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EFTA00721165.pdf

dataset_9 pdf 273.5 KB Feb 3, 2026 3 pages
From: To: "Jeffrey E." <jeevacation@gmail.com> Subject: FT TODAY Date: Sun, 22 Jun 2014 22:37:27 +0000 COO and #2 Terrified but need to do it High quality global journalism requires investment. Please share this article with others using the link below, do not cut & paste the article. See our Ts&CS and Copyright Policy for more detail. Email to buy additional rights. http://www.ft.corn/cms/s/0/3ab56de2-f35d-lle3-91a8- 00144feabdc0.html#ixzz35PQ1gsNk Ashish Thakkar: Bob Diamond's African partner By Javier Blas Author alerts g3,41- Thakkar Ashish is seen in a factory at the Ripley Packaging Limited in Uganda on May 24; 2014. °Isaac ICasamani Disruptive: Ashish Thakkar wants to shake up African banking but disagrees with criticism of his partner, Bob Diamond When he was 15 years old, Ashish Thakkar told his parents that he wanted to leave his school in Uganda to build a business. His family gave him a $5,000 loan, but he recalls receiving a stem warning from his father too: "If it doesn't work out within a year then you go back to school, but you'll be a year behind your friends." Mr Thakkar, now 32, never went back to study. Instead, the precocious young man spent the mid-1990s criss- crossing the continent to establish Mara Group, an African conglomerate that recently gained greater prominence by linking up with Bob Diamond, the former chief executive of UK bank Barclays. The teenage Mr Thakkar started out reselling computers, which involved flying to Dubai each weekend to buy motherboards and hard drives that he would shift to customers in Africa. Under his leadership, Mara subsequently diversified into a broad range of activities, including call centres, property and cardboard packaging. It has operations in 22 African countries including Kenya, Uganda, Nigeria and Rwanda. The company's rise has made Mr Thakkar rich. He values his group at "slightly above" $lbn. That would make him Africa's youngest dollar billionaire. But detractors and even some friends say that figure is inflated. Speaking at his parents' home on a hill overlooking the Ugandan capital Kampala, he seems More unfazed either way: "I don't like the Africa's-youngest-billionaire title." ON THIS STORY Bob Diamond's Africa fund Whatever the truth — and Mara Group does not publish its accounts — Mr misses target Thakkar's success in eastern Africa has increasingly made him a go-to man for investors willing to take on the risks of the region. Bob Diamond's Africa fund to tap investors Well-known to young Africans addicted to social media — he has 585,000 Twitter followers — Mr Thakkar saw his international profile rise EFTA00721165 Diamond steps up charge after partnering with Mr Diamond to move into African banking. intoAfrica The Atlas Mara cash shell, in which both he and Mr Diamond have personally ON THIS TOPIC invested, listed on the London Stock Exchange in December, raising $325m. In Mota-Engil Africa to list on March it announced its first deal, paying $265m in cash and shares to buy LSE BancABC, a medium-sized lender with operations in Botswana, Mozambique, Glencore arranges $lbn oil Tanzania, Zambia and Zimbabwe, and signed another deal to acquire a bank in loan for Chad Rwanda through a privatisation programme. Avanti to issue bonds for next satellite Atlas Mara more recently has failed to raise the $400m it had targeted for its second fundraising, although people familiar with the deal said it raised in Andrew Hill The legacy of excess of $300m. Both Mr Diamond and Mr Thakkar invested in the second an African web pioneer capital raising. THE MONDAY INTERVIEW The pair met a year ago at a mutual friend's party in Cape Town. Another Anil Agarwal, executive meeting followed in New York and they became partners soon after. Mr chairman, Vedanta Diamond left Barclays under a cloud in 2012 amid the Libor rate-rigging Resources scandal. Mr Thakkar disagrees with critics who paint Mr Diamond as the embodiment of reckless "casino banking", saying that the two men will be a Alan Clark, chief executive, "positive", albeit "disruptive", force in African banking. The financial services SABMiller sector needs to emulate the explosive growth in mobile phones in Africa, he Pascal Soriot, chief adds. executive, AstraZeneca Cao Dewang, Fuyao Glass The alliance with the investment banker is in sharp contrast to Mr Thakkar's origins. He was born in 1981 in the English city of Leicester after his parents were forced to leave Uganda in the early 1970s. He returned to Africa with his family to settle in Kigali, the Rwandan capital, months before the genocide. Mr Thakkar says the days and nights there remain vivid in his mind — time spent waiting to escape the mass slaughter of approximately 800,000 Tutsi and moderate Hutu by members of the country's Hutu majority in April 1994. "I was 13. I remember everything," he says, recalling what he ate the night the genocide started — "margherita pizza and chips" — and other small details of the days he spent hiding and praying for a rescue. After fleeing from Kigali to Bujumbura, the capital of neighbouring Burundi, The CV and from there to Kenya, the family finally resettled in Kampala months later. "My dad took a small loan because we had nothing, literally. I could see that Born: August 1981, people were avoiding my parents . .. You could see people scared that if we get Leicester, UK too close maybe we'll ask for a favour." Education: After fleeing the Rwandan genocide in It was about that time that Mr Thakkar told his family he wanted to try to build 1994, drops out of school a business, rather than study, after making $100 reselling a computer to a family in Uganda at the age of 15 friend. He replaced formal education with inspiration from the biographies of to start his own business "Richard Branson, Warren Buffett, Bill Gates and Ratan Tata". with a $5,000 loan Career: 1996 Starts The first decade of running his interlocking enterprises was not easy. "Every trading computer business was leaning on each other and that's how you grow, initially you don't hardware between have a choice," he says. "I really took a large risk . .. to fund it I just basically Uganda and Dubai leveraged everything I could." 2001 Establishes a cardboard corrugation Mr Thakkar says he bet everything he had twice in 10 years. At one point in plant in Kampala, Uganda 1996, he took a loan from a moneylender in Kampala at an annual interest rate 2006 Diversifies into high-end real estate 2009 Mara Foundation is EFTA00721166 set up to support young of 36 per cent. But a mixture of luck and a flair for networking saw him through entrepreneurs in Africa the storm. 2010-11 Forms IT services joint venture and Of course, the wind was blowing in his favour. In the early 2000s, as expands into business commodities prices surged and democracy spread across the region, Africa process outsourcing entered into a virtuous cycle of strong economic growth and improved 2013 Mara joins forces governance: a decade-and-a-half run that has been labelled "Africa rising". with Atlas Merchant Capital and lists Atlas The young entrepreneur capitalised on this trend and the connections he built. Mara on the London Mara Group now has five main business lines: technology, including investment Stock Exchange in IT and call centres; manufacturing, with assets such as packaging production 2014 Atlas Mara and glass manufacturing; financial services, through its Atlas Mara arm; announces its first property, with developments under way in Uganda and Tanzania; and acquisitions: BancABC agriculture. and the Development Bank of Rwanda "The past five years we've seen phenomenal growth and I envisage that this Interests: trend will continue," he says. The secret ingredient is knowing Africa better than Tennis, squash, his the competition, he asserts. spiritual leader Morari Bapu After years of expansion, the company, which employs more than 10,000 people, is becoming more professional in its structure, although the family remains in firm control and there are no plans for a stock market listing. Mr Thakkar has hired executives from outside, such as Bradford Gibbs, the former head of investment banking for South Africa at Morgan Stanley, and Sriram Yarlagadda, the former CEO of Wand Telecom for east Africa. Mr Thakkar remains at the top as "founder", with his father as chairman. There is no CEO but he rejects the suggestion that he is the boss. "I am not smart enough to be a chief executive," he laughs. "Maybe I need to get O-levels [old UK secondary school qualifications] first to become a chief executive." EFTA00721167

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