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Francophone Weekly by TechCabal, our latest newsletter, will resume on January 13. If youâre new here, itâs where you receive bite-sized analyses of the Francophone region, presented as clear insights and actionable steps for investors, financial institutions, government bodies, tech bros, and the average Joe whoâs just interested in whatâs going on in those markets.
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For now, letâs go into todayâs dispatch.
âEmmanuel
COMPANIES
Carrefour enters Ethiopia through the nationâs richest man
Nigerian billionaire Tony Elumeluâs recent 20% stake in oil firm Seplat is a reminder that old African wealth rarely backs tech. Tech didnât create that money, and capital tends to stay loyal to the systems that did. When billionaires show up in the digital economy, itâs usually through familiar, proven businesses rather than riskier tech plays. Ethiopian-born Saudi billionaire Mohammed Hussein Al Amoudi is partnering with Kenyan retailer Carrefour to bring its e-commerce business to Ethiopia.Â
On Wednesday, Carrefour entered a franchise agreement with Ethiopiaâs Queens Supermarket, the retail brand owned by Al Amoudiâs MIDROC Investment Group, giving the retailer indirect access to Ethiopiaâs mass market.Â
Between the lines: A deal of this scale, by proxy, partnership, or direct entry, would have been unthinkable a few years ago. Ethiopiaâs aggressive economic liberalisation has changed that, opening the door first to banks and telecoms, and now to global retailers.
Zoom out: Carrefour is already a retail heavyweight in Kenya, with sales revenue ofKES 42.9 billion ($332 million) in 2024, but that market is crowded with asset-light competitors, like Glovo and Jumia. A direct expansion to Ethiopia would have meant heavier operational risk, including unpredictable supply chain gaps, and limited insights into consumer behaviour. Partnering with Queens Supermarket lets Carrefour test the waters. If its Ethiopian rollout hits the right notes, the franchise model could open the door to further investments and deeper market penetration.
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mobility
South Africaâs car market reaches its highest point in over a decade
The next time your neighbour tells you âdisposable income doesnât matter,â we need you to take that very personally. Yes, we know itâs stereotypical and doesnât tell the full story in any market, but look at South Africa; it just made history in car sales. Why? Income. Oh, and intentional policies to provide tax reliefs, lowering costs for consumers, and ushering mobility players into the space.
Total new vehicle sales in South Africa crossed 590,000 units in 2025, a historic high in the last decade; the country sold more annual total units for the first time since 2020, according to its automotive business council, the National Association of Automobile Manufacturers of South Africa (NAAMSA).
Did rich South Africans suddenly remember to buy more cars? The data says a combination of other factors also made this watershed moment possible. While South Africaâs inflation accelerated for most parts of 2025, the figures trended between 2.7% (lowest rate in March) and 3.6% (highest rate in November), slightly easing in December (3.5%). Yet the central bank relaxed its hawkish stance, stimulating more economic activity. Vehicle inflation, which signals the rate at which new and used car prices increase (or decrease) over time, eased to a record low of 1.5%. Competitive Chinese and Indian auto imports find their way to South Africa, giving consumers a choice.
Why does this matter? The surge in new vehicle purchases shows that consumers and businesses are regaining confidence in long-term vehicle investment, which is setting the stage for sustained growth in the industry. Strong demand for new vehicles also strengthens South Africaâs position in regional supply chains, making it a more attractive market for global automakers and suppliers.
telecoms
Nigerian telecom firms rolled out 2,800 towers in 2025
I know we keep complaining about the disappearing network service that Nigerian telecom operators feed us (so much that itâs not even a joke anymoreâI say this with a straight face), yet there might be light network bars at the end of the tunnel.
Catch up: Telecom regulator Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) said that operators rolled out over 2,800 towers in 2025. While NCC has not published a comparable figure for the number of towers added in 2024, its boss, Aminu Maida, described 2025 as a return of investment momentum and network expansion. These towersâthose tall, red and white steel structures you see on your streetsâhost base stations that transmit and receive mobile signals between your phone and the telecom network. Without them, mobile calls, texts, and data wonât go through.
State of play: Telecom infrastructure is a key investment area for Nigeria as it aims to deepen broadband penetration to 70%. While the country missed that target, broadband connectivity reached 50% by the end of 2025. In December, the government announced plans to build 3,700 cell towers in rural areas, helping to improve network access in these regions.Â
Between the lines: Telecom investment by oil-heavy African countries seeking to move away from crude is not altruistic. In the oil industry, prices implode, tanking revenues with it, and thereâs the expectation that reserves are finite.Â
Economies have been trying to diversify, and telecoms have been a mainstay for many countriesâ alternative portfolios. Senegalâs nonâoil revenue draws significantly from heavily taxed telecoms and digital services, even though telecoms are not the majority of total tax receipts, and the country is trying to enable largeâscale tech production and empower its startup economy.Â
In Nigeria, telecomsâ contribution to gross domestic product (GDP) surged, standing at 21.49% by the end of 2025. Telecoms is a critical infrastructure because it is the technology underpinning most other ICT and serviceâbased sectors, forming the backbone of modern digital and economic activity.
Deeper investment will enable wide-scale digital economy growth, yet follow-through, as usual, will remain the yardstick.
CRYPTO TRACKER
The World Wide Web3
Source:
|
Coin Name |
Current Value |
Day |
Month |
|---|---|---|---|
| $90,889 |
â 2.32% |
â 0.13% |
|
| $3,141 |
â 4.01% |
+ 0.23% |
|
| $2.17 |
â 4.48% |
+ 4.66% |
|
| $896 |
â 1.81% |
â 0.53% |
* Data as of 06.41 AM WAT, January 8, 2026.
Opportunities
- Detty December is getting more expensive, but young Africans are not backing down from the vibes. A 2025 Accrue report surveyed 631 people across Ghana, Nigeria, and Kenyaâ86% of them Gen Zs and late millennials aged 18â34âmost living in moderately sized households with at least one income source, yet only 4% earn above $5,000 in total monthly household income. Yet, 60% say they planned to spend more in 2025, with outdoor events, concerts, house parties, travel, dining out, and leisure activities taking the biggest share of their budgets as Detty December cements itself as both culture and economic force. Many rely on money from abroad, receiving funds via mobile money, bank transfers, and virtual USD accounts, while navigating fees and delays. They plan ahead, stretch budgets, borrow, or sell assets just to keep the Detty December tradition alive. Download the report.
- Why Nairobi may no longer be Kenyaâs only tech capital
- With US visa bond, the path to Silicon Valley just got steeper for African startups
- How Ethiopia, Somalia and Djibouti are building Africaâs overlooked digital powerhouses
- Toluwanimi Onakoya has built a career managing startupsâ hardest moments
Written by: Emmanuel Nwosu and Opeyemi Kareem
Edited by: Emmanuel Nwosu & Ganiu Oloruntade
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