Johannesburg / Nairobi — In a landmark transaction, Vodacom Group has agreed to increase its stake in Safaricom from 35% to 55%, effectively gaining control of Kenya’s largest telecom operator — in what analysts are calling a pivotal moment in Africa’s digital-finance and telecom landscape.
Deal Details & Structure
- Scope of the Acquisition: Vodacom will acquire a 15% stake in Safaricom from the Kenyan government, and an additional 5% from Vodafone Group, at a price of KES 34 per share — a roughly 20% premium to the share’s recent closing price.
- Valuation & Ownership Post-Deal: The transaction values the 15% government stake at approximately US $1.6 billion. Combined with the additional 5% from Vodafone, Vodacom’s total investment is reported as part of a broader R 36 billion (≈ US $2.1 billion) deal. 👇
- Resulting Shareholding: Upon completion, ownership in Safaricom will be: Vodacom — 55%; Kenyan Government — 20%; Public/institutional investors — 25%.
Strategic Implications for Africa’s Telecom & Fintech Sector
The acquisition gives Vodacom control over not just Safaricom’s telecom operations, but also its fintech arm — M‑Pesa — one of Africa’s most extensive mobile-money and digital-payments platforms.
With Safaricom’s expanding footprint — including operations in Ethiopia — Vodacom’s increased influence could accelerate regional integration of telecom and financial-services infrastructure. The move aligns with Vodacom’s broader growth ambition under its “Vision 2030” strategy to deepen engagement across high-growth African markets.
What It Means for Stakeholders
- For Vodacom: Control of Safaricom brings a dominant market position in East Africa; expectations are that Safaricom’s financials will now be consolidated into Vodacom’s books — strengthening revenue base and offering scale advantages.
- For Kenya / Government: The deal delivers a substantial upfront cash inflow, providing the Kenyan government with liquidity without raising taxes — seen as part of a broader strategy to reduce fiscal pressure while retaining a meaningful minority stake (20%) and board representation.
- For Consumers & Fintech Users: With Vodacom at the helm, expectations rise for expanded mobile-money services, wider digital-finance offerings, and potential cross-market synergies across Vodacom’s footprint — potentially improving financial inclusion, service reach, and innovation across Africa.
What Happens Next
The transaction remains subject to regulatory approval by authorities in Kenya, South Africa, and Ethiopia. If cleared, the deal could close by early 2026 — marking a significant reshaping of telecom ownership and influence across East and Southern Africa.
Given Safaricom’s central role in Kenya’s digital economy and M-Pesa’s wide penetration, many stakeholders will watch how this acquisition influences telecom competition, mobile-money regulation, digital inclusion, and cross-regional expansion across the continent.