ARTICLE
10 March 2026

Structuring Cross-Border Acquisitions In The African Financial Sector: Key Legal And Regulatory Considerations

SB
Stren & Blan Partners

Contributor

At our law firm, we pride ourselves on providing personalized and attentive service to each of our Clients.

We are focused on providing solutions to our Client’s business problems and adding value to their businesses and commercial endeavours. This underpins our ethos, and everything we do flows from these underlying principles.

Stren & Blan Partners is a full-service commercial Law Firm that provides legal services to diverse local and multinational corporations. We have developed a clear vision for anticipating our Client’s business needs and surpassing their expectations, and we do this with an uncompromising commitment to Client service and legal excellence.

Cross-border acquisitions have become one of the defining features of Africa's evolving financial landscape. Regional banks, global investors...
Worldwide Finance and Banking
Stren & Blan Partners’s articles from Stren & Blan Partners are most popular:
  • within Finance and Banking topic(s)
  • with readers working within the Securities & Investment industries
Stren & Blan Partners are most popular:
  • within Consumer Protection, Technology and Tax topic(s)

Cross-border acquisitions have become one of the defining features of Africa's evolving financial landscape. Regional banks, global investors, development finance institutions, and high-growth fintech companies increasingly regard acquisitions as a strategic tool for expanding their footprint, enhancing operational efficiency, and accessing new consumer markets. Recently, transactions such as the attempted expansion of Access Bank Plc into South Africa through its proposed acquisition of Bidvest Bank, the sustained multi-jurisdictional growth of Ecobank Transnational Incorporated, Zenith Bank's proposed acquisition of Kenya's Paramount Bank, the pan-African expansion of UBA Group as well as other acquisitions by Fintechs, demonstrate the increasing appetite for regional integration. Development finance institutions such as International Finance Corporation (IFC) have also remained active, financing transactions across banking, payments, microfinance, and mobile money.

Despite this momentum, cross-border acquisitions in African financial markets remain structurally complex. The continent's regulatory ecosystem is highly fragmented; capital controls and FX policies vary across regions, and multiple regulators often assert concurrent jurisdiction over a single transaction. As a result, the success of any acquisition is shaped not only by commercial negotiation but by the acquirer's ability to navigate regulatory approvals, conduct rigorous due diligence, design optimal holding structures, and mitigate a range of legal, political, and financial risks. This article examines these considerations in detail.

Open PDF to continue reading >>

The content of this article is intended to provide a general guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought about your specific circumstances.

[View Source]

Mondaq uses cookies on this website. By using our website you agree to our use of cookies as set out in our Privacy Policy.

Learn More