Media & Telecoms 12/05/2023
MTN Blames Inflation For Its Plan To Hike Prices
Telecoms group, MTN, has said that it is planning to increase prices in selected markets due to the elevated inflation in the operating environment.
This was disclosed in its first quarter report filed with the Johannesburg Stock Exchange on Thursday.
In its outlook for the rest of 2023, the MTN group said, “We anticipate that trading conditions across markets will remain challenging for the remainder of 2023 and we will continue to execute on our proactive measures to manage the near-term challenges and risks.
“Within this environment of elevated inflation, implementing selective price increases across the portfolio remains a critical priority to ensure that operations generate sufficient cash flows to fund future capital expenditure needed for building world-class networks.
“We will continue to have the necessary engagements with the regulatory authorities on such needed increases.”
The telecom company, which operates across 19 countries including South Africa, Nigeria and Ghana, said the blended inflation across its footprint remained elevated and averaged 18.5 per cent in Q1 2023, compared to 11.5 per cent in Q1 2022. Interest rates increased during the period as central banks acted to curb inflation. Higher inflation and interest rates weighed on consumers’ spending power and impacted business activity, the company said.
MTN Chief Executive Officer Ralph Mupita, in the statement, said, “MTN’s resilient business model and operational execution enabled us to continue to successfully navigate difficult macroeconomic, geopolitical and regulatory conditions in Q1 2023.
“Local currencies generally weakened against the dollar, and foreign exchange availability was limited in several of our key markets affecting the pace of capital expenditure and our ability to upstream dividends and management fees.
“Over and above reduced economic activity in South Africa, MTN South Africa’s (MTN SA) network availability remained under pressure due to ongoing power outages across the country: there were approximately 90 days of load shedding in Q1 2023 compared to 14 days in Q1 2022.”
On the Nigerian market, the group said, “MTN Nigeria drove strong commercial momentum in a challenging operating environment to deliver a strong financial performance in the period.
“In addition to higher inflation and interest rates as well as challenges with the availability of hard currency liquidity, the Nigerian economy was also impacted by the Central Bank of Nigeria’s redesign and introduction of new naira notes from 15 December 2022. The limited availability of new notes resulted in cash shortages, which impacted customers’ ability to recharge through physical channels and transact within the MoMo agent network.”
MTN Group disclosed that in line with its Ambition 2025 strategy, it continuously assesses investments, to improve returns and reduce risk. Thus, MTN Group is evaluating an orderly exit of three operations in West Africa over the medium term; namely MTN Guinea-Bissau, MTN Guinea-Conakry and MTN Liberia. The Group has received an offer for our equity interests in these Opcos, from Axian Telecom, which is being evaluated.
The company is also in the process of exiting Afghanistan through the sale of MTN’s entire shareholding to a wholly-owned subsidiary of M1.
According to the report, MTN revenue rose 15.6 per cent to 53.83 bn rand ($2.8 billion) in the first quarter of 2023 compared to 45.69 bn rand in the first quarter of 2022, the company said.
Total subscribers increased by 5.2 per cent to 290.6 million, active data subscribers up by 11.9 per cent to 140.4 million, Data traffic increased by 19.3 per cent to 3221.26 PB and fintech transaction volumes increased by 38.8 per cent to 4.1 billion.
MTN Blames Inflation For Its Plan To Hike Prices