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Berbera Port Overtakes Mombasa as East Africa’s Top Hub

Mogadishu Port ranks 163rd globally, showcasing resilience amidst past conflicts. Investments and international support have significantly boosted its operations.

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Berbera Port’s modernization has transformed it into East Africa’s most efficient hub. Its strategic location makes it a key gateway for Ethiopia’s growing trade.
Mombasa’s slip to 375th globally highlights the urgency for reforms. Delays and inefficiencies threaten Kenya’s position as a regional trade leader.

World Bank ranks Berbera Port East Africa’s most efficient, surpassing Mombasa and Dar es Salaam. Ethiopia’s growing trade flows reshape regional logistics.

Berbera Port Emerges as East Africa’s Most Efficient Gateway, Surpassing Mombasa and Dar es Salaam

In September 2025, the World Bank in partnership with S&P Global, released the Container Port Performance Index (CPPI) 2024, ranking over 400 ports worldwide. The findings were striking: Berbera Port in Somaliland emerged as the top-performing port in East Africa, ranked 106th globally. This performance reshapes perceptions of maritime trade in the region, as Berbera leapfrogs traditional hubs like Mombasa (Kenya), which was top in 2024 and Dar es Salaam (Tanzania).

The CPPI, introduced in 2021, measures efficiency using administrative data and vessel turnaround statistics. The 2024 report shows that strategic investments and governance reforms are paying off in unexpected corners of East Africa.


Berbera’s Rise to the Top

Berbera’s ascent stems from targeted investments. Operated by DP World since 2017 under a 30-year concession, the port has benefited from a $442 million modernization program. Key upgrades include a new container terminal with a capacity of 500,000 TEUs annually, deep-water berths, and state-of-the-art cranes. Vessel turnaround times have been reduced from days to under 24 hours, aligning Berbera with global efficiency benchmarks.

Its strategic position on the Gulf of Aden enhances its appeal. As a gateway to Ethiopia—Africa’s second most populous country with over 120 million people—Berbera offers a viable alternative to Djibouti, which currently handles over 95% of Ethiopia’s maritime trade. According to Ethiopia’s Transport Ministry, Berbera could capture 30% of Ethiopia’s trade volumes by 2030, equivalent to nearly 9 million tonnes of cargo.

“Berbera’s transformation is proof that targeted infrastructure investments can turn a once-overlooked facility into a regional powerhouse,” the World Bank noted in the CPPI report.


Mogadishu’s Resurgence

Mogadishu Port ranked 163rd globally, a notable achievement for a port once plagued by conflict. Managed with support from international partners, the port now handles a growing share of Somalia’s imports, including food staples, fuel, and construction materials.

“Efficiency gains at Mogadishu are a lifeline for our economy and show that Somalia is on the path to recovery,” said Abdirahman Yusuf Ali, a senior official at the Somali Ports Authority, during a September press briefing.

While Mogadishu still faces security and infrastructure challenges, it now outperforms some better-known regional ports.


Mombasa’s Decline

The Port of Mombasa, historically East Africa’s primary trade hub, ranked only 375th globally in the CPPI 2024. Despite handling over 1.4 million TEUs in 2023, its efficiency has slipped due to congestion, red tape, and outdated systems.

“Mombasa remains our economic heartbeat, but inefficiencies are strangling its potential,” admitted Kenya Ports Authority Chairman Benjamin Tayari, calling for urgent reforms earlier this year. Delays at Mombasa can stretch to 72 hours or more, costing shipping companies millions in demurrage charges.

Kenya’s reliance on Mombasa is immense. It handles more than 70% of Kenya’s imports and serves as a critical gateway for Uganda, Rwanda, and South Sudan. But unless modernization keeps pace with demand, the CPPI suggests Mombasa risks losing its edge to rivals like Berbera.


Dar es Salaam’s Mixed Fortunes

Dar es Salaam Port, ranked around 360th globally, fares slightly better than Mombasa but still struggles with inefficiency. Tanzania has launched a $421 million modernization program backed by the World Bank, aiming to deepen berths and expand handling capacity. Current throughput is estimated at 16 million tonnes annually, with projections to reach 28 million tonnes by 2030 if upgrades succeed.

Despite this, Dar es Salaam is losing competitive ground. Traders from landlocked Zambia and Malawi increasingly complain of delays and high costs compared to using alternative routes through Berbera and Djibouti.


Implications for East Africa’s Trade

The CPPI 2024 highlights a power shift in East Africa’s maritime logistics. For decades, Mombasa and Dar es Salaam dominated, but Berbera’s rise signals that smaller ports, when modernized, can disrupt established hierarchies.

“Port efficiency is no longer a luxury but a necessity for countries looking to integrate into global supply chains,” said Martin Humphreys, Lead Transport Economist at the World Bank. “Berbera shows that with the right investment and governance, smaller ports can leapfrog regional giants.”

The shift carries major implications for Ethiopia, whose import-export flows are expected to reach 27 million tonnes annually by 2030. A diversified access to ports reduces dependence on Djibouti, enhances resilience, and lowers trade costs. Kenya, too, risks losing out on regional transit trade if Mombasa does not reverse its decline.


Conclusion

As of September 2025, Berbera Port stands as East Africa’s most efficient maritime hub, eclipsing Mombasa and Dar es Salaam in the World Bank’s CPPI 2024. Backed by DP World’s investments and Ethiopia’s growing reliance, Berbera is positioning itself as a pivotal trade corridor in the Horn of Africa. Mogadishu, while not at the top, is proving resilient and steadily improving, while Mombasa and Dar es Salaam face mounting pressure to reform.

The message from the World Bank is clear: in East Africa, efficiency is the new measure of influence, and Berbera is setting the pace.

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Diageo to Sell EABL Stake to Asahi for $2.3bn

Japan’s Asahi is set to acquire control of EABL as Diageo exits direct ownership after more than five decades. The $2.3bn deal underscores rising Asian investment in African consumer markets.

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East African Breweries will come under Asahi’s control pending regulatory approvals in Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania. Diageo will retain a regional presence through long-term brand licensing agreements.

Diageo will sell its 65% stake in EABL to Japan’s Asahi for $2.3bn (Sh297bn), reshaping East Africa’s beer market.

NAIROBI / LONDON, Dec. 17 — British spirits maker Diagoo Plc. has agreed to sell its 65 percent controlling its 65 percent controlling stake in East African Breweries Ltd (EABL) to Japan’s Asahi Group Holdings in a transaction valued at about $2.3 billion (roughly Sh297 billion), a deal that will redraw ownership of one of East Africa’s most strategic consumer goods companies.

The transaction, announced on Tuesday, will see Diageo exit direct equity ownership of EABL after more than five decades, while retaining a commercial presence in the region through long-term brand and licensing arrangements. The deal is expected to close in the second half of 2026, subject to regulatory approvals across Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania.

Strategic reset for Diageo

Diageo said the disposal forms part of a broader strategy to simplify its portfolio, strengthen its balance sheet and focus capital on faster-growing premium spirits categories globally.

“This transaction delivers significant value for shareholders and further accelerates our commitment to deleveraging,” Diageo interim chief executive Nik Jhangiani said in a statement, adding that the sale is expected to reduce net debt leverage by around 0.25 times.

The London-listed group, which owns global brands including Johnnie Walker, Smirnoff and Guinness, said it will continue to participate in East African markets through licensing agreements covering Guinness and selected spirits and ready-to-drink products.

Analysts say the move reflects Diageo’s growing focus on capital discipline as global alcohol consumption slows in some mature markets amid inflationary pressures and changing consumer preferences.

Asahi’s Africa expansion

For Asahi, Japan’s largest brewer by revenue, the acquisition marks a decisive entry into sub-Saharan Africa, a region viewed by global beverage groups as a long-term growth frontier due to demographics, urbanisation and rising disposable incomes.

“Asahi sees EABL as a high-quality business with strong brands, leading market positions and deep roots in its communities,” Asahi president and CEO Atsushi Katsuki said, noting that the group intends to invest for sustainable, long-term growth.

Asahi said it plans to retain EABL’s existing listings on the Nairobi Securities Exchange, Uganda Securities Exchange and Dar es Salaam Stock Exchange, preserving local and regional investor participation.

A regional heavyweight

Founded in 1922, EABL dominates beer and spirits markets in Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania through brands such as Tusker, Bell Lager, Serengeti and Pilsner, and operates major breweries in Nairobi, Kampala and Dar es Salaam.

For the financial year ended June 30, 2025, EABL reported net sales of $996 million, EBITDA of $258 million and net profit of $94 million, according to company filings. Net debt stood at approximately $229 million.

Deal analysts estimate the transaction values EABL at an enterprise value of about $4.8 billion, equivalent to roughly 17 times EBITDA, a multiple that reflects both its dominant market position and the scarcity value of scaled consumer businesses in East Africa.

Market reaction

Shares of Diageo rose modestly in early trading in London following the announcement, while EABL shares gained on the Nairobi bourse as investors welcomed clarity on the brewer’s long-term ownership.

“This is a clean exit for Diageo at an attractive valuation, while Asahi gains a rare platform in a high-growth region,” said a Nairobi-based equity analyst who follows consumer stocks.

Regulatory and political lens

The deal will undergo scrutiny from competition authorities in the three core EABL markets, where the brewer plays a major role in employment, tax revenues and agricultural supply chains, particularly barley and sorghum sourcing from smallholder farmers.

Kenya’s Treasury and trade officials are also expected to examine the transaction’s implications for local manufacturing and exports, given EABL’s status as one of the country’s largest listed companies and taxpayers.

A changing global drinks landscape

Diageo’s exit from EABL follows earlier divestments across Africa, including sales of breweries in Cameroon, Ghana and Ethiopia, as multinational drinks firms recalibrate portfolios in response to tighter capital markets and shifting consumption patterns.

At the same time, Asian groups such as Asahi, Kirin and Suntory have been stepping up overseas investments to offset slower growth at home.

What comes next

Once completed, the transaction will mark one of the largest cross-border acquisitions in East Africa’s consumer sector, potentially ushering in new investment, technology transfer and governance changes at EABL.

For now, investors and regulators will be watching closely to see how Asahi balances global ambitions with EABL’s deeply rooted local brands — and how Diageo’s strategic retreat reshapes its footprint on the African continent.

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Somalia Bourse Targets Kenya Listings

Investors say the cross-listing partnership with the Nairobi bourse could unlock long-term liquidity in the Horn of Africa. Regulators in Mogadishu expect listings to rise in 2026.

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The launch of the Somalia Securities Exchange signals growing confidence in the nation’s economic reforms. Its collaboration with Kenya’s capital markets will shape future investor flows.

Somalia’s new Securities Exchange targets Kenyan companies for cross-listing as Mogadishu pursues regional integration and deeper capital markets reforms.

New cross-listing pact aims to draw East African companies and Somali diaspora capital as NSES prepares for 2026 trading launch

Somalia’s new National Securities Exchange (NSES) is positioning itself as East Africa’s youngest investment hub after signing a cross-listing pact with the Nairobi Securities Exchange (NSE) in late November 2025. The agreement gives the Mogadishu-based exchange a fast route into regional markets and strengthens Somalia’s push to convert its vast diaspora savings into formal investment.

NSES was launched on 19 June 2025 following years of planning by the Somali government, regulators and private-sector partners. It is Somalia’s first modern securities exchange since state collapse in 1991. The exchange is still building its regulatory systems and trading infrastructure, but the new partnership with Nairobi signals that Somalia intends to integrate quickly into East Africa’s capital-markets architecture.

The signing ceremony, reported by Business Daily Africa in a November 30 article, highlighted NSES’s intention to attract Kenyan companies as early anchor listings. The outlet noted that NSES is targeting big Kenyan firms for cross-listing as part of its early-stage strategy. The article is accessible via Business Daily’s markets section here.

NSES CEO Yasin M. Ibar told The EastAfrican that the exchange has already held discussions with four Kenyan companies operating across finance, logistics and real estate. His remarks were published in a detailed regional analysis by The EastAfrican, which reported that these companies are assessing opportunities to tap Somalia’s fast-growing business environment. That story is available here.

We have received interest from Kenyan listed companies for cross-listing,” Ibar said. “We expect about four companies to list on NSES once systems are fully operational.” His comments shed light on the early momentum behind a market that has yet to conduct its first trade.

A strategy built on credibility and speed

For Somalia, cross-listing is a shortcut to credibility. By aligning with Kenya’s NSE—one of Africa’s oldest bourses—NSES gains access to regulatory support, surveillance tools and market-development expertise. Kenya’s state news agency reported that the MoU covers technology transfer, market-surveillance frameworks, joint investor-education programmes, and co-development of Shariah-compliant products. That report is available through Kenya News.

The pact is expected to help NSES accelerate the rollout of its trading systems and clearing infrastructure before its planned early-2026 trading launch.

The Somali bourse also wants to develop Sukuk bonds, Islamic equity screens, and Shariah-aligned REITs to match the country’s market profile. Nairobi’s experience with Islamic finance products is expected to support this expansion.

Diaspora capital: the biggest prize

Somalia receives an estimated US$2 billion in annual diaspora remittances. Much of that money goes into consumption and informal investment. NSES wants to shift those flows into listed companies, long-term corporate debt and regulated investment vehicles.

The EastAfrican reported that NSES is preparing for its first IPOs in 2026, with an explicit strategy to mobilise diaspora investors searching for regulated assets linked to Somalia’s fast-rebuilding economy. That report appears here. Analysts quoted in the piece said diaspora demand could give the exchange early liquidity even before domestic institutional investors deepen.

For Kenyan companies, cross-listing on NSES offers access to a market where competition for capital remains low. Companies with operations in Somalia—particularly in telecommunications, logistics, manufacturing and financial services—stand to benefit from sharper visibility among Somali investors.

Shaping East Africa’s financial integration

The NSES-NSE partnership aligns with ongoing work within the East African Securities Exchanges Association (EASEA) to harmonise trading rules and promote regional capital mobility. Africa Global Funds reported that the collaboration will support efforts to build seamless cross-border investment channels across the Horn of Africa. Their coverage appears here.

If NSES successfully launches trading in 2026, Somalia will join Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania and Rwanda in advancing regional financial integration.

Challenges that could slow momentum

Despite the optimism, the risks remain significant.

No company has listed yet. Liquidity will depend heavily on the success of the first few listings.
Regulatory capacity is still developing. Somalia is building its securities framework from scratch.
Security concerns persist. Market stability depends on broader political and economic reforms.
Cross-border complexity remains high. Dual listings require coordination on taxation, currency settlement and investor-protection rules.

Analysts quoted by Zawya warned that without rapid listings and visible liquidity, investor confidence may lag behind the exchange’s ambitions. Their report is available here.

What to watch in 2026

The next 12 months will determine whether NSES becomes a credible market or remains a frontier experiment. Key indicators include:

  • The identity and timing of the first Kenyan listings.
  • Publication of NSES’s full trading rulebook and listing framework.
  • The launch of Sukuk and Islamic equity products.
  • Initial trading volumes during the first 90 days.
  • Uptake by diaspora investors.

If NSES delivers on these milestones, it could shift Somalia’s economy from informal financing to structured capital formation. It could also become an important link connecting Mogadishu, Nairobi and regional investors seeking exposure to post-conflict recovery markets.

Somalia’s bourse is young. But its regional ambitions—and its ability to pull Kenyan firms into its orbit—signal a bold attempt to rewrite how capital flows across the Horn of Africa.

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Naivas Sets Bold 80% Store Expansion Plan

The supermarket chain aims to open new outlets in Nairobi suburbs and key second-tier towns, including Nakuru, Kiambu, and Mombasa. CEO Andreas von Paleske says this expansion marks a new era of professional management for Naivas.

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Naivas’ expansion is expected to create thousands of jobs and strengthen local supply chains across Kenya. Analysts say the move will cement the retailer’s position as the leading supermarket chain in the country.

Naivas plans an 80% rise in outlets as strong consumer demand powers Kenya’s biggest retail expansion.

Retail Growth Driven by Consumer Demand

Kenya’s largest supermarket chain, Naivas, is targeting a major expansion of up to 80% more outlets, reflecting strong nationwide consumer demand. According to a Bloomberg report and corroborated by Business Daily Africa, the retailer aims to increase its footprint from 111 stores to nearly 200 over the next several years.

The chain has benefited from Kenya’s rising disposable income, urbanisation, and growing preference for modern retail formats. Analysts say this expansion positions Naivas as a dominant player in a market still recovering from the collapse of legacy chains such as Nakumatt, Uchumi, and Tuskys.


Leadership Transition Marks New Era

Naivas’ aggressive growth coincides with a leadership change. Long-serving CEO David Kimani stepped down in October 2025 after guiding the company through a transformative decade. Kimani will remain as an adviser to the board and the founding Mukuha family, according to Business Daily.

He said at the time:

“Naivas was built for Kenyans, and our mission has always been to bring modern retail closer to every household. The fundamentals are strong, and this is the right time to scale.”

Succeeding him is Andreas von Paleske, Naivas’ first non-family CEO. Von Paleske highlighted the retailer’s strong foundations:

“Naivas has built an unmatched bond with Kenyan households. Our priority now is to scale this trusted model with discipline and ambition.”

Business Daily noted that von Paleske’s appointment signals a professionalisation of management aimed at sustaining long-term growth.


Investor Backing Enables Expansion

The planned growth is supported by IBL Group, IFC, and Proparco, who have all invested in Naivas’ recent funding rounds. Bloomberg and Business Daily report that IBL Group chairman Arnaud Lagesse described Naivas as:

“A remarkable retail success story rooted in strong values, operational excellence, and deep understanding of the Kenyan consumer.”

IFC emphasised that Naivas supports “thousands of direct and indirect jobs” and plays a critical role in local supply chains, from farmers to logistics providers.


Targeted Store Rollouts

Naivas will focus expansion on second-tier towns and rapidly growing urban corridors. Target counties include Nakuru, Kiambu, Uasin Gishu, Machakos, and Mombasa, while urban neighbourhoods in Nairobi such as Ruiru, Ruai, Kamulu, and Athi River are also on the shortlist.

Business Daily reports that these areas are experiencing strong population growth and rising middle-class income, creating ideal conditions for modern retail.


Supply Chain and Jobs Impact

Naivas is one of Kenya’s largest private-sector employers with more than 10,000 staff. Analysts project that the expansion could generate an additional 7,000–8,000 jobs, spanning retail operations, logistics, merchandising, and distribution.

FMCG executives praise Naivas’ reliability, noting that it is “more predictable and data-driven than almost any other chain in East Africa,” according to Business Daily. Local suppliers also benefit from the chain’s growing footprint, which strengthens regional supply chains and improves market access.


Outlook for Kenya’s Retail Sector

Despite macroeconomic challenges such as inflation and rising logistics costs, Naivas’ leadership remains confident. Von Paleske told Bloomberg:

“Retail demand in Kenya remains robust. Our focus is to execute with excellence, invest prudently, and deliver consistent value to customers nationwide.”

Analysts predict that if executed effectively, Naivas’ 80% expansion will cement its position as Kenya’s leading retailer and potentially a regional powerhouse in East Africa.

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