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Africa's Helios Plans IPO Seeking $2.6 Billion Valuation

Africa's Helios Plans IPO Seeking $2 Billion Plus Value

(Bloomberg) -- Helios Towers Plc, one of the largest sub-Saharan telecommunications tower operators, plans an initial public offering in early April to let shareholders such as Soros Fund Management LLC reduce their stakes.

Helios plans to sell shares in London and Johannesburg, the company said in a statement Friday. Helios expects at least 25 percent of its shares will be freely traded after the sale, and it’s not selling any new stock.

“We want to be positioned well to tap the equity market for funding when and if the right opportunity in terms of expansion and growth comes along,” Chief Executive Officer Kash Pandya said in an interview. “There is opportunity for additional acquisitions in the markets that we operate in with 3,500 towers still owned by our customers.”

Bloomberg in November reported that Helios was seeking a valuation of at least $2 billion. The company has now narrowed its valuation expectations to about $2.6 billion including debt, according to a person familiar with the matter, who asked not to be identified as the considerations are private.

Africa’s phone-mast industry is booming as rising wireless-device use leads to a leapfrogging of traditional land-line connections. Mobile subscriptions in sub-Saharan Africa are set to surge 41 percent to 990 million in five years, according to Ericsson AB. Two of Africa’s other tower operators, Eaton Towers Ltd. and IHS Towers, are also seeking initial public offerings in 2018, people familiar with the matter said in November.

Helios is the only independent tower company in three of the four countries in which it operates, including Republic of the Congo, Tanzania and the Democratic Republic of the Congo. In its fourth market, Ghana, there is a contract coming up for 750 towers in 2020, said Pandya. Those masts are currently managed by Eaton and Vodafone Group Plc under a contract that is due for renegotiation, Pandya said.

“We are very active and hungry to pursue those towers,” he said.

Helios doesn’t need to raise immediate cash with the listing, which will prepare the company for the growth it expects in the next five years and to expand in countries beyond current operations, Pandya said.

BofA Merrill Lynch, Credit Suisse and Standard Bank are joint coordinators and bookrunners for the sale, while Jefferies International Ltd. is also a bookrunner.

--With assistance from Thomas Mulier

To contact the reporter on this story: Loni Prinsloo in Johannesburg at lprinsloo3@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Rebecca Penty at rpenty@bloomberg.net, Kim Robert McLaughlin, John Bowker

©2018 Bloomberg L.P.