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Ex-African Commodities Trader Bets Big on FMCG Growth

byStephen Abebor
May 8, 2026
in Business, Economy, News
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Ex-African Commodities Trader Bets Big on FMCG Growth
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For nearly a decade, David Olurin built a reputation trading West African agricultural commodities like cocoa, cashews, and shea for global off-takers. But in a strategic pivot that signals a broader shift across the continent’s investment landscape, Olurin is now placing an outsized bet on the consumer end of the value chain. His target: Cardinal Treats, a Nigerian snack-food manufacturer he believes will ride a wave of rapid formalisation in African fast-moving consumer goods (FMCG).

“Commodities give you exposure to volume but little control over brand or margin compression,” Olurin said in an interview. “FMCG, particularly in branded snacks, offers recurring demand, pricing power, and a direct line to Africa’s expanding middle class.”

The move comes as sub-Saharan Africa’s consumer-facing sectors outpace many emerging markets. According to a 2023 McKinsey report, household consumption on the continent is set to reach $2.5 trillion by 2030, with packaged foods and personal care leading growth. Yet local manufacturing still lags, creating what Olurin calls a “production-to-plate” gap that imported goods have historically filled.

Cardinal Treats, founded in Lagos five years ago, produces shelf-stable baked snacks and grain-based bars distributed across Nigeria’s key urban corridors. With Olurin’s capital injection, undisclosed but described by sources as “seven figures”, the company plans to triple its production capacity and launch two new product lines tailored to price-sensitive but quality-conscious consumers.

Industry analysts see the deal as a test case for a larger thesis: domestic FMCG brands that solve for local taste, distribution fragmentation, and affordability can capture share from multinational incumbents. “Nestlé and Unilever still dominate, but their premium pricing leaves a wide lane for agile local players,” said Adaobi Nwachukwu, a Lagos-based consumer goods strategist.

For Olurin, the bet also reflects a maturing of African private capital. “Ten years ago, you’d export raw nuts. Now you brand, package, and scale the finished bar. That’s economic transformation in real time,” he added.

The broader market appears to agree. African FMCG startups raised over $800 million in 2023, according to Briter Bridges, with investors citing resilient domestic demand even as venture funding cools globally. Cardinal Treats expects to break even on the expansion within 18 months and is exploring regional export to Ghana and Ivory Coast.

Whether Olurin’s pivot becomes a harbinger or an outlier, one signal is clear: In Africa’s next growth chapter, the real value may lie not in what comes out of the ground, but in what reaches the consumer’s hand.

Tags: african-fmcgcardinal-treatscommodities-vs-consumerconsumer-goods-investmentdavid-olurinemerging-markets-strategylocal-manufacturingmiddle-class-consumptionnigeria-businessprivate-equity-africaretail-growth-africasnack-food-market
Stephen Abebor

Stephen Abebor

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