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Why Aliko Dangote Is Choosing London Again Just as Companies Started Losing Faith in It

7th May 2026
Africa’s richest man Aliko Dangote is preparing to bring part of his cement empire to London at almost the exact moment many international companies have been questioning whether the UK market still matters globally. That contradiction is what makes the story far more interesting than a normal listing announcement, because Dangote is not moving toward London because the market suddenly regained dominance. He is moving because London quietly changed the rules after years of losing leverage. For much of the past decade, the direction of travel seemed obvious. High-growth companies increasingly preferred New York, private capital became more attractive than public markets, and London developed a reputation for being slower, more restrictive, and less appealing than rival exchanges competing for global listings. Yet Dangote Cement, one of Africa’s largest industrial businesses, is reviving plans for a London listing years after similar ambitions failed to materialise, despite the wider narrative around the UK market remaining uncertain. At first glance, the move sounds simple enough. Bigger pools of investor capital, stronger international visibility, and deeper access to global markets are all obvious advantages. But large companies have always wanted those things, which is why the more important question is not why Dangote wants international investors, but why London suddenly became attractive enough again to pull one of Africa’s biggest industrial groups back toward a market that many companies have spent years moving away from. The answer says a great deal about what has been happening underneath global finance while attention remained fixed elsewhere. Britain did not suddenly become stronger. It became more flexible because it had to. The UK’s Financial Conduct Authority has spent recent years easing listing requirements and simplifying parts of the market structure after the country faced growing pressure from rival exchanges and concerns that London was losing relevance in the competition for major international companies. Dangote himself effectively acknowledged that shift by pointing directly to reduced listing requirements as part of the attraction behind the proposed move. That detail changes the meaning of the story entirely because it reflects a broader reversal in how global capital markets now operate. For decades, companies competed aggressively for investor attention while major financial centres largely controlled the terms of entry. Increasingly, the balance has started moving in the opposite direction. Exchanges are now competing harder for companies with genuine scale, strategic importance, and long-term growth potential. Dangote arrives in that environment from a position of considerable strength rather than financial necessity. Dangote Cement generated more than ₦4.3 trillion in group revenue during 2025 while group net profit more than doubled to just over ₦1 trillion. Earnings per share also surged sharply year-on-year, while the business generated enormous operating cash flow alongside continued expansion spending across its industrial footprint. At the same time, the company’s property, plant, and equipment assets approached ₦4 trillion, reinforcing the sheer physical scale of the operation across Africa. Those numbers matter because they fundamentally change the psychology of the listing story. Companies often pursue international listings when they need credibility, liquidity, or rescue capital. Dangote appears to be approaching London while holding increasing leverage, expanding capacity, distributing dividends, buying back shares, and continuing to invest aggressively in long-term industrial infrastructure. That distinction is important because investors are no longer viewing industrial businesses through the same lens they did a decade ago. For years, the dominant global investment narrative revolved around software, digital platforms, and asset-light technology growth. But geopolitical instability, supply-chain fragility, infrastructure competition, and energy security concerns have started shifting investor priorities back toward physical production capacity and industrial resilience. Industries that once looked old-fashioned beside Silicon Valley growth stories suddenly appear strategically important again. Cement, refining, logistics, energy infrastructure, and industrial manufacturing now sit much closer to the centre of how governments, institutions, and global investors think about economic security and long-term growth. Dangote’s businesses happen to operate directly inside that shift. The timing of the London move therefore feels far less accidental than it first appears. Dangote Cement is not simply selling shares into a foreign market. It is positioning itself as one of the largest industrial infrastructure stories connected to Africa’s long-term urbanisation and construction growth at a moment when investors are becoming increasingly interested in hard assets, production capacity, and supply-chain control. That also helps explain why London itself has strategic reasons for wanting a company like Dangote Cement. Years of weaker IPO activity and intensifying competition from overseas exchanges have forced the UK market into a more competitive global position than many people inside the financial industry are comfortable admitting publicly. A major international industrial group choosing London again sends an important signal that the market can still attract globally significant businesses despite growing pressure from elsewhere. The power relationship inside the story is therefore far more balanced than it might initially seem. Historically, a London listing represented prestige, institutional credibility, and entry into one of the world’s dominant financial systems. Today, London also needs internationally relevant growth stories capable of bringing investor attention, liquidity, and global relevance back toward the market itself. That is why this story matters beyond one billionaire or one stock exchange. It reflects a broader shift in the global economy where industrial scale, infrastructure ownership, production power, and strategic physical assets are becoming valuable again after years in which financial markets overwhelmingly rewarded purely digital growth narratives. The listing itself is important, but the more revealing story is what forced London to become flexible enough for the deal to make sense in the first place.

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