A record wave of stock is heading for Ghana’s market as MTN Group is said to prepare to sell a chunk of its local unit to investors for about US$790m (R9.2bn). The shares should be snapped up, the country’s second largest money manager said.
The numbers are striking: the planned listing would be more than 10 times bigger than the country’s largest initial public offering to date. Even so, demand from foreign investors attracted by MTN’s profitability should ensure the IPO is a success, said Alex Boahen, head of research at Databank Group.
“The offer will generate a lot of global interest,” Boahen said by phone from the capital, Accra. “If you see the numbers, it’s a very profitable company. MTN has a dominant market position and a lot of investors will like to get a piece of the fast-growing telecoms sector.”
MTN’s Ghana unit increased the target for its IPO by more than a half to 3.48bn cedis ($788m), people familiar with the matter said last week. The listing of a 35% stake is a step toward fulfilling conditions MTN agreed to with the government in 2015 when the Johannesburg-based company won the right to use 4G spectrum.
Boahen said he expects foreign companies and funds with emerging-market or pan-African strategies to buy the bulk of the MTN shares. Local private pension funds and other institutional investors may also take big positions. Although individual Ghanaians would be keen to pick up some of the stock, their lack of available cash will probably mean they will mostly miss out, he said.
MTN entered the Ghana market in 2006 and now has 17.8m mobile phone subscribers, a 55% share of the market, unit CEO Ebenezer Asante said in a 13 March presentation. Its mobile money service has grown to 11.6m customers in 2017, from two million in 2012. The company will become the 37th to list on the Accra bourse, following a unit of Nigeria’s Access Bank in December 2016.
Ghana’s record IPO to date was Agricultural Development Bank, which raised 326m cedis in December 2016. The large size of the MTN offer will boost liquidity in the local equities market, along with raising its profile and adding a key new sector to attract investors, said Kofi Yamoah, MD of the exchange.
“If you didn’t have the telecoms sector represented on the market then it meant you didn’t have all the key ingredients in the economy represented,” Yamoah said. “MTN is a company a lot of people identify with because they use their product.” — Reported by Moses Mozart Dzawu, (c) 2018 Bloomberg LP