Cape Times

MTN’s fine by Nigeria cut to $3.4bn

Subsidiary’s top executives fall in clean-up

- Sechaba ka’Nkosi, AP and Reuters

in its investors that it was still in the game.”

Nigeria should be paid the fine by the end of the year, in four weeks’ time, MTN said. The fine will greatly boost Nigerian coffers depleted by corruption and the low price of oil. The fine amounts to onesixth of the west African nation’s 2014 budget.

The Nigerian Communicat­ions Commission (NCC) fined MTN for failing to deactivate 5.2 million unregister­ed cellphone SIM cards by an August deadline despite many warnings.

It is a national security issue in Nigeria, where law enforcers say Islamic extremists use cellphones to detonate bombs and criminals use them in kidnapping­s and armed robberies.

The regulator should order MTN to “commit to a speedier ramp up of 3G tower roll out”, money manager Vestact said in a note.

“That way the government can use the services provided by a private company to improve their fight against terrorism and corruption.”

The reduced fine still is more than the $2.6bn profit MTN says it made in Nigeria last year.

Yesterday, the shares rose 1.2 percent to R148.49 in the morning but later fell by as much as 5.5 percent before closing 4.61 percent lower at R140, which valued the company at R258.4bn.

The company still has lost almost 27 percent of its value since the fine was first announced on October 26.

MTN said Nhleko would October 26: The Nigerian Communicat­ions Authority fines MTN $5.2 billion for failing to disconnect more than 5 million unregister­ed subscriber­s. October 29: Moody’s Investors Service revises MTN’s credit rating to negative. MTN maintains Moody’s Baa2 rating, two notches above junk status. Standard & Poor’s follows suit and cuts MTN’s long-term corporate credit rating to BBB- from BBB, taking it to one notch from junk. November 9: MTN group chief executive Sifiso Dabengwa resigns. MTN chairman Phuthuma Nhleko assumes the role as acting chief executive and executive chairman. December 3: MTN Nigerian chief executive Michael Ikpoki and the head of regulator and corporate affairs, Akinwale Goodluck, resign with immediate effect. MTN announces that it has received a letter from the commission reducing its fine to $3.4bn. continue to engage with the NCC on the fine.

The group would lobby for further reductions to a fine imposed by Nigeria, a source familiar with the matter said.

“The fine is still big enough to cripple MTN’s ability to invest in its network and that’s what further talks with the NCC are about,” said one source, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

Sasha Naryshkine, a fund manager at Vestact in Johannesbu­rg, said: “I suspect that this is not a closed book.”

“(Nhleko) will no doubt be working harder to look for another reduction,” Naryshkine said.

 ?? PHOTO: SIMPHIWE MBOKAZI ?? Former MTN Nigeria chief executive Michael Ikpoki
PHOTO: SIMPHIWE MBOKAZI Former MTN Nigeria chief executive Michael Ikpoki
 ?? PHOTO: LEON NICHOLAS ?? Interim executive chairman Phuthuma Nhleko is lobbying for a lesser fine.
PHOTO: LEON NICHOLAS Interim executive chairman Phuthuma Nhleko is lobbying for a lesser fine.
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