DELVE INTO AFRICAN WEALTH
DON'T MISS A BEAT
Subscribe now
Skip to content

Africa’s richest man, Aliko Dangote, starts 2026 with $410 million net worth increase

Aliko Dangote’s net worth rises $410 million to $30.4 billion driven by Dangote Cement gains and investor confidence.

Africa’s richest man, Aliko Dangote
Africa’s richest man, Aliko Dangote

Table of Contents

Africa’s richest man Aliko Dangote has started 2026 with a $410 million gain, raising his net worth to $30.4 billion. After closing 2025 at $30 billion, the increase reinforces his position as the only African billionaire worth more than $30 billion and the only Black billionaire to cross that threshold, thus reflecting the continued gains in his business empire.

Bloomberg’s real-time data shows Dangote’s wealth rising in early January, reflecting investor confidence in his core businesses. His net worth has surged to $30.4 billion. The Dangote Group, Africa’s largest manufacturing conglomerate, spans cement, sugar, salt and energy.

Dangote Cement gains lift net worth

The latest increase is tied to the performance of Dangote Cement Plc, the group’s flagship listed company. Shares of Dangote Cement have gained 4.37 percent on the Nigerian Exchange (NGX) this year, extending their one-year rise to 32.6 percent. This follows a strong run in 2025 when Dangote’s net worth climbed from $28.07 billion on Jan. 1 to $30 billion by Dec. 31.

Dangote owns 87.45 percent of Dangote Cement, Africa’s largest cement producer, which has a combined production and bagging capacity of 52 million tonnes a year. The company has continued to attract investor interest after reporting strong results for the first nine months of 2025. Profit nearly tripled to N743.3 billion ($514.5 million), compared with N279.1 billion ($193.4 million) a year earlier.

Assets rise as reinvestment trims earnings

Dangote Cement has prioritized cost control, cash flow management and expansion across African markets supporting its balance sheet. Total assets increased to N5.74 trillion ($3.94 billion) as of Sept. 30, 2025, from N4.34 trillion a year earlier. Retained earnings declined to N1.27 trillion ($870 million) from N2.22 trillion ($1.52 billion), thus reflecting investment and capital commitments during the period.

For Dangote, gains early in 2026 extend a series of increases linked to operating results, underscoring his lead atop Africa’s wealth rankings. Investor attention remains focused on his cement, sugar and energy businesses as markets assess earnings and expansion plans.

Latest