In a landmark financial recovery, MTN Nigeria invested ₦1 trillion in 2025 to aggressively expand its fiber infrastructure, deploy additional base stations, and fortify network capacity across the federation. This massive capital expenditure more than double the previous year’s spending underpinned the company’s return to profitability following a turbulent 2024 defined by severe foreign exchange pressures and negative equity.
The structural and fiscal consequence of this investment is a revitalized balance sheet, with the company posting a profit after tax of ₦1.1 trillion for the year ended December 31, 2025. This turnaround allowed the telecommunications giant to resume dividend payments, a move that signals the end of the balance sheet strain that had previously forced a suspension of shareholder returns. Chief Financial Officer Modupe Kadiri highlighted that the recovery was built on disciplined capital allocation and a deliberate reduction in foreign exchange exposure, successfully rebuilding shareholders’ equity to ₦548.7 billion.
Analytically, the ₦1 trillion investment has directly translated into enhanced operational metrics. MTN’s total subscriber base grew by 7.9% to reach 87.3 million, while active data users surged to 53.2 million. Most notably, data traffic spiked by 34% during the year, confirming that the company’s pivot toward high-capacity digital infrastructure is aligned with shifting consumer behavior. CEO Dr. Karl Toriola emphasized that these profits are the “mechanism” for sustainability, ensuring that as Nigeria’s digital ecosystem expands into fintech and education, the underlying infrastructure remains resilient.
The impact on “Shareholder Value and Market Confidence” is a vital dimension of this report. After a year of negative earnings per share (EPS), the company reported an EPS of ₦53.07 and declared a total dividend of ₦20 per share for the 2025 financial year. This includes a final dividend of ₦15 per share, pending shareholder approval, and a ₦5 interim dividend already paid. This restoration of dividends is a significant milestone for the Nigerian Exchange (NGX), as it marks the stabilization of one of its most influential listed entities.
Furthermore, the company generated ₦1.2 trillion in free cash flow, providing the liquidity necessary to sustain its “long-term approach” to infrastructure. Toriola noted that in a period of heightened economic pressure, Nigerians expect reliability and fairness when purchasing data for work or education. By doubling its capital expenditure, MTN is positioning itself not just as a service provider, but as a foundational pillar for national development, ensuring that network quality improves in tandem with usage intensity.
The long-term outlook for MTN Nigeria appears robust as it moves into 2026 with a repaired balance sheet and a clear mandate for expansion. With retained earnings standing at ₦400.4 billion, the company possesses the financial cushion to weather future market volatility while continuing to lead the 5G and fiber-to-the-home (FTTH) rollout. For investors and consumers alike, the message is one of stability: the “choking” financial year is over, and the era of infrastructure-led growth has been firmly re-established.




