Rwanda country of opportunities
Positioning
Cases, ready for investment Murakoze !
RCF: Folkert Castelein July 2012 www.rwandachamber.org
Rwanda Trust: (for profit) Like RDH, Paritax
- Business Development, projects
- Creating local companies, JV’s
- Management (director) of local companies
- Secretarial support
- Administration services
- Payroll services
- Legal advice
- Office support
-Telephone Services
- VAT services
-Tax Advice
- Accounting
- Bookkeeping
RCF services & RwandaTrust activities RCF: (non-profit)
Managing feasibility studies
Finding local counterparts
Contacting Rwandan governmental instances
Investigation for financing
Helping designing the business case
EAC common market: 130 million people
Rwanda, Kenia, Tanzania, Burundi, Uganda
Duty free access
COMESA: Eastern- and South Africa.
19 member states, 500 million people.
Be aware: D.R.Congo is big as
Europe , Sudan is bigger. From
Rwanda to Mombassa (South of
Kenya, is 1400 km. Dar-es-
Salaam (Tanzania) is 1600 km.
Matadi (Congo) is 2200 km.
Mombassa
Dar-Es-Salaam
Karisimbi, vulcano Rwanda's highest point at 4,507 m.(14,787 ft).This western section of the country, which
lies within the Albertine Rift montane forests ecoregion has an average elevation of 1,500 metres (4,921 ft)
to 2,500 metres (8,202 ft).The centre of the country is predominantly rolling hills, while the eastern border
region consists of savanna, plains and swamps. Source of the river Nile in Nyungwe Forest.
4507
m
Nile
2006
One stop border post
Universities
10.5 mln. people,
75% of The
Netherlands. Only
52% is usable
More rain
Less rain
Climate change:
Rain between 300 –
1600 mm (NL 650)
Facts & Figures President since 2000 is Paul Kagame ((Gitarama, 23 oktober 1957) .
Next elections 2017
Land area: 9,633 sq mi (24,949 sq km); total area: 10,169 sq mi (26,338 sq km, 75%
The Netherlands)
However, out of a surface area of 26,338 km2 52% only is usable.
Capital and largest city: Kigali, 900,000 p. on 1450 meters above sea level
Ethnicity/race: Hutu 84%, Tutsi 15%, Twa (Pygmoid) 1%
The Unity of The Republic of Rwanda !
Religion: 56,5% catholic, 26% protestant 11,1% adventist ,and 4,6% moslim(2001)
Languages: English, French, Kinyarwanda
Important institutions are
RDB Rwanda Development Board
PSF Private Sector Federation
Biggest challenges are: Energy, low cost housing, small scale agriculture, hardly
horticulture, quality standards for export, access to finance for the private sector,
healthcare in rural areas
Attractive climate to invest
Economic ranking out f 183 countries (Worldbank)
Stabile currency, well developed financial sector, stock marget, low inflation compared with others.
Rwanda economic indicators
Corporate tax is 30%, on dividend 15%, VAT 18%, however, all kind of incentives
for FDI:
License to import agricultural inputs is free of charge. Same for livestock.
Investment incentives:
- An investment enterprise benefits from a flat fee of 5% of the CIF value of
building and finishing materials
- long list of tax exemptions for imports of specific goods like machinery,
specialized vehicles, equipment for tourism and hospitality industry, etc.
RRA website: http://www.rra.gov.rw/rra_article280.html
Free economic zones / International company with headquarters in Rwanda:
-Is entitled to import machinery, equipment, raw materials for he industrial
purposes and other goods free of duty
- is exempted from corporate income tax
- is exempted from withholding tax on payments
- is exempted form tax on repatriation of profits abroad
- there is a discount on export earnings
- a discount for creating employment
- incentives for construction projects
If the determination of business profit results in a loss in a tax period, the loss
may be deducted from the business profit in the next five (5) tax periods,
earlier losses being deducted before later losses.
Tax regulations: many rules to support FDI
Employment income Tax:
0 - $600 = 0 %; - $2000 = 20%, more is 30%
Income overview
From To From To
1 < 100.000 < 1.200.000 60,89% 60,89%
2 100.001 200.000 1.200.001 2.400.000 13,51% 74,40%
3 200.001 300.000 2.400.001 3.600.000 7,43% 81,83%
4 300.001 400.000 3.600.001 4.800.000 4,88% 86,72%
5 400.001 500.000 4.800.001 6.000.000 3,25% 89,97%
6 500.001 600.000 6.000.001 7.200.000 2,32% 92,29%
7 600.001 700.000 7.200.001 8.400.000 1,88% 94,17%
8 700.001 800.000 8.400.001 9.600.000 1,35% 95,52%
9 800.001 900.000 9.600.001 10.800.000 0,94% 96,46%
10 900.001 1.000.000 10.800.001 12.000.000 0,68% 97,13%
11 1.000.001 1.100.000 12.000.001 13.200.000 0,53% 97,67%
12 1.100.001 1.500.000 13.200.001 18.000.000 1,20% 98,87%
13 1.500.001 2.000.000 18.000.001 24.000.000 0,52% 99,39%
14 2.000.001 2.500.000 24.000.001 30.000.000 0,23% 99,62%
15 2.500.001 < 30.000.001 < 0,38% 100,00%
Estimated %
of HH Cumulative
Q5
Monthly Salary
Range in RwF
Annual Salary
Range in RwF
Quintile Segment
Q1
Q2
Q3
Q4
RWF 100,000 = $ 165 = € 130 (25 June 2012). Household size 4,7
Europe Aid/127054/C/SER/ multi
HOUSING MARKET DEMAND, HOUSING FINANCE
AND
HOUSING PREFERNCES FOR THE CITY OF KIGALI
PLANET
CONSORTIUM Ars Progetti
Estimation of Housing
Demand
2012-2022 / Kigali
Monthly HH Income RwF
From To 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022
1 < 100.000 15.212 15.147 15.083 15.019 14.955 14.892 14.829 14.767 14.705 14.644 14.583 163.838
2 100.001 200.000 3.375 4.047 4.710 5.363 6.007 6.642 7.267 7.883 8.491 9.089 9.678 72.553
3 200.001 300.000 1.857 2.001 2.195 2.437 2.726 3.061 3.441 3.865 4.332 4.842 5.392 36.149
4 300.001 400.000 1.220 1.298 1.387 1.490 1.610 1.751 1.915 2.108 2.330 2.586 2.878 20.572
5 400.001 500.000 813 865 922 985 1.056 1.135 1.224 1.324 1.439 1.569 1.717 13.048
6 500.001 600.000 579 613 651 693 739 790 847 910 980 1.058 1.146 9.005
7 600.001 700.000 470 495 521 550 582 618 656 699 747 799 856 6.994
8 700.001 800.000 338 357 379 402 428 455 485 518 553 592 635 5.142
9 800.001 900.000 234 248 264 281 299 320 342 367 394 423 455 3.626
10 900.001 1.000.000 169 179 190 201 215 229 245 262 281 302 325 2.599
11 1.000.001 1.100.000 133 140 147 156 165 176 187 199 213 228 244 1.987
12 1.100.001 1.500.000 301 306 311 317 323 330 338 346 355 366 377 3.669
13 1.500.001 2.000.000 129 142 155 169 183 197 212 227 243 259 276 2.193
14 2.000.001 2.500.000 58 63 70 77 86 95 106 117 130 143 158 1.103
15 2.500.001 < 95 102 109 117 127 138 151 164 179 198 217 1.596
24.982 26.003 27.093 28.257 29.500 30.828 32.245 33.757 35.371 37.097 38.937 344.071
4.891 1%
42.624 12%
15.762 5%
8.254 2%
272.540 79%
Total DU
per
Quintile ProportionQuintile Segment
Year
TOTAL DU
Q1
Q2
Q3
Q4
Q5
TOTAL DU
Q1; 79%
;
; ; ; ; ; ; ; ;
Q2; 12%
Q3; 5%
Q4; 2% Q5; 1%
257,406 DU ( 79%) of
demand concentrates in
Q1, of which 163,838 DU
(47%) is demand
constituted by HH with
income of Rwf
100,000/month and less.
100,000 RWF = $ 169
Worldbank figures
Economic ranking out of 183 economies
2nd global reformer 2006-
2012 (World Bank)
Republic of Rwanda facts:
The Government of Rwanda has sought to privatize several key firms. Since 2007, the
telecom and mining sectors have been largely privatized, and the government has sold off
several government-owned tea estates and made great strides in completing privatization of
the banking sector. RECO, the utility monopoly, remains to be privatized, as do several other
parastatals.
Huge program in land registration (Kadaster) up to 12 mln registered ownerships of land.
There is an open trade policy, a favorable investment climate, cheap and abundant labor,
tax incentives to businesses, stable internal security, and crime rates that are comparatively
low. Investment insurance also is available through the Africa Trade Insurance Agency, the
Overseas Private Investment Corporation, and the World Bank's Multilateral Investment
Guarantee Agency (MIGA)
The implementation of a value added tax of 18% and improved tax collections are having a
positive impact on government revenues and thereby on government services rendered.
Banking reform and low corruption also are favorable current trends.
Today, 95 of children goes to school.There are about 20 institutions of higher learning in
Rwanda. Between 1963-1993, Rwandan university graduates numbered roughly 1,900;
today, Rwandan university graduates exceed 55,000.
GDP growth 2011 was 7%. GDP $6 billion:
Agriculture 33.6%, industry 14.1%, services 52.3%
Cultivated land is 46%, 1.8m ha..
Fertilizer us 16 kg / ha.
Export 2011, $300 million. Kenya 36.6%,
Democratic Republic of the Congo 14.7%, China
9.1%, Swaziland 5.9%, US 5.3%, Pakistan 4.6%
Imports 2011, $1,307 billion. foodstuffs,
machinery and equipment, steel, petroleum
products, cement and construction material
x1000
Agriculture, export & import
52% of cultivated land is in use for families only.
The size in average is < 0,4 Ha
Products--coffee, tea, pyrethrum (insecticide made from chrysanthemums),
bananas, beans, sorghum, potatoes, livestock and nuts. Coffee and tea
account for 50% of all export, (minirals like tin, tungsten, wolfram, chromium,
etc. 40%, manufactured products 5%, orther agriculture & livestock 5%)
Wheat milling industry is the third sector ($50m).
The livestock sector contributed US$60m to GDP in 2011, the fishery sector
$11.5 m. (consumption is 1 kg pp / year. But Rwanda has 24 large lakes.)
Initiated Investment projects in Rwanda
Scaling the Poultry chain: feed – hatchery – rearing layers - eggs
broilers -
- slaughtering – processing – distribution - export
Animal feed: Maize Mill factory 5 MT / hour $600,000; dosing $180,000; pelleting
$300,000; Soybeanprocessing 2 MT / hour $600,000. ROI > 10%
Parent-stock (10,000), 2 buildings, & hatchery (1 building, 35,000 chicks / week)
$435,000. ROI 20%
Pulletfarm (100,000 18-week chicks/year) $600,000
Broiler farmhouse (10,000) $160,000. 35,000 x 2.2 kg broiler / y.
Layer farmhouse (5000) $60,000. 1.5 million eggs / year
Egg-tray factory $ 150,000. Profit $75,000 / year
Slaughterhouse & meat processing plant 15 MT/day $4 million
Buildings (storages, factories) & affordable housing
Mobile factory for local production
of bricks: $ 150,000
Mobile factory for local production
of steelframes: $ 750,000
Energy, an interesting challenge
Energy
Solar power: 10 KW turn-key off grid system $55,000. Tariff from the grid is
$0.225 / KWh. Gasoline & fuel is $ 1.65
Microfinance refrigerators & battery & ledlight chargers on solar panels.
Stand‐alone 50W system $195 (CIF)
Powerplant or CHP on methane gas. 3.3 MWe is $2.2 million delivering also
3.4MWh and CO2, usable for greenhouses . Income 3300 x 8000 hour x $0,156
= $4,118,400 / year. Cost of CH4: 850 x 8000 x $0.45 = $3,060,000 / year.
Exploitation, maintenance & depreciation $400,000 / year. EBIT $650,000 ./ year
Off-shore plant for winning CH4 in lake KIVU plus 5
MW powerplant, infrastructure: $15 million. Hydragas,
KIVUgas, Worldbank $7 million. Search for $8 million
Current installed generation capacity is 93.27 MW, generated from hydropower
(57MW, 59%), thermal energy (40MW, 40%), and PV (0.25 MW%). To be added:
methane, peat, waste, and wind. Many projects waiting for investors.
Greenhouse tomatoes
5 ha investment turn-key $8.5 million. Revenue 2.5 million kg tomatoes / year
= $ 2.5 million. EBIT about $900,000 .
With 20 ha over 10% of synergy
Investment: GoR grant support (via IFAD) of ~700K $ over
the next five years. $1million in new equity (FDI), 250K USD
in debt.
Projected Investor / Shareholder ROI greater than 30% and
IRR of 22%
BIO-oil: Ikirezi Natural Products produces quality organic geranium oil.
Ikirezi currently has approximately 30 Ha of current land under cultivation and
distillation capacity to produce over 2.5 MT of geranium oil annually. The five
year plan targets an expansion to 400 Ha of geranium and patchouli producing
6MT and 9MT respectively, with an annual turnover of approximately two
million USD/yr.
Agriculture & processing
Beans: Rwanda Agri-Business Industries Limited (RABI) is engaged in the
business of processing agricultural commodities (mainly beans) into pre-
cooked and packaged food products for sale inRwanda and also in the regional
market.
Fruitprocessing: SONAFRUITS has made its primary business in the
processing of fruit, into concentrate and ready-to-drink (RTD) fruit juice for
subsequent sale to the local Rwandan market. Primarily focused on the passion
fruit market. Investment required $ 490,000 in new equity.
Projected Investor / Shareholder ROI greater than 13%.
Avocado: Avocado exports from Rwanda and Revenues are
projected to be 4,000MT and $7.8M respectively by year five. The
initial investment will require $2.9M for sourcing and packaging.
Project IRR is forecast to be 38%, with Net Income of $1M by 2017
The opportunity to invest $8M–$10M into a common beans
processing and canning business will yield an expected IRR of
30%–35%, with net income of ~$3M (by year five of business)
Fertilizers: import & distribution
.
The Government of Rwanda’s strategy to increase agricultural productivity
through increased fertilizer usage has grown the fertilizer market to 32,000
MT over the last 6 years
The Government now plans to privatize the market and encourage the
entrance of more private sector players to increase market efficiencies,
fertilizer utilization and technical agro-capabilities
With privatization and the planned market building initiatives, Rwanda’s
fertilizer market has the potential to reach 48,000 MT in volume and over
$46M in revenue over the next 5‒7 years
Utexrwa, textile factory. 565 employees.
Investment Required: New equity investment of $960,000 and New debt of
$975,000 with preferential terms.
Projected Investor / Shareholder return on equity of 41% and payback by year
three.
Wheat: SOTIRU plays an important role in establishing the wheat value chain,
developing wheat farmers.
New equity investment of $325,000. Plus $730,000 in commercial loans. And
$400,000 in MINAGI directed farmer support.
Projected Investor / Shareholder ROI up to 17% with an annualized return on
equity of 5% by year 3; IRR of 12% over 5 years.
Dairy processing: Rubilizi (1952). A 5 year plan is in place to increase
production capacity from its current 2,000 L / day to a still modest production
capacity of 8,000 L /day across pasteurized milk, fermented milk and yoghurt.
Investment Required: $400,000 in new commercial loans and $250,000 in new
Equity.
Projected $2.16M by 2016; 25% Gross Margin; 10% Net Margin.
Seeds: The Government of Rwanda currently provides seeds for free for
crops such as maize and wheat through the Rwanda Agricultural Board
(RAB), which buys certified seed through the Crop Intensification Program
(CIP). Agrotech and Africhem are small local private importers.
The Rwandan climate is perfect for seeds. There are a lot of possibilities to
start production in seeds for export of forage seeds, legume, flower, grass.
Leather: Rucep is the only leather company and producer of wet blue skins
in Rwanda. In 2005, Rwanda exported 5 million USD in leather goods and by
2012, leather exports are projected to reach 12.6 million USD.
Investment Required: FDI $350,000.
Projected Gross Margin of 38% and 2016 Revenues of $2.1M.
Projected Investor / Shareholder ROI more than 30% and payback within 1
year. Return to farmers (agricultural laborer incomes total $2.7 million over 5
years)
Soybeans. There is a high, unsatisfied demand for soy-based cooking oil,
which is currently imported. Also high demand for protein in animal feed.
The scale of the opportunity is confirmed by Soyco’s $15m investment in this
sector, aimed at producing soybeans for local consumption and processing oil
and animal feed.
Mushrooms: growing on the residues of rice, maize, sorghum, a.o., in 30
cooperatives (1000 growers). The national demand of over1600 mt doubles
the supply. Market price is high, $3.25 / kg.
In March 2012 a new seeds production factory was launched by Minagri, to
produce 20,000 seeds / day.
Challenge is the costly production methods from today.
Tourism
Number of hotel nights is growing 50,000 / year !
Kigali, 1,000.000 residents