructure.

Is fixed income good or bad? ›

Fixed-income investing can be a good strategy for new investors who want stability and regular income. Bonds and other fixed-income assets offer reliable returns and can help manage risk, as they are less volatile than stocks.

What are the pros and cons of fixed income? ›

Fixed-income securities are typically less risky than stocks but offer lower returns. For this reason, many investors choose to invest in a mix of fixed-income and equity securities. A diverse investment portfolio may include fixed-income securities as a key component.

Is Africa doing well economically? ›

Overall, real gross domestic product (GDP) growth for the continent is expected to average 3.8% and 4.2% in 2024 and 2025, respectively. This is higher than projected global averages of 2.9% and 3.2%, the report said. The continent is set to remain the second-fastest-growing region after Asia.

Why was Africa so rich? ›

Large African empires became wealthy due to their trade networks, for example Ancient Egypt, Nubia, Mali, Ashanti, the Oyo Empire and Ancient Carthage Some parts of Africa had close trade relationships with Arab kingdoms, and by the time of the Ottoman Empire, Africans had begun converting to Islam in large numbers.

Why is Africa the richest country in the world? ›

The largest reserves of cobalt, diamonds, platinum and uranium in the world are in Africa. It holds 65 per cent of the world's arable land and ten percent of the planet's internal renewable fresh water source. In most African countries, natural capital accounts for between 30 percent and 50 percent of total wealth.

Is it risky to invest in Africa? ›

Security challenges

Security related issues must be taken into account when looking to invest in Africa. Ever evolving terrorism-related threats affect West, Central and East African countries including Nigeria, Kenya, Somalia, Mali and Chad.

Who invests most in Africa? ›

China. China is the world's largest investor in Africa in terms of total capital.

Why is Africa called the land of limitless opportunities? ›

The second largest continent by land and population, Africa has abundant untapped natural resources, vast potential for sustainable agriculture, transformative free trade agreements, new policies to improve women's rights, and soaring digital commerce opportunities.

Are fixed income investments good right now? ›

With the Fed on hold and growth still above trend, the backdrop for fixed income credit sectors continues to be supportive. Fundamentals remain mostly stable, and strong demand from all-in yield buyers helped credit spreads narrow in the first quarter even amid record levels of new bond issuance.

Why is fixed income bad? ›

Fixed income securities also carry inflation risk, liquidity risk, call risk, and credit and default risks for both issuers and counterparties. Any fixed income security sold or redeemed prior to maturity may be subject to loss.

Will bond funds recover in 2024? ›

As inflation finally seems to be coming under control, and growth is slowing as the global economy feels the full impact of higher interest rates, 2024 could be a compelling year for bonds.

Is fixed income good during recession? ›

Interest rates tend to begin to decline three months ahead of recessions and reach a cycle low about five months into recessions. During economic downturns, fixed income has been shown to provide diversification benefits and reduce the volatility of portfolios that include risk assets such as equities.

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