Frankline Sunday
From left,Sylvia Mulinge chief customer officer
Safaricom PLC,Bob CollyMore Safaricom CEO,Sateesh Kamath chief financial
officer Safaricom and Nicholas Nganga board chair Safaricom following
the proceeding of the launch of Safaricom full year financial results
for 2019 at Safaricom Micheal Joseph Center on 3rd May 2019. [Edward
Kiplimo,Standard]
Twenty shillings might not appear much especially when talking about
telecommunications firm Safaricom that has just reported revenues of
Sh251 billion for the financial year to March 2019.
It is...
however that Sh20 paid every day by each of the 31.85 million
customers that has contributed to the operator’s record profits.
Safaricom profit after tax grew by 14.7 per cent from Sh55.3 billion
last year to Sh63.4 billion recorded in the year ended March 31, 2019 on
the back of M-Pesa and mobile data revenue.
The company’s newly launched overdraft facility, Fuliza proved to be a
gold mine as users borrowed more than Sh45 billion in just four months
since its launch in January this year.
SEE ALSO :Safaricom to reward customers in Sh250m Shukrani KochoKocho promotion
Total
service revenue rose by seven per cent from Sh224 billion reported at
the end of March 2018 to Sh240 billion with M-Pesa accounting for Sh75
billion of this revenue haul.
Voice declined
The record profits surpassed the combined net earnings reported by blue
chip companies KCB Group, Equity Group and East African Breweries
Limited, underscoring the telco’s heft in the country’s economy.
Earnings from voice - which has traditionally been the company’s bread
and butter - have since declined and now account for 36 per cent of
overall revenue, down from over 60 per cent five years ago.
This means Safaricom is moving away from reliance on voice and SMS, with
focus now shifting into broadening its mobile money and data offerings,
which will provide the next revenue streams.
SEE ALSO :NSE share index down by 9.56 points
“The
growth in M-Pesa has been driven by an increased number of users,
higher velocity of funds within the ecosystem and adoption of new use
cases,” said Safaricom Chief Executive Bob Collymore during the
presentation of the company’s full year results yesterday.
“In the period, we added 2.1 million active M-Pesa customers. M-Pesa now
accounts for 31.2 per cent of service revenue, further accelerating
displacement of traditional voice and messaging services.”
The decline in voice and SMS has been attributed to the increasing
adoption, particularly among young people, of third party applications
such as WhatsApp that allow consumers to make voice and video calls and
send texts free of charge.
This has directly impacted the firm’s bottom line. In the 2015/2016
financial year, for instance, Safaricom made Sh388 on average from every
user through its voice service. This figure was down to Sh339 in the
last financial year.
Mr Collymore said the company was now looking at spreading the M-Pesa
brand into the region especially after signing a new agreement with
Equity Bank earlier this week.
SEE ALSO :Safaricom unveils 400G network
“The
agreement Vodafone Group signed provides for an opportunity to take
M-Pesa to other countries in the region and Equity Bank has a presence
in Uganda, South Sudan and DRC and we’ll explore opportunities of
working together to extend our offerings in some of these markets,” he
said.
At the same time, the company highlighted the success of Fuliza which
has enjoyed rapid adoption with more than Sh45 billion advanced through
the facility in just four months.
“We launched Fuliza after we realised that consumers were cancelling
millions of transactions every day because of inadequate funds in their
wallets,” explained Collymore.
Safaricom Chairman Nicholas Nganga said the company was keeping an eye
on developments in the regulatory front where Parliament is expected to
debate legislation on dominance in the telecommunications sector as well
as proposals to have players spin off their mobile money businesses.
“Legislation and regulation that seek to forcefully re-organise the
operational structure of companies are not for business,” he said.
SEE ALSO :Safaricom’s Fuliza tipped to lend Sh200 billion in 1 year
“We
are comfortable with how the two main aspects of this business are
running and we would wait for someone to give us perhaps a more
comprehensive and convincing reason as to why that separation would be
in the interest of the business and stakeholders.”
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