Africa 2017 | Top 25 Companies

Africa is emerging from last year’s slump, but slow growth of its largest economies is impeding recovery for many of its corporates.

The increased scores of the highest-rated companies on our list show that the competition to get to the top is getting harder, with more companies showing better ratios on our four key metrics: liquidity, solvency, return on assets and profit margin. Despite modest recovery in industrial commodity prices, petrochemical and mining companies have a reduced presence in this year’s list.

There is little change from last year in the top spots of Global Finance’s 2017 list of the Best-Performing Companies in Africa. The previous year’s leader, the Egyptian company Atlas for Land Reclamation and Agriculture Processing, falls to 15th position; but the next four top companies have all climbed up one slot in the ranking: South African plastic packaging and soft-drink producer Bowler Metcalf leads, followed by Morocco’s Compagnie Miniere de Touissit, South African clothing retailer Truworths, and telecom and IT solutions provider Cognition. A newcomer, Zimbabwean crocodile rancher and meat and skin exporter Padenga Holdings, appears in fifth place.

Methodology

The 25 Best-Performing Public Companies in Africa ranking evaluates nonfinancial companies on four measures: liquidity, solvency, return on assets and profit margin. The ranking begins with the top 300 companies by market capitalization. Firms are given a score on each measure, and those figures are totaled to create an overall score. A low score on each measure is equated with best performance, and the company with the lowest overall score places highest in the ranking.

Despite low growth in their country, South African companies continue to dominate the list, boasting 14 out of the 25 best-performing companies on the continent. Zimbabwe and Tunisia bring three companies each to the pool, Kenya and Egypt take up two places each, while Compagnie Miniere de Touissit stays the only Moroccan representative in the top 25.

The geographical balance of the list could shift in coming years, as the big African economies are stalling while growth seems to be picking up in the smaller countries. According to the IMF, the region’s three largest economies—Angola, Nigeria and South Africa—are projected to post only a modest rebound in growth following 2016’s sharp slowdown.

Although it seems to have moved back to positive growth in the second quarter of 2017, South Africa’s business confidence is at its lowest since 1985, when then-president PW Botha declared a partial state of emergency to repress the anti-apartheid movement. President Jacob Zuma’s management is not offering the country or the markets much hope, after Fitch and S&P cut South Africa’s foreign-currency debt to junk in April. Bonang Mohale, CEO of Business Leadership South Africa and a former chairman of Shell South Africa, told Bloomberg in an interview, “We are expecting further ratings-agency downgrades because all the things that they said we shouldn’t do, the president has gone on to do.”

Angola, Africa’s largest oil producer, is suffering its worst economic crisis since the end of the civil war in 2002, with rampant inflation, a devalued kwanza and a foreign currency shortage. Amid suspicions of electoral fraud, president José Eduardo dos Santos is stepping down after 38 years, but his ties with his successor and his family’s strong grip on the country’s economic institutions clearly point to continuity.

The situation is looking slightly better in Nigeria. Recovering from the worst recession in 25 years, GDP growth went back to positive in the second quarter this year, led by agriculture and oil. Nigeria seems to be curbing its inflation, and its foreign currency liquidity is improving.

The African growth champion in 2016 was Ethiopia, according to IMF data. The country’s GDP success is largely attributed to public-led spending on infrastructure. The increased public debt, which now exceeds 50%, and worsening drought conditions are the main concerns for the future, according to the World Bank.

To achieve healthy growth for African corporates, continental leaders need to further diversify away from commodities and fill the infrastructure gap without incurring excessive debt. As the experience of the last year shows, it won’t be easy.

Rank

Company

Country

Sector

Reporting Year

Total Assets (US$ th)

Operating Revenue (US$ th)

Liquidity Ratio

Solvency Ratio %

Return On Assets %

Profit Margin %

Total Score

Market Cap (US$ th)

1

BOWLER METCALF

SA

Chemicals, rubber, plastics, nonmetallic products

2016

55,735

33,979

6.24

86.65

30.54

32.83

47

41,094

2

COMPAGNIE MINIERE DE TOUISSIT

MA

Metals, metal products

2015

82,544

48,217

4.77

81.77

23.54

51.61

53

282,927

3

TRUWORTHS INTERNATIONAL

SA

Wholesale, retail trade

2016

1,154,709

1,152,543

4.25

81.95

26.87

29.69

65

2,645,520

4

COGNITION HOLDINGS

SA

Post, telecommunications

2016

12,757

11,920

5.42

82.90

13.99

35.00

73

13,860

5

PADENGA HOLDINGS

ZW

Wholesale, retail trade

2016

71,450

32,713

7.77

76.15

11.77

36.13

92

1,646

6

SPUR CORPORATION

SA

Hotels, restaurants

2016

72,197

53,370

3.22

77.20

11.53

25.90

127

241,868

7

AFRICAN MEDIA ENTERTAINMENT

SA

Media, entertainment

2016

23,074

17,975

1.98

72.92

16.03

31.22

144

38,336

8

SILVERBRIDGE HOLDINGS

SA

IT services

2016

4,267

5,861

2.99

75.42

16.06

14.18

160

6,150

9

SASINI

KE

Food, beverages, tobacco

2016

166,089

37,136

3.67

84.51

6.08

35.61

169

59,288

10

NATION MEDIA GROUP

KE

Publishing, printing

2016

118,788

110,501

1.85

70.52

17.51

22.88

172

206,954

11

MIX TELEMATICS

SA

IT services

2015

161,435

99,543

3.60

80.72

7.69

19.74

177

207,063

12

METROFILE HOLDINGS

SA

Business support services

2016

64,322

52,956

1.96

66.95

13.23

24.40

195

138,837

13

DELTA CORPORATION

ZW

Food, beverages, tobacco

2015

696,238

538,198

2.22

70.08

11.50

19.68

197

16,007

14

AUTOMOBILE RESEAU TUNISIEN ET SERVICES

TN

Wholesale, retail trade

2016

107,499

95,487

2.08

65.15

14.97

20.51

202

125,078

15

ATLAS FOR LAND RECLAMATION AND AGRICULTURAL PROCESSING

EG

Food, beverages, tobacco

2016

5,225

116

12.63

95.33

3.35

49.32

204

3,133

16

REUNERT

SA

Machinery, equipment, furniture, recycling

2016

713,514

612,849

2.23

71.55

10.58

16.13

209

983,613

17

EGYPTIAN RESORTS COMPANY

EG

Hotels, restaurants

2016

128,058

12,298

2.17

54.64

13.41

53.35

231

64,610

18

LEWIS GROUP

SA

Wholesale, retail trade

2015

638,470

392,680

3.28

57.94

10.22

22.12

234

221,268

19

EURO-CYCLES

TN

Machinery, equipment, furniture, recycling

2016

26,672

34,350

1.50

63.17

25.37

18.84

239

106,747

20

SASOL

SA

Chemicals, rubber, plastics, nonmetallic products

2016

26,443,996

11,806,107

2.02

60.72

9.18

24.17

253

20,534,561

21

ADVANCED HEALTH

SA

Education, health

2016

29,708

16,338

3.25

76.89

5.41

16.65

255

25,462

22

SOCIETE DE FABRICATION DES BOISSONS DE TUNISIE

TN

Food, beverages, tobacco

2016

506,931

393,398

1.36

63.49

13.52

21.53

263

1,087,777

23

TRELLIDOR HOLDINGS

SA

Metals, metal products

2016

14,680

21,647

1.70

54.05

35.96

21.47

265

46,478

24

CROOKES BROTHERS

SA

Primary sector

2015

90,351

37,186

4.70

76.32

4.54

15.88

270

73,347

25

SEED CO

ZW

Primary sector

2015

199,393

96,451

1.53

72.50

7.73

16.88

276

3,554

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