Tekedia Institute Congratulates Azeez Lawal, Managing Director of TrustBanc Capital
Good People, join us at Tekedia Institute to congratulate one of our Faculty Members, Azeez Lawal, who has risen to the position of the Managing Director of TrustBanc Capital. He remains the Chief Financial Officer (CFO) of the TrustBanc Group. Mr. Lawal is a zen-master on capital markets, and has helped hundreds of people through his lectures on our platform. We celebrate this ascension which we just got to know, and wish to (belatedly) congratulate him and TrustBanc Group.
The Malian Mutineers and the Power of Protests
The president of Mali, Ibrahim Boubacar Keita, resigned this week after he was detained by military officers. Mali has been rattled by mass protests against corruption and escalating insecurity in the country. Since 2012, militants have made Mali largely ungovernable. This resignation mirrors Sudan’s Omar al-Bashir who lost power over bread after mass protests. Sure, the style was different. The mutineers, going with the name the “National Committee for the Salvation of the People,” have called on Mali’s civil society and political movements to come together towards creating an ecosystem for a political transition.
Meanwhile, Nigeria, the superpower in the region, has rejected the coup and has requested an immediate restoration of democratic system. Of course, for months now, Nigeria has been unable to stop the protests in Mali through its emissaries, coordinated by former President Goodluck Jonathan. So, we will be watching if Malians return to work after the boys left the barracks for the presidential villa.
The Nigerian government has called for the immediate and unconditional restoration of constitutional order in Mali following the coup that ousted President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita.
The Minister of Foreign Affairs, Geoffrey Onyeama, made the call on behalf of the Nigerian government via his verified Twitter handle @GeoffreyOnyeama on Wednesday.
Mr Onyeama said Nigeria also welcomed the urgent activation of the ECOWAS Standby Force.
“The Nigerian government unequivocally condemns the coup d’état that took place in Mali on Tuesday and demands the immediate and unconditional restoration of constitutional order.
‘We welcome the urgent activation of the ECOWAS Standby Force,” Mr Onyeama said.
No one knows tomorrow for Mali. But it is evident that protests can bring change. I am not sure these soldiers would have done what they did without the citizens marching on the streets. Yet, it is not yet uhuru as counting on soldiers could be an optical illusion. But here, with the government and the main opposition party severely lost on power tussles, these soldiers could provide an umbrella for a new chapter. The key would be to task them to finish this transition process in months.
Ralph Mupita Anointed MTN’s New CEO When Rob Shuter Steps Down in Days
MTN Group today announced that the current group CFO of MTN Group, Ralph Mupita, has been appointed as the new group president and CEO with effect from 1 September 2020. Ralph has served as the MTN Group CFO since April 2017 and has played a critical role in the development and execution of the group’s strategy, capital allocation processes, and financial performance as well as in the resolution of a number of complex regulatory matters.
MTN Group chairman Mr Mcebisi Jonas said Mupita was chosen for the role because he has the ability to fill the group president and CEO position.
“After a rigorous and extensive search process, we are pleased to have appointed someone of Ralph’s calibre, experience and ability to fill the group president and CEO position.
“Ralph’s experience as the group CFO, strong knowledge of our businesses and markets, as well as successful background in financial services, M&A and emerging markets, place him in an excellent position to lead the growth and sustainability of the business going forward,” he said.
Ralph is a graduate of the University of Cape Town with a degree in Engineering and an MBA. Prior to joining MTN Group, Ralph was the CEO of Old Mutual Emerging Markets for five years, a business that provided financial services to individuals and corporates across 19 countries in Africa, Latin America and Asia, managing over R1 trillion of customer assets under management at the time.
Commenting on his appointment, Mupita said it has given him the opportunity to drive growth and unlock value for shareholders using the digital space of African continent.
“Leading a business with MTN Group’s history, scale and socio-economic impact is a privilege and honour, and I look forward to working with the group board and executive committee in driving growth and unlocking value for shareholders and broader stakeholders.
“MTN Group is well positioned to take advantage of the digital acceleration shifts and opportunities across our markets, and we are well placed to play an important and leading role in digital and financial inclusion of the African continent, working with our stakeholders and partners,” he said.
The current group president and CEO, Rob Shuter, will step down from his executive responsibilities on 31 August 2020 and will thereafter support Ralph as required until the end of his fixed-term contract early next year.
Shuter’s result statement shows that Mupita is stepping into big shoes. Under Shuter, the MTN Group delivered commercial momentum across its operations and yielded strong financial results.
The telecom giant added over 18 million customers to reach more than 251 million, with an increased data users that jumped from 17 million to over 95 million. In the fintech area of its business, Shuter pioneered a record 7 million to 35 million users’ growth.
MTN has, during his time, introduced many products such as the instant messaging platform Ayoba, which now live in 12 markets with two million monthly active users. And there’s MoMo, the payment platform launched in South Africa and Afghanistan. The product received super-agent license in Nigeria and registered more than 100,000 agents before the end of 2019.
The Group also delivered R14 billion of asset realizations within the first 12 months of its programme, and MTN Nigeria got listed on the Nigeria’s Stock Exchange. Shuter’s leadership addressed many business concerns affecting MTN, including the AGF tax matter in Nigeria, relationship with stakeholders and employee sustainable engagement which made it the best company in 2019.
On the financial growth, the telco’s revenue increased by 9.8% to R141.8 billion, and Earnings Before Interest Tax Depreciation and Amortisation (EBITDA) expanded by 13.6% to R53.4 billion. The holding company leverage ratio improved to 2.2x, and the capex intensity was reduced from 19.3% to 17.5%, indicating greater efficiency in deploying assets.
The strong earnings performance drove the operating cash flow to 18% increase and pushed the ROE from 11.5% in 2018 to 14.3% in 2019 on an IAS17 basis.
The result was attributed to double-digit growth in service revenue by both MTN Nigeria and MTN Ghana, and was driven by improved 4G services.
“On the financial side, we delivered service revenue growth of 9.8% with an acceleration in the second half. Our EBTDA margin improved and reported headline earnings per share grew 62%. Our network rollout brought a further 69 million people into 4G coverage whilst reducing capex intensity. Improved cash flows during the year supported stable balance sheet ratios,” report statement from Shuter said.
With this trajectory, the stakes are so high for Mupita, even as environmental and monetary policies become more challenging in Africa.








