- Loud, Quiet, or Contextual? What European and African Consumer Behaviour Reveals About Status, History and Power
- Property Investment in Uncertain Times: How to Maximise Returns in a Shifting Economy - Eva August, CEO, Century 21
- Railway infrastructure is one of the solutions to Africa’s Trade Expansion - Caroline Trefault, MSC’s Intermodal Africa Manager
- The Precision Transition: Designing Africa’s power systems for reality, not abstraction
- Three weeks of conflict have tested the logic behind a rand-only portfolio - Harry Scherzer, CEO of Future Forex
MTN Nigeria Valued at $5 Billion in Lagos Stock-Exchange Listing
LAGOS (Capital Markets in Africa) – MTN Group Ltd. will list its Nigeria unit in Lagos on Thursday in a move that will value the pan-African wireless carrier’s largest business at 1.8 trillion naira ($5 billion).
The move is a step toward a partial sell down of the carrier’s majority 79% stake, and was agreed to as part of the settlement of a $1 billion regulatory fine three years ago. MTN Nigeria is the market leader in Africa’s most populous country, with about 60 million customers at the end of last year.
The price of MTN Nigeria’s shares was set at 90 naira a share, determined by referencing private sale transactions by shareholders over the past 180 business days. The true valuation of the business is uncertain due to an ongoing dispute with Nigeria’s Attorney General over a claim for $2 billion in back taxes, MTN said.
MTN has been under pressure from governments and regulators in some of its 17 African markets to transfer a greater share of its business to local investors. The company held an initial public offering of its Ghana operation last year — that country’s biggest — and is under pressure to prepare something similar in Uganda.
“The listing of MTN Nigeria deepens the equity capital markets base of the country, which makes it possible to broaden the shareholding base of MTN Nigeria over time,” the Johannesburg-based company said in a statement on Wednesday.
MTN’s shares rose 0.7% as of 11:37 a.m. in Johannesburg, valuing the company at 187 billion rand ($13 billion).
Source: Bloomberg Business News
