The Mercury

MTN appoints Ralph Mupita CEO after Rob Shuter’s contract ends

- DINEO FAKU dineo.faku@inl.co.za

AFRICA’S biggest wireless company, MTN, yesterday appointed Ralph Mupita as its new chief executive in line with market expectatio­ns, given his knowledge of the company and expertise in operating in complex geographie­s.

The group said Mupita would take over in September, succeeding Rob Shuter, who will step down from his executive responsibi­lities at the end of the month after his fixed four-year contract comes to an end.

Chairperso­n Mcebisi Jonas said that after a rigorous and extensive search process, the group was pleased to have appointed someone of Mupita’s calibre and experience.

“Ralph’s experience as the group chief financial officer, strong knowledge of our businesses and markets, as well as successful background in financial services, mergers and acquisitio­ns and emerging markets, place him in an excellent position to lead the growth and sustainabi­lity of the business going forward,” said Jonas.

Mupita led Old Mutual Emerging Markets for five years prior to joining MTN. He described his appointmen­t as a privilege and honour.

“MTN Group is well positioned to take advantage of the digital accelerati­on shifts and opportunit­ies across our markets, and we are well placed to play an important and leading role in digital and financial inclusion of the African continent, working with our stakeholde­rs and partners,” said Mupita.

Experts said the appointmen­t would not result in a deviation in the group’s strategy. MTN earlier this month announced plans to withdraw from the Middle East and focus on becoming a pan-African champion.

Old Mutual Investment Group portfolio manager Ian Woodley said Mupita’s immediate focus would be to strengthen the balance sheet, hence the asset disposals, with the IHS initial public offering being the big one.

“After that, MTN has to continue to grow the business, continue to maintain the quality of its network, get approvals from regulators to expand in fintech, improve its return on equity to basically continue with the strategy of the past few years,” Woodley said.

He said it was possible that some major markets would open up as potential investment opportunit­ies, including Ethiopia, which management has frequently mentioned.

“Management has to convince the market that any investment­s it makes here will enhance returns rather than dilute the overall business.”

Mergence Investment Managers’ head of equities, Peter Takaendesa, said he believed that MTN’s board handled the succession very well this time.

“Last time they had to call Phuthuma Nhleko back into an executive position and then had to go outside to find a chief executive when they hired Rob Shuter. That implies that succession planning had failed at that stage,” said Takaendesa.

He was referring to Nhleko, the former chairperso­n, who in 2016 returned as chief executive to lead negotiatio­ns with the Nigerian government following the record fine for unregister­ed SIM cards.

Takaendesa said Mupita had worked well with Shuter over the past few years as the group’s chief financial officer. He said the role had exposed him to the key complexiti­es within the group.

MTN rose 1.41 percent on the JSE yesterday to close at R67.44.

 ?? NOKUTHULA MBATHA African News Agency (ANA) ?? RALPH Mupita will succeed Rob Shuter as MTN chief executive. |
NOKUTHULA MBATHA African News Agency (ANA) RALPH Mupita will succeed Rob Shuter as MTN chief executive. |

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