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Rafhan Maize production facility with Nishat Group industrial operations, maize fields and export containers representing Pakistan's food processing industry.

Economy & Markets

Rafhan Maize and Nishat Group: Why Pakistan’s Most Important Acquisition May Not Be About the Purchase Price

Nishat Group’s acquisition of Rafhan Maize is more than a US$165 million deal. Here’s why it could reshape Pakistan’s food processing industry, exports, and long-term industrial growth.

Corporate acquisitions usually generate excitement because of the headline numbers.

How much was paid?

Who bought whom?

Was the premium justified?

For investors, these are natural questions. Yet sometimes the real story lies well beyond the transaction itself.

Nishat Group’s acquisition of approximately 73.9% of Rafhan Maize from Ingredion is one of Pakistan’s largest corporate acquisitions in recent years. The transaction, reportedly valued at approximately US$165 million, leaves Ingredion with roughly a 20% strategic shareholding while transferring operational control to one of Pakistan’s largest industrial groups.

Rafhan’s Pakistan business generated nearly US$250 million in revenue during 2025.

Those figures make headlines.

The long-term implications could matter far more.


Looking Beyond Foreign Investment

Pakistan’s economic debate often revolves around attracting foreign direct investment.

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That conversation is important.

Foreign capital brings technology, international networks and access to global markets.

However, another form of investment receives far less attention despite being equally important:

Domestic capital being reinvested into productive Pakistani businesses.

When one of Pakistan’s largest industrial groups commits billions of rupees to acquire and expand a manufacturing company, it reflects something equally valuable:

Confidence.

Not confidence in quarterly earnings.

Confidence in Pakistan’s long-term industrial potential.

That distinction matters.

Countries rarely industrialize solely because foreign investors arrive.

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They industrialize because local businesses continuously reinvest, modernize and expand.

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