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MTN Nigeria To Increase Their Tariff Charges

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MTN Nigeria might hike its tariffs if Nigeria’s government made its licence conditions more stringent as its licence expires in 2016.

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Andrew Bing, chief financial officer of MTN Nigeria said: “Tougher rules, tougher regulations, greater demands ultimately will impact price, the more you charge up front or the more you demand over a period of time. Well, somebody has to pay for it. Ultimately, the subscribers are the people who will have to pay.”

The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) had in February fined the three biggest mobile operators, including MTN, for the quality of their service and prohibited them from selling new SIM cards in March, the first time the punishment was imposed along with a financial penalty.

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Michael Ikpoki, CEO, MTN Nigeria said that prices of MTN’s services have come down in the past three years in Nigeria,  adding that the company had spent about $5 billion to $6 billion in expanding capacity in the past three years.

Nigeria’s regulators have to allow phone companies to make “decent margins” or it will negatively affect investment, said Ikpoki.

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MTN has fallen 1.9 percent this year in Johannesburg and closed Monday at 212.85 rand, giving it a market value of 398.7 billion rand ($37.9 billion).

The company struggles with power supply and cuts to its fiber-optic network, making it a challenge to meet the regulators’ standards.

Hundreds of cuts are made a week to MTN’s cables in the country due to negligence as roads are constructed or dug up, as well as malicious damage, said Bing.

Last year, MTN spent about N34 billion ($214 million) on diesel to power its base stations across the country due to a lack of regular electricity in Nigeria, said Ikpoki.

The government of President Goodluck Jonathan sold 15 state-owned power generation and distribution companies last year and is spending $3.5 billion to boost transmission capacity this year by 50 percent from 4,000 megawatts, less than a 10th of South Africa’s full capacity.

“We are very concerned and very keen to see that the whole power privatisation actually succeeds because it’s going to be really, really good for our business,” Ikpoki said.

MTN is looking to grow revenue from data as the use of smartphones, tablets and TV’s increases in Africa’s most populous nation to offset a slowdown in the growth in subscription numbers.

Caroline Vutagwa
Caroline Vutagwahttps://my.techmoran.com
Minding my own business is not enough for me that's why you will always find me minding Africa's Businesses as well as Technology and of course letting you know about it. Talk to me on [email protected]

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