
Audio By Carbonatix
Kobby Bentsi-Enchill, Head of Investment Banking at Stanbic Bank Ghana, has advised real estate developers across Africa to complement their innovative ideas with careful project preparation.
He highlighted that well-structured plans are more likely to attract meaningful financing from banks.
Mr Bentsi-Enchill made the remarks at the Africa Real Estate Festival, where he joined industry leaders, investors, and developers to examine the persistent financing gaps that continue to slow the pace of property development across Africa.
“When a developer walks through our doors with a project, the quality of the idea matters, but it is rarely the deciding factor. What separates a fundable project from one that stalls at the assessment stage is preparation.
"Complete documentation, credible financial projections, clear land title, and a well-articulated exit strategy tell us that the developer has done the hard thinking. That is what builds a bank’s confidence,” he told attendees.
The Stanbic executive acknowledged that the desire to access finance is widespread among developers but noted that many proposals fall short not because of weak demand fundamentals, but because of avoidable gaps in how projects are packaged and presented.
“The real estate sector across Africa holds enormous potential, and we genuinely want to support its growth. But a bank’s obligation is to its depositors and shareholders as much as it is to its borrowers.
"Due diligence is not a hurdle we place in front of developers to frustrate them; it is the mechanism by which we ensure that the projects we back are viable, sustainable, and structured to succeed,” he explained.
On how developers can improve their chances of securing financing, the seasoned investment banker emphasised the value of engaging experienced technical and financial consultants early in the project lifecycle.
Rather than viewing consultancy fees as an additional cost, he argued, developers should regard expert advisory support as a strategic investment that pays dividends at the financing stage.
“The developers who consistently secure financing are the ones who surround themselves with the right expertise.
"A seasoned quantity surveyor, a competent legal team, a financial adviser who understands bankability; these are not luxuries. They are the people who ensure your proposal speaks the language that lenders understand and respond to,” he said.
Mr Bentsi-Enchill used the platform to reaffirm Stanbic Bank Ghana’s commitment to the real estate and construction sector, describing the bank’s financing activities in the space as both a commercial priority and a contribution to Ghana’s broader development agenda.
He noted that bank financing has continued to play a central role in bringing well-structured projects to life, and that the institution remains actively engaged in growing the market through both direct lending and strategic partnerships with developers and investors.
“Real estate development, done well, creates jobs, generates tax revenue, and addresses some of the most pressing infrastructure needs our country faces.
"Stanbic Bank is committed to being a dependable partner in that process for developers who are serious about building sustainably and building right,” he noted.
Latest Stories
-
Kenyan court charges eight schoolgirls with their fellow students’ murder
1 minute -
Google has exceeded $1 billion Africa investment target
6 minutes -
Floods in Ivory Coast kill 59 people, government says
10 minutes -
Over 900 arrested during South African anti-migrant protests
14 minutes -
Communications Ministry orders Ghana Digital Centres to reverse staff suspension after floods
23 minutes -
Canada to make Eurovision Song Contest debut in 2027
25 minutes -
One killed after truck carrying fish runs into pedestrians at Winneba
32 minutes -
Egypt optimistic Salah will be fit to face Australia
33 minutes -
Absa Bank Ghana relocates head office to new Ridge headquarters
1 hour -
3 arrested in Bolgatanga for trafficking girls into prostitution
1 hour -
Concern over rise in online racist abuse at World Cup
1 hour -
Controversial bishops ordained as Pope warns of ‘schism’ in Catholic Church
1 hour -
‘Time for him to pay’ – Carroll calls on Trump to pay $5m after president’s appeal fails
1 hour -
Two people climb to top of NYC’s Empire State Building
1 hour -
Anthropic says US lifts export ban on its advanced AI tools
2 hours