Daily Trust

MTN says divestment plan on track after H1 sales

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MTN Group Ltd is on track to meet a divestment target set in March after raising $140 million from asset sales that will slim down Africa’s largest mobile phone operator and refocus it on highgrowth markets.

MTN is reviewing a raft of investment­s under a three-year, 15 billion rand ($996 million) divestment plan that includes shedding loss-making e-commerce assets and exiting countries where it has no prospect of reaching first or second place by market share.

In the first half through June it sold its shareholde­r loan in ATC Ghana to American Tower Corp for 900 million rand and its interests in investment fund Amadeus and booking website Travelstar­t for 1.2 billion rand.

It has cut its stake in newly-listed Jumia Technologi­es to 18.9% from 29.7% after the listing and is in the process of redeeming MTN Nigeria preference shares for $315 million.

“So we’re well on track for our 15 billion rand (target),” Chief Executive Rob Shuter told reporters on Thursday.

The South African firm’s plan to dispose of its minority stake in Mascom Wireless Botswana for $300 million should be concluded in the second half.

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MTN shares, which rose on Wednesday to their highest in a year, were down 2.1% by 1331 GMT against a 1% rise in Johannesbu­rg’s Top 40 index.

In the six months through June, group service revenue rose 9.7% to 67.8 billion rand in constant currency terms, led by voice, data and financial services.

Like peers, MTN has been broadening from a mobile player to offering digital and financial services in major markets while still growing its 39.7 billion rand revenue voice business.

Shuter said MTN will launch its music streaming service MusicTime in Nigeria, one of the biggest markets for music streaming, in the second half.

It has also launched its messaging app ayoba in three smaller West African markets and will expand it to other markets such as Nigeria and Ghana.

“For many years we built a network for voice consumers. We’re (now) repurposin­g it for mobile internet and we’re also repurposin­g it to service both enterprise and wholesale customers,” Shuter said. [Reuters]

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