Cape Times

MTN plans further growth in Iran

Profit repatriati­on has begun

- Nqobile Dludla

MTN GROUP, Africa’s biggest cellphone company, is planning to expand in Iran, from where it has only just managed to begin repatriati­ng profits.

The move is part of MTN’s 10-year plan to cement its leading position in risky but lucrative frontier markets in the Middle East and Africa, where it aggressive­ly expanded a decade ago.

But setbacks in Nigeria have knocked MTN’s share price and drawn sharper scrutiny of its hunt for returns in politicall­y unstable and economical­ly fragile markets.

Excited “We’re very excited about Iran and the possibilit­ies there,” MTN’s newly appointed head of strategy, mergers and acquisitio­ns, Stephen van Coller, said in an interview. “That digital economy in Iran is going to move fast.”

The company had been unable to repatriate its accumulate­d dividends until recently. It said in October it had started receiving the cash and this process would take at least six months.

Another potential risk is US president-elect Donald Trump’s threat to scrap the nuclear agreement with Iran, which could bring back secondary sanctions on non-US entities.

Asked if Trump’s win could deter or impact further investment in Iran, Coller said: “That’s a tough question, I don’t know really.”

A potential risk is US president-elect Donald Trump’s threat to scrap the nuclear agreement with Iran.

MTN, which has set aside about $700 million (R9.73 billion) in capital expenditur­e that includes revamping its network in Iran, is also looking to expand its services to include rapidly expanding its e-commerce offering in a country where it has already invested $22m in Snapp, a Tehran-based taxi-hailing app.

“While our presence in Iran’s e-commerce space is still relatively nascent, it is growing rapidly, particular­ly in the retail and travel sectors,” Coller said.

MTN also has a joint venture with Germany’s Rocket Internet , which invests in tech start-ups in the Middle East.

Many internatio­nal companies have sought to capitalise on the opening up of the region’s second-largest economy since internatio­nal sanctions against Iran were lifted in January after Tehran agreed to curtail its nuclear programme.

With a young population and high levels of mobile ownership, Iran is seen as an opportunit­y for telecoms companies. “As those restraints get lifted you will see that economy grow really quickly. It’s almost like South Africa in 1994 in a way,” Coller said. – Reuters

 ?? PHOTO: BLOOMBERG ?? Mobile handsets and smartphone­s on display inside an MTN Group telecoms store in Hyde Park, Johannesbu­rg. MTN is still sore about the fine it received in Nigeria, but now has plans to expand further in Iran.
PHOTO: BLOOMBERG Mobile handsets and smartphone­s on display inside an MTN Group telecoms store in Hyde Park, Johannesbu­rg. MTN is still sore about the fine it received in Nigeria, but now has plans to expand further in Iran.
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