Safaricom net
profit jumped 19.5 per cent to Sh74.7 billion for the year ended March
2020, extending its lead as East Africa’s most profitable company.
The telco said earnings included a Sh3.3 billion one-off exceptional gain arising from acquisition of the M-Pesa brand.
Without
this item, its profit after tax grew 14.3 per cent to Sh71.7 billion.
This means that the firm was making profit of Sh6.2 billion every month
or Sh200 million every day.
Safaricom made more
money than the top 10 banks combined. Its service revenue grew 4.8 per
cent to Sh251.2 billion, meaning, it was generating revenues of Sh20.9
billion every month on average or Sh690 million daily.
In
the previous year, the telco made a net profit of Sh62 billion. The
earnings promise its shareholders among them the government, another
windfall in dividends.
The company has proposed a
total dividend payout of Sh56.09 billion, which translates to Sh1.4 per
share. It represents 80 per cent of the profit and total comprehensive
income for the year excluding the one-off exceptional item.
The company said the profits were mainly driven by M-Pesa
revenue, which grew by 12.6 per cent to Sh84.4 billion. This contributed
33.6 per cent of the service revenue.
The other driver of profit is mobile data, which increased by 12.1 per cent to Sh40.67 billion.
The reality of voice reaching its peak became clearer after its revenue shrunk by 1.4 per cent to Sh94.45 billion.
Also
text message returns took a hit as more people moved to other social
medial networking platforms such as WhatsApp. The result was a 12.3 per
cent decline in its messaging revenue to Sh17.19 billion.
This
is the first results incoming chief executive officer Peter Ndegwa has
announced. He will be under pressure to match this performance or better
it despite coming in when Kenya is battling the Covid-19 pandemic.
Mr
Ndegwa sees the pandemic as giving the telco a chance “to leverage its
digital and data capability to support customers and community during
this period and through the recovery process.
“We
will focus on developing a range of digital products and services that
will provide sustainable solutions to challenges in sectors like
agriculture, health, education and essential services,” he said.
Smartphone devices, he said, are critical in supporting the new realities brought about by Covid-19.
“This
proposition aims to support Kenyans during and beyond this pandemic by
enabling them access more opportunities, be it learning, working or
running businesses from the comfort of their homes,” Mr Ndegwa added.
In
the year under review, its fixed service revenue rose by 10.7 per cent
to Sh8.97 billion and its one-month active overall customer base by 9.5
per cent to 28.63 million.
Also, its one-month
active M-Pesa customers increased 10 per cent to 24.91 million while
active chargeable mobile data customers rose by 10.2 per cent to 19.62
million.
The other most important measure for
performance is earnings or profit before interest, which grew by 13.5
per cent to Sh101 billion, the first time it has ever crossed the Sh100
billion mark.
This saw the company end the year
with free cash-flow of Sh70.27 billion, which was up 11.4 per cent
compared to a similar period the previous year.
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