Close Menu
Xsum NewsXsum News

    Stay Updated.

    Get the latest Africa-focused business & infrastructure news and more directly to your inbox.

    What's Hot

    Glade transforms fragrance into fashion with Make Africa Bloom event

    Centum RE leads the future of East African cities

    Experts highlight growing health concerns in Africa’s urban areas

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • Glade transforms fragrance into fashion with Make Africa Bloom event
    • Centum RE leads the future of East African cities
    • Experts highlight growing health concerns in Africa’s urban areas
    • How adaptive reuse can solve urban development challenges
    • How South African cities are rebuilding affordable housing
    • Sustainable infrastructure to fight climate change
    • China’s key minerals strategy in Africa – Africa Center
    • Egypt, African Financial Cooperation collaborates with Infinity Power to accelerate green transformation – Economy – Business
    X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube LinkedIn TikTok
    Xsum NewsXsum News
    • African Development Bank
    • Africa Finance Corporation
    • All Africa – Construction & Infrastructure
    • Africa Intelligence
    • Construct Africa
    • More
      • Mining Review Africa
      • Energy Capital Power
      • Sustainability & Climate-Resilient Infrastructure
      • Private-Sector Infrastructure Players
      • Urban Development & Housing
    Xsum NewsXsum News
    You are at:Home»Africa Finance Corporation»Pursuing fair credit: African credit rating agencies
    Africa Finance Corporation

    Pursuing fair credit: African credit rating agencies

    Xsum NewsBy Xsum NewsMarch 23, 2026No Comments5 Mins Read1 Views
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest Telegram LinkedIn Tumblr Email Reddit
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest WhatsApp Email

    The initiative represents an ambitious attempt to recalibrate the way global markets measure Africa’s economic risks, as the African Union prepares to launch the Mauritius-headquartered African Credit Rating Agency (AfCRA) in the second quarter of 2026. Many African policymakers have argued for decades that the continent’s economic potential has been systematically misread by the world’s leading rating agencies, S&P Global Ratings, Moody’s Investors Service, and Fitch Ratings, whose assessments heavily influence borrowing costs.

    The frustration is understandable. A widely cited United Nations Development Program study estimates that what it calls the “African risk premium” costs the continent approximately $74.5 billion each year in excessive borrowing costs and missed financing opportunities. Political reactions sometimes get violent. Ghana publicly rejected Fitch’s downgrade in 2023, arguing that the assessment did not reflect ongoing fiscal reforms.

    At first glance, AfCRA promises a modified lens, a credit rating methodology based on Africa’s economic structure, institutional realities, and development trajectory. The logic is fascinating. Africa understands Africa better. But the central question is not whether Africa can set up its own credit rating agency. The question is whether global capital markets and the multilateral institutions that shape them will treat those ratings as trustworthy.

    Credit ratings are more than just opinions. They are embedded in financial regulations, investment obligations and risk models across global finance. Banks, pension funds, and insurance companies frequently rely on the ratings of the “big three” because the regulatory frameworks of major financial centers from New York to London explicitly allow them to calculate capital adequacy ratios. The immediate impact on borrowing costs may be limited until AfCRA receives a similar assessment from regulators.

    This is not a challenge unique to Africa. Partly in response to similar concerns about Western financial domination, China established its own agency, the Grand Duke World Credit Ratings. Discussions are also taking place in the Arab world about the establishment of regional rating agencies. Africa itself already has several domestic rating agencies, including Nigeria’s Agust & Company, Francophone Africa’s Bloomfield Investment Corporation, and South Africa’s Sovereign Africa Ratings.

    In fact, global distributors are increasingly integrating these emerging competitors. In 2022, Moody’s Corporation acquired a majority stake in Global Credit Ratings, the continent’s largest rating agency. Such acquisitions strengthen the deep-rooted oligopolistic structure of the global credit rating industry.

    Still, the argument that African risks are systematically mispriced is contested. According to Moody’s Investors Service’s own research, default rates for African sovereign borrowers are broadly in line with default rates for similarly rated countries in other parts of the world. Rising borrowing costs may reflect structural realities such as reduced fiscal transparency, weak regulatory institutions, a large informal economy, and governance indicators that correlate with sovereign credit risk.

    AfCRA hopes to address this dynamic by providing more “context-intelligent” assessments. One potential niche is in borrower ratings, which are largely ignored by global institutions. Approximately 40 percent of African governments and more than 90 percent of African companies remain undervalued in international markets. Bridging this information gap could help deepen the continent’s domestic bond markets.

    However, ratings alone do not determine capital flows. Investors ultimately follow the balance sheet. This is where deeper structural challenges emerge. Africa’s financial architecture lacks the scale of multilateral institutions that support the credit systems of developed countries.

    Africa’s multilateral financial institutions (AMFIs), including the African Development Bank, African Export-Import Bank, African Finance Corporation, West African Development Bank, and Trade and Development Bank, have a combined balance sheet of approximately $70 billion. However, they account for less than 3% of external funds raised by African governments. The World Bank, International Monetary Fund and private creditors hold more than 40 percent of Africa’s external debt.

    This imbalance highlights a fundamental truth: the credit rating ecosystem is only as powerful as the financial institutions that can act on it. Without strong African multilateral financial institutions, African rating agencies risk becoming symbolic rather than transformative.

    In the United States and Europe, credit ratings are embedded in deep domestic financial systems. Institutions such as the European Investment Bank and the European Stability Mechanism provide countercyclical financing that strengthens the credibility of regional financial markets. Africa has no comparable scale.

    Even the highly respected African Development Bank, despite its AAA rating, cannot single-handedly entrench an alternative rating system across the continent. The implication is clear. AfCRA’s success will depend less on the sophistication of its methodology and more on the strength of its surrounding organizations.

    If Africa wants to have a greater say in its credit ratings, it needs to simultaneously strengthen its financial structures. Increasing paid-up capital to Africa’s multilateral financial institutions, expanding partnerships with global institutional investors, and deepening local currency debt markets will significantly strengthen the continent’s financial leverage.

    Introducing regional regulations may also help build trust. Just as Chinese rating agencies initially gained traction through domestic regulatory mandates, African financial regulators may require AfCRA ratings for certain infrastructure projects and intra-African loans under the African Continental Free Trade Area framework.

    After all, better ratings alone won’t fill the continent’s estimated $221 billion annual infrastructure funding gap. This requires financial institutions with balance sheets and credibility to match.

    Mayowa Oyatogun is a strategy and business planning specialist based in the UK.

    African agencies credit Fair Pursuing Rating
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp Telegram Email
    Previous ArticleAI: Xiaomi accelerates with huge investment of 7.5 billion euros
    Next Article Pursuing fair credit: African credit rating agencies
    Xsum News
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Centum RE leads the future of East African cities

    June 3, 2026

    How South African cities are rebuilding affordable housing

    June 2, 2026

    Egypt, African Financial Cooperation collaborates with Infinity Power to accelerate green transformation – Economy – Business

    May 15, 2026
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Posts

    African Development Bank Group and Nedbank Group sign multi-billion rand funding partnership to transform housing access and boost African trade

    December 19, 202529 Views

    A United Continent on the Move: Ambassador Kouyateh’s Call for an African Logistics Renaissance

    November 20, 202529 Views

    African Development Fund and WHO collaborate to save Sudan’s health system

    November 17, 202523 Views

    Eni secures multi-million dollar loan for African FLNG project

    January 26, 202622 Views
    Don't Miss
    Construct Africa June 3, 2026

    Glade transforms fragrance into fashion with Make Africa Bloom event

    Glade’s ‘Make Africa Bloom’ event, held at Langham’s Lifestyle Estate, was a fragrant celebration. The…

    Centum RE leads the future of East African cities

    Experts highlight growing health concerns in Africa’s urban areas

    How adaptive reuse can solve urban development challenges

    Stay In Touch
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • LinkedIn
    • TikTok

    Stay Updated.

    Get the latest Africa-focused business & infrastructure news and more directly to your inbox.

    About Us
    About Us

    Xsum News is Africa’s digital window into the future of business. We tell stories of innovation, enterprise, and investment that are shaping the continent’s economic rise. African Business, Added Up.

    X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube LinkedIn TikTok
    Our Picks

    Glade transforms fragrance into fashion with Make Africa Bloom event

    Centum RE leads the future of East African cities

    Experts highlight growing health concerns in Africa’s urban areas

    Most Popular

    African Development Bank praises Algeria’s development model, aims to replicate its success across the continent

    South Africa investigates mystery of plane arriving from Gaza carrying over 150 Palestinians

    ADB and Kabale University announce Sh1 billion incubation center

    © 2026 Xsum News. All Rights Reserved.
    • 🌍 About Xsum News
    • 📬 Contact us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions
    • Disclaimer

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.