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Safaricom sees reduction in Ethiopia licence bid price without M-Pesa

Sunday November 15 2020

The telco has disclosed that its interest would only have been significantly enhanced and translate to higher bid price had the Ethiopian government allowed it to operate M-Pesa.

File | Nation Media Group

IN SUMMARY

  • The telco has disclosed that its interest would only have been significantly enhanced and translate to higher bid price had the Ethiopian government allowed it to operate its mobile money platform M-Pesa there.
  • Disclosures contained in a transcript call covering events to end of July reveals that Safaricom sees a license without mobile money hurting profitability and lengthening the period of recouping the investment.
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Safaricom #ticker:SCOM expects a reduced bid price for the Ethiopian market licence on the news that only the locally owned non-financial institutions will be allowed to offer mobile money services.

The telco has disclosed that its interest in the market of 108 million people and about 50 million phone subscribers would only have been significantly enhanced and translate to higher bid price had the Ethiopian government allowed it to operate its mobile money platform M-Pesa there.

Disclosures contained in a transcript call covering events to end of July reveals that Safaricom sees a license without mobile money hurting profitability and lengthening the period of recouping the investment.

“A license that doesn't include a mobile money license will significantly reduce the level of profitability and therefore in essence, our bid price for the license but also our profitability and payback period,” chief executive Peter Ndegwa says in the transcript call.

Safaricom has never disclosed how much it is willing to bid or the expected annual rate of growth the investment in Ethiopian market will be expected to generate, terming it as competitive and sensitive information.

Vodafone Business chief finance officer (CFO) Sateesh Kamath who was then serving as Safaricom CFO said only a licence with mobile money would enhance bid price.

“Our interests would be significantly enhanced if there's mobile money and what we would be willing to put in down as licence fee would certainly be different if there's mobile money and lesser, if there is no mobile money,” said Mr Kamath.

The Ethiopian Communications Authority (ECA) disclosed that at the end of June it had received 12 expressions of interest for the issuance of two new full-service telecommunications licenses.

Safaricom made its application for the licences through a consortium that includes its parent companies Vodafone and Vodacom.

Other telcos in the line for the two licences include Liquid Telecom, Etisalat, Snail Mobile, Axian, MTN, Orange, Saudi Telecom Company and Telkom (South Africa).

Safaricom expects the outcome to get concluded towards end of the year or early next year in case there is a delay.

The telco says that factors such as currency depreciation are part of what is to determine the size of the bid to make so as to ensure it is putting “brain ahead of heart” in the deal.

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