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parallax.africa
The risk assigned to African capital markets is not a market truth. It is a measurement error. And like all measurement errors, it does not merely produce inaccurate numbers — it produces decisions made on inaccurate numbers, compounding quietly over decades into what now appears to be structural reality.
Western capital has spent decades pricing African risk. It has been measuring from the wrong position — and the market has paid the difference.
When an African institution produces an inconvenient finding, the first thing a powerful counterparty questions is never the cargo. It is the lab.
Africa did not build an alternative capital architecture because its markets are broken. It built one because the front door was designed for someone else — and the capital still needed to move.
The deals are real. The assets are real. What is missing is not the substance — it is the understanding of who is sitting across from you, and what they actually need to say yes.
Gulf capital is not navigating toward Africa. It is navigating toward its own future — and Africa is where that future is being built. The operator who understands the direction of travel is working with a different instrument than everyone else in the room.
African infrastructure does not have a capital problem. It has a structure problem. And the capital that could solve it is already in the room — sitting in the pension funds, insurance pools, and savings of the very communities the infrastructure is meant to serve.
An opportunity becomes real when the asset exists. It becomes financeable when the structure around it allows capital to move. Confusing these two things is the most expensive mistake in African deal-making.
Parallax is named for the apparent displacement of an object when viewed from two different positions. It is the technique navigators and astronomers use to calculate true distance — not from a single vantage point, but from the measured gap between two. The gap is not an error. The gap is the information.
African capital markets are consistently read from a single vantage point — shaped by frameworks, rating methodologies, and institutional assumptions built elsewhere and applied here without recalibration. Parallax exists to close that gap. Not with optimism. Not with advocacy. With the precision that comes from having been inside the transactions, the structures, and the rooms where the capital actually moves.
Kojo Boahene is the Founder and Chief Executive of Applied Resources Group. He began his career in US banking — trained inside the institutional frameworks that shape how western capital reads the world — before moving into corporate credit allocation at a major US manufacturer, where he observed firsthand how those frameworks applied themselves to Caribbean and African counterparties.
He subsequently co-founded and scaled an oil and gas trading and distribution business across West Africa before a successful exit, and the founding of ARG. His operational experience spans commodity supply mandates, cross-border pre-finance across oil and gas and mining, and sovereign and infrastructure advisory across Sub-Saharan Africa and the Americas.
Parallax publishes when the argument demands it. No filler. Each issue is a complete, considered piece of intelligence — the kind that changes how you read the next deal you encounter.
No spam. No filler. Parallax publishes when the argument demands it.
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