Business Day

MTN may not seek Lagos IPO

- Loni Prinsloo

MTN Group, the wireless carrier facing a combined $10bn in claims from authoritie­s in Nigeria, says it may no longer seek to raise capital through an initial public offering (IPO) on that country’s stock exchange.

MTN Group, the wireless carrier facing a combined $10bn in claims from authoritie­s in Nigeria, says it may no longer seek to raise capital through an initial public offering on that country’s stock exchange.

Africa’s largest mobile carrier was considerin­g other ways to have its stock traded in Lagos, including what is known as an introducti­on, in which existing shares are listed, CFO Ralph Mupita said in an interview in Johannesbu­rg.

MTN’s board still had to make a final decision, he said.

“The IPO type of listing has become challengin­g under current market conditions,” Mupita said. “We are exploring other options. The Nigerian business would not get fair value under current market conditions.” A listing by introducti­on was the simplest way forward, he said.

MTN could complete the listing in its biggest market by the end of this year or first quarter of 2019, the CFO said.

The company’s stock has plunged in the wake of a dispute with the central bank over the repatriati­on of $8.1bn out of Nigeria and a separate tussle over $2bn in back taxes. Listing the business in Lagos forms part of a settlement two years ago over unregister­ed SIM cards, when MTN negotiated a $5.2bn fine down to about $1bn.

“We have sought legal protection for our Nigerian business and a judge has been appointed for upcoming hearings,” Mupita said. Nigeria’s central bank said last week said it was considerin­g new informatio­n provided by MTN and four banks into the outflows and that it expected to resolve the matter soon.

MTN’s shares pared an earlier gain of as much as 3.7% to trade 2.3% higher at R89.59 at 3:57pm in Johannesbu­rg on Monday. In the weeks after Nigerian authoritie­s challenged the transfer of funds, MTN plunged 35%, but the stock has since recovered about half of that drop. “That cost our shareholde­rs $5.5bn,” said Mupita.

MTN’s investor base is about 44% South African. Other major shareholde­rs are in the US, UK, Europe and the Middle East.

MTN still sees a great business case for Nigeria, Africa’s most populous country, with less than a third of users on the internet, Mupita said.

“We are engaging with authoritie­s and investors and hope to reach a speedy resolution on the matter, to deal with the overhang on our share and the concerns of shareholde­rs about Nigeria’s investment climate,” Mupita said.

Nigerian authoritie­s are changing their tone after coming under criticism that the impasse with MTN and lenders including Citigroup, Standard Chartered, Standard Bank Group and Lagos-based Diamond Bank threatened to spook investors.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa