MultiChoice scraps annual dividend amid headwinds

MultiChoice continued to scale its overall subscriber base and benefited from a strong performance in the rest of Africa, that delivered a trading profit for the first time since its listing in 2019. Picture: Simphiwe Mbokazi/ African News Agency (ANA)

MultiChoice continued to scale its overall subscriber base and benefited from a strong performance in the rest of Africa, that delivered a trading profit for the first time since its listing in 2019. Picture: Simphiwe Mbokazi/ African News Agency (ANA)

Published Jun 14, 2023

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MultiChoice, the JSE-listed pay television group that reported a bigger knock as a result of headwinds in its South Africa market, is anticipating an improvement in its exposure to exchange rate losses from its Rest oAfrica operations, mainly in Nigeria, after new Nigerian President Bola Tinubu mooted reforms.

The South Africa market has been roiled by load shedding, declining discretionary incomes and higher interest rates as the South Africa Reserve Bank tries to contain inflation. This is eating into MultiChoice’s bottom lines to the extent that it did not declare a dividend for the full year to the end of March.

“No dividend was declared by the board due to a cautious outlook on currencies in South Africa and Nigeria, a challenging environment in South Africa, exacerbated by the energy challenge,” MultiChoice said yesterday.

This came as “the South African consumer-facing business environment faced severe challenges” during the period under review, with high levels of unemployment, and load shedding becoming a permanent fixture in customers’ lives, worsening the environment.

According to Tim Jacobs, the chief financial officer for MultiChoice, the South African consumer is already saddled with servicing debt obligations that are taking up to 70% of incomes, leaving discretionary income at a low level.

The South Africa market now accounts for about 40% of MultiChoice’s 90-day subscribers, at 9.3 million, owing to the impact of load shedding, while the market in the rest of Africa, at 14.2 million households, accounts for 60% of total user numbers.

During the period under review, the MultiChoice group added 1.7 million 90-day active subscribers, an increase of about 8%. The Africa market was not spared the power outages, such as in Zimbabwe, Zambia and elsewhere.

Nigeria continues to be problematic for the company. However, President Tinubu, who sacked Central Bank of Nigeria Governor Godwin Emefiele last week, has removed fuel subsidies and has been talking up exchange rate reforms.

This was more likely to benefit MultiChoice, which has been exposed to exchange rate losses and challenges in repatriating earnings from one of Africa’s biggest economies, Jacobs told Business Report in an interview yesterday.

“Exchange rate losses are one of the biggest challenges we have been facing (and) extracting cash out of Nigeria has also been having the biggest impact on the company,” said Jacobs.

Although the group “successfully repatriated cash throughout the year” from Nigeria despite ongoing liquidity challenges, Jacobs said the “parallel exchange rate” in the west African nation had proven problematic because it gave a weaker value when sourcing foreign currency.

However, with Tinubu promising to reform the Nigerian monetary sector, the MultiChoice CFO believes the removal of subsidies on fuel will leave the government with some foreign exchange resources for the official market. Tinubu is also seen allowing for the convergence of the parallel market and formal market exchange rates.

Calvo Mawela, MultiChoice’s CEO, said, “We continued to scale our overall subscriber base and benefited from a strong performance in the rest of Africa, that delivered a trading profit for the first time since our listing in 2019. It is a remarkable performance by the team considering that they have had to absorb almost R3 billion in currency losses in the last four years.”

Although revenue for the period was up by 7% at R59.1bn, the trading profit for MultiChoice for the period was down 3% to R10bn due to a R900m “adverse currency impact” and weaker SA earnings.

Core headline earnings for the period were 2% up at R3.5bn, driven by the return to profitability for the rest of Africa segment, though cash flows at R2.9bn are down a massive 48% “due to lower trading profit, content prepayments and working capital timing due to a systems upgrade” investment.

Users on the group’s DStv app and Showmax services “continue to grow as online consumption increases, supported by rising broadband connectivity and more affordable” pricing. To this end, MultiChoice’s overall online user base increased by 12% year-on-year with the growth rate for paying Showmax subscribers amounting to 26%.

BUSINESS REPORT