MTN Nigeria announced a profit after tax of ₦51 billion in Q1 2020 - a
6% increase compared with Q1 2019. This increase was largely driven by
revenue from data subscriptions, which rose to ₦74 billion – a 60%
increase compared with Q1 2019. Revenue from data subscriptions is
expected to further increase this quarter (Q2 2020) as workers in many
parts of Nigeria are working remotely due to the coronavirus outbreak.
- Revenue grew by 16.7% to N329bn from N282bn in the previous quarter.
- Profit before tax grew by 8.9% to N76bn.
- Profit after tax grew by 5.6% to N51bn.
- Net Assets grew by 35.3% to N196bn from N145bn.
Service
revenue rose by 16.7 percent year on year to NGN 328.5 billion, driven
by voice and data revenue. Net profit increased by 5.6 percent to NGN
51.15 billion from NGN 48.44 billion in Q1 2019 and earnings per share
increased by 5.6 percent to NGN 0.025.
EBITDA grew by 15.3
percent year on year to NGN 173.5 billion resulting in an EBITDA margin
of 52.5 percent, an increase of 0.6 percentage points. Mobile
subscribers increased by 4.2 million to 68.5 million, an increase of 7.4
percent. Active data users increased by 1.7 million to 26.8 million and
data revenue grew by 59.2 percent. The performance was achieved against
the backdrop of several developments during the quarter. Value-added
tax (VAT) was increased in February from 5.0 percent to 7.5 percent,
which adversely affected both revenue and costs.
MTN Nigeria said mobile subscribers increased by 4.2 million to 68.5 million, an increase of 7.4 percent.
MTN
Nigeria’s Chief Executive Officer, Ferdi Moolman, said data revenue
increased by 59.2 percent due to growth in data traffic and the addition
of 1.7 million active Internet subscribers to the network during the
quarter.
The situation has been exacerbated by upheavals in the
global oil market, which put significant downward pressure on oil
prices, leading to an exchange rate adjustment by the Central Bank of
Nigeria on 20 March, increasing some of the operator's costs. In
addition, a series of lockdown measures began being implemented globally
in response to the Covid-19 pandemic, resulting in significant
operational challenges and supply chain disruptions.
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