Tuesday, March 24, 2026

WEALTH BEGINS WITH HUMAN LIFE VALUE


Garrett Gunderson’s Killing Sacred Cows 2.0 is a provocative book that challenges the financial orthodoxies most people grow up believing. The “sacred cows” of the title are the assumptions that dominate conventional personal finance: that debt is always bad, that saving automatically creates wealth, and that traditional retirement planning is the safest path to prosperity.

Gunderson’s central argument is that much of the advice people receive about money is not designed primarily for their benefit. Instead, it often serves the interests of financial intermediaries — asset managers, insurance companies and advisors whose incentives are tied to fees, commissions and products.

In dismantling these ideas, the book performs a useful service. Gunderson highlights how inflation, taxes and management fees quietly erode wealth over time. He also challenges the idea that “playing it safe” is truly safe, arguing that many conventional strategies are simply inefficient ways of building long-term prosperity.

This critique of the financial advice industry is one of the book’s strongest contributions. It encourages readers to question received wisdom and to interrogate the structures behind financial products.

However, the book sometimes replaces one orthodoxy with another. Many of Gunderson’s solutions revolve around complex financial structures, particularly insurance-based strategies. While these may have merit in certain contexts, they can feel unnecessarily complicated and are heavily dependent on the institutional environment of developed markets such as the United States.

For readers in emerging economies, where the more immediate challenge is participation in financial markets, the path to wealth is often far simpler: accumulate productive assets, reinvest income and allow compounding to work over time.

Yet focusing only on the technical financial advice in Killing Sacred Cows 2.0 risks missing the book’s most powerful idea.

The most important insight Gunderson offers is his concept of Human Life Value (HLV).

Human Life Value refers to the economic value a person is capable of producing over their lifetime through their knowledge, skills, relationships, creativity and productivity. In other words, the real source of wealth is not money itself but the ability of a person to create value for others.

This insight shifts the entire frame through which we think about wealth.

Most personal finance discussions begin with money — how to earn it, save it, invest it. Gunderson reverses that logic. Money is not the starting point of wealth creation. It is the result.

Wealth begins with human capability.

A person who increases their knowledge, develops valuable skills, builds trust, cultivates networks and solves problems for others automatically increases their Human Life Value. And as that value rises, income tends to follow.

This idea also clarifies one of the most common clichés in discussions about wealth: the notion that people “make money from nothing.”

At first glance, the phrase sounds almost magical. How can wealth come from nothing?

The concept of Human Life Value provides the answer.

Money is created when someone introduces new value into the world — whether through an idea, a service, a system or a better way of doing something. Before that intervention, the value did not exist in the marketplace. Once human ingenuity organizes resources into something useful, new wealth is created.

It may appear that money has been made “from nothing.” In reality, it has been created from human ingenuity.

This is why the most valuable asset in any economy is not financial capital but human capital. Societies that invest in skills, innovation and entrepreneurship expand their Human Life Value and, in turn, their prosperity.

Gunderson’s insight is powerful because it redirects attention away from financial products and toward the deeper drivers of wealth.

The real question is not: Where should I invest my money?

The real question is: How can I increase my Human Life Value?

This could mean acquiring new knowledge, developing expertise, building strong relationships, improving productivity or cultivating discipline.

In that sense, wealth creation is not primarily a financial process. It is a human one.

Money simply follows.

Killing Sacred Cows 2.0 therefore works best not as a manual of financial tactics but as a philosophical reframing of how wealth works. It reminds readers that prosperity does not come from obsessing about money itself. Instead, it emerges from continually increasing the value one is capable of creating for others.

That is the sacred cow truly worth killing: the belief that wealth begins with money.

In reality, it begins with people.

Monday, March 23, 2026

STANBIC 2025: A MASTERCLASS IN PROFITABILITY — BUT WHAT IS IT SAYING ABOUT THE ECONOMY?

Stanbic Uganda Holdings’ 2025 results are, on the surface, exactly what investors want to see: profits up 23.6% to UShs 591 billion, dividends up 20% to UShs 360 billion, and return on equity pushing 26.8%. It is the kind of performance that reinforces Stanbic’s reputation as the most reliable money machine on the Uganda Securities Exchange.

But as we have discussed in previous analyses—particularly in our recurring theme around “where banks are making their money”—these results are as much a commentary on Uganda’s economy as they are on Stanbic itself.

The Trend: From Lending to Positioning

The most important structural trend remains intact: banks are still earning disproportionately from government securities and trading income rather than private sector lending.

Yes, loans grew 16.4% to UShs 5.1 trillion, which is encouraging. But look beneath that and you see the real driver of income:

  • Net interest income growth was modest (+3.7%)

  • Non-interest revenue surged (+21%)

This tells you Stanbic is increasingly behaving like a financial platform, monetising flows (payments, trade, forex) rather than just taking credit risk.

This aligns neatly with the broader shift we’ve observed in the sector—from balance sheet banking to ecosystem banking—a trend also evident in MTN’s fintech dominance, albeit at a different layer of the financial stack.

The Concern: Crowding Out Still Alive

Here is the uncomfortable truth.

When a bank delivers 26.8% ROE with NPLs at just 1.7%, it suggests one thing:
it is not taking much risk.

And in Uganda’s context, that often means:

  • Preference for government paper

  • Selective lending to top-tier corporates

  • Limited appetite for SMEs

This is the same concern we raised in discussions around domestic arrears and bond market distortions:
why lend to a struggling manufacturer when you can earn double-digit yields risk-free from government?

The danger is subtle but profound:
capital begins to flow toward certainty rather than productivity.

The Promise: The Positive Impact Agenda

And yet, Stanbic seems aware of this tension.

The Positive Impact Agenda—targeting women, youth, and farmers—is not just CSR branding. It is a strategic attempt to reposition capital toward productive sectors:

  • UShs 5 trillion deployed in loans

  • SME financing scaling through the incubator

  • Agricultural and community finance expanding

If executed properly, this could be Stanbic’s next growth frontier:
turning inclusion into profitability.

The Investor Takeaway: Still the Dividend King

For investors—especially in the “Bush Fund” logic we’ve discussed—Stanbic remains a classic:

  • High ROE

  • Strong earnings growth

  • Predictable dividend (UShs 7.03 per share total)

This is not a speculative growth stock.
It is a cash flow compounder.

The Bigger Question

Stanbic is doing everything right.

But the real question is whether the economy around it is.

Because when your most efficient allocator of capital earns best returns from the state rather than the private sector, the issue is no longer banking.

It is structure.

And until that shifts, Stanbic will continue to thrive—
but Uganda may grow slower than it should.

STANBIC LIFTS DIVIDEND 20 PCT AS PROFIT HITS USHS591B

Kampala, March 23, 2026 — Stanbic Uganda Holdings Limited has increased its total dividend payout by 20% to UShs 360 billion, up from UShs 300 billion in 2024, after delivering strong earnings growth for the year ended December 2025.

The payout includes an interim dividend of UShs 2.73 per share and a proposed final dividend of UShs 4.30 per share, bringing total shareholder returns for the year into focus.

Profit after tax rose 23.6% to UShs 591 billion, compared to UShs 478 billion the previous year, driven by growth in both interest income and non-interest revenue.

Total income increased to UShs 1.44 trillion, from UShs 1.30 trillion in 2024. Net interest income rose to UShs 788 billion from UShs 760 billion, while non-interest revenue climbed sharply to UShs 651 billion, up from UShs 538 billion.

The balance sheet also expanded, with total assets growing 10.9% to UShs 11.5 trillion, from UShs 10.4 trillion. Customer deposits increased 12.9% to UShs 8.0 trillion, compared to UShs 7.1 trillion, while loans and advances rose 16.4% to UShs 5.1 trillion, from UShs 4.37 trillion.

Profitability remained strong, with return on equity improving to 26.8% from 24.3%, while the cost-to-income ratio edged down to 47.1% from 47.2%. Asset quality remained stable, with non-performing loans at 1.7%, up slightly from 1.5%.

Group Chief Executive Francis Karuhanga said the results reflect disciplined execution and a diversified income base, while CEO Mumba Kalifungwa highlighted continued growth in digital and transactional banking.

Stanbic Uganda Holdings – Financial Summary

Metric20252024Change
Total IncomeUShs 1.44 trillionUShs 1.30 trillion+11%
Net Interest IncomeUShs 788 bnUShs 760 bn+3.7%
Non-Interest RevenueUShs 651 bnUShs 538 bn+21%
Profit After TaxUShs 591 bnUShs 478 bn+23.6%
Earnings Per Share (EPS)UShs 11.54UShs 9.34+23.6%
Total AssetsUShs 11.5 trillionUShs 10.4 trillion+10.9%
Customer DepositsUShs 8.0 trillionUShs 7.1 trillion+12.9%
Loans & AdvancesUShs 5.1 trillionUShs 4.37 trillion+16.4%
Return on Equity (ROE)26.8%24.3%+2.5pp
Cost-to-Income Ratio47.1%47.2%Improved
Non-Performing Loans (NPL)1.7%1.5%+0.2pp
Dividend Per Share (Total)UShs 7.03*
Total DividendUShs 360 bnUShs 300 bn+20%

*Interim (UShs 2.73) + Final (UShs 4.30)

Tuesday, March 17, 2026

MTN SIGNALS THE RISE OF TELECOM AS MAJOR ECONOMIC ENGINE

MTN revenues touched the $1 billion last year, making it the first company in Ugandan history to do so.

The telecom giant reported sh3.6 trillion in total revenue for the year ended December 2025, setting it on the cusp of the billion-dollar club. A year earlier revenues stood at about sh3.15 trillion, meaning the company expanded its topline by roughly 14 percent year-on-year

In a country where most companies still measure revenues in billions rather than trillions, that milestone is more than a corporate bragging right. It is a signal of how deeply telecom infrastructure has become woven into Uganda’s economic life...

There is also a certain symmetry to the moment. MTN Uganda is not only the first company in Uganda to generate more than $1 billion in annual revenues, it was also the first Ugandan company to cross the $1 billion market capitalisation mark when it listed on the Uganda Securities Exchange in December 2021.

In other words, MTN first entered the billion-dollar club through investor belief. Today it has entered it again through economic performance.

But the real story behind those revenues lies in a transformation that has happened in less than three decades.

Thirty years ago Uganda barely had a telecom sector in the modern sense. Fixed telephone lines were scarce and expensive, confined largely to government offices and a handful of large companies. Getting a landline could take months.

Today telecom networks carry the lifeblood of the modern economy.

The numbers released alongside MTN’s results illustrate that shift. The company now serves 24.2 million customers, up from roughly 21.6 million the previous year. Active data users have climbed to 14.7 million, continuing the steady growth seen in recent years as smartphones spread across the country. Meanwhile mobile money users have reached about 12 million, up from about 11.3 million in 2024.

Each of these indicators reflects the widening role of telecom infrastructure in everyday economic life.

But perhaps the most striking statistic lies in the fintech ecosystem built around MTN MoMo.

In comments accompanying the results, MTN Uganda chief executive Sylvia Mulinge revealed just how large that ecosystem has become.

“The volume of transactions on our platform increased by 16.8 percent to five billion while the value of transactions increased by 23.3 percent to sh195.5trillion”.”

Those numbers deserve a moment of reflection.

Uganda’s GDP is roughly sh200 trillion. In other words, the value of transactions flowing through MTN's mobile money platform is now approaching the size of the entire economy...

And that number itself has been growing steadily. A few years ago mobile money transaction values were below sh160 trillion. Today they are brushing against UGX 200 trillion.

Telecom networks are therefore no longer just carrying voice calls and WhatsApp messages.

They are carrying the financial bloodstream of the economy.

Every boda fare paid digitally, every school fee sent to a boarding student, every electricity token purchased through a phone flows through this invisible infrastructure.

MTN’s financial performance reflects that structural shift.

The company reported profit after tax of about sh678.8 billion, up from roughly sh641.5 billion the previous year. Earnings per share rose to sh30.3, compared with about sh28.7 the year before.

Those gains may appear incremental at first glance, but they underline the steady compounding of a business that now sits at the centre of the digital economy.

Mulinge herself linked the company’s revenue growth to rising connectivity and digital adoption.

Telecom growth is therefore not simply sector growth.

It is economic growth expressed through digital infrastructure.

When farmers receive produce payments through mobile money, telecom networks earn transaction fees. When families send remittances across the country, telecom infrastructure carries the payment. When small businesses pay suppliers digitally, telecom networks facilitate the exchange.

Telecom infrastructure has quietly become the plumbing of the modern economy.

Mulinge framed the company’s trajectory within MTN Group’s broader strategic ambition.

“As we conclude the Ambition 2025 journey, I am pleased with the sustained progress we have made towards building the largest and most valuable platform business in Uganda.”

The phrase platform business captures the transformation underway.

The old telecom model revolved around voice calls and SMS. The new model revolves around data consumption, fintech services and digital platforms.

Behind the scenes the infrastructure supporting this transformation continues to expand. MTN now operates 549 network sites, while 4G population coverage has reached about 88.6 percent, up from roughly 86 percent last year.

These investments are capital intensive but essential.

Without the network backbone, there is no digital economy.

For investors, MTN’s results carry additional significance. Since its 2021 listing, the company has become the flagship stock of the Uganda Securities Exchange. More than 22,000 Ugandan investors participated in the IPO — many of them entering the stock market for the first time.

The company has also maintained a strong dividend policy, distributing over sh543 billion in dividends, reinforcing its reputation as one of the exchange’s most dependable yield stocks.

And if the trajectory of fintech, data consumption and digital payments continues, telecom networks may prove to be the single most important piece of economic infrastructure built in Uganda since Independence.

 

Friday, March 13, 2026

TELECOM TITANS MTNU AND AIRTEL 2025 RESULTS COMPARISON

For most of the past two decades, Uganda’s telecom story has been framed as a rivalry between two companies: MTN Uganda and Airtel Uganda.

But the 2025 results released by the two operators reveal something much bigger than competition. They show how telecoms have quietly become one of the most powerful engines of Uganda’s modern economy — generating trillions in revenues, handling hundreds of trillions in digital payments, and increasingly acting as the financial plumbing of everyday commerce.

The numbers are staggering.

MTN Uganda reported revenue of Sh3.6 trillion, up 13.6%, with profit after tax of Sh678.8 billion.

Airtel Uganda, whose financials are reported in dollars, delivered profit before tax of roughly Sh2.3 trillion and profit after tax of about Sh1.6 trillion, when converted at Sh3,600 to the dollar.

Two companies. Multi-trillion-shilling businesses. And an industry that has evolved from selling voice minutes to powering the digital economy.

MTN: The Scale Champion

MTN remains Uganda’s telecom heavyweight.

With Sh3.6 trillion in revenue, the company sits among the largest corporate revenue generators in the country.

Its network scale is formidable:

  • 24.2 million subscribers

  • 12 million active data users

  • 14.7 million fintech users

That scale translates into industry-leading profitability.

MTN’s EBITDA margin of 53.8% reflects a business that has reached operational maturity. Telecom economics at this stage resemble utilities: heavy upfront investment followed by long periods of strong, predictable cash flow.

In 2025 alone, the company invested about Sh843 billion expanding network capacity and improving service quality.

Airtel: The Profit Story

If MTN dominates scale, Airtel’s 2025 results tell a story of profit acceleration.

Converted into shillings, Airtel generated roughly:

  • Sh2.3 trillion profit before tax

  • Sh1.6 trillion profit after tax

That sharp jump in profitability suggests improved operational efficiency and a telecom market entering its cash-generation phase.

In the early years of Uganda’s telecom sector the focus was subscriber growth — building towers, expanding coverage and acquiring customers.

Now the industry has entered its second phase: monetisation.

The Real Engine: Fintech

Yet the most important similarity between the two companies lies in mobile money.

At MTN:

  • Fintech revenue reached Sh1.1 trillion

  • Transaction volumes hit 5 billion

  • Transaction value reached Sh195.5 trillion

Those numbers illustrate how telecom networks have evolved into financial infrastructure.

Mobile money is now the nervous system of Uganda’s economy.

Salaries move through it. Bills are paid through it. Small traders rely on it for daily commerce.

Telecom companies are no longer simply communication networks.

They are digital financial ecosystems.

Data Is the New Voice

Another structural shift visible in the results is the rise of data.

MTN’s data revenue jumped 28.8% to Sh1 trillion, while voice grew just 1%.

The smartphone has replaced the voice call as the primary interface with telecom networks.

Consumers now rely on telecom infrastructure to stream video, transact online, run businesses and access government services.

In effect, telecom operators are evolving into digital platform companies.

A Quiet But Important Change for Investors

One of the most interesting announcements buried in the MTN results is a change in dividend policy.

Previously, MTN Uganda paid dividends three times a year — after the full-year, half-year and third-quarter results.

The company will now pay dividends quarterly.

That may sound like a minor administrative tweak, but for investors it is actually quite significant.

Quarterly dividends mean:

  • more predictable cash flow

  • shorter waiting periods for income

  • stronger appeal for institutional investors

In effect, MTN is positioning itself more clearly as a high-yield telecom infrastructure stock.

What This Means for Investors

For investors on the Uganda Securities Exchange, the telecom sector remains one of the most compelling opportunities on the market.

At current closing prices — Sh472 for MTN Uganda and Sh112 for Airtel Uganda — the valuation picture becomes even more interesting.

Telecom Investment Comparison

CompanyPrice (UGX)EPS (UGX)P/EPEG
Div YieldROICRank (PEG)
MTN Uganda4723015.70.69
6.1%32%2
Airtel Uganda112402.80.14
7.0%28%1

The PEG ratio — price relative to growth — is often one of the most revealing valuation metrics.

A PEG below 1 typically suggests undervaluation relative to growth potential.

By that measure, Airtel Uganda ranks first, suggesting that the market may be significantly underpricing its growth prospects.

MTN Uganda ranks second but remains the higher-quality dividend stock, reflecting its market leadership and stronger fintech ecosystem.

Investment Strategy

For long-term investors, the telecom sector offers two complementary opportunities.

MTN Uganda – Dividend Stability

MTN paid Sh28.75 per share in dividends in 2025, distributing about Sh643.7 billion to shareholders.

With a payout ratio above 75%, the company behaves like a high-yield telecom utility.

The shift to quarterly dividends further strengthens its appeal to investors seeking steady income.

Airtel Uganda – Value and Growth

Airtel’s extremely low valuation relative to earnings growth makes it one of the most interesting value opportunities on the exchange.

If its profit trajectory continues, the current price may eventually look like a bargain.

The Bigger Story

The rivalry between MTN and Airtel may dominate headlines, but the deeper story is structural.

Telecom networks have become the digital backbone of Uganda’s economy.

They connect businesses, enable payments, and power digital commerce.

And as the country continues to digitise, telecom companies will likely remain among the most powerful wealth-creation vehicles on the Uganda Securities Exchange.

For investors, the lesson is simple.

Owning a slice of the network may prove one of the smartest investments of the coming decade.

Tuesday, March 10, 2026

UGANDA BUDGET 2026/27 IGNORES DOMESTIC ARREARS --AGAIN

These days Hajji curses the day his friend Jack walked into his workshop with what looked like the deal of a lifetime.

Jack had a contact in a government agency that needed thousands of desks and chairs for public schools. The Local Purchase Order(LPO) carried the authority of the state. The volumes were large. The opportunity seemed obvious.

Supply the furniture. Deliver the desks. Get paid.

What Hajji did not know then was that he had just stepped into one of the most dangerous transactions in Uganda’s economy: supplying government.

The banks had already learnt the lesson the hard way. They no longer discount government LPOs. Too many suppliers had walked into branches with official paperwork only to discover that payment might take years.

So Hajji financed the contract himself.

He drained his savings, borrowed from friends, sold part of his inventory and rolled the rest through expensive overdrafts. By the time the desks were delivered, he had sunk hundreds of millions of shillings of his own money into the deal.

That was five years ago.

He is still waiting to be paid.

His workshop is barely surviving. Expansion plans have been shelved. Machinery upgrades postponed. The only way he has kept the doors open is by shrinking the business — cutting staff, closing one production line and focusing on private clients who actually pay their bills.

Hajji’s story is not unusual. It is simply the human face of one of the least discussed problems in Uganda’s public finances.

Buried deep in the recently released Medium-Term Expenditure Framework (MTEF) for 2026/27 is a number that should worry anyone interested in the health of the economy.

"The government plans to allocate about Shs200 billion to clear domestic arrears estimated at roughly Shs8.4 trillion...

If you owed your suppliers Shs8.4 trillion and planned to repay them Shs200 billion a year, it would take more than 40 years to clear the bill — assuming you stopped accumulating new arrears tomorrow.

That assumption is heroic.

Domestic arrears are one of the most persistent structural weaknesses in Uganda’s fiscal system. Every year contractors build roads, firms supply medicines, manufacturers deliver furniture like Hajji’s desks, and small traders supply food to schools, hospitals and barracks.

But a significant share of those bills is not paid on time.

Instead they accumulate quietly in ministry ledgers until they become arrears — unpaid obligations sitting on government’s balance sheet like sediment at the bottom of a river.

And the problem has been building for more than a decade. Ten years ago domestic arrears were estimated at roughly Shs2 trillion. By 2018 they had crossed Shs3 trillion, prompting repeated directives from the Ministry of Finance warning accounting officers not to commit expenditure without cash backing. Yet the numbers kept rising. By the early 2020s the stock had climbed to around Shs5 trillion.

Today the figure stands at about Shs8.4 trillion — roughly four times what it was a decade ago.

In effect, government has allowed arrears to grow faster than the economy itself...

The Budget Framework Paper acknowledges the scale of the problem and outlines a multi-year strategy to eliminate the stock, even allocating Shs1.4 trillion this financial year toward the effort.

Yet the Medium-Term Expenditure Framework that follows suggests the effort quickly reverts to a token Shs200 billion annually.

In fiscal terms, that is not a strategy. It is an accounting gesture.

To understand why domestic arrears matter, think of them as the government’s hidden tax on the private sector.

When government fails to pay suppliers on time, those suppliers must finance the gap themselves. They borrow from banks, delay paying workers and suppliers, or scale back investment.

A contractor waiting years to be paid for a project is effectively extending a loan to the state — except the interest rate is whatever his bank charges him.

In Uganda’s case, that rate easily sits between 18 and 22 percent.

At the current arrears stock of Shs8.4 trillion, the business community is effectively financing the government to the tune of roughly Shs1.5–1.7 trillion every year in interest costs alone. And because arrears are not cleared on a strict first-in-first-out basis, some suppliers wait far longer than others, pushing their financing costs even higher...

So what begins as a government cash-flow problem quickly becomes a private sector solvency problem.

You can see the consequences across the economy.

Banks complain about non-performing loans from contractors whose payments have stalled. Businesses become reluctant to bid for government contracts unless they price in the risk of delayed payment. Smaller firms simply avoid government tenders altogether.

The result is predictable: higher project costs, weaker competition and slower growth.

And yet the irony is striking.

At the same time government struggles to pay suppliers like Hajji, it continues to borrow aggressively on the domestic bond market.

Interest payments next year are projected to reach about Shs12.7 trillion, with more than Shs10 trillion going to domestic creditors.

Put differently, Uganda will spend many times more servicing interest than clearing arrears.

That tells you something about our fiscal priorities.

We pay the bond market religiously. We pay suppliers when we can.

And this creates a dangerous incentive.

If government bonds offer 15–16 percent risk-free returns while productive businesses struggle with unpaid invoices and borrowing costs above 20 percent, what stops genuine producers from abandoning expansion altogether?

Why struggle with factories, machinery and payrolls when the state itself is offering double-digit returns for simply buying its paper?

"The risk is that capital slowly migrates from production to speculation...

Which brings us back to Hajji and his desks.

For him, the cost of supplying government was not just delayed payment. It was the freezing of capital, the shrinking of a business and the quiet death of expansion plans.

Multiply that story across thousands of suppliers and you begin to see the real economic cost of domestic arrears.

Until government pays its bills, the talk of private-sector-led growth will remain just that — talk.

Monday, March 9, 2026

KAMPALA'S PROPERTY MARKET: BUBBLE IN THE HILLS, BOOM IN THE WAREHOUSES

Every few years Kampala’s skyline provokes the same uneasy question.

Are we building too much?

A recently released Kampala Property Market Performance Review for the second half of 2025 by Knight Frank Uganda provides a useful starting point for thinking about that question. The report reads less like a warning of a looming collapse and more like a snapshot of a market that is beginning to diverge.

"Look closely and three very different stories are unfolding beneath Kampala’s real estate boom.

The first is a cooling residential market.
The second is a roaring industrial sector.
And the third is a quiet migration of business activity away from the traditional city centre...

Each raises deeper questions about where Kampala’s property market is heading.

Start with the hills.

For two decades Kampala’s prime residential market ran on a very simple engine: expatriate rents.

Developers built apartments in Kololo, Nakasero, Naguru and Mbuya because NGOs, diplomatic missions and international consultants were willing to pay dollar-denominated rents that justified the investment.

That model is now wobbling.

Knight Frank’s latest market review shows rental rates for two- and three-bedroom apartments in these prime areas falling by roughly 9 to 10 percent over the past year. It is not a crash. But it is the first meaningful correction the market has seen in years.

More telling is what lies beneath the numbers.

Supply is rising. Demand is shifting. And marketing periods for properties are getting longer. Some developers are quietly discounting prices. Others are simply waiting for better days.

At the same time, distressed property listings are beginning to appear—never a good sign in any asset market.

Yet the buyers that remain are not the ones developers originally built for.

Increasingly, it is Ugandan investors snapping up smaller apartments priced between about $80,000 and $170,000. The logic is simple: buy, furnish and list the property on the short-let market for diaspora visitors and business travellers.

That shift—from expatriate tenants to investor buyers—is the kind of transition that has preceded property bubbles in other cities.

But Kampala may not be there yet.

What we may be seeing instead is something more mundane: a market adjusting to the slow replacement of expatriate demand with domestic wealth.

Uganda’s middle and upper classes are growing. Many are now able to buy into neighbourhoods that once belonged almost exclusively to diplomats.

Prices may soften. But the long-term demand story is still intact.

Now leave the hills and head for the warehouses.

If residential real estate is cooling, industrial property is having a moment.

"Knight Frank’s report shows occupancy rates across Kampala’s industrial corridors remaining above 80 percent and warehouse rents holding firm between about $3 and $7 per square metre...

Three forces are powering this demand.

The first is coffee.

Uganda exported about 8.4 million bags last year earning roughly $2.4 billion and overtaking Ethiopia as Africa’s largest coffee exporter. Coffee exporters now require modern storage facilities—large warehouses with ventilation, security and climate control.

The second is logistics.

As Uganda’s consumer economy grows, distribution companies and FMCG manufacturers increasingly require storage space close to Kampala’s transport corridors.

The third force—still largely anticipatory—is oil.

With commercial production expected to begin around 2026 and the East African Crude Oil Pipeline nearing completion, contractors and support companies are already securing space for logistics yards and equipment storage.

Industrial real estate is therefore benefiting from a rare alignment of economic forces: exports, consumption and energy.

The question, of course, is whether the boom will last.

Oil timelines have slipped before. Infrastructure delays are common. And once the initial construction frenzy ends, demand for some logistics facilities may ease.

But unlike residential property, industrial real estate is anchored in productive activity rather than speculation.

Warehouses are built because goods need to move.

That is usually a healthier foundation for a property market.

The third transformation is perhaps the most subtle but also the most permanent.

Kampala’s centre of gravity is shifting.

For decades the city revolved around the CBD—Kampala Road, Nakasero and the immediate surroundings. Offices clustered there. Retail followed. And traffic, predictably, followed both.

But businesses are quietly voting with their feet.

Knight Frank notes that office tenants increasingly prefer suburban locations such as Ntinda, Bukoto, Naguru and Nakawa where parking is easier and congestion is less punishing.

Retail is following the same path.

Neighbourhood malls are replacing roadside shops across emerging suburbs. International brands—from KFC to Java House—are expanding along major commuter corridors rather than squeezing into the already crowded city centre.

Even fuel stations are becoming mini retail hubs with supermarkets, pharmacies and restaurants built into their forecourts.

"This is not the decline of the CBD.

It is simply the decentralisation of Kampala...

As cities grow, economic activity spreads outward into multiple nodes rather than concentrating in a single downtown district. Nairobi went through this transition years ago when Westlands, Upper Hill and Kilimani emerged as alternative business centres.

Kampala appears to be following the same trajectory.

And so the real story of Kampala’s property market today is not one of uniform boom or impending bust.

It is one of divergence.

Residential property is adjusting to new patterns of demand. Industrial property is riding the wave of exports and the oil economy. And commercial activity is gradually redistributing itself across a wider metropolitan footprint.

Markets, like cities, rarely move in straight lines.

But if Kampala’s cranes seem unusually busy today, it may be because the city is not simply growing.

It is rearranging itself.

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