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Dangote Cement consider London listing within two years

Dangote Cement will consider a London share sale over the next two years, Bloomberg reports, as Africa’s biggest building materials producer seeks funds for expansion. Nigeria’s biggest company, owned by the continent’s richest man, Aliko Dangote, will also seek to raise US$500 million via the issue of a Eurobond, chief financial officer Brian Egan told investors on a conference call on Tuesday after reporting the sector giant’s Q1 2018 results. The money sought is on top of a 300 billion naira
April 26, 2018 Read time: 2 mins

7635 Dangote Cement will consider a London share sale over the next two years, Bloomberg reports, as Africa’s biggest building materials producer seeks funds for expansion.

Nigeria’s biggest company, owned by the continent’s richest man, Aliko Dangote, will also seek to raise US$500 million via the issue of a Eurobond, chief financial officer Brian Egan told investors on a conference call on Tuesday after reporting the sector giant’s Q1 2018 results. The money sought is on top of a 300 billion naira ($833 million) local-currency bond announced last month.

Under new chief executive officer Joseph Makoju, Dangote Cement is investing heavily on expansion, with $350 million earmarked for capital projects this year. Those include the building of export facilities at Nigeria’s seaports to boost shipments to neighboring West African countries. The economy of Africa’s biggest crude producer is set to grow this year, after falling into recession amid low oil prices in 2016.

On Monday, Lagos-based Dangote Cement hired former Xstrata Plc CEO Mick Davis as a non-executive director alongside Cherie Blair, a lawyer and the wife of ex-UK Prime Minister Tony Blair. The high-profile appointments were widely seen as a prelude to a listing in London, after the cement maker previously mulled a share sale in the UK capital in 2010.

The company has approached investment banks about arranging the IPO, people familiar with the matter said in February. The share sale could raise about $1 billion, they said, adding that the cement maker is more likely to raise that much cash in London than Lagos due to the deeper pool of investors.

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