Summary
- From its 35 percent stake in the telco, the Treasury is set to receive Sh19.6 billion while South Africa’s Vodacom Group and its UK affiliate, Vodafone Group Plc, will earn Sh22.4 billion from their combined 40 percent equity in the firm.
- The company said the dividend payout is equivalent to 80 percent of its normalised earnings.
- The upcoming distribution takes the company’s cumulative dividend payouts since its 2008 listing to Sh356.9 billion, underlining the lucrative returns earned by its long-term investors, including the government.
Safaricom is set to pay a total dividend of
Sh56 billion after posting a 19.5 percent jump in net profit in the year
ended March, boosting its shareholders' cash flow — including the
government’s — in the face of the coronavirus crisis.
The
Nairobi Securities Exchange-listed firm declared a payout of Sh1.40 per
share to shareholders, up from Sh1.25 paid a year earlier. The growth
was driven by higher revenue from its internet provision business and
its financial services business, M-Pesa, as well as its first ever drop
in operating expenses. This saw its sales rise 4.9 percent to Sh265.5
billion while net profit grew to from Sh62.49 billion to Sh74.7 billion,
reflecting a growth of 19.5 percent.
From
its 35 percent stake in the telco, the Treasury is set to receive
Sh19.6 billion while South Africa’s Vodacom Group and its UK affiliate,
Vodafone Group Plc, will earn Sh22.4 billion from their combined 40
percent equity in the firm.
In a statement to the media
Wednesday, Safaricom said: "The board remains committed to investing in
the business and continuing our strong record for paying progressive
dividends each year."
The company said the dividend payout is equivalent to 80 percent of its normalised earnings.
The upcoming distribution takes the company’s cumulative
dividend payouts since its 2008 listing to Sh356.9 billion, underlining
the lucrative returns earned by its long-term investors, including the
government.
For the previous year (ended March 31,
2019), the company paid a normal dividend of Sh1.25 and a special payout
of Sh0.62, bringing the total to Sh1.87 or an aggregate of Sh74.9
billion.
The Sh19.6 billion to be paid to the
government will help the Treasury to plug revenue shortfalls, with Kenya
Revenue Authority (KRA) collections expected to take a hit in the wake
of the Covid-19 pandemic containment measures that have reduced economic
activities.
"Measures taken to slow down the rate of
infection, including home confinement, travel restrictions, the closure
of schools and entertainment spots, the suspension of public gatherings
and conferences, and a nightly curfew are expected to affect both
production and consumption," the World Bank said yesterday.
The
reduced production and consumption together with the government’s move
to cut taxes for companies and individuals to cushion the economy are
expected to hit tax collections.
The Parliamentary
Budget Office (PBO) — the unit that advises lawmakers on financial,
budgetary and economic matters — said revenue collection would drop by
Sh122.2 billion between April and June following the tax cuts.
At
the stock market, investors reacted by sending Safaricom’s share price
up 4.5 percent to Sh29.40 at the close of yesterday’s trading.
The
telco’s share price has rebounded the most among blue chip firms from
the stock market rout that was sparked by the spread of Covid-19, partly
due to the observation that there is increased demand for its services
from people working and studying from home.
Safaricom’s
earnings growth was driven by higher sales, reduced costs and one-off
gains from the acquisition of M-Pesa, its mobile money service brand,
which is also its second largest revenue stream.
For
instance, Safaricom increased its subscriber base by 12.2 percent to
35.6 million. This helped lift voice revenue — the largest sales item —
by 1.4 percent to Sh94.4 billion.
Revenue from mobile
data, where Safaricom has been aggressively fighting for market share by
offering internet bundles without expiry, rose 12.1 percent to Sh40.7
billion, after recording 21 per growth in the second half.
Earnings
growth was also driven by the first-ever drop in operating expenses,
Safaricom’s finance chief Sateesh Kamath said. He attributed the drop to
digitisation, increased efficiencies and the maximisation of the use of
the assets.
Revenue from M-Pesa jumped 12.6 percent to Sh84.4 billion, a third of Safaricom’s service revenue.
Safaricom said the coronavirus pandemic has made it impossible to issue guidance for the year to March 2021.
Peter
Ndegwa, who became CEO this month after heading Diageo’s continental
Europe business, said the uncertainty was mainly due to a lack of
clarity on how long the crisis would last.
The company
is foregoing about Sh5.5 billion in revenue from M-Pesa after it removed
charges on small transfers, to facilitate cashless transactions and
help slow the spread of the coronavirus.
"If the crisis
takes longer, we will need to support our customers even more," Mr
Ndegwa told investors his first online briefing.
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