Africa Finance Corporation’s Total assets grow by 20% to US$7.36 billion in 2020

Lagos, 12 April 2021: Africa Finance Corporation, one of Africa’s biggest investors in infrastructure development, has delivered a 20% growth in total assets during the 2020 pandemic year.

AFC’s audited financial statements for 2020 calendar year show strong and continued growth, with total assets reaching US $7.36 billion on Dec. 31, compared with US$ 6.12 billion a year earlier. Amidst the tough economic climate, asset growth was largely driven by the robust pipeline of infrastructure opportunities, maturing project development initiatives and repeat business from clients seeking to capitalize on the opportunities from the disruption in the global supply chain to embark on import substitution projects and value accretive beneficiation of African resources.

Samaila Zubairu, President & CEO of AFC, said: “Achieving this financial performance during an unprecedented time of a global pandemic is testament to the Corporation’s resilience driven by our strong team of agile professionals and our vital role in Africa’s infrastructure and industrial development.  We maintained the growth and profitability trajectory in our strategic plan with improved portfolio quality, a strong capital base, and a high liquidity position.

Our role becomes even more critical as we look ahead, especially at this time when African economies have begun the journey of recovery from the impact of COVID-19. AFC will continue to partner with African governments and sponsors to ensure sustainable development and production of the metals required for the energy transition. In addition, we will support projects that reduce carbon dioxide emissions with greater focus on the requisite energy infrastructure, renewable projects and the digital infrastructure that should enable Africa to build back better with more resilient and sustainable infrastructure.”

The Corporation continued to diversify funding and increased total borrowing 17% YoY to US$ 5.1 billion during this period. In addition to a US$700 million Reg S Eurobond in June 2020, the Corporation issued its inaugural CHF150 million Reg S Green Bond in September 2020 with significant oversubscription.

AFC also secured US$250 million tier-2 capital from the U.S. International Development Finance Corporation, boosting the Corporation’s capital, and enhancing its ability to create assets.

The Arab Bank for Economic Development in Africa and the Republic of Gabon became equity shareholders of Africa Finance Corporation in the financial year 2020, with equity injections of US$10 million and US$50 million, respectively.

Key milestones last year include an expanded investment footprint in Africa to 35 countries, growing the cumulative disbursements to US$8.7 billion (vs. US$7.2 billion a year earlier).

Further highlights:

  • US$2.08 billion total equity (2019: US$1.71 billion) 22%
  • US$167.1 million net interest income (2019: US$162.6 million) 3%
  • US$156.5 million in total comprehensive income (2019: US$164.5 million) 5%
  • US$165.5 million profit for the year (2019: US$183.3 million) 10%
  • US$2.40 billion liquidity position (2019: US$ 2.13 billion) 12%

Source: AFC

×

Table of Contents

Scroll to Top

2026 AADFI Annual General Assembly

The Association of African Development Finance Institutions (AADFI) is pleased to announce that its 2026 Annual General Assembly will take place from May 24 to 29, 2026, in Brazzaville, Republic of Congo, on the sidelines of the African Development Bank (AfDB) Annual Meetings.

The Annual General Assembly will be held on the theme “Augmenting Sovereign Finance in Africa: DFIs Unlocking Growth and Resilience through NAFA,” with a focus on the transformative role of African Development Finance Institutions (DFIs) in strengthening Africa’s financial sovereignty. The discussions will align with the AfDB-led New African Financial Architecture (NAFA), a system-level framework designed to mobilize long-term investment, reduce Africa’s cost of capital, and reinforce resilience through coordinated financial systems and deeper domestic capital markets.

The Annual General Assembly will convene leaders of African DFIs, government officials, regional institutions, and development partners to further explore how African DFIs can catalyze local investment, de-risk strategic projects, and strengthen economic autonomy to build resilience against global shocks and bridge the continent’s infrastructure funding gap.

Further details will be shared in the coming weeks.