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Kenya Ranks Fourth Highest Number of Millionaires in Africa

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Kenya Ranks Fourth Highest Number of Millionaires in Africa

(3 Minutes Read)

Kenya has been ranked after South Africa, Egypt, and Nigeria as African countries with the highest number of millionaires. A large number of Kenya’s rich people are found in Nairobi, Johannesburg, Cape Town, Cairo, and Lagos.  According to the 2024 Africa Wealth Report, Kenya has 7,200 high-net-worth individuals with 4,400 found in Nairobi

Kenya has been ranked after South Africa, Egypt, and Nigeria as African countries with the highest number of millionaires. A large number of Kenya’s rich people are found in Nairobi, Johannesburg, Cape Town, Cairo, and Lagos.

According to the 2024 Africa Wealth Report, Kenya has 7,200 high-net-worth individuals with 4,400 found in Nairobi. South Africa, which remains home to over twice as many high-net-worth individuals (HNWIs) as any other African country, has 37,400 millionaires, 102 centi-millionaires, and 5 billionaires.

Egypt, which is second in the continent, has 15,600 millionaires, 52 centi-millionaires, and 7 billionaires. Nigeria sits in 3rd place with 8,200 HNWIs, Morocco (6,800), Mauritius (5,100), Algeria (2,800), Ethiopia (2,700), Ghana (2,700), and Namibia (2,300), all making it into the Top 10 Wealthiest Countries in Africa.

The Wealth Report reveals that there are currently 135,200 high-net-worth individuals (HNWIs) with a liquid investable wealth of US$ 1 million or more living in the continent, along with 342 centi-millionaires worth USD 100 million or more-, and 21-dollar billionaires. The continent’s ‘Big 5’ wealth markets — South Africa, Egypt, Nigeria, Kenya, and Morocco — together account for 56 % of the continent’s millionaires and over 90% of its billionaires.

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Currency depreciation and underperforming stock markets have chipped away at Africa’s wealth compared to global benchmarks. The South African rand fell 43% against the US dollar from 2013–2023, and even though the JSE All Share Index, which makes up well over half of the continent’s listed company holdings, rose in local currency terms, it was down 5% in US dollar terms over that period. Nations are also losing large numbers of HNWIs to migration which is eroding the continent’s wealth.