Orange and Vodafone Group are in “strong
running” to buy 65 per cent of Etisalat Nigeria following Etisalat’s exit from
the troubled operator, according to local sources.
According to Brandish, “no fewer than five”
companies have expressed interest in Etisalat Nigeria, although the two
international telco giants have shown “concrete interest”. The potential
hurdle, the report said, was the restructuring of the debt which caused the
current uncertainty for the business.
The report also said the negotiators for
Etisalat Nigeria – including representatives of its bankers and Nigerian
regulators – are working to “mitigate any collateral damage and brand erosion”
which could impact the new owners. Either way, a rebranding is likely to be an
early priority for Orange or Vodafone if they become the successful owner, to
shift away from the Etisalat name.
After the Nigerian business defaulted on its
loan repayments, Etisalat was required to transfer its holding in the company
to a consortium of lenders to the Nigerian operation.
UAE investment fund Mubadala was also reported
to have pulled-out, leaving Etisalat Nigeria in the hands of local banks.
Etisalat had been in talks with Nigerians
banks to restructure a $1.2billion trade facility after missing repayments, but
the talks failed to produce tangible result.
Zenith Bank, Guaranty Trust Bank, First Bank,
United Bank for African, Fidelity Bank, Access Bank, Ecobank, FCMB, Stanbic
IBTC Bank and Union Bank are involved in the loan deal.
The telco said it had serviced its debt obligation up until
February 2017. According to the company, the outstanding loan sum to the
lenders stands at $227m and N113bn, bringing the total to $574m if the naira portion
is converted to US Dollars.
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