Monday, June 1, 2026
  • Login
No Result
View All Result
The Business Times
  • News
  • BT Exclusive
  • Economy
  • Business
  • Financial Markets
  • Politics
  • Energy
  • Insights
  • Sports
  • News
  • BT Exclusive
  • Economy
  • Business
  • Financial Markets
  • Politics
  • Energy
  • Insights
  • Sports
No Result
View All Result
The Business Times
No Result
View All Result
Home Africa

Strive Masiyiwa Moves Econet Off Zimbabwe Bourse, Spins Off Towers in Bid to Unlock Hidden Value

byDare Iretomide
December 16, 2025
in Africa, Business, News
0
Strive Masiyiwa Moves Econet Off Zimbabwe Bourse, Spins Off Towers in Bid to Unlock Hidden Value
8
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Econet Wireless Zimbabwe Limited, the flagship telecoms company controlled by Zimbabwe’s richest man, Strive Masiyiwa, is preparing to voluntarily delist from the Zimbabwe Stock Exchange (ZSE), marking a major strategic shift for one of the country’s most prominent publicly traded companies.

The move brings to a close Econet’s long tenure on the local bourse and reflects growing frustration over persistent undervaluation in Zimbabwe’s capital markets.

Econet’s board said the decision follows years of trading at a steep discount compared with telecom operators across Africa. While many peers on the continent have successfully unlocked value by separating and monetizing their tower infrastructure, often trading at six to eight times enterprise value to EBITDA, Econet retained ownership of its towers and other passive assets. In Zimbabwe’s volatile local-currency market, investors struggled to properly value this structure, leaving the company’s market price far below what management believes reflects its true worth.

The proposed delisting will be presented to shareholders for approval in line with ZSE regulations. Ahead of the exit, Econet plans to make a voluntary exit offer, giving shareholders who prefer not to remain invested in an unlisted company the option to cash out or receive partial settlement in shares of a new infrastructure-focused subsidiary.

Central to the restructuring is the creation of Econet Infrastructure Company Limited, which will hold the group’s telecom towers, real estate, and power assets. The separation mirrors global telecom best practice, where passive infrastructure is carved out into standalone “tower companies” to improve transparency and valuation. Econet will retain a 70 percent stake in the new entity, while up to 30 percent of its shares will be allocated to shareholders who choose equity instead of cash under the exit offer.

To ensure fairness, the value of the infrastructure business will be determined by an independent valuation expert. Econet plans to list the new infrastructure company by way of introduction on the Victoria Falls Stock Exchange (VFEX), Zimbabwe’s U.S. dollar–denominated exchange, which has increasingly attracted companies seeking more stable pricing and access to offshore capital.

Once the delisting is completed, Econet Wireless Zimbabwe shares will no longer trade on the ZSE and will instead change hands privately, subject to company law and reinstated pre-emption rights among existing shareholders. The shift highlights a broader trend across Africa, where large corporates are reassessing listings on local exchanges that struggle to efficiently price assets, while turning to alternative platforms better suited to their capital and currency needs.

For shareholders, the restructuring offers a clearer set of choices: exit the investment now, or remain invested in a leaner telecom operator while also holding exposure to a separately listed infrastructure business. For Masiyiwa, the move reinforces his long-standing view that African companies must adapt their structures creatively to unlock value in imperfect and often constrained markets.

The delisting does not signal a retreat from Zimbabwe. Rather, it represents a strategic reset for a company that has been central to the country’s digital economy for more than two decades. Founded by Masiyiwa in 1998 after a landmark legal battle to liberalize the telecom sector, Econet has grown into Zimbabwe’s dominant mobile operator, serving more than 14 million subscribers and commanding significant shares of the voice and data markets. Through Econet Global, Masiyiwa controls roughly 47.5 percent of Econet Wireless Zimbabwe.

Beyond its home market, Econet has evolved into a pan-African and international telecom group, with operations and investments spanning more than 20 countries across Africa, Europe, South America, and East Asia. While the Zimbabwe unit remains the group’s anchor, economic instability and structural limitations of the local market have increasingly constrained how that value is reflected on the ZSE.

By stepping away from the local bourse and separating infrastructure assets, Masiyiwa is betting that a cleaner corporate structure and access to a dollar-based exchange will finally allow investors to see and price the full value of one of Zimbabwe’s most important companies.

Tags: EconetFeaturedStrive MasiyiwaTowersZimbabwe Stock Exchange
Dare Iretomide

Dare Iretomide

Next Post
Hassan Allam Construction Lands $250 Million Deal to Build Afreximbank’s New Global Headquarters in Egypt

Hassan Allam Construction Lands $250 Million Deal to Build Afreximbank’s New Global Headquarters in Egypt

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recommended

FG Probes MTN-IHS Tower Consolidation Deal

FG Probes MTN-IHS Tower Consolidation Deal

3 months ago
Africa Stablecoin Network Backs CBN’s Push for Cross-Border Payment Reform

Africa Stablecoin Network Backs CBN’s Push for Cross-Border Payment Reform

3 months ago

Popular News

  • Cowry Securities Climbs NGX Weekly Broker Rankings With Strong Trading Performance

    Cowry Securities Climbs NGX Weekly Broker Rankings With Strong Trading Performance

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Nigeria Imports £1.1 Billion Worth of Refined Oil From UK in 2025

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Nigeria’s Manufacturing Sector Sees Fresh Growth as Local Production Gains Momentum

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Nigeria’s Financial System Gains Strength as Market Liquidity Surges to N6.02 Trillion

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Power Outages Cost Nigerian Firms 3% of Annual Sales, AfDB Says

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

Connect with us

Facebook Twitter Instagram TikTok

Newsletter

Pages

  • About Page
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions

Navigation

  • News
  • BT Exclusive
  • Economy
  • Business
  • Financial Markets
  • Politics
  • Energy
  • Insights
  • Sports

© 2025 The Business Times NG .

Welcome Back!

OR

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • BT Exclusive
  • Economy
  • Business
  • Financial Markets
  • Politics
  • Energy
  • Insights
  • Sports

© 2025 The Business Times NG .