MTN Group will look for new ways to bring banking services to its customers’ mobile phones in South Africa after severing ties with Australian-owned partner Tyme.
Africa’s biggest mobile phone operator scrapped the Mobile Money payment service it ran with Commonwealth Bank of Australia’s Tyme due to a “lack of commercial viability”, said Maxwell Nonge, chief digital officer of the Johannesburg-based company’s local unit, without giving further detail.
MTN retains a banking licence together with a second partner, South African Bank of Athens, and can use that as a platform for new deals, he said.
“MTN is committed to remaining a significant player in financial services and continues to explore opportunities in this space,” Nonge said in e-mailed comments on Tuesday.
MTN’s focus on its financial services and digital banking operations has sharpened following a wave of hires with experience in the industry.
Rob Shuter, who starts as group CEO on 17 March, has worked for both Standard Bank and Nedbank. Stephen van Coller, MTN’s head of strategy, mergers & acquisitions, was CEO of Barclays Africa’s investment bank. And incoming group chief financial officer Ralph Mupita was previously head of insurer Old Mutual’s emerging markets unit.
Mobile Money had gained five million customers since its launch in 2012. MTN rival Vodacom stopped offering its mobile banking product M-Pesa in the country as the strength of the banking system means fewer customers are taking up the service than in other sub-Saharan African markets.
For Tyme, the loss of the MTN alliance leaves the firm with supermarket chain Pick n Pay as its sole partner with direct access to South African consumers. While the Johannesburg-based company is trying to secure a banking licence in the country, several developers have quit to join insurer Outsurance, Business Day reported. Rolf Eichweber, the executive head of strategic partnerships and a co-founder of the company, resigned last month.
Tyme, which stands for Take Your Money Everywhere, can compete effectively in South Africa without MTN’s backing, spokeswoman Thoraya Pandy said on Monday. While Tyme’s website still notes its Mobile Money partnership with MTN, this information is “old and incorrect” and will be “fixed”, Pandy said.
South African billionaire Patrice Motsepe’s African Rainbow Capital will buy a 10% stake in Tyme, CBA said on Wednesday. ARC, as it’s known, will introduce black shareholders, Commonwealth Bank of Australia said, adding that through the Pick n Pay alliance Tyme has 685 kiosks and has registered 100 000 customer enrolments. — (c) 2017 Bloomberg LP