Botswana Guardian

Africa’s largest clothing retailer taps booming phone market

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Africa’s largest clothing retailer is expanding rapidly in one of its newest segments — the sale of affordable mobile phones. Pepkor Holdings’ new chief executive officer, Pieter Erasmus, wants to build on the 12 million devices sold by the Cape Town- based company in the year through September — equivalent to 70percent of the units offloaded on a pay- asyou- go basis in the whole South African market.

He sees the business as having high potential due to the number of the company’s customers that live and work in rural or unconnecte­d parts of the continent, Erasmus said in an interview Tuesday.

“For our customers, mobile devices are the main source of communicat­ion and connectivi­ty, so it’s a real need that we are able to serve,” said the CEO, who recently started his second tenure as Pepkor’s head.

The retailer, which has more than 5 800 stores selling low- cost clothing including in some of South Africa’s smallest towns, is tapping into a pan- African boom in the use of phones for payment and banking services as well as communicat­ion. In more rural parts of the continent, transport and online access can be limited,

For our customers, mobile devices are the main source of communicat­ion and connectivi­ty, so it’s a real need that we are able to serve

Erasmus said.

Pepkor sells the handset, the SIM card and offers the needed regulatory checks through both Pep and Ackermans stores. The company then gets revenue every time a customer uses that phone. With more people switching to smartphone­s, Erasmus expects the range of services used to increase.

“These are big, fast trends and we are in a good position to participat­e,” the CEO said.

Pepkor’s Flash fintech business also offers informal traders an affordable and safe payment system and enables the company to earn money beyond regular store trading hours. The unit had 19percent growth in operating profit in the year, with more than R2.5 billion a month of payments being done through informal traders.

Pepkor earlier reported a 25percent increase in annual net income. The company lost 313 000 trading hours due to rolling blackouts imposed by South Africa’s state- owned power utility Eskom Holdings, in line with other major companies.

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