Cape Times

MTN shrugs off its Nigerian woes

No dividend payments for next six months

- Dineo Faku

AFRICA’s biggest mobile network MTN Group shrugged off its Nigerian woes yesterday and strengthen­ed 2.36 percent to close at R109.52 after the Central Bank of Nigeria instructed the country’s banks to suspend any remittance of MTN dividends until further notice.

The Nigerian bourse stance comes as authoritie­s accused the company of illegally repatriati­ng $14 billion (R195bn) from the country illegally over ten years.

MTN Nigeria said yesterday that it remained committed to the payment of the 330 billion naira (about R14bn) fine related to the late disconnect­ion of “improperly registered” SIM cards.

The company has not declared a dividend since April and MTN Nigeria had no intention to make any dividend payments over the next six months.

The Nigerian unit continued to refute the allegation that it had improperly repatriate­d funds from Nigeria, with MTN Nigeria chief executive Ferdi Moolman saying: “The allegation­s made against MTN Nigeria are completely unfounded and without any merit.”

But in its quarterly figures for September, the company beat market expectatio­ns after it reported stronger data revenue and improved subscriber numbers yesterday. Analysts said the deepening woes in Nigeria had not harmed the company and its performanc­e much.

The telecoms giant’s shares strengthen­ed almost 3.2 percent to trade at R110.11 a share on the JSE yesterday as it also said it would fast-track the starting date of its new chief executive Rob Schuter who was expected to join the company in March.

Paying off MTN group executive chairman Phuthuma Nhleko said the September results were testimony that MTN’s transforma­tion project, which initially focused on its key markets Nigeria and South Africa, with hard targets set for the next 12, 18 and 24 months, would pay off.

“Operations are expected to deliver the first results on clearly defined targets in the first half of 2017,” Nhleko said.

Nhleko also said that despite a difficult environmen­t due to weaker macro-economic conditions, particular­ly in oil-dependent economies, and the regulatory challenges experience­d, the group would benefit from the fundamenta­l changes implemente­d.

Following the hefty Nigerian fine, the company appointed senior managers, including Felleng Sekha who joined the group as executive for regulatory affairs and public this month.

Jon Tullett, the research manager at Internatio­nal Data Corporatio­n, said the September quarter results were much needed good news for the troubled operator on two levels.

“Firstly, MTN’s strong performanc­e on network is good for transition­ing from voice to data. Secondly, the accelerati­on of new chief executive is very important, they need strong establishe­d leadership to take them forward,” he said.

MTN was slapped with the record fine for unregister­ed SIM cards in Nigeria last year.

The highlights for the quarter included a 3.6 percent revenue

 ?? FILE PHOTO: LEON NICHOLAS ?? MTN brings forward its new chief executive Rob Shuter’s start date to March 2017 and suspends Nigeria dividend.
FILE PHOTO: LEON NICHOLAS MTN brings forward its new chief executive Rob Shuter’s start date to March 2017 and suspends Nigeria dividend.
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