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Safaricom’s $1.2bn Ethiopia Expansion Deepens Amid Telecom Losses

  • Money
    • Ethiopia has granted Nigeria’s United Capital its first foreign investment banking licence. The move marks a key step in the country’s controlled financial liberalisation strategy.Ethiopia Grants First Foreign Banking Licence

    • Standard Chartered says Africa is beginning to attract investors who retreated during the post-pandemic debt and currency crisis. The lender believes reforms are reshaping how global capital evaluates risk across the continent.Standard Chartered Sees Africa Capital Return

    • Standard Chartered Kenya is increasingly prioritising negotiated settlements over court litigation to resolve long-standing credit disputes. The bank says this approach has been part of its risk strategy for more than a decade.StanChart Kenya Rethinks Credit Litigation

    • Uganda’s central bank has introduced system-wide cash withdrawal limits, marking a structural shift in how money moves through the economy. The policy signals a move from encouraging digital payments to actively enforcing their dominance.Uganda Cash Limits Accelerate Digital Shift

    • Stanbic exceeded its sustainable trade finance target by nearly 48 per cent, deploying Sh133 billion ($1.03 billion) across Kenya and South Sudan in 2025. The performance highlights the growing role of green finance in driving economic growth and climate resilience across East Africa.Stanbic’s $1bn Green Finance Push Reshapes EA

  • Asset Management
    • East Africa’s ports are competing for regional dominance. Mombasa and Dar es Salaam serve multiple inland economies.East Africa Ports Battle: Trade Routes Control

    • NCBA’s high financing model reduces the upfront burden of vehicle ownership. This makes it a key enabler for first-time buyers and SMEs.NCBA Car Loans: High Financing Edge

    • Stanbic’s car loan offering is built on pricing discipline and structured finance expertise. It targets borrowers who prioritize efficiency over accessibility.Stanbic Car Loans: Kenya’s Low-Rate Advantage

    • KCB’s car loan product blends affordability with scale, making it accessible across income segments. Its flexibility has positioned it as a default lender for many Kenyan borrowers.KCB Car Loans: Kenya’s Most Competitive Option

  • Capital Markets
    • The revived East African Capital Markets Infrastructure (EAC CMI) project is linking stock markets across Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania and other regional partners. The initiative, underway in February 2026, aims to broaden investor access and unlock regional capital flows.East Africa Capital Markets Integration 2026

  • Central Banking & Monetary Policy
    • East Africa’s currencies face persistent pressure from global and domestic factors. Central banks actively intervene to stabilise exchange rates.10 Forces Shaping East Africa’s Currency Pressure

    • Ethiopia’s banking reforms are driving strong profit growth among local lenders while opening the door to foreign investors for the first time in decades. The shift positions the country as one of Africa’s most closely watched financial markets for global capital.Ethiopia Banking Reform Sparks Investor Moves

    • Kenya’s budget deficit is set to widen to 5.3% of GDP in 2026/27 as revenue shortfalls persist. The government plans increased domestic borrowing to bridge the KSh 1.106 trillion gap.Kenya Budget Deficit 2026/27 Hits 5.3% GDP

  • Commercial Banking
    • Standard Chartered says Africa is beginning to attract investors who retreated during the post-pandemic debt and currency crisis. The lender believes reforms are reshaping how global capital evaluates risk across the continent.Standard Chartered Sees Africa Capital Return

    • The renewed focus on FX hedging highlights the growing sophistication of treasury management across East Africa. Moreover, Kenya’s position as a regional financial hub is making it a key market for advanced risk management solutions.FX Hedging Surge Hits Kenya Banks

    • Investors are now treating African banks more like emerging-market financial infrastructure rather than frontier assets. Because of this shift, valuation movements are becoming faster, tighter, and more closely linked to earnings performance.Africa Banking Valuation Shift: Standard Bank Leads $90bn Market Cap Triangle in 2026

    • Kenya remains under enhanced monitoring by the Financial Action Task Force due to gaps in anti-money laundering enforcement. The designation continues to influence how global investors assess country risk.Kenya Grey List Risks Raise Capital Costs

    • Absa Bank Kenya’s Q1 2026 earnings underline how falling interest rates are beginning to compress margins across East Africa’s banking sector. Investors are increasingly focusing on efficiency and balance-sheet quality rather than headline growth alone.Absa Kenya Earnings Hit by Rate Shift

  • Development Finance Institutions (DFIs)
    • Rising oil prices linked to geopolitical tensions are increasing Africa’s import bills. This is putting pressure on already fragile fiscal balances across the region.Sub-Saharan Africa Growth Cut to 4.1%

    • African Export-Import Bank has unveiled a $10 billion emergency facility. The move aims to shield African economies from global geopolitical shocks.Afreximbank $10B Fund Shields Africa Economies

  • Fintech
    • Uganda’s central bank has introduced system-wide cash withdrawal limits, marking a structural shift in how money moves through the economy. The policy signals a move from encouraging digital payments to actively enforcing their dominance.Uganda Cash Limits Accelerate Digital Shift

    • Tanzania Enters Bloomberg Startup Radar Black Swan’s inclusion in Bloomberg’s 2026 startup list highlights Tanzania’s emerging role in fintech innovation. The recognition reflects growing interest in data-led credit systems.Black Swan Tanzania Bloomberg Startup List

    • NALA Moves Into Infrastructure Mode NALA is shifting from a remittance app into a payments system provider. This change reflects a broader industry move toward infrastructure-led fintech growth.NALA Raises US$50M for Payment Rails Growth

    • Rwanda Builds $5B Cross-Border Finance Rail

    • DRC’s fintech system is rapidly expanding as mobile money platforms replace cash transactions in one of Africa’s most underbanked economies.DRC Fintech Boom Reshapes Mobile Money Power

  • Insurance
    • Equity Pushes Deeper Into Insurance Equity Group Holdings is seeking shareholder approval to establish three new insurance subsidiaries across Kenya and the DRC. The move strengthens the lender’s transition toward a full-stack financial services ecosystem spanning banking, insurance, and health coverage.Equity Group Expands Insurance Platform Strategy

    • Debt Exit, Growth Entry CIC has cleared a major financial burden. The focus now shifts to how it drives growth.CIC Pays $10.3M Debt, Eyes Growth Pivot

    • CIC Insurance was built on Kenya’s cooperative movement. This foundation gave it unmatched reach across grassroots financial networks.Can CIC Still Dominate Kenya Insurance?

    • CIC Insurance has embedded itself within Kenya’s SACCO ecosystem. This gives it access to millions of potential customers across the country.CIC’s SACCO Strategy Drives Insurance Edge

    • CIC Insurance is expanding beyond Kenya into regional markets. This strategy aims to capture growth in underserved insurance sectors.Can CIC Scale Insurance Across East Africa?

  • Islamic Finance
    • Investment Banking
      • Ethiopia has granted Nigeria’s United Capital its first foreign investment banking licence. The move marks a key step in the country’s controlled financial liberalisation strategy.Ethiopia Grants First Foreign Banking Licence

      • Brookside Dairy’s cross-border network highlights the scale of East Africa corporate expansion. The company processes hundreds of millions of litres annually across multiple markets.Standard Chartered CIO Funds Kenya Insight

      • Standard Chartered Kenya’s AUM growth from $145M to $2.3B reflects a 16x expansion. Wealth management is becoming central to banking strategy.StanChart Kenya AUM Surges to $2.3B

  • Economy
    • Rwanda’s macro framework is now shaped by global interest rates and commodity volatility. IMF support acts as both liquidity buffer and investor confidence anchor.IMF Approves Rwanda $250M Facility 2026

    • Nigeria’s FX market is experiencing sustained volatility driven by structural currency adjustments. This has increased risk premiums and reshaped foreign investor expectations across key sectors.Africa FX Volatility: Nigeria vs Kenya 2026 Risk Gap

    • Kenya is gaining ground in Africa’s capital allocation shift as investors prioritize stability over scale. Nigeria remains dominant in size but faces rising FX-driven risk pressure.Kenya vs Nigeria Capital Shift 2026: Africa Investment Repricing Model Explained

    • A 10+ property footprint in Dubai signals more than wealth—it reveals strategy. Asset diversification is now central to conflict financing models.Hemeti Dubai Asset Network Exposed

    • Dubai’s prime districts are becoming repositories of global wealth, including politically exposed capital. The Hemeti case shows how strategic property acquisition can shield assets from volatility.Hemeti Dubai Property Trail Mapped

  • AfCFTA & Regional Trade
    • As South Sudan and Uganda gain routing options, freight pricing dynamics are shifting. Increased corridor competition is expected to drive down transport costs across the region.DESSU Corridor Threatens Kenya’s Trade Dominance

    • Economic scale of the COMESA bloc underscores stakes. With a combined GDP exceeding $1 trillion and a population of over 560 million, even mid-sized mergers now fall under enhanced regional regulatory oversight.COMESA merger rule jolts African dealmaking

  • Fiscal Policy
    • Rwanda’s macro framework is now shaped by global interest rates and commodity volatility. IMF support acts as both liquidity buffer and investor confidence anchor.IMF Approves Rwanda $250M Facility 2026

    • Kenya’s $13 billion reserve buffer remains stable but under pressure from rising oil prices. The World Bank engagement reflects early financial positioning.Kenya Seeks $13B Buffer as Oil Shock Hits

    • Kenya’s central bank has held interest rates at 8.75%. This signals a shift toward caution amid rising global uncertainty.Kenya Holds Rates at 8.75% Amid War Risks

    • Uganda has launched a domestic gold buying programme aimed at strengthening its foreign exchange reserves. The move aligns with a broader global trend of central banks increasing gold holdings.Uganda Gold Strategy Bolsters Reserves, 2026

    • Kenya plans to start buying gold to diversify its foreign exchange reserves, a strategy aimed at reducing currency and external shocks. Analysts say this move could strengthen banking sector resilience and investor confidence in 2026.Kenya Gold FX Shift Reshapes Banking Risk

  • Industrial Policy
    • Infrastructure
      • Berbera Port is emerging as a key alternative gateway for Ethiopia-bound cargo, handling rising container flows through DP World-backed infrastructure expansion.Berbera vs Mogadishu Port Rivalry Intensifies

      • East Africa’s economy is becoming increasingly interconnected. Capital, trade, and digital systems now operate as a unified structure.East Africa Economic Outlook: Capital, Trade & Power

      • East Africa is investing over $10 billion annually in infrastructure. Funding sources are shaping the region’s economic future.East Africa $10Bn Infrastructure Race

      • Energy Transition Stage EACOP has reached about 79% completion, shifting focus from construction to financial pricing. Markets now value it based on future export potential.East Africa Energy Capital Repricing Cycle

    • Macroeconomics
      • Public Debt
        • In April 2026, the IMF flagged Kenya’s $2.6 billion in securitized revenues as debt. The move could reshape how markets price sovereign risk.IMF Flags Kenya’s Hidden Debt Risk

        • Kenya is intensifying negotiations with the IMF as it seeks a new financing programme to stabilize its fiscal position. The talks highlight the complex balance between debt reform commitments and political realities at home.Kenya IMF Financing Puzzle: Debt Reform Diplomacy

        • Kenya’s domestic debt has breached Sh7 trillion ($54 billion), highlighting growing fiscal pressures and heavy reliance on local borrowing. Analysts warn this surge could constrain public investment and raise interest burdens.Kenya Domestic Debt Surge: Fiscal Crossroads

      • Real Estate
        • Trade & Regional Integration
          • A $30 million SME risk-sharing facility is reshaping access to credit for small businesses across the Democratic Republic of Congo.DRC SME financing expansion

          • Across the region, sovereign bond yields reflect differing levels of risk, liquidity, and macroeconomic stability. Investors are increasingly using these markets as complementary allocations rather than isolated opportunities.Frontier Debt Face-Off: DRC vs Kenya & Uganda

          • Escalating conflict in eastern DRC is disrupting critical mineral supply chains. Global markets are reacting to increased uncertainty in cobalt and copper flows.DRC Conflict Disrupts Mining Supply Chains

          • Ethiopia is accelerating its WTO accession push as negotiations enter a politically sensitive phase. The outcome will hinge on how far the government is willing to reform its state-led economic model.Ethiopia WTO Push Faces Reform Test

          • Uganda is set to begin commercial oil production, with recoverable reserves of 1.4–1.65 billion barrels . The Tilenga and Kingfisher fields will drive peak output and attract global investors.Uganda Oil 2026: Pipeline, Reserves, Investment Risk

        • Entrepreneurship
          • M-KOPA’s pay-as-you-go model began with solar kits and evolved into a broader asset-financing platform. Payment data from these devices underpins its credit scoring.M-KOPA’s Bet: Banking Without Banks

          • East Africa’s richest individuals in 2025 reflect the region’s expanding wealth across finance, manufacturing, and real estate. Their fortunes highlight the sectors driving economic growth.East Africa’s Richest 2025: Top 10 Revealed

          • Rostam Azizi’s acquisition of 100% of Nation Media Group PLC signals a strategic shift in East African media ownership. The deal positions Azizi to expand influence across regional news, advertising, and digital platforms.Azizi Acquisition Shifts East Africa Media Strategy

        • 40 Under 40
          • Joseph Nguthiru’s HyaPak converts invasive water hyacinth into biodegradable packaging. The model transforms an environmental problem into an industrial opportunity.Turning Hyacinth Into Profit in Kenya

          • Elly Savatia built Signvrse to address communication barriers faced by the deaf community in everyday life. His approach prioritizes access over scale.How Elly Savatia Is Scaling AI for Inclusion

          • Apollo Agriculture uses satellite imagery and machine learning to turn farmland into measurable credit profiles, redefining agricultural lending in Kenya.Apollo Agriculture: Founder, Funding & Growth

          • With over $50 million raised, NALA has moved beyond startup experimentation into fintech infrastructure—building systems, not just applications.Inside NALA: Founder, Funding & Kenya Play

        • Incubators & Accelerators
          • Innovation
            • SME Growth
              • Startups
                • Tech Founders
                  • Dr. David Wachira turned global finance experience into a bold fintech solution with WayaPay. The platform is transforming how immigrants send money home—faster, cheaper, and more securely.Global Diaspora Banking Innovation by WayaPay

                • Venture Funding
                  • Women in Business
                    • Female industrial ownership in East Africa remains structurally limited despite high rates of entrepreneurship. Capital intensity and ownership barriers continue to define who builds—and who controls—production systems.Why Female Industrialists Are Missing in East Africa

                    • When food becomes a strategic asset, data is power. Sara Menker, CEO of Gro Intelligence , uses AI-driven agriculture analytics to forecast global food security risks before they hit headlines.AgriIntelligence: Sara Menker’s Food AI

                  • Women in Business Power List
                    • East Africa’s wealthiest women entrepreneurs are driving growth across key sectors including finance, manufacturing, and real estate. Their business empires reflect resilience, innovation, and long-term visionWealthiest Women Entrepreneurs in East Africa 2025

                  • Youth Enterprise
                    • Manufacturing
                      • Diageo’s planned divestment marks a strategic pivot toward higher-margin global spirits, aligning with its ongoing portfolio reshaping efforts. The transaction opens the door for new strategic capital from Japan’s Asahi Group Holdings into East Africa’s consumer sector.Kenya Wins $324M from Diageo EABL Exit

                      • Kenya is steadily gaining ground as Africa’s preferred investment hub in 2026. Investors are increasingly favoring macro stability and predictable returns over pure market size.Kenya vs Nigeria Capital Shift 2026

                      • East African companies are expanding beyond domestic markets. They are becoming regional players across multiple sectors.African Multinationals: East Africa Expansion Wave

                    • Agriculture & Agribusiness
                      • Energy
                        • East Africa’s energy transition is driven by diverse national strategies. Kenya, Tanzania, and Ethiopia each follow distinct energy models.5 Shifts Powering East Africa’s Energy Transition

                        • Capital Signal, Not Policy Noise Tanzania’s April 24 reset is calibrated for lenders, not headlines. The emphasis on fiscal predictability directly targets project finance constraints.Tanzania LNG Reset: $42B Capital Signal 2026

                        • Rising oil prices are widening trade deficits across East Africa. Import-dependent economies are facing renewed pressure on foreign exchange reserves.East Africa Faces Oil Shock & Capital Squeeze

                        • Somalia has officially entered the offshore oil exploration phase. The move signals a bold shift into the global hydrocarbons economy.Somalia Oil Push Draws Global Energy Giants

                        • Uganda is set for its first commercial oil exports in 2026, shifting the nation from an aid-dependent to an oil-driven economy. Investors are closely watching how foreign funding, peacekeeping reimbursements, and oil revenues interact to shape fiscal stability.Uganda Oil and Aid Economics in 2026

                      • Healthcare
                        • Technology
                          • Data has overtaken voice as the main revenue driver in East Africa’s telecom sector. The shift is transforming business models across the industry.East Africa Telecom Data Economy

                          • Blended finance has powered Pezesha’s growth, combining equity and debt funding. This structure supports sustainable lending expansion.Hilda Moraa’s Fintech Bet on Uganda

                          • Flexible repayment terms of up to 72 months help borrowers manage cash flow effectively. However, longer tenures can increase the total cost of credit over time.Airtel Kenya Targets Rural & Youth Growth

                          • Airtel Kenya’s lower data prices are reshaping consumer expectations. Price-sensitive users are increasingly shifting usage to its network.Airtel Kenya’s Price War Disrupts Telecoms

                          • Airtel Money surpassed 10% market share, marking a turning point in Kenya’s mobile payments sector. M-Pesa’s dominance is now facing measurable pressure.Airtel Money’s Strategic Rise in Kenya

                        • Telecommunications
                          • Safaricom Ethiopia is rapidly expanding infrastructure and mobile money services, increasing competitive pressure on Ethio Telecom in Africa’s fastest-growing telecom frontier.Safaricom Ethiopia Challenges Ethio Telecom in Telecom Battle

                          • Ethio Telecom’s debut on the Ethiopian Securities Exchange marks a historic shift from state monopoly to public market participation. The listing signals Ethiopia’s first serious step toward building a modern capital market ecosystem.Ethio Telecom Lists as Ethiopia Opens Markets

                          • Safaricom’s $1.2bn Ethiopia Expansion Deepens Amid Telecom Losses

                          • Flexible repayment terms of up to 72 months help borrowers manage cash flow effectively. However, longer tenures can increase the total cost of credit over time.Airtel Kenya Targets Rural & Youth Growth

                          • Airtel Kenya expanded its 5G network to cover nearly 690 sites across 39 counties. This reflects rapid growth in next‑generation infrastructure.Airtel Kenya’s Network Catch‑Up Transformation

                        • Transport & Logistics
                          • Tourism & Hospitality
                            • Training
                              • Boardroom Leadership
                                • Leadership signals strategic reset in Tanzania Standard Chartered’s appointment of Geofrey Mchangila marks a leadership shift in its Tanzania operations. The move aligns with the bank’s broader push toward digital and corporate banking transformation.StanChart Tanzania CEO Leadership Shift

                                • Consolidated Bank has recently gained increased State business support following Treasury directives to government agencies. The leadership dispute now places the lender at the center of Kenya’s evolving State banking strategy.Court Shields Mbadi in Consolidated Bank Row

                                • East Africa’s top women CEOs are leading some of the region’s largest companies by assets and influence. Their leadership is reshaping corporate strategy and regional expansion.East Africa Women CEOs 2025 Rankings

                              • C-Suite Profiles
                                • Joshua Oigara has been appointed chief executive of Stanbic Holdings Plc effective March 1, 2026, marking a return to the helm of a listed lender. His elevation signals renewed focus on regional growth and banking sector transformation across East Africa.Stanbic East Africa Capital Reset 2026

                                • Risper Ohaga’s appointment marks a decisive shift from expansion to capital discipline at APA Apollo Group. Investors will be watching whether tighter underwriting translates into stronger returns.Risper Ohaga APA Strategy at APA Apollo

                                • ESG initiatives grew to KSh31.3 billion ($202M), embedding sustainability into risk management. Birju Sanghrajka’s succession aims to maintain this disciplined, high-margin strategyStandard Chartered Kenya Strategy After Kariuki Ngari Exit

                                • Lina Githuka is transforming KWAL with growth, sustainability, and regional expansion, earning top honours in African manufacturing.KWAL Growth: Inside Kenya’s Beverage Shift

                              • CEO Interviews
                                • Executive Education
                                  • Governance & Ethics
                                    • Pritesh Ashok Shah’s fraud relied on trust networks rather than digital systems. The case highlights rising vulnerability in elite finance.UK Fraud War: Shah’s Nairobi Crisis

                                    • The Mombasa–Nairobi pipeline project was designed to secure Kenya’s fuel supply chain. Today, it is entangled in one of the country’s most complex commercial disputes.KPC–Zakhem Deal: Debt, Disputes, Billions

                                    • System Shock The simultaneous fall of operator, regulator and policy actors signals a full-chain breakdown. It is rare—and highly revealing.Joe Sang: Inside Kenya’s Fuel System Breakdown

                                    • Fuel Pipeline Nexus Joe Sang’s role at KPC placed him at the center of Kenya’s petroleum movement system — where logistics decisions carry broad economic consequences.Joe Sang: Kenya Pipeline Power & Structural Risk

                                  • Leadership Strategy
                                    • Absa’s appointment of Sitoyo Lopokoiyit signals a decisive shift toward fintech-led banking across Africa. Investors are now watching whether the strategy can close efficiency gaps and lift returns.Absa Africa Banking Strategy Accelerates Digital Shift

                                    • Mutunga warns on foreign military risks. On January 13, 2026, former Chief Justice Willy Mutunga challenged the Kenyan government over foreign military installations, citing potential economic and security vulnerabilities. He highlighted that in case of conflict, ordinary Kenyans could become collateral damage, emphasizing the lack of public debate and transparency.Kenya Military Bases: Economic Risks

                                  • Next-Generation Leaders
                                    • East Africa’s young influential leaders under 30 are driving change across business, technology, and social impact. Their innovation is shaping the region’s future.Top Young Influential East Africans Under 30 (2025)

                                  • Public Sector Leaders
                                    • Corporates
                                      • Remittance inflows remain a critical source of foreign exchange stability in Kenya and the wider region. A slowdown could tighten liquidity conditions across banking systems.East Africa Remittance Shock Warning 2026

                                    • Boardroom & Governance
                                      • Corporate Strategy
                                        • Kenya’s KWAL stake sale delay exposes structural tensions in privatisation law and state asset execution.Heineken Exposure Grows in KWAL Delay

                                        • DRC plans a $100m mining security force to protect cobalt and copper zones. The move signals rising state control over strategic minerals.DRC Mining War: $100m Armed Unit Plan

                                        • Equity dilution is reshaping corporate strategy in Kenya. Firms are prioritizing scale and regional dominance over full ownership.Kenya FMCG Shake-Up as Musangi Eyes Equity Sale

                                        • Brookside Dairy’s cross-border network highlights the scale of East Africa corporate expansion. The company processes hundreds of millions of litres annually across multiple markets.Silent Expansion: East Africa’s Corporate Power Shift

                                        • EABL Kenya Strategy: Tax, Illicit, Market Power

                                      • Corporate Earnings
                                        • Stanbic Bank Kenya’s KSh3.52 billion ($27.2m) Q1 2026 profit reflects steady earnings growth amid a rapidly changing banking environment. The lender’s deposits surged to KSh411 billion ($3.18bn), signalling a major liquidity milestone in Kenya’s financial system.Stanbic’s $27m Profit Signals Banking Shift

                                        • Co-op Bank’s KSh8.41 billion ($65m) Q1 profit exposed the surprising resilience of Kenya’s retail banking economy despite rising taxes and expensive credit. Behind the earnings lies a KSh612 billion ($4.73bn) deposit machine powered by SACCOs, SMEs and digital banking.Co-op Bank’s $65m Profit Reveals Hidden Power

                                        • . A Client Loss That Changed Everything The exit of Airtel removed nearly 20% of revenue. However, the deeper damage came from the loss of institutional relationships.WPP Scangroup Loss Hits $5.5M on Client Exit

                                        • Uganda’s banking sector posted a 36% jump in net after-tax profits for the year ended June 2025, driven by higher interest income and improved underwriting. Strong earnings are strengthening capital buffers and enhancing overall banking sector resilience in early 2026.Uganda Banking Profit Surge Strengthens Buffers

                                      • Corporate Leadership Programs
                                        • Family-Owned Enterprises
                                          • IPOs & Listings
                                            • Kenya’s KWAL stake sale delay exposes structural tensions in privatisation law and state asset execution.Kenya KWAL Sale Blocked in Legal Clash Crisis

                                            • A Market Gains Real Weight Awash Bank’s entry transforms the ESX into a credible platform. Scale now meets structure.Awash Bank Lists: $3.4B Giant Hits ESX

                                            • KPC IPO Market Impact The KPC IPO raised $292M and was oversubscribed, signaling strong investor demand. It has since boosted liquidity on the Nairobi Securities Exchange.KPC IPO: What It Means for Kenya’s Economy

                                            • KPC IPO Momentum The KPC IPO raised $292M and was oversubscribed, signaling strong investor appetite. This success is now reshaping expectations around Kenya’s privatisation pipeline.Kenya IPO Pipeline: 5 State Firms Next

                                            • The Kenya Pipeline Company (KPC) IPO closed oversubscribed at 105.7%, raising KSh112.37 billion ($877 million). Investor appetite reflects strong confidence in Kenya’s infrastructure-linked assets.KPC IPO Raises $700M, Retail Demand Weak

                                          • Mergers & Acquisitions
                                            • Multinationals in East Africa
                                              • Tusker has long been embedded in Kenya’s cultural identity. However, changing demographics are reshaping how younger consumers relate to legacy brands.Tusker’s Cultural Power—and Its Limits

                                              • East Africa’s most capitalized firms highlight the region’s strongest corporate players by market value. Their scale reflects investor confidence and long-term growth potential.Top 10 Most Capitalized Firms in East Africa

                                            • State-Owned Enterprises
                                              • Business Education
                                                • Business School Rankings
                                                  • East Africa’s MBA market is shifting from cost-focused to return-driven decision-making. Professionals now weigh tuition against career growth, salary progression, and regional opportunities.East Africa MBA ROI Surge 2025

                                                  • East Africa’s top business schools are shaping the next generation of corporate and entrepreneurial leaders. Their programs combine academic rigor with practical industry exposure.Top 10 Business Schools in East Africa (2025)

                                                • Executive Education
                                                  • MBA Programs
                                                    • East Africa’s public universities offer some of the most affordable MBA programs globally. Their low tuition makes them attractive for professionals seeking quick ROI.Cheapest vs Premium MBAs in East Africa

                                                  • Research & Thought Leadership
                                                    • Rising excise taxes continue to reshape Kenya’s alcohol industry. The impact is most visible in the shrinking mass-market segment.Kenya Alcohol Tax Trap Explained

                                                  • Scholarships
                                                    • EA Institutions Tuition & Fees
                                                      • Telecommunications

                                                        Safaricom’s $1.2bn Ethiopia Expansion Deepens Amid Telecom Losses

                                                        Mobile data generated nearly 68 percent of Safaricom Ethiopia’s revenue, highlighting how consumers are leapfrogging directly into internet-driven telecom usage. Voice income is increasingly becoming secondary in the company’s growth model.

                                                        Published

                                                        2 months ago

                                                        on

                                                        May 15, 2026

                                                        By

                                                        Charles Wachira
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                                                        Safaricom raises Ethiopia stake to 54.1% after a $165m investment, strengthening its position in Africa’s largest telecom market ahead of a 2027 breakeven target.

                                                        Safaricom increased its Ethiopia stake to 54.1 percent after injecting another $165 million into Africa’s most expensive telecom expansion project.

                                                        Three years after entering one of Africa’s last closed telecom markets, Safaricom PLC is increasing investment in a business that is still making losses.

                                                        The Nairobi-listed operator increased its ownership in Safaricom Ethiopia to 54.1 percent in the year ended March 2026 after participating aggressively in a fresh funding round alongside Vodacom Group. The move diluted several heavyweight backers, including Sumitomo Corporation, British International Investment and the International Finance Corporation.

                                                        On paper, the transaction looks straightforward: Safaricom injected another Sh21.3 billion ($165 million), pushing its cumulative Ethiopia exposure to Sh158 billion ($1.22 billion). Yet beneath those figures sits a far larger strategic contest over who ultimately controls East Africa’s digital future.

                                                        Total shareholder funding in the Ethiopian venture has now reached Sh341.7 billion ($2.64 billion). That level of spending is rare in African telecom expansion projects. Even by emerging-market telecom standards, the capital burn is extraordinary.

                                                        But so is the prize.


                                                        Ethiopia: Africa’s Last Big Telecom Frontier

                                                        Ethiopia, with a population exceeding 130 million people, represents Africa’s second-most populous nation after Nigeria and one of the final large-scale mobile-data growth frontiers left globally. For decades, the market was dominated by state operator Ethio Telecom. Liberalization created a rare opening for foreign telecom firms.

                                                        Safaricom executives increasingly speak about Ethiopia less as a subsidiary and more as a generational strategic asset — one capable of reshaping the company’s long-term earnings architecture beyond Kenya’s maturing telecom market.

                                                        That logic helps explain why the group continues absorbing massive upfront losses while many global telecom operators are retreating from frontier-market risk exposure.

                                                        The Ethiopian unit still posted a Sh21.2 billion annual loss, though the deficit narrowed sharply from Sh36 billion a year earlier. For investors, the reduction matters less as an accounting detail and more as evidence that the venture may finally be moving from infrastructure-heavy deployment into monetization mode.

                                                        Safaricom chairman Adil Khawaja signaled precisely that transition.

                                                        “Ethiopia is gradually transitioning from roll-out to scale,” he said, framing the market as a long-duration expansion rather than a near-term profitability exercise.


                                                        Why Safaricom Keeps Spending Despite Losses

                                                        That distinction is critical.

                                                        Telecom expansion in frontier markets requires heavy spending in the early years. Operators spend heavily on towers, spectrum, fiber and customer growth long before revenues stabilize. Ethiopia’s case has been even more complex because of foreign exchange shortages, political instability, inflationary pressure and infrastructure bottlenecks that have complicated deployment economics.

                                                        The company disclosed that part of the latest funding round was directed toward settling obligations tied to infrastructure suppliers and equipment vendors. Chief finance officer Dilip Pal said the Ethiopian subsidiary cut deferred vendor liabilities by $121 million during the period while also expanding an existing financing facility from $100 million to $134 million.

                                                        That financing evolution reveals another important shift: Safaricom is slowly engineering a transition away from pure equity dependence toward blended funding structures using local debt and supplier financing.

                                                        In effect, the company is trying to convert Ethiopia from a shareholder-funded expansion story into a partially self-financing operating business before investor patience weakens.

                                                        The urgency is understandable.

                                                        Even as subscriber growth accelerates, Ethiopia remains an unusually difficult operating environment for multinational investors. Chronic dollar shortages complicate repatriation planning. Inflation continues pressuring household purchasing power. Political tensions still linger after years of internal conflict. Meanwhile, infrastructure deployment costs remain elevated relative to consumer spending capacity.


                                                        Data, Not Voice, Is Driving Ethiopia’s Telecom Boom

                                                        Yet early commercial signals are beginning to validate Safaricom’s thesis.

                                                        Monthly active customers climbed to 10.75 million during the financial year, driven partly by tariff adjustments introduced in December 2025 and improving macroeconomic conditions. Revenue reached Sh14 billion, with mobile data accounting for Sh9.5 billion — nearly 68 percent of total turnover.

                                                        That revenue mix is revealing.

                                                        Unlike older African telecom markets that relied on voice calls, Ethiopia is quickly becoming a data-driven market. Consumers are moving quickly to smartphone internet usage. That shift could support future growth in streaming, fintech, e-commerce and digital services.

                                                        Voice revenue stood at Sh3 billion, underscoring how secondary traditional calling services are becoming inside the company’s broader commercial model.

                                                        The weakest segment remains mobile money.

                                                        Despite M-Pesa enjoying near-mythical status in Kenya, Ethiopia contributed only Sh169.4 million in M-Pesa revenue during the year — a negligible figure relative to the scale of investment. The muted performance reflects regulatory constraints, financial-system conservatism and the early-stage nature of Ethiopia’s digital-payments ecosystem.

                                                        Still, executives remain convinced mobile financial services could eventually become the operation’s most valuable earnings engine.

                                                        That belief mirrors what happened in Kenya, where M-Pesa evolved from a payments utility into the central nervous system of the economy, supporting everything from merchant transactions to lending and wealth products.


                                                        The Bigger Strategic Battle Behind the Funding Round

                                                        For global investors, Safaricom’s Ethiopia strategy now looks more like a long-term infrastructure project than a normal telecom expansion.

                                                        The company is effectively betting that digital connectivity in East Africa will become as systemically important as transport corridors, ports or energy grids over the next decade.

                                                        That helps explain why Safaricom — despite pressure on margins and rising capital intensity — continues increasing exposure while several co-investors passively dilute.

                                                        Vodacom’s ownership edged higher to 6.02 percent from 5.74 percent. Meanwhile, Sumitomo’s holding declined to 23.5 percent, British International Investment fell to 9.5 percent and IFC slipped to 6.81 percent.

                                                        The dilution dynamics quietly reveal who remains willing to absorb near-term risk in exchange for long-duration strategic control.

                                                        Safaricom clearly wants that control.


                                                        Can Ethiopia Become Safaricom’s Next Growth Engine?

                                                        The company still expects the unit to break even by March 2027. Investors see that target as a key test of whether the Ethiopia venture will succeed.

                                                        For now, the market is showing cautious optimism.

                                                        Losses are narrowing. Data usage is accelerating. Customer growth remains strong. Vendor obligations are shrinking. Financing structures are improving.

                                                        Yet the deeper reality is that Safaricom is no longer merely expanding into Ethiopia.

                                                        It is attempting to build the digital rails of a future East African economic super-region — before global capital fully prices in its significance.

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                                                        Telecommunications

                                                        Safaricom Ethiopia Challenges Ethio Telecom in Telecom Battle

                                                        Telebirr and M-PESA Ethiopia are emerging as competing financial ecosystems, reshaping how digital payments evolve in Ethiopia’s telecom market.

                                                        Published

                                                        1 month ago

                                                        on

                                                        May 28, 2026

                                                        By

                                                        Charles Wachira
                                                        Safaricom Ethiopia is rapidly expanding infrastructure and mobile money services, increasing competitive pressure on Ethio Telecom in Africa’s fastest-growing telecom frontier. Global investors are closely tracking Ethiopia’s telecom liberalization, driven by its large population base and low digital penetration rates.

                                                        Safaricom Ethiopia intensifies competition with Ethio Telecom as mobile money, infrastructure, and subscriber growth reshape Ethiopia’s emerging telecom duopoly.

                                                        Safaricom Escalates Ethiopia Telecom Battle as Duopoly Forms

                                                        Ethiopia’s telecom sector is undergoing a structural shift as Safaricom PLC expands its footprint in a market still dominated by Ethio Telecom, reshaping infrastructure investment, pricing dynamics, and mobile money competition across one of Africa’s most strategically important digital economies.

                                                        The liberalisation process is being driven by the Ethiopian Communications Authority, which continues to frame market opening as a way to improve access, affordability, and service quality in a historically state-controlled telecom system — see Ethiopian Communications Authority.

                                                        Global institutions such as the World Bank have repeatedly linked telecom liberalisation to productivity gains and financial inclusion in emerging markets — see World Bank Digital Development.


                                                        Ethio Telecom Still Dominates Despite Rising Competition

                                                        Ethio Telecom remains the dominant operator in Ethiopia despite growing competition.

                                                        According to Reuters reporting, the company posted strong earnings growth, including a pretax profit of about 76 billion birr (around US$1.3 billion), driven by rising mobile data consumption and digital services expansion — see Reuters coverage of Ethio Telecom earnings.

                                                        The operator continues to serve more than 80 million subscribers, reinforcing its entrenched position in Ethiopia’s telecom ecosystem.

                                                        Its mobile money platform, Telebirr, has evolved into a national payments infrastructure layer supporting government services, merchant transactions, and retail financial flows.


                                                        Safaricom Ethiopia Expands in High-Cost Phase

                                                        Safaricom Ethiopia, a subsidiary of Safaricom PLC, entered the market in 2022 through a consortium involving Vodafone Group and Vodacom Group.

                                                        Since launch, it has pursued aggressive infrastructure rollout and customer acquisition despite operating in a high-capital, low-margin environment.

                                                        Reuters reports that Safaricom’s Ethiopian operations remain in a heavy investment phase, with startup losses driven by network expansion and market entry costs — see Reuters Safaricom financial performance.

                                                        Operational momentum includes:

                                                        • 10–13 million customers
                                                        • 3,100+ telecom towers
                                                        • 5M+ M-PESA Ethiopia users

                                                        Safaricom has disclosed Ethiopian service revenue of approximately ETB 15.9 billion in FY2026 — see Safaricom Investor Relations.

                                                        CEO Peter Ndegwa has consistently described Ethiopia as a long-term strategic growth market.


                                                        Heavy Capital Investment Continues

                                                        Safaricom Ethiopia remains in a structurally capital-intensive phase, investing heavily in towers, fibre rollout, spectrum deployment, and mobile money infrastructure.

                                                        Reuters analysis shows Ethiopian operations continue to weigh on group earnings, although losses are narrowing as scale improves — see Reuters Safaricom earnings analysis.

                                                        This reflects a classic frontier-market telecom strategy: invest heavily first, monetise later.


                                                        Ethiopia’s Emerging Telecom Duopoly

                                                        Ethiopia is now effectively a regulated duopoly dominated by Ethio Telecom and Safaricom Ethiopia.

                                                        Both operators are shaping connectivity, pricing, and digital finance infrastructure.

                                                        Infrastructure race

                                                        Both firms are expanding rural coverage, fibre backbone, and 4G densification.

                                                        Subscriber competition

                                                        Ethio Telecom retains a scale advantage, while Safaricom targets younger, high-data users.

                                                        Mobile money battle

                                                        Telebirr and M-PESA Ethiopia are competing for dominance in digital payment ecosystems.


                                                        Structural Constraint: Low Penetration, High Upside

                                                        Despite rapid expansion, Ethiopia remains underpenetrated in telecom and digital finance.

                                                        The World Bank notes that large segments of the population still lack reliable internet access and financial inclusion — see World Bank Digital Development.

                                                        This creates a structural paradox:

                                                        • low current monetisation
                                                        • extremely large long-term market potential

                                                        Ethio Telecom’s Defensive Transformation

                                                        Ethio Telecom is evolving from a monopoly operator to a competitive digital services platform.

                                                        Its strategy includes expansion of Telebirr into a national payment system, enterprise services growth, rural connectivity expansion, and network modernisation.


                                                        Investor Implications

                                                        Ethiopia’s telecom liberalisation is attracting global investor attention due to:

                                                        • population exceeding 120 million
                                                        • shift from monopoly to duopoly
                                                        • telecom-fintech convergence

                                                        Reuters notes Safaricom Ethiopia remains loss-making but is improving as scale builds — see Reuters Safaricom update.


                                                        Bottom Line

                                                        Ethiopia’s telecom sector is now a live competitive battleground.

                                                        Ethio Telecom remains dominant in scale and infrastructure, but Safaricom Ethiopia is reshaping pricing, investment behaviour, and mobile money competition.

                                                        The outcome will define not just telecom leadership — but the architecture of Ethiopia’s digital economy.

                                                        Continue Reading

                                                        Telecommunications

                                                        Ethio Telecom Lists as Ethiopia Opens Markets

                                                        Safaricom Ethiopia’s entry into the market reshaped competition, forcing rapid upgrades in pricing, infrastructure, and service delivery. Yet Ethio Telecom still maintains overwhelming scale with tens of millions of subscribers and dominant national reach.

                                                        Published

                                                        1 month ago

                                                        on

                                                        May 27, 2026

                                                        By

                                                        Charles Wachira
                                                        Ethio Telecom’s debut on the Ethiopian Securities Exchange marks a historic shift from state monopoly to public market participation. The listing signals Ethiopia’s first serious step toward building a modern capital market ecosystem. The Ethiopian Securities Exchange is positioning itself as a new financial gateway for the region, with banks and state firms lining up for listings. Ethio Telecom’s IPO now stands as the benchmark test for future market confidence and foreign investor interest.

                                                        Ethio Telecom has listed on the Ethiopian Securities Exchange after a partial IPO, marking a major shift in Ethiopia’s telecom and capital markets reforms.

                                                        🧠 Investor Intelligence Brief: Ethio Telecom’s Listing Signals Ethiopia’s State Capitalism Reset

                                                        The listing of Ethio Telecom on the newly established Ethiopian Securities Exchange marks far more than the debut of a telecom stock.

                                                        It represents the first large-scale attempt by the Ethiopian state to transition a strategic monopoly asset into a partially market-driven public company while maintaining sovereign control.

                                                        For regional investors, the May 26 listing is also an early test of whether Ethiopia’s long-delayed capital markets liberalisation can attract meaningful domestic participation and eventually foreign institutional capital.

                                                        👉 according to the Ethiopian Securities Exchange framework


                                                        📊 THE IPO UNDERPERFORMED — BUT THE STRATEGIC SIGNAL MATTERS MORE

                                                        The state initially offered:

                                                        • 100 million shares
                                                        • at 300 birr each
                                                        • targeting 30 billion birr (US$220 million+)

                                                        However, only 10.7 million shares were sold, raising approximately:

                                                        • 3.2 billion birr
                                                        • equivalent to roughly US$23 million

                                                        That means the IPO achieved barely over 10% of its fundraising target.

                                                        Ordinarily, such an outcome would be viewed as a weak market debut.

                                                        Yet Ethiopia’s case is different.

                                                        This was effectively:

                                                        • the country’s first large-scale public telecom offering,
                                                        • one of the first major equity market transactions under the ESX era,
                                                        • and a test of domestic investor confidence inside a tightly controlled economy transitioning toward partial liberalisation.

                                                        ESX CEO Tilahun Esmael Kassahun described the listing as:

                                                        “an important precedent for transparency, public participation, and long-term value creation.”

                                                        👉 according to the Ethiopian Securities Exchange


                                                        🏦 ETHIO TELECOM IS NO LONGER JUST A STATE MONOPOLY

                                                        The listing formalises a transition that began in June 2024 when Ethio Telecom converted from a traditional state monopoly into a public share company.

                                                        For decades, the telecom operator functioned as one of Ethiopia’s most powerful state-owned enterprises, controlling:

                                                        • fixed-line infrastructure,
                                                        • mobile connectivity,
                                                        • international telecom gateways,
                                                        • and digital financial rails.

                                                        However, that model began changing after Ethiopia initiated telecom-sector reforms aimed at:

                                                        • attracting foreign investment,
                                                        • modernising digital infrastructure,
                                                        • and increasing competition.

                                                        The most important catalyst came in 2022, when Safaricom Ethiopia entered the market after a consortium led by Safaricom PLC spent approximately:

                                                        • US$850 million
                                                          to secure Ethiopia’s first private telecom licence.

                                                        That move effectively broke an eight-decade monopoly.


                                                        📉 SAFARICOM FORCED A STRATEGIC RESET

                                                        The entry of Safaricom Ethiopia fundamentally changed Ethio Telecom’s operating behavior.

                                                        Following competition pressure:

                                                        • mobile data tariffs were cut by roughly 70%,
                                                        • 4G and 5G rollout accelerated,
                                                        • and customer acquisition strategies became more aggressive.

                                                        This matters because Ethio Telecom historically operated without meaningful pricing pressure.

                                                        Competition forced operational modernisation.

                                                        Yet despite Safaricom Ethiopia’s rapid growth:

                                                        • service revenue rose 86.6% to KES14.1 billion (US$109 million),
                                                        • subscribers reached 13.6 million,
                                                        • coverage expanded to 60% of Ethiopia’s population across 3,504 sites,

                                                        the operator remains significantly smaller than Ethio Telecom.


                                                        📈 ETHIO TELECOM’S SCALE REMAINS OVERWHELMING

                                                        In the fiscal year ended June 2025, Ethio Telecom reported:

                                                        • revenue of 162 billion birr (US$1.18 billion+),
                                                        • up 72.9% year-on-year,
                                                        • with EBITDA reaching 76 billion birr (US$555 million+).

                                                        In the first half of FY2025/26:

                                                        • revenue rose another 37% to 85.02 billion birr,
                                                        • net profit reached 42.36 billion birr,
                                                        • gross margin stood at 49.8%.

                                                        Subscribers reached:

                                                        • 87.1 million users.

                                                        That scale advantage is enormous.

                                                        Safaricom Ethiopia may be growing faster percentage-wise, but Ethio Telecom still controls:

                                                        • the deeper infrastructure network,
                                                        • larger subscriber base,
                                                        • stronger cash flows,
                                                        • and entrenched national distribution reach.

                                                        🧭 THE BIGGER STORY: ETHIOPIA IS BUILDING A CAPITAL MARKET FROM SCRATCH

                                                        The Ethio Telecom listing is also strategically important for the Ethiopian Securities Exchange itself.

                                                        The ESX launched in January 2025 and previously hosted:

                                                        • Wegagen Bank
                                                        • Gadaa Bank
                                                        • Awash Bank

                                                        all of which entered through listing-by-introduction structures rather than public IPOs.

                                                        Ethio Telecom, therefore,becomes:

                                                        • the exchange’s first major IPO,
                                                        • first state enterprise listing,
                                                        • and first non-financial equity.

                                                        More banks are now moving toward listing preparation, including:

                                                        • Dashen Bank
                                                        • Bank of Abyssinia

                                                        with others reportedly at advanced regulatory stages.

                                                        The ESX is targeting:

                                                        • nine listings before July 2026.

                                                        ⚠️ THE RISKS GLOBAL INVESTORS WILL WATCH

                                                        Despite the symbolism, several structural concerns remain.

                                                        🔴 Limited IPO participation

                                                        The offering was heavily undersubscribed.

                                                        That raises questions about:

                                                        • domestic liquidity depth,
                                                        • investor education,
                                                        • and trust in long-term equity ownership.

                                                        🔴 Currency convertibility constraints

                                                        Ethiopia’s FX market remains tightly managed.

                                                        That creates uncertainty for:

                                                        • dividend repatriation,
                                                        • foreign investor participation,
                                                        • and valuation modelling.

                                                        🔴 State influence risk

                                                        The government remains the dominant shareholder.

                                                        Investors will monitor whether:

                                                        • pricing decisions,
                                                        • capital allocation,
                                                        • and strategic priorities

                                                        remain commercially driven or politically influenced.


                                                        📌 INTELLIGENCE TAKEAWAY

                                                        Ethio Telecom’s listing is not primarily about the amount of money raised.

                                                        It is about institutional transition.

                                                        The company is moving:

                                                        • from monopoly to competitive operator,
                                                        • from state utility to partially market-priced entity,
                                                        • and from closed governance toward public accountability.

                                                        At the same time, Ethiopia itself is attempting something larger:
                                                        the construction of a domestic capital market ecosystem capable of funding economic expansion without relying entirely on sovereign borrowing and state banking channels.

                                                        The IPO may have underperformed financially.

                                                        But strategically, it may become one of the most consequential listings in modern Ethiopian economic history.

                                                        Continue Reading

                                                        Technology

                                                        Airtel Kenya Targets Rural & Youth Growth

                                                        Multi-SIM usage is strengthening Airtel’s position in the market. Users combine networks to optimize cost and convenience.

                                                        Published

                                                        3 months ago

                                                        on

                                                        April 9, 2026

                                                        By

                                                        Charles Wachira
                                                        Flexible repayment terms of up to 72 months help borrowers manage cash flow effectively. However, longer tenures can increase the total cost of credit over time. Airtel’s high-volume strategy focuses on scale rather than margins. This approach is reshaping telecom profitability models.In the pix above L-R) Airtel’s customer Carlos Kimuyu engages with Airtel Kenya Customer Experience Director Goldermier Opiyo, Group CEO Sunil Taldar, and Airtel Kenya MD Ashish Malhotra during the opening of a retail shop at Spur Mall, Ruiru

                                                        Airtel Kenya is expanding in rural and youth segments with low-cost data, driving subscriber growth and reshaping telecom competition.

                                                        The Underserved Strategy: Airtel’s Rural & Youth Playbook

                                                        How Airtel Is Expanding Kenya’s Telecom Market from the Bottom Up

                                                        Kenya’s telecommunications sector is entering a structural shift, not through regulation, but through market expansion into underserved segments. For nearly two decades, Safaricom has dominated through premium pricing and ecosystem strength. However, Airtel Kenya is rewriting that model by targeting youth, rural, and low-income users—segments historically under-monetized.

                                                        According to the Communications Authority of Kenya, Kenya had over 67 million mobile subscriptions by 2024, with penetration exceeding 130%, largely driven by multi-SIM usage. Within this landscape, Airtel has steadily grown its share to over 30% of mobile subscriptions, up from roughly 27% in 2021. This growth is not coming from premium users—it is being driven from the bottom of the pyramid.


                                                        Affordable Data: Capturing the Youth Economy

                                                        At the center of Airtel’s strategy is aggressive pricing, particularly in mobile data. In Kenya, where over 75% of the population is under 35, affordability determines access to digital services.

                                                        Airtel has consistently priced its data bundles 20–40% lower than comparable offerings from Safaricom. For instance, entry-level daily bundles often cost below KSh 20, making them accessible to students and informal workers.

                                                        Moreover, Airtel’s simplified bundle structure reduces complexity, allowing users to clearly understand value. This matters because, as noted by industry analyst Eric Musau (Standard Investment Bank):

                                                        “Price transparency and affordability are now the biggest drivers of data adoption in Kenya, especially among youth and first-time users.”

                                                        Consequently, Airtel is not just gaining subscribers—it is driving higher data consumption per user, particularly on platforms like TikTok, YouTube, and WhatsApp.


                                                        Rural Penetration: Unlocking a Neglected Market

                                                        While urban markets are saturated, rural Kenya remains under-served despite significant population density. Historically, high infrastructure costs and lower ARPU discouraged deep rural expansion.

                                                        However, Airtel’s lean model is changing that equation.

                                                        By leveraging:

                                                        • Shared tower infrastructure
                                                        • Lower operating costs
                                                        • Targeted deployment

                                                        Airtel has expanded coverage across counties previously considered low-return. As a result, millions of rural users are entering the digital economy for the first time.

                                                        According to CAK data, rural connectivity has improved significantly, with 3G/4G coverage now exceeding 95% of the population. Airtel’s contribution to this expansion has been particularly notable in peri-urban and semi-rural zones.


                                                        High-Volume, Low-Margin Economics

                                                        Airtel’s model contrasts sharply with Safaricom’s.

                                                        Safaricom model:

                                                        • High ARPU (Average Revenue Per User)
                                                        • Premium pricing
                                                        • Strong margins

                                                        Airtel model:

                                                        • Lower ARPU
                                                        • High subscriber volume
                                                        • Thin margins, scaled profitability

                                                        Airtel Africa reported over 150 million mobile subscribers across its markets in 2024, with data revenue growing by over 20% year-on-year. Kenya remains a key growth market within this ecosystem.

                                                        As Airtel Africa CEO Sunil Taldar noted in a 2024 investor briefing:

                                                        “Our strategy is focused on expanding access and driving usage. Scale allows us to operate efficiently even at lower price points.”

                                                        Therefore, Airtel’s profitability is not dependent on extracting more from fewer users—but on serving more users more frequently.


                                                        Expanding the Market: Beyond Competition

                                                        Unlike traditional competition, Airtel is not simply taking share from Safaricom—it is growing the overall market.

                                                        This is happening through:

                                                        • First-time internet users entering via cheap data
                                                        • Increased usage among low-income subscribers
                                                        • Multi-SIM adoption

                                                        Kenya remains a multi-SIM market, where over 60% of users operate more than one line. In this environment, Airtel does not need to replace Safaricom—it only needs to capture incremental usage.

                                                        Consequently, users often:

                                                        • Keep Safaricom for M-Pesa
                                                        • Use Airtel for cheaper data and calls

                                                        This dual usage model plays directly into Airtel’s strengths.


                                                        Youth Pipeline: Building Future Market Share

                                                        Airtel’s focus on youth is also a long-term strategic play.

                                                        Young users:

                                                        • Drive the highest data consumption
                                                        • Influence peer adoption
                                                        • Transition into higher-value customers over time

                                                        By capturing this segment early, Airtel is effectively building a future revenue pipeline.

                                                        According to the World Bank, Kenya’s digital economy is expected to contribute over 10% of GDP by 2025, driven largely by youth-led innovation and mobile connectivity.

                                                        Thus, Airtel’s positioning aligns directly with macroeconomic trends.


                                                        Competitive Pressure on Safaricom

                                                        Airtel’s expansion into underserved segments creates indirect pressure on Safaricom.

                                                        While Safaricom still commands:

                                                        • Over 60% market share
                                                        • Dominance in mobile money via M-Pesa
                                                        • Higher ARPU

                                                        The competitive dynamics are shifting.

                                                        Emerging effects include:

                                                        • Increased promotional pricing
                                                        • More flexible data bundles
                                                        • Greater focus on lower-income segments

                                                        As a result, Safaricom is gradually being forced to respond in areas it previously deprioritized.


                                                        Risks and Sustainability

                                                        Despite strong momentum, Airtel faces structural challenges:

                                                        • Lower margins may pressure profitability
                                                        • Rural infrastructure costs remain high
                                                        • Network consistency must match growth

                                                        However, Airtel mitigates these risks through:

                                                        • Regional scale via Airtel Africa
                                                        • Lean operational model
                                                        • Strategic infrastructure partnerships

                                                        Therefore, the company can sustain its expansion without significantly eroding financial stability.


                                                        Conclusion: Growth from the Base of the Pyramid

                                                        Airtel Kenya’s underserved market strategy represents a fundamental shift in telecom economics.

                                                        By focusing on:

                                                        • Affordable data
                                                        • Rural penetration
                                                        • Youth-driven demand

                                                        Airtel is expanding access, increasing usage, and reshaping competition.

                                                        👉 Final intelligence insight:
                                                        While Safaricom dominates value extraction, Airtel is mastering market expansion and volume-driven growth—a strategy that could define the next decade of telecom competition in Kenya.

                                                        Continue Reading

                                                        Telecommunications

                                                        Airtel Kenya’s Network Catch‑Up Transformation

                                                        Strategic infrastructure sharing and tower partnerships reduce build‑out costs. Airtel’s deployment strategy leverages regional efficiencies.

                                                        Published

                                                        3 months ago

                                                        on

                                                        April 3, 2026

                                                        By

                                                        Charles Wachira
                                                        Airtel Kenya expanded its 5G network to cover nearly 690 sites across 39 counties. This reflects rapid growth in next‑generation infrastructure. Airtel-Kenya-MD-Ashish-Malhotra continues improving network coverage weakening Safaricom’s premium pricing argument. As performance gaps narrow, pricing competition intensifies.

                                                        Airtel Kenya’s strategic network expansion is narrowing the gap with Safaricom, reshaping competition in Kenya’s telecom market.

                                                        Airtel Kenya’s Infrastructure Leap: Redefining Telecom Competition

                                                        In recent years, competition in Kenya’s telecommunications sector has entered a new phase, where pricing alone no longer dictates market leadership. Instead, network quality and connectivity performance have become equally decisive. Against this backdrop, Airtel Kenya has embarked on a silent but strategic network expansion, gradually eroding what was once Safaricom’s strongest advantage: network superiority.

                                                        As data consumption grows and mobile internet becomes essential for work, entertainment, and services, the race to deliver reliable and fast networks is reshaping customer loyalty. Moreover, Airtel’s dual focus on network build‑out and pricing competitiveness is forcing a broader market recalibration. Consequently, this shift is positioning Airtel not just as a challenger, but as a credible contender across both urban and peri‑urban zones.


                                                        Building Out 4G and Rolling Out 5G at Scale

                                                        Airtel Kenya began its network transformation with an accelerated 4G rollout, significantly increasing the number of sites equipped for high‑speed mobile internet. Unlike earlier years when coverage was limited, today 4G connectivity is increasingly accessible across major cities. Furthermore, in July 2023 Airtel launched its commercial 5G services, becoming the second major operator in Kenya to deploy next‑generation connectivity. Early networks already encompass hundreds of sites, including urban centers where data demand is highest.

                                                        By mid‑2024, the company had extended 5G coverage to over 39 counties, with nearly 690 active sites, supporting improved performance for both mobile and home broadband applications. Importantly, this expansion is not simply symbolic. Rather, it reflects strategic prioritization of areas where high‑speed data usage drives revenue and influences consumer perception. Meanwhile, competitors have focused more incrementally on 5G, giving Airtel breathing room to capture early adopters excited about faster, low‑latency services.


                                                        Strategic Partnerships and Efficient Infrastructure Deployment

                                                        Instead of relying solely on in‑house construction, Airtel has pursued strategic partnerships with independent tower companies and network sharing arrangements. This approach allows the company to scale rapidly without exorbitant capital expenditure, reducing duplication and accelerating deployment timelines. Additionally, by leveraging shared infrastructure, Airtel can reallocate resources toward capacity upgrades and densification, essential for high‑performance networks.

                                                        In contrast, relying on owned assets alone often slows expansion due to cost and complexity. Therefore, Airtel’s hybrid infrastructure model provides both speed and flexibility, which are increasingly valuable in a data‑driven market. In addition, being part of the broader Airtel Africa network gives the Kenyan unit access to regional expertise and shared technology investments. This collaboration enhances Airtel’s ability to implement best‑in‑class practices while containing costs.


                                                        Focusing on High‑Impact Urban and Peri‑Urban Zones

                                                        Rather than spreading resources thinly across all regions at once, Airtel has prioritized deployment where usage density and revenue potential are highest. By targeting Nairobi, Mombasa, Kisumu and key peri‑urban centres, the operator ensures that connectivity improvements are felt where they matter most. These areas not only generate significant data traffic but also influence broader market perception and brand comparisons.

                                                        For example, consumers in these zones are more likely to perform speed tests and directly compare network performance on platforms such as Ookla Speedtest or OpenSignal. Consequently, delivering competitive performance in these locations creates a cascade effect; positive user experiences enhance Airtel’s reputation and reduce hesitancy among new subscribers.


                                                        Real‑World Performance and Consumer Perception Shifts

                                                        Network improvements are only meaningful if users perceive them. In recent months, a growing number of Kenyan subscribers have shared positive feedback regarding Airtel’s urban network speeds and coverage consistency. According to reports and user forums, these performance gains are most noticeable during peak hours and in high‑traffic districts where Airtel has densified infrastructure.

                                                        Nevertheless, some users still report variability depending on location — especially in rural areas where expansion is ongoing. Still, pockets of strong performance have shifted the narrative from “Airtel as a secondary SIM” to “Airtel as a primary connectivity option,” particularly among price‑sensitive consumers.


                                                        Undermining Safaricom’s Pricing Justification

                                                        Historically, Safaricom’s ability to charge premium prices rested on its perceived lead in network quality and reliability. With Airtel now narrowing that gap, the justification for a sizable price premium diminishes. Therefore, Safaricom has gradually introduced more competitive pricing and promotional bundles, suggesting strategic response to Airtel’s network gains.

                                                        Industry analysts observe that when network parity reaches critical mass — especially in urban areas — the market begins to value price and performance more equally. Accordingly, Airtel’s improved network may catalyse pricing adjustments across the sector, benefiting end users.


                                                        Integration with Broader Value Propositions

                                                        Airtel’s network improvements are complemented by broader service innovations, including enhanced 5G home broadband equipment and transparent bundle offerings. This combination of network capability and simplified pricing makes Airtel’s ecosystem more attractive to customers who prioritise value and predictability.

                                                        Additionally, Airtel’s approach aligns with digital consumption trends in Kenya, where demand for streaming, remote work connectivity, and mobile services continues to rise. As a result, network capacity and stability become more than technical metrics; they are core business differentiators in a market where user expectations are increasing.


                                                        Remaining Challenges and the Road Ahead

                                                        Despite progress, Airtel Kenya faces ongoing challenges, particularly in extending high‑quality coverage to remote and under‑served regions. Infrastructure costs and regulatory considerations sometimes slow expansion beyond urban hubs. Moreover, ensuring consistent performance during peak demand periods — when networks are most taxed — remains a technical priority.

                                                        However, continued investment, coupled with efficient deployment strategies, positions Airtel to build a narrowing network gap that may eventually translate into higher market share. In doing so, the operator strengthens its foundation not only for mobile connectivity but also for future digital services and enterprise solutions.


                                                        Conclusion: A Market Transformed by Network Competition

                                                        The Kenyan telecommunications market is at a strategic inflection point, where network quality, coverage and pricing converge to define competitive positioning. Through proactive investments in 4G and 5G, smart infrastructure partnerships, and targeted deployments, Airtel Kenya is steadily narrowing the performance gap with Safaricom.

                                                        As a result, competition is shifting from price alone to price backed by connectivity quality — a combination that ultimately benefits consumers and challenges incumbents to improve. Looking ahead, continued network expansion is likely to reshape subscriber behaviour, pricing models, and service expectations in Kenya’s dynamic telecom landscape.


                                                        Continue Reading

                                                        Telecommunications

                                                        Safaricom Shifts to Birr Bonds in Ethiopia

                                                        Safricom intends to issue local currency-denominated bonds starting in September, leveraging Ethiopia’s new financial market infrastructure to support its expansion and operations within the country.

                                                        Published

                                                        2 years ago

                                                        on

                                                        September 28, 2024

                                                        By

                                                        Charles Wachira
                                                        Safaricom PLC plans to raise up to $150 million in local currency debt in Ethiopia as it deepens its investment in one of Africa’s newest telecom markets. The funding move is expected to support infrastructure expansion and long-term operations as the company scales its presence in the country. Recently, Safaricom PLC has intensified efforts to reduce its exposure to foreign currency-denominated debt due to the significant depreciation of frontier market currencies like the Kenya shilling and the Ethiopian birr, which have increased finance costs and impacted company performance.

                                                        Safaricom targets $150m in Ethiopia local-currency bonds as it cuts FX risk and deepens expansion in Africa’s newest telecom frontier.

                                                        Safaricom Targets Birr Bonds in Ethiopia Shift

                                                        Intelligence Report | By Charles Wachira

                                                        Safaricom PLC is moving to raise up to $150 million (about Ksh19.6 billion) in Ethiopia through local-currency bonds. The plan marks a major shift in how the telecom giant funds its fast-growing Ethiopian business.

                                                        The company will issue birr-denominated bonds once Ethiopia launches its new securities exchange. The rollout is expected in the third quarter of 2024.

                                                        The strategy reflects a clear change in Safaricom’s funding model. It is shifting away from dollar debt toward local-currency borrowing.

                                                        Shift Away From Dollar Debt

                                                        Dilip Pal says the company is watching Ethiopia’s new bond market closely. He confirms Safaricom is ready to use it when conditions allow.

                                                        “We are closely monitoring this space and will consider listing at the right time. We are very interested in the new bond market,” Pal said in comments to Business Daily after FY2024 results.

                                                        The statement shows growing interest in domestic funding tools across Africa. It also reflects rising pressure on firms that rely on dollar loans in volatile markets.

                                                        $100–150 Million Funding Plan

                                                        Safaricom plans to raise between $100 million and $150 million over several years. The final amount will depend on network expansion needs and market conditions.

                                                        The company will not raise all funds at once. Instead, it will spread issuance across multiple phases.

                                                        This phased model helps match funding with project rollout in Ethiopia. It also reduces financial pressure during early-stage investment.

                                                        Ethiopia remains one of Africa’s largest telecom growth markets. It has more than 120 million people and low mobile penetration compared to regional peers.

                                                        Currency Pressure Reshapes Strategy

                                                        Safaricom is adjusting its strategy due to currency swings in key markets. The Ethiopian birr and Kenyan shilling have both weakened in recent periods.

                                                        These moves have raised the cost of dollar loans. They have also increased financial risk for companies operating across borders.

                                                        In the six months to September 2023, Safaricom repaid a $120 million (Ksh15.6 billion) syndicated loan early. The firm had taken the loan to fund Ethiopia expansion.

                                                        It repaid the loan four years before maturity. The move cut exposure to exchange-rate losses.

                                                        Ethiopia Market Reform Opens New Channel

                                                        Ethiopia is building a new securities exchange. The reform aims to open the country to corporate bonds and equity listings.

                                                        This creates a new funding channel for companies like Safaricom. It also allows firms to borrow in the same currency they earn revenue in.

                                                        This reduces currency mismatch risk. It also improves financial stability for long-term projects.

                                                        Strategic Meaning for Safaricom

                                                        Safaricom’s shift reflects a wider trend in African telecom markets. Companies are moving away from dollar debt toward local funding.

                                                        Local pension funds and domestic investors are becoming key lenders. This deepens financial systems in emerging markets.

                                                        However, risks remain. Ethiopia’s capital market is still new. Liquidity is limited. Rules are still evolving.

                                                        Pricing and demand for bonds may also vary in early stages. This could affect fundraising speed and cost.

                                                        Outlook: Early Test of Ethiopia’s Bond Market

                                                        Safaricom’s plan will be one of the first major tests of Ethiopia’s bond market. Success could attract more global firms into local funding.

                                                        Failure could expose gaps in investor depth and market readiness.

                                                        Either way, the outcome will shape investor views on Ethiopia’s financial reforms.

                                                        For Safaricom, the move signals a deeper shift in strategy. It is building a financing model tied directly to local markets rather than global dollar cycles.

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