African Business Magazine published the Top 250 African companies by market value (dollars) and 10 Kenyan companies make it on the list. The usual boneheads from South Africa, Morocco & Egypt dominate the Top 50, while only Safcom and EABL make it to Top 100. The 10 Kenyan companies are below by rank;
Company 2010 ranking / 2009 ranking
safcom 39 / 55
eabl 74 / 65
barclays 121 / 100
bamburi 127 / 119
scbk 147 / 149
kcb 150 / 155
equity 152 / 151
kengen 190 / 179
BAT 224 / 239
Kq 228
Impressive performance from Safaricom moving up 16 places to 39, but other Kenyan firms did okay. KQ surprizingly made it to the list for Top 250, kudos. Maybe a poor showing from Nigerians considering economists expect Nigeria's economy to overtake South Africa within the next three years (2013). Nigeria's top company First Bank of Nigeria was only 2 places above Safaricom at 37.
What's good about this issue is that the magazine gives us comparisons against the Top 25 companies in Asia, Latin America & the Middle east. Top 15 companies in East Africa had the usual suspects, the always present imfamous 'three' Mauritian titans and the other titans in Tanzania and Uganda. See the top 15 below.
Safaricom (Kenya) - $2,776 mn
EA Breweries (Kenya) - $1,568 mn
Mauritius Commercial Bank (Mauritius) - $1,374 mn
State Bank of Mauritius (Mauritius) - $1,030 mn
Barclays Bank (Kenya) - $884 mn
Bamburi Cement (Kenya) - $768 mn
New Mauritius Hotel (Mauritius) - $742 mn
Stan. Chart. Bank (Kenya) - $608 mn
KCB (Kenya) - $580 mn
Equity Bank (Kenya) - $573 mn
Stanbic Bank (Uganda) - $434 mn
KenGen (Kenya) - $420 mn
BAT (Kenya) - $311 mn
Tanzania Breweries (Tanzania) - $308 mn
Kenya Airways (Kenya) - $305 mn
Definately a good issue of African Business Magazine to read. Has interesting article on tourism potential in Kenya, BRICS leading global recovery, FDI inflows to Africa, interview with a brilliant economist 'Joseph stiglitz', among others. Anyone interested in the Fortune 500 and Global 500 Ranks for 2005-2008 can email me.
“We are the middle children of history man, no purpose or place. We have no great war, no great depression. Our great war is a spiritual war, our great depression is our lives!" – Tyler Durden