Cape Times

Vodacom has added 2.5m more customers

Subscriber­s surge to 39m

- Kabelo Khumalo

LISTED telecoms giant Vodacom, buoyed by the recent acquisitio­n of Kenyan mobile operator Safaricom for R35 billion, has set its sights on growing its footprint in the rest of Africa as its home market subscriber number surged by 2.3 million to 39million in the quarter to June.

In total the group added 2.5 million customers in the period, 280 000 in its internatio­nal operations to reach a total customer base of more than 70 million across the group.

Shameel Joosub, Vodacom Group chief executive, said although its internatio­nal operations had turned the corner, currency volatility was still negatively impacting the translatio­n of its results.

“We now have 30 million customers outside of South Africa, an increase of 12 percent. Following the shareholde­r approval of the acquisitio­n of a stake in Safaricom on July 18, this will further boost contributi­on outside of South Africa,” Joosub said.

Earlier this week the company said its minority shareholde­rs had approved its deal to acquire 34.9 percent of Safaricom in a transactio­n that would see Vodafone increase its interest in the Vodacom Group to 69.6percent.

Safaricom provides a range of telecommun­ications services, including mobile and fixed voice, SMS, data, the internet and mobile money (M-Pesa) to more than 28.1million customers. Its M-Pesa service reaches more than 19 million customers.

The company said yesterday that its deal with Safaricom was expected to be effective from the beginning of next month. It cancelled the M-Pesa offering in South Africa last year after the service proved to be unpopular with customers, but said the service continued to make attraction in its other African markets.

The group’s M-Pesa internatio­nal offerings revenue increased 7.4 percent, with normalised growth of 24.9 percent. It attributed this growth to the addition of 350 000 new customers in the quarter to reach a total of 13.3 million customers.

Joosub said the company would continue to enhance its service and product eco-systems and develop innovative products to improve customer experience. “In Tanzania, 1 million customers are using our successful M-Pawa savings and loans product, developed in partnershi­p with the Commercial Bank of Africa.

“There has also been a steady uptake of our Internatio­nal Money Transfer services. During the quarter, on average, R22bn was processed monthly through the M-Pesa system.”

In the quarter under review, the group’s revenue grew 3.9 percent to R20.7bn, while its service revenue grew 1.7 percent to R17.1bn.

It said its South African revenue growth accelerate­d to 7.8percent in the period, supported by stronger device sales. However, the internatio­nal revenue declined 8.2 percent and service revenue declined 8 percent, while normalised for currency fluctuatio­ns, revenue and service revenue increased 8 percent in the period under review.

The group sold 553million prepaid and contract bundles in the quarter, up 68.3 percent, with the number of bundle users increasing by 25.7 percent to 17.8 million. Its South African data revenue grew 18.1 percent to R5.5bn, contributi­ng 42.2 percent of the group’s total service revenue in the period.

It said it added 463 000 4G customers in the quarter, reaching a total of 5.5million customers as devices became more affordable.

Data revenue from its internatio­nal operations grew by 2.2 percent, with normalised growth of 18.9 percent, supported by an increase of 810000 data customers, up to 13.8million, while data traffic grew 87 percent. Data revenue comprised 27.1 percent of internatio­nal operations’ service revenue.

Joosub said the company would continue to make substantia­l investment­s in all its operations so that it maintained its network lead and informatio­n technology advantage

“We remain cognisant of the weaker economic conditions that prevail in South Africa as well as some of our larger markets and have put measures in place should these conditions deteriorat­e materially in these markets.”

 ?? PHOTO: BLOOMBERG ?? The headquarte­rs of Vodacom Group in Johannesbu­rg. The group wants to grow in the rest of Africa.
PHOTO: BLOOMBERG The headquarte­rs of Vodacom Group in Johannesbu­rg. The group wants to grow in the rest of Africa.
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