MTN Nigeria rebounds with N1.1tn profit

MTN-new-logo-e1663465256894MTN Nigeria has reported a staggering N1.1tn profit for the 2025 financial year. This turnaround marks a significant departure from the fiscal headwinds of 2024, signalling a robust resurgence in the country’s digital economy.

Speaking on Channels Television on Tuesday, the Chief Financial Officer of MTN Nigeria, Modupe Kadri, broke down the numbers that defined the company’s “impressive” performance. He revealed that the firm achieved a 22.9 per cent increase in service revenue, reaching N392.2bn, fuelled by a surge in third-quarter activity.

The recovery was not a matter of chance but the result of aggressive capital expenditure. Kadri disclosed that the company’s investment in the sector has reached unprecedented levels. “We spent about N1tn in 2025, significantly higher than our 2024 investment levels. We will continue now that we have a business case to make this investment,” he explained.

Despite the massive profit and the deployment of over 2,850 new network sites, the CFO offered a grounded perspective on when consumers will feel the full impact of these billions. He addressed the recurring question of whether increased income immediately equates to better service quality. “The telecommunications industry is capital-intensive. Even when the capital is available, improvements in network infrastructure take time to materialise. We are not out of the woods yet, but the impact of such investments will be fully realised in time,” he said.

Looking towards the future, MTN is shifting its focus toward the “unconnected” segments of the Nigerian population. With the industry’s total investment exceeding $1bn, the company is eyeing a 70 per cent broadband penetration rate through a mixture of traditional and frontier technologies. “There is a growing need to expand connectivity as Nigeria’s population increases. Areas previously classified as rural require improved population coverage. Our goal is to exceed 2025 investment levels with the Bridge Project and a ‘satellite revolution’ aimed at closing the rural connectivity gap,” he added.

Kadri concluded that while private investment remains a pillar of their growth, much of this massive expansion is currently funded by the company’s own operating cash flow.

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