MTN Group CEO Rob Shuter said on Thursday at the telecommunications operator’s annual general meeting of shareholders that it still expects to declare a full-year dividend for 2018 of R5/share despite impending severe US sanctions on Iran.
Iran is a key market for MTN, where it owns 49% of MTN Irancell.
Shuter reiterated the intention to grow the group dividend at between 10% and 20%/year “over the medium term” beyond the 2018 financial year.
He said the US’s recent withdrawal from an international agreement dealing with Iran’s nuclear programme and its plan to impose tough new sanctions on the Middle Eastern country has “created some complexity” for MTN.
Reiterating a previous communication to shareholders, he said the US decision could affect the group’s ability to repatriate cash and dividends from the country.
“We still have a few months before these new agreements kick in,” Shuter said. “We are making every effort to repatriate the funds.”
He added that despite the new US sanctions, MTN remains committed to its investment in Iran and has no intention of withdrawing from the market.
The US government’s seven-year ban on Chinese telecoms equipment company ZTE buying American technology has also led to “operational complexities”.
“We are on top of a difficult situation that will unfold in the months to come.”
MTN, Shuter said, has made progress in dealing with issues in other markets, including in Benin where a dispute over spectrum fees resulted in the CEO, Stephen Blewett, being expelled from the country. “We have signed a memorandum of understanding with the government that resolves the dispute we had with them over frequency fees. The situation is calm … and our CEO has returned to running the operation.”
A long-running dispute in Cameroon over an operating licence has also now been resolved, he said.
Nigeria, Ghana listings
MTN is moving ahead with the listing of its operations in Ghana, which is imminent, and Nigeria, which should happen by the end of the year, “market conditions permitting”.
Thursday’s AGM was the last to be chaired by outgoing chairman Phuthuma Nhleko, who will step down in December after 17 years with the group during which time he has served as both chairman and CEO.
Lead independent director Alan Harper, speaking at the AGM, said Nhleko “transformed MTN into the company it is today by growing it significantly into both Africa and the Middle East”. — © 2018 NewsCentral Media