Cape Times

World’s major mobile operators reassess African investment­s

- Loni Prinsloo and Janice Kew

BACK when African countries were auctioning off mobile licences by the boatload to serve the region’s young, tech-savvy population, investing in the continent’s fast-growing economies seemed like a no-brainer.

Some of the world’s biggest wireless carriers rushed in. Now they are wondering if they made a mistake. Increasing government and regulatory scrutiny, as well as a lack of expansion opportunit­ies in sub-Saharan Africa, are making it harder for operators such as Vodafone, Orange and Bharti Airtel to grow. Their choice: Pull back or double down.

Two companies beating at least a partial retreat are Millicom Internatio­nal Cellular, which disposed of its Senegal and Democratic Republic of Congo units, and India’s Airtel, which sold businesses in Burkina Faso and Sierra Leone to Orange earlier this year.

Reducing its exposure to Kenya, Vodafone transferre­d most of its $3.6 billion (R48.14bn) stake in Nairobi-based Safaricom to majority-owned South African unit Vodacom in May, and may pare further. That leaves Vodafone Ghana as the UK company’s sole own-branded African operation.

“At this point it is becoming clear who has a chance of making it in Africa and who does not, and it essentiall­y boils down to scale, as well as government sway,” said Baha Makarem, an analyst at Arqaam Capital.

Sentiment “It’s just a question of who is ready to weather the storm.” The shift in sentiment comes as government­s across sub-Saharan Africa are losing favour with investors.

The fall in commodity prices has reduced tax revenue in many countries, and average economic growth slumped to 1.4 percent last year from 3.4 percent in 2015, according to the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund.

That has encouraged lawmakers in countries including Tanzania and Ghana to look to internatio­nal companies for revenue opportunit­ies – both have ordered foreign wireless carriers to cede shares to local investors.

“The regulatory challenges are top of our mind at all times,” MTN chairperso­n Phuthuma Nhleko said at the annual meeting of Africa’s biggest wireless carrier in May. “It’s just part of the environmen­t in which we operate.”

Nhleko has first-hand experience with that. A Nigerian watchdog fined the carrier $5.2bn in 2015 for missing a deadline to disconnect unregister­ed subscriber­s, leading to a slump in the share price that is yet to turn around.

The penalty was reduced to $1bn after months of negotiatio­ns and Nhleko has since overhauled management and corporate governance.

Even so, MTN was fined $8.5 million in Rwanda in May for non-compliance with its licence obligation­s. The company has not yet delivered on a promise to list its Nigerian unit in Lagos.

Vodacom, 70 percent owned by Vodafone, has complied with Tanzania’s demand to sell shares on the Dar es Salaam stock exchange.

It had to delay the listing when a surge in demand from retail investors slowed the processing of applicatio­ns from outside the country.

IPOs are the only way to force the wireless carriers to share their profits with local investors in the East African country, Tanzanian President John Magufuli said last month, adding that licences could be withdrawn if they refuse the order.

Revenue Not everyone is down on Africa, where GSMA Intelligen­ce expects mobile revenue will reach $43bn in 2020. Orange, France’s market leader, in February called Africa a priority region and has focused most of its investment in French-speaking markets such as Cameroon and Ivory Coast.

That is partly to offset stagnating growth in Europe and to take advantage of a younger population demanding faster and cheaper data, according to Bruno Mettling, the Parisbased company’s head of operations on the continent.

A lack of obsolete infrastruc­ture that would need to be removed or upgraded is also underlying the business case, he said.

Some operators “are withdrawin­g from Africa in the face of the enormous investment­s to be made – 3G, 4G, but also in the fibre to connect the antennas to each other,” Mettling said. “At Orange, we invest an average of €1bn (R15.24bn) in Africa each year.”

Areas of expansion for Orange include mobile banking, where Nairobi-based Safaricom blazed a trail with its M-Pesa product in Kenya. Orange Money reported a 74 percent increase in customers, to more than 30 million, in the first quarter, and plans to extend the service into its home market this year.

Orange’s francophon­e markets have so far stopped short of ordering share sales to local investors. Vodacom is another considerin­g further expansion following the Safaricom deal. Lower prices The tougher market and increasing willingnes­s of some rivals to sell may have brought down prices, chief executive Shameel Joosub said at the company’s results presentati­on in May.

“The days of you going in with a new greenfield licence are gone,” Joosub said. The price of potential acquisitio­n targets is, however, “becoming more reasonable,” and there “are not that many buyers.”

The first wave of second-generation digital mobile licences in Africa started in the late 1990s, with Nigeria being one of the last countries to issue its first permit in 2001.

While those markets have since been growing – more than half the continent’s population is seen owning a smartphone by 2020 – the only country yet to auction licences is Ethiopia.

“Africa is a market of growth, but also a very difficult environmen­t to operate,” said Dobek Pater, managing director of Pretoria-based Africa Analysis. “Costs of operation are often high, disposable income levels of large segments of the society low, and the regulatory environmen­t not always predictabl­e. Only companies with “increasing economies of scale will succeed.” – Bloomberg

 ?? PHOTO: LEON NICHOLAS ?? MTN chief executive Phuthuma Nhleko presenting their interim results in May at Fairlands, Roodepoort.
PHOTO: LEON NICHOLAS MTN chief executive Phuthuma Nhleko presenting their interim results in May at Fairlands, Roodepoort.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa