Good afternoon from Billionaires.Africa.
Here is a brief on what we published yesterday.
Monday’s coverage moved between the league table and the deal flow — a reshuffle at the top of African wealth, a marquee Gulf construction win, and a founder’s dividend windfall.
The lead: the list reshuffles
Nicky Oppenheimer, the diamond heir whose fortune traces to the family’s former De Beers empire, climbed to Africa’s fourth-richest, worth about $10.6 billion, as the updated 2026 Forbes ranking reordered the continent’s wealthiest. The reshuffle is less about Oppenheimer’s own assets than about the field around him — most notably Abdulsamad Rabiu’s surge on the back of soaring BUA shares — but it lands amid a week already preoccupied with where the lines on the league table truly belong, from Dangote’s quarrel with Forbes to Rupert’s crossing of $20 billion.
Deals
North Africa to the Gulf — a marquee win. Hassan Allam’s holding company secured a $727 million contract to build the Waldorf Astoria Hotel and a mixed-use superblock at Saudi Arabia’s Diriyah giga-project — the second major headline in a week for the Egyptian builder, after its $400 million Egyptian data-centre commitment, and a sign of how far Egyptian engineering capacity now reaches into Gulf megaprojects.
Markets and money
Southern Africa — a founder’s payday. Datatec announced a R7.1 billion (about $434.5 million) special dividend following a refinancing deal with General Atlantic, with founder and chief executive Jens Montanana set to pocket roughly R1.3 billion ($79 million) — a clean reminder that a well-timed capital event can convert a founder’s long-held stake into cash in a single announcement.
The takeaway
Monday was about position and proceeds. The Forbes reshuffle nudged the rankings even as the underlying fortunes barely moved; an Egyptian builder pushed deeper into the Gulf’s giga-project economy; and a South African tech founder turned a refinancing into a personal windfall. The league table and the cash flow — the two ways African wealth keeps score.
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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