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African Wealth Briefing — Wed., July 8, 2026

Good morning from Billionaires.Africa.

Here is a brief on what we published since Monday’s briefing.

The past two days were about milestones — a Nigerian refinery displacing America in Europe’s fuel market, a banking era ending in Lagos, and a billionaire leading a presidential poll he insists he isn’t running in.

The lead: Lagos fuels Europe

Aliko Dangote’s refinery shipped about 466,000 tonnes of jet fuel to Europe in June, overtaking the United States as the region’s top supplier. It is hard to overstate the symbolism: a single Nigerian plant, at full stride, now sells Europe more jet fuel than America does — the clearest evidence yet that the refinery is redrawing global product flows, not just West African ones. With the pan-African IPO still ahead, every month like this strengthens the valuation argument Dangote has been making all year.

An era ends at UBA

Tony Elumelu will retire as chairman of UBA Group on August 21 after 12 years, with veteran banker Emmanuel Nnorom named as his successor. Elumelu’s tenure — and the Transcorp and Heirs Holdings empire built alongside it — made him one of the defining figures of Nigerian finance; the handover to a longtime lieutenant is a succession done the orderly way, and a moment worth marking.

The reluctant frontrunner

Patrice Motsepe played down a run for the ANC presidency even as polls put him ahead, saying his contribution is best made outside politics. The spectacle of South Africa’s mining billionaire — and CAF president — leading a party-leadership poll he hasn’t entered says as much about the ANC’s search for renewal as it does about Motsepe; we report his words and the polls as they stand.

Money in motion

Nigeria — a turnaround delivered. Wale Tinubu’s Oando swung back to a N204.8 billion profit for 2025 as production jumped 32%, with higher output targeted for 2026 — vindication, for now, of the debt-heavy Agip acquisition that many doubted.

West & Central Africa — the quiet expansion. Idrissa Nassa’s Coris Bank incorporated a Cameroonian subsidiary and named its leadership, awaiting approval to begin operations — the Burkinabe banker’s methodical push from the Sahel into Central Africa continues.

Nigeria — steel meets solar. Niger State handed Raj Gupta’s African Industries 500 hectares to build what it calls sub-Saharan Africa’s largest solar-powered steel plant — industrial ambition wired to renewable power.

Southern Africa — the price of a turnaround. Pick n Pay, long controlled by the Ackerman family, sold down more of its Boxer crown jewel for R4.7 billion — funding a slow recovery that has already cost the family control of the retailer their patriarch built.

Morocco — grain diplomacy. Kazakhstan’s ambassador met Rita Zniber, head of Diana Holding, over grain and oils supply and joint investments — Morocco’s agribusiness matriarch as a node in food-trade geopolitics.

The diaspora note

Nigerian-American billionaire Adebayo Ogunlesi met Uzbekistan’s president to discuss expanding BlackRock’s energy and finance investments in the country — the Lagos-born dealmaker operating at the highest altitude of global capital.

The takeaway

Two days, three kinds of power: industrial (a refinery out-supplying a superpower), institutional (a 12-year chairmanship handed over in good order), and political (a fortune polling ahead of the politicians). African wealth is no longer just accumulating — it is displacing, succeeding, and being courted.

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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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