Black Rhino Or White Elephant? Blackstone Retreats From Africa Investment Plan

Courtesy of The Wall Street Journal, a report on Blackstone’s decision to pull back from a pledge to invest $2.5 billion through an African infrastructure company called Black Rhino:

Blackstone Group , BX -0.50% the world’s largest private-equity firm, has pulled back on a plan to invest billions of dollars across Africa, the latest U.S. investor to temper its ambitions on the continent.

The New York-based firm agreed about a year ago to sell Black Rhino Group, a developer of energy infrastructure projects that was meant to be Blackstone’s main vehicle for investing in Africa, back to its management team for an undisclosed amount, a Blackstone spokeswoman said. The sale, which has yet to close, hasn’t been previously reported. Around the same time, Blackstone also sold the rights to develop and operate a Nigerian power plant Black Rhino is planning for an undisclosed amount to Globeleq, a British company that owns power plants across Africa, the spokeswoman said.

“We are talking about $5 billion, half invested by Dangote Industries and half by Blackstone, through our Black Rhino affiliate,” Mr. Schwarzman told The Wall Street Journal in 2014. “We have 10 projects we are working on now.”

However, Black Rhino didn’t find large deals that Blackstone wanted to finance, according to people familiar with the situation. Competition from Chinese companies was a factor that complicated at least one of Black Rhino’s proposed projects—a plan for a 340-mile fuel pipeline linking landlocked Ethiopia to the sea. Chinese companies built a new railroad capable of transporting fuel along the same route.

U.S. private-equity firms have struggled to complete successful large deals in Africa. In 2017, New York-based KKR & Co. disbanded its African deal team and sold its only asset there, an Ethiopian rose farm, saying there weren’t enough big companies on the continent to buy. In 2016, Boston-based Bain Capital lost control of South African retailer Edcon Holdings Ltd. to lenders in a debt-for-equity swap.

Blackstone’s past investments in Africa include construction of a hydropower dam on the White Nile in Uganda. In October, Blackstone started a company called Zarou with plans to invest in renewable energy projects in the Middle East and North Africa.

“Blackstone has a long track record of successful development of power generation facilities around the world,” the spokeswoman said. “We continue to look at the energy industry in general, and power generation in particular, across Latin America, Asia and Africa.”

Black Rhino was created in 2012 by Brian Herlihy, who previously led a successful project to build a submarine broadband cable linking Africa to Europe and Asia. Mr. Herlihy had worked on African projects with Bruce Wrobel, an American executive who had close ties to Blackstone and initiated the U.S. firm’s work on the Ugandan dam.

When Blackstone acquired control of Black Rhino in 2014, it hired Mimi Alemayehou, formerly an executive at the U.S. government’s Overseas Private Investment Corp., as chair of Blackstone Africa Infrastructure and as a Black Rhino managing director. Former Nigerian central bank chief Lamido Sanusi was hired to chair Black Rhino. Blackstone planned to use its main private-equity fund and an energy fund to invest in Black Rhino’s deals.

Black Rhino doesn’t disclose how much money—if any—it invested in African projects, and the Blackstone spokeswoman declined to say. A spokesman for Mr. Dangote declined to comment.

Sean Klimczak, a Blackstone executive who worked closely with Black Rhino in the beginning, is now spearheading a planned $40 billion Blackstone fund focused on building U.S. infrastructure. The fund was announced when President Trump visited Saudi Arabia in 2017.

Blackstone in December 2017 sold the rights to develop and operate a gas-fired Nigerian power plant Black Rhino is planning to Globeleq, according to a Globeleq spokeswoman. Globeleq has been funding Black Rhino and the power plant project for the past 12 months, according to people familiar with the situation.

Globeleq is controlled by CDC Group, a British government-owned company that has been investing in Africa since the 1940s.



This entry was posted on Saturday, February 9th, 2019 at 8:23 am and is filed under Nigeria.  You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.  Both comments and pings are currently closed. 

Comments are closed.


ABOUT
WILDCATS AND BLACK SHEEP
Wildcats & Black Sheep is a personal interest blog dedicated to the identification and evaluation of maverick investment opportunities arising in frontier - and, what some may consider to be, “rogue” or “black sheep” - markets around the world.

Focusing primarily on The New Seven Sisters - the largely state owned petroleum companies from the emerging world that have become key players in the oil & gas industry as identified by Carola Hoyos, Chief Energy Correspondent for The Financial Times - but spanning other nascent opportunities around the globe that may hold potential in the years ahead, Wildcats & Black Sheep is a place for the adventurous to contemplate & evaluate the emerging markets of tomorrow.