No offers for Kuwait Zain Africa ‘assets’ Market capitalization up $1.6b in 2 days

KUWAIT CITY, Feb 8, (Agencies): Kuwait’s telecom giant Zain group denied on Monday reports that it has received new offers for the purchase of its operations in 15 African nations.
“The group would like to inform (the bourse) that there are no new offers at present,” for the purchase of its African assets, Zain said in a statement posted on the Kuwait Stock Exchange website.
Shares of the largest listed firm in Kuwait rose by more than 10 percent in the past two days over the reports, and its market capitalisation gained about $1.6 billion to $14.6 billion.
Zain entered the African market in 2005 by buying the Dutch Celtel operations for $3.5 billion. Later, it made bold acquisitions in Nigeria, Sudan and other smaller nations.
Last year, Zain entered into serious negotiations with a number of bidders, including French telecom group Vivendi, for the sale of its African assets, but the talks faltered because the bids were below expectations.


In September, major shareholders Al-Khorafi Group signed an initial agreement to sell a 46-percent stake worth $14 billion to an Indo-Malaysian consortium that included two state-owned Indian telecom firms.
The deal was supposed to have been completed in four months. The deadline has passed without any progress, but the investors still stressed that the deal is not dead, although it will take more time.
The company’s chief executive officer Saad Al-Barrak resigned on Wednesday and the company accepted the resignation the following day.

Zain has developed from a local company with a customer base of under one million in 2002 to a major international firm with 72 million subscribers in 23 nations.
“With regard to information published in a local newspaper on buying Zain Africa assets, the group would like to state that there are no offers at present,” the company said in a statement on the bourse website.
Zain, the Gulf’s third-largest telecoms company by market value, halted talks in October to sell African assets to appease potential buyers of a stake in Zain Group.
Chief Executive Saad al Barrak’s resignation comes amid uncertainty over the fate of a delayed $13.7 billion deal for Kuwaiti family conglomerate Kharafi Group to sell a 46 percent stake in Zain at KD 2 per share to a consortium of Asian investors.
 

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