Fine payable by the end of December, Nigerian regulator says
MTN's chairman will consider penalty, to consult further

The Nigerian telecommunications regulator cut the fine imposed on MTN
Group Ltd. to $3.4 billion from a record $5.2 billion and the chief
executive officer in the country quit as part of a wider management
shake-up at Africa’s biggest mobile-phone operator.
The shares
gained 1.2 percent to 148.49 rand as of 9:32 a.m. in Johannesburg,
valuing the company at 274 billion rand ($19.1 billion). The stock is
still down about 22 percent since the penalty was made public on Oct.
26.
The Nigerian Communications
Commission decided to reduce the levy after considering a request from
the company, Johannesburg-based MTN said in a statement on Thursday. MTN
named Ferdi Moolman, the former CEO of the company’s Iran unit and most
recently the chief financial officer of MTN Nigeria, as head of the
Lagos-based operations, replacing Michael Ikpoki, who resigned.
The
Nigerian regulator imposed the fine on MTN for failing to meet a
deadline to disconnect 5.1 million unregistered subscribers. Group
Chairman Phuthuma Nhleko took an executive position in November and led
negotiations with the NCC after CEO Sifiso Dabengwa quit.
Reduction Considered
Nhleko
will “immediately and urgently re-engage with the Nigerian authorities
before responding formally,” MTN said in the statement. “All factors
having a bearing on the situation will be thoroughly and carefully
considered before the company arrives at a final decision.”
The
initial fine of $5.2 billion was more than MTN’s total sales in Nigeria
in 2014 and the equivalent of about 37 percent of the group’s total
revenue. A full payment would have exceeded the revenue the Nigerian
government made from oil in the second-quarter, and more than double the
state’s non-crude proceeds, according to central bank data. MTN’s
largest shareholder, the Public Investment Corp., in November called on
the board to take greater responsibility for the fine.
The company
decided to reinstate its previous reporting structures to boost
oversight, leadership and compliance across 22 countries in Africa and
the Middle East, the company said in a separate statement. Jyoti Desai
will be group chief operating officer, based in Johannesburg, while Karl
Toriola will be vice president for the West and central African region
and Ismail Jaroudi will play the same role for the Middle East and north
Africa. Amina Oyagbola replaces Akinwale Goodluck as head of regulatory
and corporate affairs in Nigeria.
Bloomberg
No comments:
Post a Comment