MTN Group Issues Profit Warning over Nigeria Fine, Devaluation

Wednesday, 20 July 2016

MTN Group Issues Profit Warning over Nigeria Fine, Devaluation


MTN Group Limited fell in Johannesburg trading as the Africa’s largest mobile-phone company said it expects to report a first-half loss after agreeing to pay a record fine in Nigeria.

The shares dropped 2.5 percent to 138.13 rands by 11:25a.m., after earlier slumping as much as 3.8 percent, the most in three weeks on a closing basis.

The N330 billion ($1.18 billion) settlement in Nigeria, announced in June, will reduce earnings per share for the six months through June by 4.74 rands, while foreign-exchange losses, joint ventures and adjustments for inflation in Iran will further hurt results, MTN said in a statement yesterday.


 According to  a data compiled by Bloomberg, MTN is set to report first loss-per-share for a six-month period in at least 20 years.
The telecoms giant is seeking to turn the page on a dispute with the Nigerian government, which initially imposed a $5.2 billion fine after the company missed a deadline to disconnect unregistered users.

A Johannesburg-based company is overhauling senior management and has added new directors as it seeks to convince investors the penalty won’t be repeated and revive a share price that’s 36 percent lower than a year ago.

Earnings were also damped by underperformance in MTN’s two largest markets, it said. Nigerian results were further weighed on by government-mandated subscriber disconnections and a temporary withdrawal of regulatory services, while profit margins in South Africa were narrowed by an increase in handset sales. The loss would be the first over any half-year period for at least 20 years.

MTN, which reported earnings per share of 6.53 rands for the same period a year earlier, said it would issue a further statement once it’s ready to provide more detail about the projected loss. The final results will be announced on August 5.

[Breaking Times]

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