Michel Lunanga/Getty ImagesAfrica’s leading banking groups are targeting DR Congo, enticed by one of the continent’s fastest-growing economies and the promise of a lucrative mining sector, despite the ongoing conflict in the country’s east. Top banks from Kenya, Nigeria, South Africa, and Tanzania are among the newly arrived or expanding institutions over the past 18 months, eyeing a market that produces higher than average banking profits. “One would ask, why are you in DRC with everything that is happening?” Neema Munisi Mori, chair of Tanzania’s CRDB Bank, told Semafor. “We are following our customers.” Fewer than a tenth of DR Congo’s 100 million people have bank accounts. In the past five years, the Congolese government’s annual budget quadrupled to $16 billion, and by the end of 2024, deposits in the banking system had nearly tripled to $14 billion, according to the central bank. South Africa’s Absa, for example, has been attracted by a multibillion-dollar US-backed project to link DR Congo and Zambia’s mining regions to the Lobito port in Angola: “You can’t capture the opportunity of the Lobito Corridor via ‘suitcase banking’ forever,” its CEO Kenny Fihla told Semafor. |