Audio By Carbonatix
Bharti Airtel’s board on Wednesday cleared the sale of its Ghana joint venture AirtelTigo to the government in the African country and is taking an impairment charge of Rs184.1 crore for the transaction.
“The parties are in advance stages of discussions for the conclusion of the commercial agreement for the transfer of AirtelTigo on a going concern basis to the Government of Ghana,” Airtel said in a statement to the Bombay Stock Exchange on Wednesday.
The proposed deal would result in the government of Ghana acquiring 100% shares of Airtel Ghana Ltd, also known as AirtelTigo, along with all its customers, assets and agreed liabilities.
“Accordingly, Airtel is voluntarily taking an impairment charge of Rs 1,841 million (Rs 184 crore),” the statement added.
AirtelTigo is a joint venture between 'Airtel' and 'Millicom' wherein Airtel holds a non-controlling 49.95% share in AirtelTigo.
Airtel had merged its Ghana operations with Millicom in 2017, resulting in the second largest mobile carrier in the country.
The merger was approved by the regulator subject to the condition that the African country’s government will have the option to pick up a stake in the new entity in future.
But the joint venture has fallen behind MTN and Vodacom in the country. Airtel has previously said that it will look at consolidation opportunities, including exit, in markets where it is not among the top two players.
According to the quarterly results ending September 30, Airtel said its Ghana operations had a customer base of 5.1 million.
The company has successively been posting losses for the past four quarters and the Ebidta for the quarter fell to Rs 8.8 crore from Rs 9.9 crore in the previous quarter ending June 30.
Total revenue remained stagnant at Rs 118 crore during the quarter and data customers as a percentage of the total customer base also saw a dip to 56.2% during the period from 59.4% in the June quarter.
Bharti Airtel’s Africa operations clocked in a net profit of $88 million for the second quarter this fiscal, down 8.3% on-year, hurt by higher net finance costs.
But consolidated revenue stood at $965 million, increasing 14.3% from the corresponding quarter last year.
Latest Stories
-
Why Alonso’s chances of survival at Real Madrid are slim
25 minutes -
Legal Green Association launches scholarship scheme for law students
38 minutes -
Simon Madjie writes: Oti Region: Ghana’s emerging growth frontier
48 minutes -
Cedi slips amid seasonal heat; one dollar equals GH¢12.20
1 hour -
Yirenkyi-Addo wins ‘Deloitte CEO Impact Award’
1 hour -
‘I am not weak’ says Slot, but Salah could return
1 hour -
World Bank’s new outcome bond supports clean cooking initiative in Ghana
1 hour -
NACOC nabs 3 in connection with 1,158kg suspected cocaine shipment to Belgium
1 hour -
‘Certiorari is not stay of execution’: Amaliba defends Parliament’s notification on Kpandai vacancy
1 hour -
Sister Sandy set to host Medikal’s BYK Concert at the Accra Sports Stadium
2 hours -
AfroFuture Ghana 2025 adds Rema, KiDi and more to its December festival lineup
2 hours -
Paramount launches rival bid for Warner Bros Discovery
3 hours -
Ukraine’s European allies press for more security guarantees
3 hours -
Why the haste? – NPP MP question’s EC notification over vacant Kpandai seat despite stay of exection
3 hours -
Explainer: Why electricity and water tariffs have surged to 9.86% and 15.92%, respectively
3 hours
