🔒 Etisalat weighs investment in Vodafone’s African business

By Dinesh Nair, Vinicy Chan and Loni Prinsloo

A Vodacom logo sits on display outside the Vodacom World mall, operated by Vodacom Group Ltd., in the Midrand district of Johannesburg, South Africa, on Thursday, Feb. 2, 2017. Vodacom, which is 65 percent owned by Newbury, England-based Vodafone and the South African market leader by subscriber numbers, is expanding its internet offering to offset falling voice revenue.

Emirates Telecommunications Group Co. is exploring a potential investment in Vodafone Plc’s African business as it seeks to boost its international footprint, people familiar with the matter said. 

___STEADY_PAYWALL___

The Abu Dhabi carrier is studying the feasibility of an offer for part or all of Vodafone’s stake in Johannesburg-listed Vodacom Group Ltd., the people said, asking not to be identified because the information is private. 

Vodafone owns roughly 60% of the company. Shares of Vodacom jumped 7.1% as of 1:38 p.m. Wednesday in South Africa, on track for the biggest daily gain since March 2020, giving it a market value of about $14.4 billion. Vodafone shares pared earlier losses and were down 0.1% in London. 

Etisalat is also weighing the possibility of combining some of its own African operations with Vodacom or buying Vodacom assets in specific countries, the people said. It’s in the early stages of weighing which path to pursue, and could also consider other forms of cooperation, according to the people.

Any tie-up would bring together the biggest Middle Eastern telecom operator with the second-biggest African carrier by market value. Vodafone has been steadily consolidating its interests on the continent under Vodacom, which provides telecom services in countries including South Africa, Tanzania and the Democratic Republic of Congo. 

Etisalat became Vodafone’s largest shareholder earlier this year and is keen to leverage this position as it plots an expansion of its own business in Africa, according to the people. 

Deliberations are ongoing and there’s no certainty they’ll lead to any transactions. A spokesperson for Etisalat said the group is scanning the market for opportunities in line with its strategy to grow in part through acquisitions, though there is “no such project in progress at the moment.” 

Representatives for Vodafone and Vodacom declined to comment. 

Etisalat disclosed in May that it had spent $4.4 billion for a 9.8% stake in Vodafone. It announced Wednesday it had it increased its holding to 11%. The Middle Eastern company is the controlling shareholder of North African carrier Maroc Telecom, which has a market value of about $9.5 billion in Casablanca. 

Telecom companies in the Middle East have been stepping up dealmaking this year. Etisalat has been working to boost its shareholding in Saudi Arabia’s Mobily, while Qatar’s Ooredoo QPSC is working on a sale of its network towers and is also considering carving out its data center unit.

What Bloomberg Intelligence says:

Etisalat’s possible acquisition of Vodafone’s 60% stake in African carrier Vodacom (reported by Bloomberg News) may face many obstacles as the governments of Morocco, South Africa and Kenya — as well as regulatory and competition authorities — would need to sign off. An agreement could yield considerable synergies for Etisalat, with emerging-market telecom and mobile-money expertise adding value to its operations outside the UAE.—John Davies, BI telecoms analyst

Read more:

With assistance from Ruth David and Abeer Abu Omar.

© 2022 Bloomberg L.P.

Visited 33 times, 1 visit(s) today