Economy
Saudi Telecom to Buy Vodafone Egypt Stake for $2.39 Billion
(Bloomberg) — Saudi Telecom Co. agreed to pay $2.39 billion for Vodafone Group Plc’s Egyptian business as part of expansion outside its home market.
The cash offer is for Vodafone’s 55% stake in Vodafone Egypt, the country’s largest mobile operator, and gives the North African firm an enterprise value of $4.35 billion, according to a statement from Saudi Telecom. Bloomberg reported on Tuesday that the companies were in talks.
The deal gives STC, as the Riyadh-based firm is known, access to a country of some 100 million people where Vodafone Egypt has a market share of about 44%. STC still gets more than 90% of revenue from its domestic market. It helps Vodafone further streamline its focus on Europe and sub-Saharan Africa, and cut debt.
Vodafone Egypt shares fell 0.8% at 11:35 in Riyadh, and London-based Vodafone Group dropped 0.2%. State-run Telecom Egypt, which has a 45% stake in Vodafone Egypt, rose 6.2%. STC dropped 0.2%.
“The potential acquisition of Vodafone Egypt is in line with our expansion strategy in the MENA region,” Chief Executive Officer Nasser Sulaiman Al Nasser said in the statement. “Vodafone Egypt is the leading player in the Egyptian mobile market and we look forward to contributing further to its continuing success.”
More than six years ago, STC had tried to acquire Telecom Egypt’s holding in the business. Vodafone Group had also expressed interest in buying the stake it didn’t own. Telecom Egypt said in a statement Wednesday that it was considering “all the possible ways it may deal with its investment.”
Debt Reduction
Vodafone said it will use proceeds from the deal to reduce debt. The potential sale is also “consistent with our efforts to simplify the group to two differentiated, scaled geographic regions — Europe and sub-Saharan Africa,” Vodafone CEO Nick Read said in a statement.
Vodafone has been retrenching outside Europe and sub-Saharan Africa over the past decade, to raise cash amid leverage concerns and build scale in core markets such as Germany. Vodafone sold its New Zealand business last year, after offloading stakes in U.S. carrier Verizon Communications Inc. in 2013 and Asian operators Softbank Corp. and China Mobile Ltd. in 2010.
Despite these and other moves, including a cut in the dividend and a plan to monetize its tower assets, S&P Global Ratings lowered the company’s credit rating one level to BBB in August, citing concerns about its debt.
-
Uncategorized2 months ago
Oman Oil Marketing Company partners with Ihsaan Association to support its activities
-
OER Magazines1 month ago
Signature, October 24
-
Alamaliktistaad Magazines1 month ago
Al-iktisaad, October 24
-
Commodities2 months ago
Gold Rangebound as Investors Brace for Key US Economic Data
-
Magazines4 weeks ago
OER, October 24
-
Oil & Gas2 months ago
OQEP Appoints United Securities as Liquidity Provider Ahead of Landmark MSX Listing
-
Lifestyle2 months ago
Royal Opera House Muscat Welcomes First Shows of its 2024/25 Season
-
Oman1 week ago
Shell Oman Partners with Oneroad Automotive Gives Away 2 Forthing Cars as Part of its ‘Win Big’ Campaign