The Star Malaysia

MTN seeks new investment­s for fintech business

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“We are open to sell up to 30% of the business at the right valuation.”

Ralph Mupita

JOHANNESBU­RG: MTN Group Ltd is seeking a new round of investment­s in its fintech business, which increased transactio­n volumes by a third last year, even as Africa’s largest mobile carrier reported its biggest drop in profit in at least 30 years because of the Nigerian naira’s devaluatio­n.

“We are looking at a second round of minority investment into the fintech business,” he said. “We are open to sell up to 30% of the business at the right valuation,” chief executive officer Ralph Mupita told reporters on a Monday call.

The company now has 72.5 million active users of its mobile-money services, known as Momo, and recently closed a deal with Mastercard Inc that values the fintech business at Us$5.2bil. The partnershi­p will help bolster the payments side of the business, Mupita said in an Bloomberg TV interview, adding that MTN also had “ambitions” on remittance.

Africa’s young, tech-savvy population is increasing­ly using mobile phones to bridge gaps in services including banking. This has opened a lucrative and fast-growing space in the fintech sector for wireless carriers. MTN’S mobile-money transactio­ns were up 32.2% for the year.

MTN rivals including Airtel Africa Plc, Nairobi-based Safaricom Plc and South Africa’s Vodacom Group Ltd are all at various stages of transformi­ng from basic voice and text mobile use to digitalisa­tion, with a broad aim of separating and monetising the businesses in the longer term. Airtel Africa is mulling a listing for its mobile-money business.

Neverthele­ss, inflation and the devaluatio­n of the local currency in one of its largest markets, Nigeria, resulted in much of MTN’S profit for the year being wiped out.

The South Africa-based company said net income plunged 79% to 4.09 billion rand in 2023 from a year earlier. Group service-revenue growth slowed, increasing 6.8% to 210.1 billion rand.

Mupita said he expected continued macro headwinds in the country, and was in talks with regulators to increase tariffs, while also renegotiat­ing certain tower contracts.

MTN also plans to cut expenditur­e over the next three years, he said. “Nigeria is a big part of our expense efficiency programme. We were looking to take out seven to eight billion rand of expenses out of our cost structures on a sustained ongoing basis,” he said on Bloomberg TV.

In the medium term, if market conditions allow, it plans to sell a further 11% of the Nigerian business to local investors, Mupita said.

MTN’S total number of subscriber­s climbed 2% to 294.8 million. The company declared a final dividend of 3.30 rand a share, less than the 3.37 rand average estimate by analysts.

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