Social Development & Impact
Joe Mamo: From Gas Station to Billionaire
Eyob “Joe” Mamo rose from a single gas station in 1991 to a billion-dollar empire. With a net worth over $1 billion, he thrives in fuel, real estate, and sports while honoring his Ethiopian roots. “Success takes patience, vision, and courage,” he says. “The best is yet to come.”
Ethiopian-American mogul Joe Mamo built a billion-dollar U.S. fuel empire, expanded into real estate, sports, and energy, while investing back in Ethiopia.
Joe Mamo: The Billion-Dollar Rise of an Ethiopian-American Tycoon
In 1981, a young Ethiopian named Eyob “Joe” Mamo arrived in the United States with little more than ambition and a dream. Over four decades later, he stands as one of the most influential figures in the U.S. petroleum industry, having built Capitol Petroleum Group into a billion-dollar empire controlling hundreds of gas stations across America.
From Addis Ababa to Washington: The Early Years
Born in Ethiopia, Mamo fled his homeland during the political upheaval that followed the 1974 overthrow of Emperor Haile Selassie. Seeking stability and opportunity, he settled in the U.S.
“I knew that if I worked hard and took risks, the U.S. would reward my efforts,” Mamo later told Forbes.
In 1991, he took a leap of faith and purchased his first gas station in Washington, D.C. for $150,000—despite having no prior experience in fuel retail.
Capitol Petroleum Group: A Fuel Empire Rises
Through strategic acquisitions during the 1990s and early 2000s, Mamo rapidly expanded his holdings. By 2011, Capitol Petroleum Group controlled over 240 gas stations in Washington, D.C., Virginia, and Maryland, claiming a 41% market share in the D.C. fuel retail sector.
“One deal led to another, and before I knew it, we had built something massive,” he reflected in a 2012 interview.
From Fuel to Real Estate: Billion-Dollar Diversification
In 2018, Mamo sold a portion of his empire to Global Partners LP for $156 million, reinvesting the proceeds into new ventures. By 2019, he proposed The View at Tysons, a $500 million development project in Virginia, which aimed to become the tallest building in the Greater Washington area.
“This is more than a real estate project; it’s a legacy,” Mamo declared.
Beyond Business: Soccer, Ethiopia, and Giving Back
In 2024, Mamo entered the sports world by becoming a co-owner of Major League Soccer’s D.C. United. He has since helped bridge ties with Ethiopian football organizations, aiming to foster talent and partnership across continents.
Despite his American success, Mamo has remained deeply connected to Ethiopia. He has invested in the renewable energy sector, focusing on solutions to address electricity shortages in his country of birth.
“Ethiopia gave me my foundation, and I want to give back in a meaningful way,” he said at a 2023 Addis Ababa business forum.
Legacy of a Self-Made Billionaire
With an estimated net worth of over $1 billion, Eyob “Joe” Mamo is considered one of the most successful Ethiopian-American entrepreneurs in U.S. history.
“Success is not overnight. It takes patience, vision, and most importantly, the courage to take risks,” he told young entrepreneurs at a 2024 Washington business summit.
From a single gas station in 1991 to a multi-sector business empire, Mamo’s journey reflects the resilience of the African diaspora and the endless opportunities of the American dream.
“The journey is far from over,” he says. “The best is yet to come.”
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- Capitol Petroleum Group
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- Ethiopian-American success stories
African Entrepreneurship
Abdiweli Hassan: From Banker to Builder
Abdiweli Hassan’s journey is a study in disciplined risk-taking and faith-driven leadership. By blending Islamic finance principles with modern digital innovation, he is redefining inclusive banking across Somalia and Kenya’s underserved frontiers.
Somali-born Abdiweli Hassan rose from banker to builder, creating Amal Bank and Business Bay Square to empower Africa’s unbanked.
NAIROBI, Oct 17 (BW Africa) — Step into the bright atrium of Business Bay Square (BBS) in Eastleigh, Nairobi’s commercial heartbeat. It is hard to believe its founder, Abdiweli Hassan, once counted shillings behind a teller’s counter. Today, he stands among East Africa’s most visionary Somali entrepreneurs — a man whose journey from banking halls to billion-shilling projects proves that foresight and discipline can still rewrite destinies. These are the traits that Joe Mamo, an Ethiopian American fuel mogul, used to build a billion-dollar empire.
From Garissa to Global Vision
Born in Garissa, northern Kenya, in the late 1970s, Hassan grew up surrounded by trade and resilience. His father traded livestock across the Kenya–Somalia border, while his mother sold fabrics in Garissa Town. However, life was far from easy. “Money was tight,” he recalled in a 2023 interview with Business Daily Africa. “But my parents taught me that even small trade, if done honestly, could open big doors.”
After attending Garissa Primary and Wajir High School, he won a scholarship to study finance at Moi University, graduating in 2002. He soon joined Barclays Bank of Kenya (now Absa Bank Kenya). During nearly a decade there, he learned the rhythm of money and the psychology of trust. “Banking taught me how money behaves,” he says. “More importantly, it taught me how people behave around money.”
Banking Lessons that Built a Billion-Shilling Dream
By 2010, Hassan had saved roughly KSh 6 million ($47,000) — his seed capital. Instead of chasing Nairobi’s elite property market, he looked to Eastleigh, a district many dismissed as chaotic. “People underestimated Eastleigh,” he said. “They saw disorder; I saw opportunity.”
In 2013, he co-founded Amal Bank Kenya, a Sharia-compliant lender that began as a modest remittance firm helping Somali diaspora families send money home. Over time, trust deepened and Amal became a full-service bank serving traders, professionals, and small businesses.
Under Hassan’s leadership, Amal Bank has grown into one of the Horn of Africa’s most trusted Islamic banks, operating in Kenya, Somalia, Ethiopia, and Djibouti. “We didn’t build Amal to chase profit alone,” he told Business Daily Africa. “Our mission has always been to bank the unbanked — to bring dignity and opportunity to people once invisible to mainstream lenders.”
The Mission to Bank the Unbanked
That mission continues to define his philosophy. Amal’s micro-finance arm now supports over 25,000 small traders in Garissa, Mandera, and Eastleigh. Moreover, its remittance service processes more than KSh 15 billion ($115 million) every year in diaspora inflows — a vital lifeline for rural economies.
Hassan’s model merges Sharia-compliant ethics with digital innovation, ensuring inclusion without compromising values. “We built trust before we built profit,” he says. Consequently, Amal became a blueprint for community-based banking.
According to the Central Bank of Kenya, Islamic finance now accounts for nearly 10 percent of the nation’s banking assets, up from just 2 percent a decade ago. As a result, Somali-led financial ventures have reshaped Kenya’s financial inclusion landscape.
Building Business Bay Square: Eastleigh’s New Skyline
In 2018, Hassan founded Business Bay Group, which invested more than KSh 12 billion ($92 million) to build Business Bay Square — one of East Africa’s largest mixed-use developments. The project blends retail, hospitality, and office space in a district once written off by formal investors.
Built on the belief that “Eastleigh deserved a skyline,” BBS transformed the neighborhood into a structured commercial hub. The complex now houses over 1,200 retail outlets and employs more than 3,000 people. It also attracts investors from the Gulf region, the Somali diaspora, and major Kenyan corporations.
However, the road was rough. During the COVID-19 pandemic, lockdowns stalled imports and financing. “We were weeks away from insolvency,” Hassan admitted. Fortunately, a refinancing deal with Amal Capital — his investment arm — saved the project. As a result, BBS finally opened its doors in 2022.
Lessons for Africa’s Next Generation of Entrepreneurs
Today, Hassan’s portfolio spans banking, real estate, logistics, and renewable energy. His companies employ more than 5,000 people across the Horn of Africa and generate estimated annual revenues of KSh 25 billion ($190 million).
For many young Somali entrepreneurs, his story delivers hard-won lessons. “Entrepreneurship isn’t about money,” he says. “It’s about solving problems others ignore. If your community grows, your business will grow with it.”
Meanwhile, Kenya’s participation in the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) is opening fresh opportunities. Hassan believes Somali enterprises will play a decisive role in shaping Africa’s new economic era. “The next frontier is integration,” he says. “We have the networks, the trust, and the hunger. Now we need to build the bridges.”
From a teller’s window in Garissa to the skyline of Eastleigh, Abdiweli Hassan’s story shows that opportunity often hides where others see disorder — and that fortune favors those who build where no blueprint exists.
African Entrepreneurship
Paul Wanderi Ndung’u: From Forex Pioneer to Boardroom Battles and Resilient Comeback
From Clerk to Tycoon: Paul Wanderi Ndung’u started his career at Uchumi Supermarkets as a junior accounting clerk in 1991. Today, he is quietly rebuilding a diversified business empire spanning telecoms, agriculture, and healthcare.
Explore the journey of Paul Wanderi Ndung’u, a Kenyan entrepreneur who rose from humble beginnings to build a multi-million-dollar empire, faced significant challenges, and is now quietly rebuilding his legacy.
A Quiet Rebuilding in 2025
In 2025, Paul Wanderi Ndung’u is not a name that frequently graces the headlines. Yet, in the corridors of Kenya’s business community, his quiet resurgence is being closely watched. Once a prominent figure in the mobile distribution and betting sectors, Ndung’u is now focusing on rebuilding his business empire with a renewed sense of purpose and discipline.
His current ventures span agriculture, healthcare, and hospitality, including interests in G-North & Son, Life Care Medics, and small-cap ventures along the Rift Valley corridor. Friends and associates describe him as a man who has learned from his past and is committed to building a sustainable future.
Humble Beginnings and Early Career
Born in 1962 in Kagwathi, Nyeri County, Paul Wanderi Ndung’u’s journey into the business world began in 1991 as a junior accounting clerk at Uchumi Supermarkets. Armed with a Finance degree from USIU-Africa, he quickly rose through the ranks, moving on to Pioneer General Assurance as Chief Accountant and Investment Officer. Here, he honed his skills in balance-sheet analysis and risk management, setting the stage for his future entrepreneurial endeavors.
The Rise: Forex Ventures and Mobile Distribution
In 1995, when Kenya liberalized its foreign-exchange market, many entrepreneurs hesitated. Ndung’u, however, saw an opportunity. He launched Glory Forex Bureau, one of Kenya’s first currency-trading firms, and later Taipan Forex. His ventures built a reputation for agility and integrity in a volatile market.
By 2001, sensing a telecom revolution, he co-founded Mobicom Kenya Ltd, a mobile-phone and accessories distributor. As Kenya’s mobile-phone penetration exploded, Mobicom thrived. Ndung’u rose to Chairman, expanding operations to Uganda and Tanzania.
The Stock Market Masterstroke
The Nairobi Securities Exchange (NSE) became Ndung’u’s playground. In 2002, he bought one million shares of Kenya Power at KSh 1 each. A year later, he sold them for KSh 6—a 500 percent return. He reinvested the windfall into 16 million shares of Kenya Airways at about KSh 6 per share. When the stock hit KSh 120 in 2006, he partially cashed out—turning that trade into roughly KSh 2 billion (~$14.3 million USD).
His portfolio ballooned with stakes in Car & General, Uchumi, and CMC Holdings, where he later served as a director.
Betting on SportPesa—and Losing the Boardroom
In 2014, Ndung’u made what seemed another brilliant move. He invested in Pevans East Africa Ltd, the company behind SportPesa, joining a group of bold entrepreneurs who saw a legal betting boom ahead. SportPesa exploded into one of Africa’s most valuable betting platforms, sponsoring Everton FC and Hull City in the English Premier League, and generating billions in revenue across Kenya, Tanzania, and the UK.
However, success turned sour. By 2020, cracks emerged between local shareholders, including Ndung’u, and foreign partners over governance and revenue flows. The Kenyan Revenue Authority accused SportPesa of withholding taxes; its license was briefly revoked.
Ndung’u, who had chaired Pevans East Africa, was ousted from the board in 2021, leading to protracted court battles and his eventual financial strain. “It wasn’t about greed,” he later said. “It was about principles. When you fight for transparency, you pay a price.”
The Hammer Fell: Equity Bank Auctions His Properties
The price came due in May 2023, when auctioneers acting on behalf of Equity Bank moved to sell Ndung’u’s prime Nairobi and Nyeri properties over a KSh 600 million (~$4.3 million USD) debt. The Standard reported that the loans were backed by commercial property in Westlands and farmland in Nyeri County.
His appeal to stop the sale was dismissed by the High Court, leaving him to watch decades of wealth go under the hammer. Yet, those close to him say he never lost his composure. “Paul told us, ‘I have built before; I will build again,’” recalls a long-time associate at Mobicom. “That’s his DNA—he rebuilds.”
A New Chapter: Quiet Rebuilding
Today, Ndung’u chairs Mobicom Kenya and has diversified into agriculture, hospitality, and healthcare—with interests in G-North & Son, Life Care Medics, and small-cap ventures along the Rift Valley corridor. Friends say he has returned to the philosophy that made him rich in the first place: focus, discipline, and timing.
“You don’t create wealth by noise; you do it by patience,” he told Business Daily in 2018. “If you think long term, the market rewards you.”
Lessons Entrepreneurs Can Learn
- Don’t Fear Being Early: The biggest rewards come to those who enter before the crowd—as Ndung’u did with forex and mobile distribution.
- Think Long-Term: He held Kenya Airways and Kenya Power shares for years before cashing out. Timing is patience in disguise.
- Stand Firm in Storms: From CMC Motors disputes to SportPesa boardroom wars, Ndung’u proved that conviction can outlast chaos.
- Diversify Smartly: By spreading investments across telecoms, insurance, and agriculture, he shielded himself from sectoral shocks.
- Character is Currency: His belief that reputation matters more than quarterly profit earned him respect across Nairobi’s investment circles.
The Moral of the Story
Paul Wanderi Ndung’u’s journey—from a village in Nyeri to a billion-shilling fortune and back to rebuilding mode—is a study in persistence. He has been up, down, and back again. But in a country where many fortunes are fleeting, he stands out for one thing: resilience.
“I started with nothing,” he once said. “If I lose it all, I can start again—because I still have the one thing that built it: belief.”
African Entrepreneurship
Zukabet Ruling Highlights Trademark Ownership in Kenya’s $1.6bn Betting Industry
The betting industry in Kenya now generates over KSh 200 billion annually, but competition is fierce and regulation is tightening. The Zukabet dispute shows that brand ownership can be as valuable as customer bases or technology. In this high-stakes market, legal foresight is a winning strategy.
Kenya’s High Court ruling in the Zukabet case highlights trademark rights and the value of IP in Kenya’s $1.6bn betting industry, where high taxes and tough rules shape success.
Zukabet Ruling Highlights Trademark Ownership in Kenya’s $1.6bn Betting Industry
A recent High Court decision in Nairobi has placed the spotlight on the importance of intellectual property rights in Kenya’s betting sector. Justice John Chigiti barred Ukrainian businessman Anatoliy Kavelanko and his firm, Muvans Limited, from using the trade name Zukabet. The court ruled that the registered trademark belongs to Kenyan entrepreneur Samuel Mungai Muigai.
Why the Trademark Dispute Matters
At the center of the case was a fallout between Kavelanko and Muigai, once business partners. Their disagreements over management and licensing costs escalated into a court battle. The judgment affirmed Muigai’s ownership of the Zukabet name, showing how trademarks can protect entrepreneurs in high-stakes industries.
Trademark law in Kenya has become increasingly robust. The Kenya Industrial Property Institute (KIPI) oversees trademark registration, which gives owners exclusive rights for renewable ten-year periods. Without that protection, businesses risk losing their brands to rivals or disgruntled partners.
Early this September, a group of Kenyan billionaires engaged in a courtroom over ownership of the trademarks of Sportspesa, a leading betting firm.in Kenya.
Kenya’s Betting Industry: Big Business, Bigger Risks
Kenya’s betting industry has exploded over the past two decades. According to the Betting Control and Licensing Board (BCLB), annual revenues exceed KSh 200 billion ($1.6 billion), most of it from online platforms.
Mobile money platforms such as M-Pesa have accelerated this growth. They allow customers to place wagers instantly on their phones. For operators, the technology provides mass-market access. For regulators, it requires constant monitoring to ensure compliance and protect consumers.
Critics argue the boom has fueled problem gambling, especially among young Kenyans aged 18–35. The government has responded with stricter licensing, tighter rules, and heavier taxation.
The Tax Burden in Global Context
Operators in Kenya face some of the heaviest tax obligations worldwide. They pay an excise duty of 7.5%–12.5% on stakes, while winners lose 20% of their earnings to the Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA).
International comparisons highlight the challenge. In the UK, operators pay a 15% point-of-consumption tax, but player winnings are tax-free. In the US, sports betting tax rates range from 6% to 15%, though in New York they go as high as 51%. South Africa charges about 6%–9.6% of gross gambling revenue.
Kenya’s dual burden on operators and consumers makes compliance costly. The 2019 standoff between regulators and SportPesa over alleged unpaid taxes forced the market leader to suspend operations. The episode revealed just how fragile the industry can be under heavy regulation.
Opportunities and Challenges for Entrepreneurs
Despite the risks, the sector continues to attract entrepreneurs. Kenya’s young population, high smartphone penetration, and mobile money adoption offer a ready market.
But entering the business is not easy. A license costs millions of shillings, equal to tens of thousands of US dollars. Applicants must also undergo rigorous vetting by the BCLB. Even after approval, firms face high compliance costs, frequent audits, and reputational risks.
Add in disputes like Zukabet, and the lesson is clear: succeeding in this industry requires capital, legal foresight, and a tolerance for regulatory risk.
What the Ruling Signals
The High Court ruling is more than a personal victory for Muigai. It highlights the decisive power of registered trademarks. For entrepreneurs, owning the rights to a brand is not optional—it is essential.
In a sector where customer loyalty often depends on name recognition, trademarks can be more valuable than infrastructure or technology. For global investors, the decision reinforces Kenya’s alignment with international standards on intellectual property.
Key Takeaways
- Trademark power: The Zukabet ruling confirms that registered marks give decisive protection.
- Big market: Kenya’s betting sector generates over $1.6 billion annually.
- Tax pressure: Operators and consumers face some of the toughest gambling taxes in the world.
- Entrepreneurial caution: High licensing costs, regulation, and legal disputes make foresight vital.
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