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Technology Stocks : Africa - The Wireless Frontier -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: waitwatchwander who wrote (168)3/14/2012 4:51:19 PM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 180
 
MTN has no operations in Angola. UNITEL and MOVICEL, both local enterprises, divide the market.



To: waitwatchwander who wrote (168)3/15/2012 1:24:41 AM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 180
 
Angola oil concessions
berkeley.edu




To: waitwatchwander who wrote (168)3/15/2012 1:29:20 AM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 180
 
Africa: 10 cities to watch
March 14, 2012 2:37 pm by Keyur Patel



Everyone is talking up Africa’s potential for growth – but in a continent with more than a billion people, where should foreign companies focus their attention?

According to research by Frontier Strategy Group, Africa will have 73 cities of 1-5m people by 2025. Matthew Spivack, head of MENA research, picks out five top urban markets across the continent – and five up-and-coming prospects. Some are very well-known; others may surprise you.

First, the ‘Big 5' - cities which are broadly politically and economically-stable, and already major FDI destinations. They are:

- Accra, Ghana
- Johannesburg, South Africa
- Lagos, Nigeria
- Luanda, Angola
- Nairobi, Kenya

No major surprises here. Johannesburg is the biggest city in sub-Saharan Africa’s leading economy, and, as Frontier notes, is reaching the size of a large European city. Its nominal ‘GDP’ output is $51bn; Munich, in Germany, has a GDP of $64bn.

Lagos has a smaller economy, at $40bn – but that is expected to jump when Nigeria rebases its economic statistics this year. By 2015, Frontier says, “risk-weighted business opportunities in Lagos will far outpace that of the city’s nearest competitor” (Johannesburg).

It’s the ‘Next 5' – large cities with rapidly expanding economies, but serious business climate deficiencies – that offer some of the biggest potential rewards – provided multinationals can stomach the risks. They are:

- Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
- Dar es Salaam, Tanzania
- Ibadan, Nigeria
- Kinshasa, Congo-DRC
- Mombasa, Kenya

Some of the world’s largest companies have already made inroads into these economies. Diaego, one of the world’s largest brewing companies, paid $225m for Ethiopia’s state-owned brewer Meta Abo last year, to tap into Addis Ababa’s growing consumer market. What’s more, the African Union is headquartered in the city, making it the political capital of Africa, Frontier says. That’s a bit of a stretch, but the business buzz in Addis is undeniable.

Fellow beer group Heineken is spending $325m in Kinshasa, Congo’s capital. Frontier says: “while poverty and an underdeveloped infrastructure reduce market size in Kinshasa, staggering population growth and consistently higheconomic growth means the city of 10 million cannot remain ignored by many MNCs.”

Dar es Salaam, Tanzania’s largest city, arguably offers the best investment prospects of all. Taking into account its size, short-term stability and growth, Frontier ranks it as the third best risk-weighted business opportunity in all of Africa by 2015.

An emerging trade hub in east Africa, it is increasingly handling more cargo than Mombasa, the region’s other sea trade centre. And Japanese carmaker Honda Motor has recently shown an interest, teaming up with a Tanzanian company and preparing to build an assembly plant to expand sales in the city.

There are risks to expanding in all of these markets, of course – Frontier highlights the usual concerns about infrastructure, corruption, and regulation. But Africa is the fastest growing and most rapidl



To: waitwatchwander who wrote (168)10/29/2012 5:26:29 AM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 180
 
VimpelCom will sell several of its emerging market businesses in Africa and Asia as part of a rationalisation of its global telecoms operations to focus on core growth areas.

The Russian telecoms group, which is the world’s sixth largest by customer numbers, has spoken to potential buyers of its sub-Saharan African units from Burundi and the Central African Republic.

It is also expected to sell its Zimbabwean business – Telecel Zimbabwe – after resolving outstanding ownership and licensing issues.

The three businesses could be valued at more than $60m, according to one person with knowledge of the situation, with about $94m of revenues generated from about 2.8m mobile subscribers across the businesses.

The move is part of a strategy to focus on more mature markets such as Russia and Italy, which make up about 70 per cent of the group’s business.

In Asia, VimpelCom is lining up the sale of its three businesses in Cambodia, where it has more than 1m subscribers, and in Laos, which has about 400,000 subscribers. Including Vietnam, which has already been sold, the unit generated revenues of $69m last year.

VimpelCom created five distinct business units spanning the world following a series of large acquisitions including the purchase of a controlling stake in Italy’s Wind Telecom for $6bn in April last year.

The five decentralised units – Europe and North America, Russia, Ukraine, the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS), and Africa and Asia – all report to headquarters in Amsterdam.

But the company is now focusing on increasing core earnings and reducing debt. Standard Chartered is advising VimpelCom on the review.

People with knowledge of the strategy said that it was seeking to create a more unified “story” around the telecoms group, which has been criticised by analysts as resembling more of a collection of disparate telecoms assets than a cohesive operator with resulting synergies.

Interest in the African assets has mainly come from telecoms groups looking to buy a first foothold in the markets, he people said. In Asia on the other hand there have been talks with companies already present in the markets seeking to consolidate their position.

Such markets are challenging but also offer potentially high growth given low levels of mobile phone penetration. In Laos, 3G services were launched last year with data bundles offered to customers, and are already present in Zimbabwe and Burundi.

VimpelCom will keep key growth emerging market businesses such as in Algeria – where it is in negotiations with the government over the future ownership structure of its Djezzy business – as well as Pakistan and Bangladesh.

The company has been at the centre of an ownership battle between its largest shareholders, Norway’s Telenor and Russia’s Altimo.



To: waitwatchwander who wrote (168)11/26/2012 12:20:06 PM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 180
 
Kenya: Scramble for Safaricom Shares

BY ALY KHAN SATCHU, 12 NOVEMBER 2012

On Monday last week, I was on Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington participating in a panel at the World Bank. One of my co-panellists was Jacqueline Novogratz [The CEO and founder of the Acumen Fund] and she said; 'Kenya is a Leader at bringing technology to the bottom of the pyramid.'

And as I flew back I was keenly anticipating Safaricom's half year earnings release. I was certain the results were going to be muscular and as I entered the Michael Joseph Centre, I found the chairman Nicholas Nganga, Michael Joseph and of course, Bob Collymore and all of them were exuding a level of confidence that was a message all of its of its own and the highest I had witnessed since the share was listed at the Nairobi Securities many moons ago. The signal was loud and clear through the noise of the pre-action before Bob read out the Results.

The earnings tape read as follows. Profit before tax increased by 113 per cent to Sh11.5 billion, profit after tax increased by 94 per cent to Sh7.8 billion, total revenue increased +21.72 per cent to 59.118 billion, voice revenue grew +18.84 per cent to 37.422 billion, M-Pesa revenue +32.32% to 10.427 billion.

The previous 1st Half in 2012 had been a brutal one when the competition had been at its most irrational so I admit there is some flattery in the comparison but it would be churlish not to recognise that these numbers confirm the machine has changed gears and that the captain [who likes flying helicopters] has gotten lift off.

Total customers grew 6.51 per cent to 19.211 million, M-Pesa registered customers now total 15.23 million, Average Revenue Per User [ARPU] increased +11.8 per cent, Voice ARPU was +11.07 per cent, M-Pesa ARPU +25.66 per cent, mobile broadband ARPU eased -16.75 per cent as Safaricom began to chase customers more aggressively.

The tape is your elescope said Edwin Lefevre in his book reminiscences of a Stock Market Operator and that rule is a constant and the earnings tape released by Safaricom confirms that Bob Collymore has now put his stamp on this business.

The stock market had its first opportunity to react on Friday and promptly rallied Safaricom 7.9 per cent higher to close at 4.80 and this is a 22 month closing high and the last time the price was here was in January 2011. Safaricom is +70.169% this Year and is all set to cross 5.00.

Coincidental with the Safaricom earnings release, Bharti Airtel announced its 11th consecutive quarter of profit decline and that losses in its Africa operations widened to 5.39 billion rupees from 4.27 billion rupees a year earlier.

And in that comparison, between Safaricom and Bharti Airtel, you understand that captain Bob has lifted Safaricom above the turbulence and into a deep Blue sky. Sun Tzu said: "Ultimate excellence lies not in winning every battle, but in defeating the enemy without ever fighting."

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To: waitwatchwander who wrote (168)3/7/2017 10:29:39 AM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 180
 
busy analysing if China Mobile operators are coming on a buying spree.
They have made tepid moves before.

China Mobile hasn't bid for South Africa's MTN, president says

Published: May 8, 2008 4:21 a.m. ET

marketwatch.com

But this week news made me think if the Chinese want to go on a mobile operator buying spree.

Investment bankers circle MTN as woes hammer its share price

With MTN's share price plunging 55% from its peak on rising regulatory burdens, difficult operating environments in places such as Syria and ever-increasing competition in its domestic market, industry insiders are touting the prospects of corporate activity around the mobile operator that is Africa's biggest.

Investment bankers are said to be circling the group chaired by Phuthuma Nhleko as both a potential takeover target by an international player and an acquirer itself. Africa remains one of the few growth spots in an increasingly maturing mobile market.

"Consolidation in this market is a logical and value-adding move for the sector," a company insider said this week, cautioning that in the markets in which it operates the group faced a challenge in getting the approval of competition authorities.

The insider said the company, which operates in 22 countries across the continent and in the Middle East, has attracted interest from investment bankers, although no firm offer was tabled.

"People talk to us on an ongoing basis," the person said, adding that they "talk among themselves without us knowing".

MTN's share price has fallen about 35% since it announced details of its bruising regulatory battle with the Nigerian Communications Commission over unregistered sim cards in October 2015.

At R125, the share is trading at levels last seen seven years ago.

Wayne McCurrie, fund manager at Ashburton Investments, said that at its current valuation MTN was cheap enough to be considered for a takeover.

A potential buyer could get away with an offer of R150 or R160 a share as it would be "a long haul to get MTN into shape".

From a long-term range of about 10 years or more, McCurrie said there was still much value a buyer could extract.

Apart from its regulatory headaches in Nigeria - further complicated by that country's economy struggling because of low oil prices - MTN has faced rising competition in its domestic market from smaller rival Vodacom and a resurgent Telkom.

MTN had been on the back foot in terms of investments in its infrastructure because of management's focus on its regulatory issues, said Alastair Jones, analyst at London-based New Street Research. "They [MTN] tend to react to competition ... there's been significant management changes. We'll have to see how shareholders will benefit from that."

Since Nhleko's return to lead MTN through the battle with Nigeria's regulatory authorities in November 2015 as executive chairman, the company has appointed a chief executive officer, chief financial officer and chief operating officer among a host of other appointments.

On whether there would be interest in acquiring MTN, Jones - who has had a "reduce" recommendation on the stock since September - said it would be "difficult" for an international operator to convince its shareholders to back a bid, given the challenges MTN faces.

"It's not materially expensive, but certainly not cheap given the challenges it faces ... it would be very difficult."

Kate Turner-Smith, research analyst at BPI Capital Africa, said that if MTN were to be absorbed by an international player another issue from a competition perspective would be the "validity of transferring spectrum licences". These relate to radio-frequency spectrum, which is necessary to offer products dependent on advanced and high-speed technology.

MTN was the subject of merger talks in the late 2000s at least three times. These failed for various reasons.

Previous merger talks included a $23-billion tie-up with India's Bharti Airtel which failed in 2009 after South African authorities allegedly scuppered the deal.

A year later, the mobile operator bid for the African assets of Orascom Telecom, based in the Middle East, but the Algerian government denied approval. Four years ago, there was talk about a renewed merger with another Indian firm, Reliance, but this also fell by the wayside.

Domestically, speculation around a possible deal with the Sipho Maseko-led Telkom has been the order of the day since the group failed with a 2007 bid for the fixed-line assets of what was then a much-troubled state-controlled player. There was renewed speculation about two years ago on a possible tie-up, but it did not materialise.

Consolidation has been a key feature of the local market in recent months with the fate of Cell C taking centre stage.

This week, the struggling and smallest of South Africa's mobile operators secured support for a R5.5-billion bid by Blue Label.

The third-largest mobile operator won support from creditors to push ahead with a debt-restructuring deal involving Blue Label, and in the process fended off a potential rival bid from Telkom.



To: waitwatchwander who wrote (168)3/15/2017 1:53:14 AM
From: elmatador  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 180
 
MTN: What next for Africa’s $17bn telecoms group?

The continent’s largest operator has struggled after a hefty fine in Nigeria. Now a new CEO aims to revive its fortunes

YESTERDAY by: Maggie Fick and Joseph Cotterill

As TV screens in Abuja flickered with footage of xenophobic mobs in South Africa attacking Nigerian-owned businesses, a group of angry young men sought revenge. But rather than attack the South African embassy in the Nigerian capital, they targeted instead the offices of Johannesburg-listed MTN, the biggest telecoms operator in Africa.

“South Africans insult us and they think they do us good,” says Aruna Kadiri, head of a student group involved in looting and vandalising the office. “We will survive on our own.”

The incident last month highlighted simmering tensions between the two most powerful countries on the continent. But for MTN it exposed something more: the problems it faces in its most important overseas market.

Days after the ransacking, MTN revealed its first ever annual loss, of R1.4bn ($107m). It came after an 18-month period in which its share price slipped 40 per cent, wiping $10bn off its value, largely due to its woes in Nigeria. On Monday a new chief executive, Rob Shuter, took over with the task of turning round the business, valued at more than $17bn, and bringing to an end what the company has itself described as the “most challenging” year in its history.

Crucial to that, for a company with a presence in many of the world’s toughest emerging markets, is Nigeria. Of MTN’s 240m subscribers, a quarter are in the west African country, driving a third of its $11bn sales last year.

Nigeria was once the engine of growth for a business viewed as a rare success story among black-owned and managed companies in post-apartheid South Africa. Now it stands as the clearest example of why MTN’s progress has stalled — underlined by its battered share price, which rises and falls in tandem with the volatile Nigerian currency and global oil prices.

MTN is still suffering the fallout from a $5.2bn fine levelled against it by Nigerian authorities in 2015, for failing to disconnect unregistered mobile lines. The prosecution exposed a failure of governance,as the company made ever bolder plays to bring mobile coverage to countries ranging from Iran — where it was unsuccessfully sued by a Turkish rival, Turkcell, over claims that it secured its mobile licence in the country corruptly — to Syria and Afghanistan. MTN denied the allegations.

In South Africa, which together with Nigeria makes up 70 per cent of the landline and mobile operator’s profits, subscriber growth has stalled, growing less than 1 per cent in 2016 to just under 31m. Vodacom, its local rival, briefly eclipsed MTN’s market capitalisation last year despite having only a quarter of its subscribers. The companies are competing to roll out lucrative mobile internet services to sell to existing users instead of chasing new ones, but the investment in data is expensive and MTN is racing to catch up.

“The fine was a symptom of wider problems both at MTN and for Nigeria rather than a cause of those problems,” says a telecoms analyst who has covered the company for years. “MTN had become complacent and was slow to adapt to a maturing industry and changing dynamics in Nigeria.”

MTN has invested more than $16bn in the west African country since acquiring a licence in 2001, when Nigeria had less than half a million landlines and was one of the least connected nations in the world. Over the next decade it enjoyed a period of explosive growth in mobile phone usage across Africa, and especially Nigeria. As the price of oil soared in the 2000s, so did MTN’s shares, from R21 in 2004 to a peak of R260 in September 2014 — just as the crude market collapsed, sending Nigeria’s oil-dependent economy spiralling into recession.

MTN’s crash back to earth in Nigeria was abrupt. In October 2015, just six months after taking office, the government of President Muhammadu Buhari fined the company the equivalent of more than double its projected net income for the year after accusing it of failing to heed an order to disconnect unregistered sim cards, some of which were being used by Boko Haram insurgents committing acts of terrorism in the country.

MTN paid the government $1.7bn to settle the case last year and agreed to list its local operation on the Nigerian Stock Exchange as soon as possible — likely to be 2018 at the earliest. For the Buhari administration the fine was a warning to companies operating in the country to obey the law. But a person familiar with MTN said the company had argued that the problem of unregistered sim cards could not be addressed until Nigeria had a functioning national identification system. MTN offered, says the person, to share its experience with sim registration in other challenging environments such as Syria.

“At the end of the day, from a security perspective, was anything learned?” the person asks. “They [Abuja] were just focused on the penalty, on punishment, not on learning lessons.”

MTN still has more than 50 per cent market share by subscribers in the country of more than 180m people, but the shockwaves from the fine, and the resentment toward the company as a symbol of South Africa are still being felt. It faces a fresh investigation by Nigerian lawmakers over alleged tax dodging and illegal repatriation of profits of $13.9bn in the decade to 2016. MTN has denied any wrongdoing.

Phuthuma Nhleko, the executive chairman who ran MTN during a period of explosive growth and drove its aggressive expansion into 22 countries across Africa, the Middle East and Asia, was asked to return as chief executive for an interim period until Mr Shuter’s arrival. He told investors earlier this month that the company would “hit the reset button”, including putting in place a “second layer between the group and the various countries at the regional level” to improve scrutiny of its operations.

Announcing the 2016 results, Mr Nhleko said “MTN is still the number-one brand” in most of the countries where it operates. “There’s a lot to leverage there.”

But it faces fierce competition not just in its home market but from other operators in Africa that have been quick to shift their focus to selling more lucrative mobile data rather than call-time.

  • 240m Total MTN subscribers — 25% of whom are in Nigeria
  • $11bn MTN sales in 2016, a third of which comes from Nigeria
  • $107m 2016 loss reported by MTN last month, the first in its two-decade history
  • $5.2bn MTN’s Nigerian fine in 2015. It paid $1.7bn to settle the case and agreed to list its local operation in Lagos
  • $13.9bn Sum Nigerian lawmakers have accused MTN of illegally repatriating in profits in the decade to 2016
  • $730m Estimated value of last year’s share scheme to raise black ownership of MTN above 30%
In Nigeria, MTN’s ability to roll out more of this data capacity is hampered by having to spend US dollars on expensive kit, such as towers, while earning weakened naira from its operations. The company’s earnings margin in Nigeria (before tax, interest, depreciation and amortisation) has fallen from more than 58 per cent in 2014 to below 47 per cent last year — underlining both how profitable the country has been for MTN, but also the difficulty it will have turning around operations while Nigeria’s currency continues to weaken.

“Nigeria is the number-one priority,” says a Johannesburg-based businessman close to Mr Nhleko. “Shuter has never been to Nigeria. His first [issue] is to understand the traditional prejudice of Nigerians against South Africans who they think behave like they can give lessons to the rest of Africa.”

The company’s importance in South Africa’s recent history cannot be overstated. Only one in 100 black South Africans owned a phone line when MTN was set up in 1994 — the year apartheid ended and Nelson Mandela was elected as president.

Bidding for the first mobile licences to be issued by the young democracy, the group, created by black empowerment company New Africa Investments, was in the right place at the right time.

The African National Congress government was just beginning to shift key industries away from white-minority ownership. MTN quickly became a byword for those advocating more black-owned or run businesses.

When it looked at international expansion, just four years after it launched, the South African government gave its blessing. Even today, precious few of the South African companies that have made the leap outside the country — mostly miners like African Rainbow Minerals — are black-owned.

Political support became even more obvious in 2009, when Pretoria’s Treasury blocked an attempt by India’s Bharti Airtel to buy MTN in a $24bn deal.

Today the company’s largest shareholder with a 16 per cent stake is the Public Investment Corporation, the investment manager for pension funds of mostly black government employees. And as it pursues a turnround, MTN is under pressure not to backslide on empowerment — epitomised by the reaction to the recruitment of Mr Shuter, a white South African hired from Vodafone’s European operation last year. It was described by the Black Management Forum, a lobby group, as “a serious blow to transformation” that showed a “lack of thoughtfulness” from MTN’s black directors.

MTN countered that “while transformation will always be important”, it also had to focus on innovation and remain competitive. The statement reflected the tension in being both an avatar of empowerment at home and a global company more than half of whose shares are held outside of South Africa.

The company has renewed a scheme to put more of its shares in black investors’ hands, offering a 4 per cent stake worth R9.9bn ($730m) to lift black ownership of the company’s South African operations above 30 per cent. That threshold, which includes indirectly held shares, would allow the company to bid for South Africa’s radio-frequency spectrum in an auction later this year — part of an effort to roll out access to faster internet services on its network and overcome slowing growth at home.

But questions persist over whether MTN’s status as a national champion is hampering its ability to recognise problems in international markets, and foster local executives to deal with them. In hiring Mr Shuter — and replacing other group board-level executives — MTN is trying to respond to shareholder criticism over its management of such risks.

“It is disappointing when our investee companies are found to have transgressed the law,” says Deon Botha, a PIC spokesman, adding that it had “engaged with management at MTN to impress on them that compliance with the law is a high priority and that their risk management should be strengthened”.

This could help the group learn and improve its relationships with regulators in other countries where it operates, observers say.

One Lagos-based lawyer familiar with the Nigerian regulators and MTN’s local business is more blunt. “The MTN corporate culture is from black empowerment in South Africa. Because of the apartheid days, all they needed to do was say [to the authorities], ‘look, we are black, we want a telecoms company’, and that’s it [they got it].”

Officials in Abuja stress they do not want MTN to leave Nigeria. “I would be an irresponsible minister if MTN is scared away,” says Adebayo Shittu, minister of communications. “We must give every company every protection, and when they go amiss, we beat them to order [punish appropriately]. But of course when you have a headache the solution is not to cut off the head.”

Data: MTN makes a digital pitch in a bid for future growth
While it grapples with a currency crisis and political fallout in Nigeria alongside a slowdown in South Africa — the two countries that drive its current profitability — other markets and sectors offer a glimpse of where MTN wants to be in the future.

It is the largest distributor of digital music in Africa; a fast-growing mobile lender in Uganda and Zambia; and in Iran — its second-biggest market by subscribers after Nigeria — the company owns stakes in both the country’s biggest e-commerce operator and Snapp, the homegrown answer to Uber.

Underlining the shift towards sectors such as mobile payments, the new chief executive, Rob Shuter, has a background in financial services, having worked for South African banks as much as in telecoms.

Although they remain small and largely lossmaking, it is these fast-growing digital operations that MTN would prefer investors to focus on. The shift to these services, away from traditional money-spinners such as selling voice airtime, is critical to MTN’s turnround. It also underlines how the data revolution is catching up with unwary players even in emerging markets, requiring expensive capital investment to stay ahead.

Television ads and billboards in MTN’s home market, South Africa, trumpet the 180m calls it places each day but also that its fourth-generation mobile network, offering faster data speeds, now covers 27m users.

Across the 22 countries in which it operates, MTN derived 27 per cent of its revenues last year from selling data, up from 23 per cent in 2015. In the relatively mature South African market, data’s share was 34 per cent, with MTN investing R11bn ($830m) in the country last year to expand capacity.

But two-thirds of MTN users in the country are still without smartphones, compared with half of the subscribers of Cell C, an aggressive smaller rival that is raising cash to expand. Rather than South Africa or Nigeria, the market where MTN has achieved most smartphone penetration is Iran, at more than half the nearly 48m subscribers in the country.

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