MTN shares leaps at start of $1.1 billion sale plan

The company agreed to sell its 53 percent stake in Botswana’s Mascom to Econet Wireless Zimbabwe Ltd
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MTN  Limited’s shares jumped the most in almost three years after Africa’s biggest wireless carrier started a 15 billion-rand ($1.1 billion) disposal plan to shore up the balance sheet.

The company agreed to sell its 53 percent stake in Botswana’s Mascom to Econet Wireless Zimbabwe Ltd. for $300 million, the Johannesburg-based company announced on Thursday. Other businesses now on the market include e-commerce services, which includes Nigerian online retailer, Jumia Technologies AG. and Travelstart.co.za. MTN is also looking to sell its interest in IHS Towers Ltd., the company said.

The news comes a year after Chief Executive Officer Rob Shuter announced a review of MTN’s then-22 markets across the Middle East and Africa to evaluate ways of simplifying the business and focus on the highest-earning countries. South Africa, Nigeria, Iran, Ghana and Uganda account for more than 84 percent of earnings, while some of the others, such as South Sudan and Syria, have been ravaged by conflict.  

MTN sold its Cyprus unit for 260 million euros ($294 million) last year. The shares gained 15 percent, the most since June 2016, to 87.83 rand as at publish time. The stock is still down by 28 percent in the last 12 months, valuing the carrier at 166 billion rand.

The mobile-phone company is still facing a number of challenges across its territories, with a Nigeria court hearing into an alleged unpaid tax bill of about $2 billion due later this month.
 

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MTN still plans to list its Nigeria unit in Lagos over the first half of the year.

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  • Abdulateef Ahmed

    Abdulateef Ahmed, Digital News Editor and; Research Lead, is a self-driven researcher with exceptional editorial skills. He's a literary bon vivant keenly interested in green energy, food systems, mining, macroeconomics, big data, African political economy, and aviation..

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