President Duma Boko has turned to the United Arab Emirates, Oman, and neighbouring producers as Anglo American pursues plans to sell its 85% holding in De Beers.
Botswana currently owns 15% of De Beers, alongside Anglo American’s 85% stake, and is exploring options to secure a strategic share of the divested holding. Any increase would deepen state influence over a company that sits at the heart of Botswana’s growth model. Diamonds account for about 80% of Botswana’s export earnings and roughly a quarter of GDP. The transaction is therefore systemically important for both the fiscal position and the balance of payments.
President Boko has confirmed that Gaborone is seeking “reliable, trusted partners” and has identified the UAE and Oman as preferred financiers. His outreach follows earlier talks with an Omani sovereign wealth fund over backing a potential controlling stake in De Beers, although more recent reports suggest Botswana may now be targeting a smaller but strategic increase in its shareholding. For Gulf investors, the appeal is clear: access to upstream supply in a market with high barriers to entry, at a time when diamond valuations are under pressure and long-term capital can negotiate favourable entry terms.
For Botswana, Gulf backing would provide scale capital without forcing a sharp increase in sovereign borrowing. It would also plug into existing trade and logistics channels. The UAE, through Dubai, has emerged as a major global diamond trading centre, handling growing volumes of African rough stones. Omani capital, meanwhile, aligns with a broader push by Gulf states to deploy surplus funds into strategic resources and emerging markets.
Anglo American’s decision to sell its stake in De Beers forms part of a restructuring that followed a takeover approach by BHP. The group has since refocused on copper and iron ore, while cutting De Beers’ valuation several times in the past three years amid weaker demand, falling prices, and the rise of lab‑grown diamonds. That combination creates an unusual window: a core asset for Botswana has become non-core for its long-standing partner.
Alongside Gulf outreach, Botswana has engaged neighbouring Namibia and Angola in discussions as all three significant diamond producers explore potential participation in a De Beers stake and ways to strengthen their regional influence in the industry.
Any larger Botswana De Beers stake would likely require competition and regulatory clearance and would have to compete with bids from other strategic and financial investors already being shortlisted by Anglo American. That process may introduce delay and could limit the size of any eventual stake. However, even a modest increase, backed by alignment with fellow producers, would strengthen Botswana’s hand in future contract and marketing negotiations.
The timing is sensitive. The diamond sector faces cyclical weakness and structural tests from lab-grown stones, yet resource-rich African states are pushing for more local processing, jobs and fiscal take. Botswana’s bid balances these forces. It seeks more control and value retention, but via partnership with Gulf capital rather than outright nationalisation.
For investors, the Botswana De Beers stake story sits at the intersection of three themes: African resource nationalism in a more structured, partnership-driven form; Gulf sovereign wealth funds deploying capital into real assets with geopolitical relevance; and Anglo American’s strategic pivot away from diamonds.
The outcome will shape pricing power, contract structures and investment entry points across the natural diamond segment. Over the next 12 to 24 months, investors should track three signals: which Gulf or other sovereign funds emerge as anchor partners; how far Namibia and Angola move towards a coordinated producer stance; and whether sustained price recovery in natural diamonds lifts De Beers’ eventual sale valuation.
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