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MTN plans to redeem Nigeria Preference Shares for $315mn

 

MTN, Africa’s largest mobile network by subscribers, said on Thursday that it plans to redeem its Nigeria preference shares for $315 million as part of divestment programme across Africa and middle-East.after reporting a 9.3 per cent drop in earnings.

The MTN Group has also raised $140.24 million from asset sales as part of a divestment plan announced in March.

MTN is reviewing a raft of investments under the three-year, 15 billion rand divestment programme as it moves to focus on high-growth markets in the Middle East and Africa.

In the first half to June, it sold its shareholder loan in ATC Ghana to American Tower Corp for 900 million rand and its interests in investment fund Amadeus and booking website Travelstart for 1.2 billion rand, the firm said in a statement.

It is also in the process of redeeming MTN Nigeria preference shares for $315 million.

“So we’re well on track for our 15 billion rand (target) over three years,” Group Chief Executive Rob Shuter told reporters in a post-earnings conference call.

The South African firm’s plan to dispose of its minority stake in Mascom Wireless Botswana for $300 million is ongoing and should be concluded in the second half of the year, it said.

It has cut its stake in newly-listed Jumia Technologies AG to 18.9% from 29.7% after the listing.

Group service revenue rose 9.7% to 67.8 billion rand in constant currency terms, led by 12.2% growth in MTN Nigeria – its second biggest African market – 18.7% in MTN Ghana and 3.3% in MTN South Africa.

Service revenue in South Africa was hurt by the weak economy and changes in tariffs and subscriber regulations in the first quarter, the firm said.

New regulations require mobile operators to roll over unused data and to stop automatically giving users access to extra data once prepaid limits have been reached.

Sales were also pressured by a reassessment of revenue from a network roaming agreement with the Cell C mobile network operator, MTN added.

Headline earnings per share (HEPS), the main profit measure in South Africa, fell to 195 cents in the six months to end June from 215 cents a year earlier.

HEPS were hurt by new accounting standards, interest on fines, foreign exchange moves, hyperinflation and the depreciation of the Iranian real, which resulted in lower earnings from MTN Irancell, MTN said.

Using the previous accounting standard, HEPS grew 8.8% to 234 cents, while adjusted HEPS grew 12.1 per cent.

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