Globacom
desperately wants to acquire 9mobile — but it would take a miracle for
the nation’s second largest mobile network to get its wish, those with
inside knowledge of the goings-on have told TheCable.
The company formerly known as Etisalat Nigeria was taken over in July 2017 following a N541 billion debt overhang.
Mubadala
Group, the major investor from the United Arab Emirates, pulled out of
Nigeria’s fourth largest mobile operator as a result of the debt owed to
a consortium of 13 banks, and insisted that the brand name be dropped,
leading to the birth of 9mobile.
The telco is now up for sale,
with five bidders making the final list of potential buyers: Teleology
Holdings Limited, promoted by Adrian Wood, the pioneer CEO of MTN
Nigeria; Smile Telecoms Holdings, a telco operating in Nigeria,
Tanzania, Uganda, Congo DR and South Africa; and Helios Investment
Partners LLP, an investment company.
Others are Bharti Airtel, an
Indian telco that owns Airtel Nigeria, and Globacom, the Nigerian
company owned by Mike Adenuga Jnr.
Of the lot, Globacom has done
the most extensive media campaign — albeit unofficially — with the hope
of swaying the deal its way.
An Glo insider told TheCable that
the driving force for Adenuga’s pursuit is to claim the bragging rights
of the largest telecom company in Nigeria.
Glo is currently the
second largest operator in Nigeria with 37 million voice and 26.8
million internet subscribers, according to the October 2017 statistics
from the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC), the industry
regulator.
If it acquires 9mobile, it will automatically become
the biggest network in Nigeria by adding 17 million to voice and 11.5
million to internet subscription base.
Combined, the new entity’s
54 million voice lines and 38.3 million internet subscriptions will
surpass MTN Nigeria’s 50.7 million and 32.5 million respectively.
“This,
in sum, is why Adenuga wants 9mobile badly, despite the serious
challenges Glo itself is facing in its business model,” the source said.
Glo
would move from its 26.4% share of the market to 38.5%, including the
benefit of recording more subscribers porting to its network.
Adenuga’s
company currently has the lowest number of gains from porting — an
average of less than 1,000 per month — while 9mobile recorded a monthly
average of 12,000 porting subscribers in 2017, industry’s highest by a
distance.
WRONG NUMBER
Although the transaction is
being handled by Barclays Africa, an arm of the Barclays Group, the
telecom regulator, NCC, and the banking watchdog, Central Bank of
Nigeria (CBN), are expected to play a key role in the final decision.
NCC controls 9mobile’s operating licence while CBN regulates the banks. Both intervened to save 9mobile when it was going down.
The
involvement of CBN and NCC, which had previously complained about “lack
of transparency” by Barclays in the transaction, is not likely to do
Adenuga any favours.
And for good reasons, some will argue. Glo
is the second national operator (SNO), licensed to provide national
backbone for other networks as well as roll out landlines across the
country.
“Since Adenuga got the SNO licence in 2003, he has not
yet fulfilled the conditions of the licence. This is 14 years and
counting,” a senior government official told TheCable on the condition
that he would not be named.
“By now, it should have rolled out
landlines nationwide and provided broadband access to millions of homes.
The huge benefits to the economy have been lost over time. The notion
that Globacom can get such an important licence and refuse to fulfill
the conditions is unacceptable.”
Globacom was recently kicked out
of the Republic of Benin after failing to meet conditions for the
renewal of its licence, despite the fact that it took years for the
company to roll out its service as a result of regulatory requirements.
The telecom company’s services in Ghana are also not well rated.
“It
is public knowledge that 9mobile is in dire need of real financial
injection because of the debts, as well as a strong governance culture
in view of its recent history,” the official said.
“Glo is not
the most financially buoyant to revive 9mobile, neither does it have the
best-practice governance culture that 9mobile requires. Adenuga runs
Glo like a kiosk or corner shop, and this cannot help the situation of
9mobile.”
However, Globacom remains confident that it would win the bid.
“Dr
Mike Adenuga Jnr is never tired of pushing for improvement. Globacom
boasts of arguably the most inspired and most passionate workforce in
the industry.
We have the edge,” an insider told TheCable, refusing to be named because of internal rules.
In a matter of days, though, the final picture will put the questions and permutations to rest.
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