Vodacom inks takeover of Tata's Neotel

Vodacom, a unit of Britain's Vodafone, said the deal will help the company to accelerate broadband connectivity in South Africa, which has been lagging behind emerging market-peers.

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Ankit Pal
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South Africa's largest mobile provider Vodacom has finalised a deal to takeover Indian-owned telecommunications firm Neotel in a deal worth seven billion rand (USD 676 million), the company said on Monday.

Vodacom, a unit of Britain's Vodafone, said the deal will help the company to "accelerate broadband connectivity" in South Africa, which has been lagging behind emerging market-peers.

Neotel, which majority-owned by India's Tata Communications has been in business for seven years, operating mainly in urban areas, in a sector which is still dominated by state-backed provider Telkom.

Vodacom group chief executive Shameel Joob said the 100 percent buyout fitted the company's business aim of growing its data business, where the company has seen growth in recent years.

In February, the Johannesburg-listed firm reported a 40-percent jump in revenue from data, boosted by an increase in smart phone internet access.

It said 7.2 million customers in its main market, South Africa, were using smartphones.

The company also has operations elsewhere in Africa—Mozambique, Nigeria, Lesotho, Tanzania and the Democratic Republic of Congo.

The transaction was still to be approved by competition authorities.