Whether they spend their millions on jet fleets or cemetery plots, Africa’s richest know how to flash their cash.
When hopping on a plane it is understandable that
you might carry a few personal belongings with you: a toothbrush or some
bed socks, a little cash for incidentals in the airport or in-flight,
duty-free shopping. So one can only imagine Christo Wiese’s surprise
when he was stopped by customs at Heathrow Airport for carrying what he
considered “small change”. Customs confiscated over $1 million in cash,
the South African billionaire had bundled into rolls with elastic bands
and nestled in his carry-on.
A man with a personal fortune worth over $3
billion, complete with a wine estate, five-star hotel and private game
reserve, considered this kind of cash “peanuts” – small change indeed.
Africa, a continent home to 80 percent of the world’s population
living in poverty, is also the home of some of the world’s wealthiest
people. Like their international brethren, despite the struggles of
their poor neighbours, the region’s rich have no compunction about
flashing their fancy cars, fleets of private jets, tickets to outer
space, lavish weddings and exclusive and extravagant real estate.
In late 2008, South African luxury retail magnate, Johann Rupert, was
quick to swear that his 22-year-old son Anton was not a “spoilt brat”,
despite the young man having just smashed his father’s $1.2-million
Ferrari F50 – one of only 349 in the world. Publicly, at least, the
billionaire blamed only himself for his son’s error. The car – one of
400 sitting in the billionaire’s
private-collection-cum-vintage-car-museum – did need driving to remain
in mint condition, Johann Rupert said. “Cars that are not driven
regularly suffer irreparable damage,” the tycoon remarked at the time.
“The museum cars are therefore driven often.” Rupert senior brushed off
his son’s ill-fated joy ride, saying: “I did far worse things at Anton’s
age, often involving an Alfa Romeo Giulia Super.” Who knows whether the
boy would have received more than a slap on the wrist had he taken out
dad’s 2003 supercar Ferrari Enzo or the rare 1931 Austro-Daimler
Bergmeister.
While Rupert seems fairly nonchalant about his jam-packed garage,
Nigerian self-made businessman, Aliko Dangote, worth a whopping $20.2
billion, might be a bit more territorial about his latest purchase: a
$43-million custom-made luxury yacht. The richest man in Africa for the
second year running and widely reported as the 43rd highest-grossing
billionaire in the world, Dangote paved the way to his billions through
his publicly traded cement company, Dangote Cement, which operates in 14
countries on the continent. The yacht, named Mariya after his
mother, can often be seen moored alongside Nigerian oil tycoon, Femi
Otedola’s almost identical boat – in his case, named Nana after his wife.
AFRICA’S MONOPOLY “MAYFAIR”
If you are on the lookout for Africa’s superrich, Nigeria is the
place to start. The capital Abuja is considered the most expensive city
in Africa. A four-bedroom duplex in the upscale Maitama district, for
example, runs to about $4 million. Nigeria’s vast oil resources and poor
infrastructure raise the cost of living in this inland city but so do
the tastes of some of its residents. Ferraris, McLarens and Lamborghinis
have been seen on its roads, with local bloggers also claiming to have
spotted a Bugatti Veyron (the world’s most expensive car at $2.4 million
apiece), with a mystery driver behind the wheel.
Recently, well-heeled politicians and senior civil servants have been
snapping up real estate in the city’s Goodluck Jonathan District, newly
named after the Nigerian president, amid talk that the district will
house governmental heavyweights like the Senate president and the
speaker of the House of Representatives. Developers have scaled up
prices accordingly: a 2,800-square-metre residential plot – undeveloped –
now goes for upwards of $5 million.
Not far away on the coast near Lagos, the residents of the Banana
Island district, a sliver of reclaimed land aptly named for its shape,
enjoy first-world luxuries that elude many Nigerians and then some.
While a four-bedroom apartment can cost as much as $21 million,
residents pay for benefits including a 24-hour electricity supply – a
privilege found in only one other place in Nigeria: the presidential
residence. Other rare conveniences include freshly paved roads and a
central sewage system, not to mention a mosque, two watch towers and a
banquet hall with seating capacity for 200 guests. The extravagantly
landscaped grounds are decorated with statues of frolicking deer and a
bull. In 2012, the rare luxury of its premises earned Banana Island the
coveted “Mayfair” spot on Lagos’s first Monopoly board.
Among the residents of Banana Island is Mike Adenuga, Nigeria’s
newest billionaire, who counts a gilded duplex in the development among
seven homes he owns. This is not the only kind of real estate Adenuga
has been buying. He recently spent $1.24 million on a burial plot in the
Vaults and Gardens cemetery in Ikoyi, Lagos. The sum is typical of the
cemetery, where vaults and plots costing millions wait for their
super-rich occupants. Adenuga, who built his fortune in banking, oil and
telecommunications, reportedly paid the same amount for his sister to
be buried here after she passed away in 2009.
Eccentric as this may seem, Adenuga and the other buyers in Vaults
and Gardens aren’t the only wealthy Africans to choose an exclusive
resting place. Egyptian businessman Mohamed Al-Fayed, the former owner
of Harrods, once announced that he wanted to be mummified and entombed
on the roof of the department store when the time came. “There’s a glass
studio on the top floor in his private suite,” a long-time friend
reputedly said. “It has a glass dome and he said he wanted to be placed
beneath that.” The Qatari royal family, which bought the place in 2010
for £1.5 billion, may have other ideas.
HOW WEALTHY WOMEN PREFER TO DO IT
In the coming years, according to the United Nations, most African
countries are expected to achieve growth higher than the global average,
and the continent’s billionaires are reaping the rewards of this upward
trend. The combined fortune of Africa’s 55 billionaires is $143.88
billion. There are three female billionaires in Africa.
Isabel dos Santos, the daughter of the president of Angola, enjoys a
net worth of $2.4 billion. Her 2003 wedding to wealthy Congolese art
collector, Sindika Dokolo, reportedly cost $4 million. African
presidents mingled among the 100 guests, a choir was flown from Belgium
and two charter planes full of food made the journey from France. Her
10-year wedding anniversary party this year was no less extravagant. The
invitation to celebrate a “decade of passion, a decade of friendship, a
decade worth a hundred years” meant three days of extravagance for
hundreds of lucky local and European guests, who partied in Luanda and
brunched on the swanky Mussulo peninsula.
New luxury apartments owned by dos Santos in the Angolan capital of
Luanda, which the Mercer Group this year ranked the world’s most
expensive city in which to live, currently stand empty. With rent
costing upward of $3,000 a month, most Angolans would struggle to step
foot in such a place.
Let’s not forget Folorunsho Alakija, who got her start in the early
1980s when she quit her job as a secretary at a bank to study fashion
design in England. The ambitious Nigerian returned home to Africa to set
up Supreme Stitches. She picked up an exclusive clientele, made friends
in high society and enticed the wives to wear her designer threads. Her
brand soon became a household name.
In 1993, Alakija began to dabble in oil exploration, despite having
no experience in the industry. Her oil riches today have helped amass
her a net worth of $7.3 billion. She gets around in a $46-million
private jet and owns a reported five apartments in one of the world’s
most expensive apartment blocks, One Hyde Park in London, where
penthouses sell for up to $9,350 per square foot.
source: venture africa
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