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African Wealth Briefing — Tues., June 30, 2026

South Africa has a new dollar billionaire in Dis-Chem founder Ivan Saltzman. Papa Kwesi Nduom bids for Standard Chartered's Ghana retail arm.

African Wealth Briefing — Tues., June 30, 2026

Table of Contents

Good morning from Billionaires.Africa.

Here is a brief on what we published yesterday.

Monday brought a new entrant to the billionaire ranks, a bid to buy a piece of a global bank, and a troubling move against a media empire.

The lead: a new billionaire

South Africa has a new dollar billionaire: Ivan Saltzman, the founder of the pharmacy retail chain Dis-Chem. The milestone, driven by the value of his stake in the JSE-listed retailer he built with his wife Lynette, adds a fresh name to a South African billionaire cohort long dominated by mining, luxury and media fortunes — this one built, prescription by prescription, on the unglamorous business of health and convenience retail.

Deals

West Africa — a bid for the bank's counter. Ghanaian businessman Papa Kwesi Nduom wants to acquire Standard Chartered's local retail banking business in Ghana, a move that would expand his Groupe Nduom financial-services footprint and hand an indigenous owner a slice of a storied international franchise. The bid signals the continuing retreat of global banks from African retail markets — and the readiness of local money to fill the space.

Scrutiny and press freedom

East Africa — a media empire under pressure. Ugandan military authorities shut outlets of the Nation Media Group, in which Tanzanian billionaire Rostam Aziz is a major shareholder. Nation Media is one of East Africa's largest independent media houses, and the closure of its operations by military order raises serious press-freedom concerns. We report the action as it stands; the issues it raises — about the independence of the press and the security of cross-border media investments — will outlast the immediate shutdown.

This morning on the site

A few stories are already moving as we publish: Abdulsamad Rabiu has submitted a $1.1 million bid for a 70% stake in Kano Pillars, the four-time Nigerian league champions, pending government approval; Ahmed El Sewedy's Elsewedy Electric has launched a new generator range aimed at Egypt's industrial expansion; and, abroad, Elon Musk is a trillionaire again after SpaceX and Tesla added some $62 billion to his fortune in a single day — a swing that underscores how much the world's largest fortune now moves on two volatile stocks.

The takeaway

Monday was a study in how fortunes are made, moved and tested: one built quietly in retail crossing the billion-dollar line, another reaching to buy what a global bank is leaving behind, and a third reminded that media wealth, however large, sits at the mercy of the state. Creation, ambition, and vulnerability — the three constants of African wealth, all on one page.

On the site


Billionaires.Africa — the world's premier source of news on Africa's billionaires and UHNWIs. Forward to a colleague.

Figures are point-in-time estimates from public sources including Forbes, Bloomberg, company disclosures and exchange filings, as of reporting; they change with markets and currencies and are not measures of liquid wealth. Editorial analysis, not investment, legal or tax advice. © 2026 Billionaires.Africa Inc.

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