MTN revenue bumped up by data

Date:

MTN’s quarterly update for the three months which ended 31 March 2017 has revealed that its revenue was bumped up 7.1% by a data revenue spike of 29.4% year-on-year.

Data revenue now contributes 20% to total revenue for the SA-headquartered telco, which saw voice traffic (billable minutes) increase by 2% and total data traffic by 145%.

Group subscribers, however, dropped by 1.5% quarter-on-quarter, to almost 237 million “largely as a result of restatements to subscriber numbers in Ghana, Rwanda and Zambia”. Year-on-year total subscribers grew by 3% in MTN’s 22 operations across Africa and the Middle East.
“While our reported subscriber numbers are lower than we had expected, this is largely the result of an ongoing review of subscriber definitions. We are planning to further modernise our internal subscriber definitions to more closely align with the changing mix of revenue streams and will report on this at the end of the first half of 2017,” according to new MTN group president and CEO Rob Shuter.

“In our key markets of SA, Nigeria and Iran, significant network investments made over the past few years are underpinning the improving revenue trends. The network investment planned for 2017 is expected to support further market share gains across our markets,” adds Shuter.

Network improvements have seen year-to-date capital expenditure of R4.6 billion so far. He says the firstthree months of 2016 saw a continuation of the improving operational momentum experienced in the fourth quarter of 2016, but acknowledges MTN still has work to do to meet its full-year targets.

Shuter moved from Vodafone in Europe to take up the top job at MTN last month, while fill-in leader Phuthuma Nhleko reverted back to his role as non-executive chairman. Nhleko took over as executive chairman in an interim capacity in early November 2015 after former group CEO Sifiso Dabengwa resigned.

This as the group faced a $5.2 billion (R71 billion at the time) fine from the Nigerian Communications Commission for failing to disconnect 5.1 million unregistered SIM cards in the country. In June 2016, after months of negotiations, MTN agreed to pay $1.671 billion (R25 billion at the time) to the federal government of Nigeria, in six instalments over three years, to settle the fine.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Share post:

Subscribe

Popular

More like this
Related

CBN finally crashes Naira To 630/$1

The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has devalued the...

Al Pacino, 82, girlfriend Noor Alfallah 29, expecting a baby

The 82-year-old actor and his girlfriend Noor Alfallah are...

Presidency backpedals; subsidy removal not immediate

The removal of petrol subsidy will no longer be...

Kwara gov goes tough on marketers; hoard fuel, lose C of O

The Kwara State governor and Chairman of the Nigeria...