Wireless operator Veon planning to sell its tower assets in Pakistan: report

Wireless operator Veon Limited (Jazz) is planning to sell its 10,000 to 12,000 tower assets in Pakistan, with the sale process “very close to the conclusion”, Bloomberg reported citing Chief Executive Officer Kaan Terziogl.

Wireless operator Veon planning to sell its tower assets in Pakistan: report

Wireless operator Veon Limited (Jazz) is planning to sell its 10,000 to 12,000 tower assets in Pakistan, with the sale process “very close to the conclusion”, Bloomberg reported citing Chief Executive Officer Kaan Terziogl.

Implying a valuation range between $600 million and $960 million, the CEO — in an interview — said: “The value of a tower is somewhere between $60,000 to $80,000 depending on interest rates.”

People familiar with the matter who spoke on condition of anonymity told the publication that Saudi Telecom Co unit, a consortium between Pakistan’s TPL Corp. and UAE-based TASC Towers, and Pakistani conglomerate Engro are among the bidders for its tower assets in Pakistan.

However, spokespeople for Saudi Telecom and Veon declined to comment. The TPL-TASC consortium and Engro also didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

Pakistan’s TPL, in September, said it formed a strategic partnership with TASC to bid for an unidentified telecom tower company.

Veon was founded in Moscow in 1992 as VimpelCom, one of Russia’s first cellular-phone providers. It has grown into a Dutch-domiciled telecommunications giant with more than 217 million customers in nine countries, although Russia still accounts for about half of its revenue.

The firm stated that this month in an attempt to limit the fallout from the war in Ukraine, where it is the country’s biggest mobile operator, it has started the process of selling its Russian unit.

Last year, Veon sold more than 15,000 towers in Russia for around $970 million to Service-Telecom LLC It has about 30,000 more towers to sell, Terzioglu told Bloomberg News in August.

Veon’s share price has fallen by two-thirds this year as the invasion and subsequent sanctions on Russia by the US, European Union and UK undermined the company.

According to data compiled by Bloomberg, LetterOne Investment Holdings, founded by Russian billionaire Mikhail Fridman, owns 48% of Veon. Fridman was sanctioned by both the EU and the UK earlier this year and stepped down from the boards of Veon and LetterOne.