Helios targets Africa’s Mobile Money billions

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Private equity firm, Helios Investment Partners is in talks with African telecommunications operators and banks about ways it can help them cash in on their mobile money and digital payments platforms.

Africa’s largest wireless carriers, including MTN Group and Airtel Africa, are among companies exploring how to unlock value from their multibillion-dollar fintech operations.

MTN is looking to finalize plans to spin off its lucrative mobile finance unit by the end of March, while Airtel brought in Mastercard as a minority investor in its mobile finance division last year.

“There is a desire to carve out these businesses, and we have been in continuous dialogue with such players,” Helios co-founder and managing partner Tope Lawani said in an interview, without naming specific firms. “Companies are trying to find ways of letting these units flourish and not essentially be suffocated by the traditional parts of business.”

Helios is looking to take advantage of the booming digital payments sector in Africa, where a youthful and tech-savvy population has increasing access to smartphones and affordable, high-speed Internet. Traditional banking infrastructure is relatively scarce for a continent of about 1.4 billion people — a report by Stastica found that about a third has an account. Mobile phones enable those without to easily pay for goods and services.

The opportunity for investment firms is therefore vast, Lawani said. Helios’s experience in the African telecoms market includes founding and developing mobile-mast firm Helios Towers, which expanded through acquisitions across the continent and listed in London in 2019.

The investment firm is now in the process of raising a US$1.25-billion fund for future deals.

Another focus for Helios is the continent’s role in the global energy transition from fossil fuels to cleaner energy options. The company is raising $350-million for this purpose, Lawani said.

“We want to help Africa to navigate this quite dangerous energy transition period that we are in,” the CEO said. “I say dangerous as pro-climate policies are not designed with continents like Africa in mind, but rather with the big polluters like the US, Europe and China. We are quite keen not to see Africa miss out on another development cycle, and we want to get these investments done.”

Meanwhile, Helios is looking for deals in South Africa, which is in the throes of a debate about a historic dependence on coal and proposals about new energy sources.

“The cleaner fuels investment opportunity is particularly interesting in South Africa, and maybe some of the work that we intend to do with the new fund will enable us to deepen and increase our footprint in the country,” Lawani said.

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