MTN Marches Towards Nigeria Public Listing!


By Joburg Post

According to Quartz Africa, South Africa’s MTN is one step closer to listing publicly in Nigeria—but it won’t be doing so via an initial public offering (IPO).

Africa’s largest telecoms operator has converted its Nigerian business to a public company before a listing by introduction on the Nigerian exchange, rather than an launching IPO as previously expected. Unlike with an IPO, a listing by introduction will see MTN list already existing shares without raising new funding or issuing new shares. The listing is expected to happen by June 30.



The proposed listing of MTN’s Nigerian business dates back to a billion-dollar settlement of a protracted SIM card dispute with the Nigerian government in 2016. 

After initially being slapped with a record $5.1 billion fine, the telecoms giant which hired Eric Holder, former US attorney general, to handle its negotiations, settled the dispute for $1.7 billion in staggered payments as well as a commitment to list its shares in Nigeria.

However, MTN almost reversed the decision in October amid another high profile tussle with the Nigerian government, this time an allegation that it illegally repatriated $8.1 billion in profits and owed $2 billion in taxes. In an emailed statement to Quartz Africa at the time, MTN stated that prior to the dispute, “the plan was to meet this listing obligation by an initial public offering (IPO) on the Nigerian Stock Exchange” but that continuing with the listing by IPO “will make it challenging to get a fair valuation” given allegations by the government. Last December, the dispute was settled for $53 million.

Quartz Africa

-JP

Article Tags

Cancel

    Most Read