MTN Group Limited shares fell after
Nigeria suspended talks about a $3.9 billion fine on the South African
mobile-phone company while the country’s House of Representatives
completes an investigation into the nature of the penalty.
The stock declined as much as 2.9
percent, the most since May 12, and traded 1.5 percent lower at 126.50
rand monday in Johannesburg, valuing the company at 233 billion rand
($15 billion). The shares have plunged almost 35 percent since the fine,
originally set at $5.2 billion, was levied in October.
“Any delays in finding a resolution for
the MTN fine will play into trading and keep MTN’s share price
suppressed,” Bloomberg quoted an analyst at Mergence Investment
Managers, Peter Takaendesa to have said by phone from Cape Town on
Monday.
“The big event to watch this week will be MTN’s annual general meeting, where the market might also get additional clarity.”
Nigeria’s decision to put talks on hold
will frustrate Johannesburg-based MTN as it seeks to resolve a fine that
was levied for missing a deadline to disconnect customers deemed
unregistered in the country, which is battling an Islamist insurgency.
The company’s stock decline has cost MTN the title of Africa’s biggest
wireless company by market capitalisation, losing it to crosstown rival
Vodacom Group Ltd.
“MTN cautions shareholders not to make
any decisions based on media reports,” spokesman Chris Maroleng said in
e-mailed comments. Investors will be informed of any update to the fine
negotiations via the stock exchange news service, he said.
The Nigerian lawmakers “have set up a
committee to investigate the MTN saga and they are still on it,”
spokesman for Nigeria’s Ministry of Communications, Victor Oluwadamilare
said by phone from Abuja, the capital. “Until they are through with it,
nothing can be done.”
Executive Chairman Phuthuma Nhleko
returned to the helm in November for a six-month term to resolve the
crisis, yet he remains in charge having not fulfilled his mandate. He
will address shareholders at the annual meeting in Johannesburg on
Wednesday.
“The federal government, the Nigerian
Communications Commission and the Ministry of Communications can do
nothing about the MTN case until the committee concludes its thorough
investigation,” Oluwadamilare said.
“There’s no point dealing with a particular organisation from different fronts. It would be counter-productive.”
MTN’s last reported offer was to pay $1.5 billion in a combination of staggered cash payments, sovereign debt purchases and access to its network. The company is Nigeria’s biggest mobile-phone company, and in turn the country is the largest of MTN’s 22 markets across Africa and the Middle East.
“This suggests that MTN might still be
stuck in limbo, and that is not a good thing for them,” managing
director at Johannesburg-based Africa Analyst, Dobek Pater, said.
“Suggestions were that the negotiations
were going on in a positive Dobek Pater, path for MTN, especially when
the company received that first reduction. Now, with the investigation
the process is back to the unknown.”
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