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The Role of Angolan Banks, Insurers in the Rise of Local Exploration and Production (E&P) Players
Recent reforms and an economic resurgence in Angola’s financial landscape have resulted in new opportunities for local banks and insurers to play a stronger role in financing the country’s strategic oil industry
Angola’s leading private sector bank is the Banco Angolano de Investimentos, which controls an estimated 20% of the country’s market shares
As the primary driver of its economy, the local content regime for the oil and gas sector in Angola is heavily dependent on a robust and efficient financial sector. Exploration and production (E&P) of the country’s oil and gas resources has set the stage for strong economic outlook for Angola, with the country’s GDP projected to grow 5% between 2023 and 2026.
As such, domestic financiers and insurers have called for increased synergy between the finance sector (https://apo-opa.info/45FqD3t) and energy industry of Angola, working to facilitate the monetization of the country’s hydrocarbons reserves while promoting economic diversification and socioeconomic development.
Participating primarily to support salary amounts and work accident premiums, Angolan banks and insurance companies play a secondary role in the country’s domestic oil and gas industry. High oil prices and a strengthened kwanza – Angola’s national currency –, however, are poised to serve as stabilizing factors within the country’s economy and is expected to result in greater sector participation from domestic institutions, insurers, and business leaders.
Angola’s leading private sector bank is the Banco Angolano de Investimentos, which controls an estimated 20% of the country’s market shares. The BAI serves state-owned enterprises and corporations while playing an important role in the financing of Angola’s strategic oil industry. In June 2022 – amidst an economic resurgence as a result of strong oil prices – the BAI achieved a listing on the country’s BODIVA stock exchange. This milestone showcases the success of President João Lourenço’s economic reforms while marking a turning point within the modernization of Angola’s economy.
The National Bank of Angola (BNA) acts as the country’s central bank, playing an instrumental role in the establishment of a transparent and reassuring legal framework to invite the participation of local investors while protecting financial players and attracting foreign direct investment into the country’s oil sector (https://apo-opa.info/3C0voaf). Inadequate financial strength coupled with the high cost of oil and gas investments, however, have led to local banks implementing connectivity strategies between local companies and international financial institutions.
Under Angola’s October 2020 Local Content Law, international oil companies are required to contract local service companies to participate in the country’s oil and gas space. Recent reforms imposed by the BNA stipulates that Angolan banks are required to attain a minimum share capital of $17.3 million in all joint ventures in the country while additional monetary and foreign exchange reforms oblige local banking institutions to establish 10% in minimum reserves of net profits for each year.
In January 2022, Angola’s national concessionaire and regulatory body in charge of activities in the oil and gas industry, the National Oil, Gas and Biofuels Agency, presented a list of five exclusive services for local insurance companies to participate in the oil industry. The services include insurance for oil companies, insurance mediation, property insurance services, motor insurance, and life insurance.
Meanwhile, to ensure the adequate insurance of E&P activities in the country, the body responsible for regulating and supervising insurance, reinsurance, and insurance mediation activities, the Angolan Agency for Insurance Regulation and Supervision (ARSEG), has established an insurance pool consisting of 11 local insurers to cover risks in the hydrocarbons sector. Under the supervision of Angola’s Ministry of Finance, ARSEG aims to ensure local content participation by enabling the ability of local insurers to develop their technical capacities.
As Angola’s oil and gas sector expands owing to a recent E&P drive by government and private sector players, Angolan financial institutions are playing an increasingly more important role in financing the new era of energy developments.
The 2023 edition of the Angola Oil & Gas conference (https://apo-opa.info/3yWXf9D) – organized by Energy Capital & Power – will unite the country’s energy policymakers and stakeholders with global investors to discuss investment and partnership opportunities within the Angola’s burgeoning oil and gas industry.
Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Energy Capital & Power.