Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
09CASABLANCA93
2009-05-14 17:33:00
UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
Consulate Casablanca
Cable title:  

MOROCCO'S EL DORADO - FRANCOPHONE AFRICA

Tags:  ECIN ECON EINV PGOV SOCI MO 
pdf how-to read a cable
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RR RUEHWEB

DE RUEHCL #0093/01 1341733
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
R 141733Z MAY 09
FM AMCONSUL CASABLANCA
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC 8390
INFO RUCPDOC/DEPT OF COMMERCE WASHDC
RUCNMGH/MAGHREB COLLECTIVE
RUEHBP/AMEMBASSY BAMAKO 0288
RUEHDK/AMEMBASSY DAKAR 0308
RUEHNK/AMEMBASSY NOUAKCHOTT 2375
RUEHOU/AMEMBASSY OUAGADOUGOU 0047
UNCLAS CASABLANCA 000093 

SIPDIS
SENSITIVE

STATE FOR NEA/MAG
COMMERCE FOR NATHANIEL MASON

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: ECIN ECON EINV PGOV SOCI MO
SUBJECT: MOROCCO'S EL DORADO - FRANCOPHONE AFRICA

REF: A. CASABLANCA 10

B. CASABLANCA 26


UNCLAS CASABLANCA 000093

SIPDIS
SENSITIVE

STATE FOR NEA/MAG
COMMERCE FOR NATHANIEL MASON

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: ECIN ECON EINV PGOV SOCI MO
SUBJECT: MOROCCO'S EL DORADO - FRANCOPHONE AFRICA

REF: A. CASABLANCA 10

B. CASABLANCA 26



1. (SBU) Summary: To fuel its expansion in Francophone Africa,
Morocco's largest companies - Attijariwafa Bank, Banque Morocaine du
Commerce Exterieur (BMCE),and Maroc Telecom - are employing a
calculated strategy, which entails buying controlling stakes in key
sub-Saharan African firms, and pursuing deals in smaller, low
visibility countries in the region. Morocco's majority stake in
Francophone Africa's largest banks and telecom firms, in conjunction
with King Mohammed VI's economic diplomacy, provides Morocco with
leverage for its Sahara policy. While Morocco's business ventures
have generally been successful, some companies have arguably taken
disproportionate risks in their acquisitions. (Note: Throughout,
Africa is used as shorthand for Francophone Africa. End Note.) End
Summary.

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Business Strategy in Africa
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2. (SBU) Morocco's largest companies - Attijariwafa Bank, BMCE, and
Maroc Telecom - are utilizing a calculated strategy, which entails
buying controlling stakes in key sub-Saharan firms and pursuing
deals in smaller, low visibility countries in Africa in order to
fuel their expansion in the banking and telecom sectors. (Note:
Over the past decade, much of Morocco's investment in Francophone
Africa, like its trade, has been concentrated in a few countries
such as Senegal, Mali, and Mauritania. End Note.) Hicham Alaoui,
director of BMCE's Risk Management office, said "This sub-Saharan
strategy has certainly brought BMCE quite a bit of profit". The
Bank's activities in the region account for close to 10 percent of
its total net income, added Alaoui.


3. (SBU) The extent to which this policy is officially supported
and encouraged by the Government of Morocco was evident in King
Mohammed VI's recent visit to Equatorial Guinea. Accompanied by a
large trade delegation, the visit produced an agreement that will
see Morocco's Tanger-Med Agency assume responsibility for managing
the port of Malabo. Such high-visibility visits and the
accompanying investment, Attijariwafa Bank's Idriss Maghraoui

observes, have also brought Morocco political benefits. Government
officials, like the King, strongly believe that Morocco's business
ventures in Africa will enhance the country's ability to garner and
maintain support on its Sahara policy. Yet Yahia El Farah of the
Institute of African Studies at Rabat's Mohammed V University
cautions against conflating Morocco's foreign policy with its
commercial actions abroad.

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A Partnership, Solidified
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4. (SBU) Morocco's largest companies are aggressively deploying
this expansion strategy in Africa. Maroc Telecom, the country's
largest telecommunication firm, is rapidly buying control stakes in
some of Africa's largest telecom firms such as Mauritania's
Mauritel, Burkina Faso's Onatel, and Mali's Sotelma to name a few.
"Sub-Sahara's telecommunications sector is the most dynamic segment
of the continent's economy, the most flexible and therefore the most
desirable", says Lahcen Kourss of Maroc Telecom.


5. (SBU) Meanwhile, Morocco's commercial banks have also sought
opportunities in the Francophone region. Attijariwafa Bank,
Morocco's largest bank, and a French financial group, Credit
Agricole, announced in November 2008 that the Bank would acquire the
French firm's banking stake in Africa. Credit Agricole's operations
in Africa consist of Societe Ivorienne de Banque (51 percent stake),
Union Gabonaise de Banque (59 percent stake),Societe Camerounaise
de Banque (65 percent stake),Credit du Congo (81 percent stake),
and Credit du Senegal (95 percent stake). Attijariwafa Bank is
already present in Senegal through two subsidiaries that are
currently being merged - Attijari Bank Senegal and CBAO - to form
Senegal's largest bank.


6. (SBU) Similarly, BMCE has relied on a strategic acquisition of
the Bank of Africa (BOA),the rapidly rising West African
multinational bank, to fuel its expansion. In May 2008, a 70
million Euro loan from the International Financial Corporation
helped BMCE acquire 35 percent of the capital of BOA, to which it
added a 7.5 percent share in September. BMCE is expected to have a
controlling stake in BOA in the upcoming months, which will expand
its influence to 12 countries in Africa. BMCE also holds a 20.7
percent share in Mali's largest bank, BDM.

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Risky Business
--------------


7. (SBU) While Morocco's business ventures have generally been
successful, some companies have arguably taken disproportionate
risks in their acquisitions. The rating agency Standards & Poor
flagged such expansion as a "source of risk" in its otherwise
generally positive assessment of the Moroccan banking sector in
February 2008. Outside observers also question the amount that
Moroccan banks have paid for some of their acquisitions. Oxford
Business Group, for instance, noted that Attijariwafa's July 2008
bid of 60 million Euros for a Malian bank outstripped its closest
rival by nearly 40 percent.


8. (SBU) There are also other risks to Moroccan expansion in
Africa. Poor governance and regulatory burdens remain serious
limitations to investment in the region. Ongoing difference over
management with Air Senegal International, the Senegalese flag
carrier set up as a joint venture between Senegal and Morocco's
Royal Air Maroc (RAM),illustrate that business disputes in
Francophone Africa can be costly, in terms of both time and fees.
RAM has been seeking to extricate itself from the agreement since
2007, thus far without success.

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Comment
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9. (SBU) Morocco's expansion into Africa has been emphasized over
the past year as part of a strategic move to diversify Morocco's
international presence away from its more traditional, saturated,
European markets. Reftels discuss Morocco's emerging economic ties
with India and Russia.

Millard