News, views and commentary from the telecoms sector across emerging markets and developing countries worldwide
Showing posts with label Telecel Centrafrique. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Telecel Centrafrique. Show all posts

Monday, 23 March 2009

Are some African markets already contested by too many cellcos?

In yesterday's post, I tried to examine an idea articulated last week by MTN CEO Phuthuma Nhleko in an interview with the Financial Times - that there will be an African showdown leading to "fewer players with larger footprint, bigger balance sheets, more economies of scale".

Nhleko notes that 2008 saw more players entering the continent's smaller markets, some of which now have three, four or five competing operators in the mobile space.

One notable example must surely be Benin. The Francophone country ranks 31st in Africa in terms of the size of its population. Five mobile operators now compete in a market which is home to around 8 million people. The fifth entrant, joining the fray in June last year, is a subsidiary of Nigerian cellco Globacom. Yesterday I recounted some of the difficulties and delays faced by Globacom owner Dr. Mike Adenuga on the company's home patch. The Benin market has also presented challenges for the Nigerian company. A Wireless Federation article in September described how Globacom was protesting about radio spectrum allegedly withheld by the Beninoise Government. The article cited an anonymous Globacom insider who reported urgent appeals to the state to release spectrum by state-run MNO Libercom. "Sources," said the article "disclose that most of the spectrum released to Globacom so far was in the 1800MHz band but not the promised 900MHz band and this could disrupts the operator’s plan for expansion." Network expansion, in terms of capacity at least, might well be high on the agenda for Globacom's Benin operation - according to an IDG article published not long after the operator launched services, the Nigerian cello sold 600,000 SIMs in fewer than 10 days. By December Globacom Benin had around 700,000 subscriptions according to Informa Telecoms & Media's World Cellular Information Service, outstripping two much longer established operators - the aforementioned Libercom and locally-owned Bell Benin Communications. Presumably, in the consolidation scenario envisaged by MTN's Nhleko, it is these strugglers that would be more likely to fall by the wayside than Dr. Adenuga's Globacom Benin.

With four mobile operators serving a relatively small population, the Central African Republic, one of the poorest countries in the world and among the ten poorest countries in Africa, seems to me like another quite congested market. The country's 2007 census recorded a population of around 4.2 million, the 36th largest in Africa. Mobile penetration is very low, standing at just over 11% according to December figures from WCIS. This would suggest that, despite the rather limited overall market size, there remains a decent growth opportunity for each of the existing competing mobile operators. The likely ARPU from further waves of mobile service adopters, however, is surely very low: the CAR is heavily dependent on foreign aid and the presence of numerous NGOs which provide services that the country's Government is ill-equipped to deliver to the populace. The very presence of numerous foreign personnel and organisations in the country, including peacekeepers and even refugee camps, provides an important source of revenue for many citizens. While the country is self-sufficient in food crops, much of the population lives at a subsistence level. Political instability has also hampered development. As recently as 2006, over 50,000 people in the country's north-west were at risk of starvation due to protracted violence. This looks like a daunting set of trading conditions for the four mobile operators. Of these, the one to join the market most recently was France Telecom-backed Orange CAR, which has rapidly built a 25% share of the market since launching its commercial activities in December 2007.

Another well-funded later entrant in the CAR is the Moov-branded Atlantique Telecom operator, part of a group of African operations in which the UAE's Etisalat now holds a 70% stake. The CAR operation has been in business since 2005.

While the overall size of the CAR mobile market has grown quickly from a low base since the newer competitors set up their operations, with mobile penetration growing from just 1.30% at the end of 2004 to today's double-digit level, Orange and Moov have massively eroded the market share of the two longer-established MNOs. Of these, Telecel Centrafrique may now be in a better position to fight back, having been reacquired last year by Orascom Telecom.

If these two countries are truly representative, it would appear that MTN's Nhleko is quite right to contend that competitive conditions in smaller African markets may not be favourable for the support of as many competing MNOs as are currently in business. However, as last week's FT article noted, following the collapse of merger talks last year with India’s mobile groups, Bharti Airtel and Reliance Communications, Mr. Nhleko himself may be under pressure to prolong the whistlestop expansion of his six-year tenure. Mr. Nhleko acknowledges that "to maintain our growth, somehow we need to try and find larger markets". The FT piece insists that he appears focused on African opportunities, such as long-awaited new licences in fast-growing Angola and Ethiopia, one of the few countries that maintains a state-run monopoly. MTN’s balance sheet, says the article, "shows it is poised to pounce."

Let's see if further African expansion by MTN and other powerful groups this year drives the widely predicted wave of consolidation across the continent's mobile markets.

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Saturday, 7 February 2009

Acquisitive telcos to widen the net?

In a recent post on my former blog (now handed over to my Informa Telecoms & Media colleague Julie Rey) I discussed evidence to support the theory that the current economic woes will prompt MENA region-headquartered telcos to go shopping for valuable assets at knock down prices. One of the examples I flagged up was Orascom Telecom paying US$59 million in cash for Namibian GSM player Cell One and closing previously agreed deals to reacquire Telecel Centrafrique in the Central African Republic and U-Com Burundi (formerly Telecel Burundi).

This example, in common with several others which I cited, concerns a MENA-region powerhouse extending its footprint into further emerging markets. Prior to receiving yesterday's Global Mobile Daily, I had merely speculated about operations in more mature markets being on the radar of prospective buyers from the Arab world. This struck me as a theoretically plausible development but I had not gone as far as trying to work out where this might happen. Now it seems that a possible scene for this kind of move is Austria, where OeIAG, the state holding vehicle which has a 27% chunk of incumbent Telekom Austria, may offload its stake. Orascom Telecom has been named as a possible taker.

The GMD story quotes Stefano Songini, Investor Relations Director for Orascom Telecom, who says that the Egypt-based company "could look at merging with another similar-sized telecoms operator to create a large wide-scale operator." According to Songini, "Telekom Austria or others would potentially be right candidates", but any possible sale will depend on the Austrian coalition government’s position on privatization, which has yet to be made known.

Orascom Telecom is one MENA region telco with previous experience of moving into Western Europe. In 2005, Italy's Wind Telecomunicazioni was sold to Weather Investments, a company controlled by businessman Naguib Sawiris, the Orascom Telecom Chairman & CEO. Via Weather Investments, Sawiris went on to acquire the Greek mobile carrier TIM Hellas from Apax Partners and Texas Pacific Group in a deal worth EUR 3.4 billion in 2007, rebranding it Wind Greece.

Keeping track of the Sawiris strategy requires some agility. I really enjoyed how he livened up a morning plenary session at the 3GSM World Congress in February 2007. Speaking immediately after Vodafone's then-CEO Arun Sarin and the then-CEO of Orange Sanjiv Ajuha, Sawiris gestured towards his fellow presenters and told the audience "the difference between me and these two gentlemen is that, for me - it's all about the money... the other difference between me and these two gentleman is that I am the biggest shareholder in my company, and I have made a lot of money that way."

Explaining how he had amassed this fortune, Sawiris spoke about a simple strategy: winning as large a market share as possible in as few countries as possible. Turning towards the Orange CEO, he told the audience that "Sanjiv talked about having around 100m subscribers in 23 markets. Well, we will have 100m subscribers in just six markets."

This sounded wonderfully convincing to me as I scribbled my notes in the darkened auditorium in Barcelona. I was therefore quite surprised when I heard about the above-mentioned re-enty of Orascom Telecom to a number of relatively small African markets. The company ran around a dozen mobile networks across Africa prior 2005, including Gabon, Togo, Burkina Faso and Zambia. These were sold as part of the strategy of which Sawiris seemed so proud in his jocular World Congress talk in 2007, i.e. getting out of minor markets to focus on the big stuff.

Now, according to Arab Finance, Sawiris "is considering the entry to a number of new markets on the African continent... characterized by low rates of mobile usage, which is a remarkable motive to invest in them." According to this article, Sawiris has indicated that Orascom Telecom "is looking for opportunities to work in Mali and Equatorial Guinea".

One aspect of this rather fluid Orascom Telecom strategy appears to be something of a taste for adventure. Last year, the company was awarded a mobile licence in what must be one of the most challenging markets in the world - isolated, secretive North Korea. According to a GMD article of March 2008, Orascom Telecom will spend around US$400 million over the next three years on the license and establishing operations in the country.

Yesterday seems to have been Sawiris day for Global Mobile Daily. In addition to the story about possible Orascom interest in a piece of Telekom Austria, the daily news service came with an update on Koryolink, the aforementioned North Korean cellco, which has "reportedly seen 6,000 applications within its first two weeks of operation in the secretive one-party state."

"So far we have about 6,000 applications. The important point is that they are normal citizens, not the privileged or military generals or party higher-ups. For the first time they have been able to go to a shop and get a mobile phone," Sawiris was quoted as saying.

I am sure it will be interesting to keep an eye on further developments from Orascom Telecom and other Arab World telcos looking to take advantage of opportunities to acquire new subsidiaries at good prices. All of this reminds me of how Naguib Sawiris concluded his speech to the World Congress audience two years ago: he said he was delighted to see two Indian-born men and an Egyptian giving the keynote presentations at one of the world's biggest industry gatherings, saying that this was proof that the developing world is the place to be in mobile. I agree - and am delighted that I will be remaining active in emerging markets in the coming years.
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