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African Wealth Briefing — Sat., June 13, 2026

Good afternoon from Billionaires.Africa.

Here is a brief on what we published yesterday — a lighter Friday slate, led by a milestone with deep African roots.

The headline: a trillionaire is born

Elon Musk became the world’s first trillionaire as SpaceX began trading, with the listing pricing the rocket company at about $1.77 trillion ($135 a share) and pushing his personal fortune past a threshold no individual in recorded history has crossed. The African angle is real: Musk was born and raised in Pretoria, which makes the planet’s largest fortune, in a sense, a South African export — even as its scale (he entered June worth roughly $835 billion on Forbes’ tally) dwarfs the entire African billionaire cohort combined.

On the continent

Nigeria — generosity, quantified. Aliko Dangote, Africa’s richest man, has publicly donated about $47 million to charitable causes so far in 2026 — a tally that puts hard numbers to a philanthropic profile usually described only in the abstract, and a reminder that the continent’s biggest fortune is also among its biggest givers.

Southern Africa — back online. Sandile Zungu’s ZICO consortium, which is acquiring Madagascar’s Ambatovy nickel mine, saw the operation restart production after a four-month shutdown caused by damage from Cyclone Gezani. For a tycoon betting on critical minerals, getting one of the region’s largest nickel assets pumping again is the milestone that matters.

The takeaway

Friday framed a striking contrast. On one side of the world, a Pretoria-born entrepreneur crossed into thirteen figures; on the continent he left, the work looked different in scale but not in seriousness — a record fortune accounting for its giving, and a mining consortium nursing a cyclone-hit asset back to life. Different arenas, the same throughline: wealth measured not just by what it totals, but by what it does.

On the site


Billionaires.Africa — the world’s premier source of news on Africa’s billionaires and UHNWIs. Forward to a colleague.

Figures are point-in-time estimates from public sources including Forbes, Bloomberg, company disclosures and exchange filings, as of reporting; they change with markets and currencies and are not measures of liquid wealth. Editorial analysis, not investment, legal or tax advice. © 2026 Billionaires.Africa Inc.

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