Sudan has scrapped a 30 percent profit tax on telecom operators until the end of 2015, replacing it with a 2.5 percent levy on total income, the state news agency said, in a move that should help a sector hurt by the plunging value of the Sudanese pound.
Sudan had the highest sales tax on mobile in services in the Arab world, according to a September report by the Arab Advisors Group, deterring investment in what is a vital industry for a country still reeling from South Sudan's succession that led to the loss of three-quarters of Khartoum's oil output.
Sudan's decision, announced via the official Sudan News Agency (SUNA), reverses a government tax increase in December 2011, which raised sales taxes on telecoms companies to 30 percent from 20 percent and a profit tax to 30 percent from 15 percent.
It is unclear whether the new 2.5 percent tax on total income is in addition to, or replaces, the sales tax.
Sudan's three mobile operators — Zain Sudan, a 100 percent-owned subsidiary of Kuwait's Zain, state-owned Sudani and South Africa's MTN — typically buy equipment in hard currencies, such as dollars or the Euro, so the pound's plunge has upped expenditure at a time when average revenue per user (ARPU) — a key industry metric — is in retreat.
A Zain spokesman said the profit tax exemption would be backdated to 1 January 2013.
Sudan's mobile penetration was 58 percent in 2011, ranking it 159th globally according to data from the International Telecommunication Union. There remains plenty of room for growth, although that could require operators to expand and improve their networks to reach unconnected residents.
Zain is the market leader with a 52 percent share of Sudan's mobile subscribers, according to its first-quarter results, while South Africa's MTN and state-owned Sudani each had 24 percent.
Currency falls
In the first quarter, Zain Sudan's net profit fell 26 percent to $38 million and revenue dropped 41 percent to $154 million.
Zain blamed these declines on the plunging value of the Sudanese pound (in local currency terms, Zain's profit and revenue actually rose 25 and 58 percent respectively in the first quarter).
Zain is unable to hedge against the pound, while a shortage of dollars means the company has struggled to repatriate earnings to Kuwait.
Sudan's currency fell to a near record low against the dollar on the black market this month after Khartoum threatened to halt cross-border oil flows with South Sudan.
The pound has more than halved in value since South Sudan became independent in July 2011. Oil was the driver of Sudan's economy and a source of dollars needed for imports.
The Sudanese pound's exchange rate against the dollar has fallen to 7.1, down from 6.8, black market dealers said. The central bank rate is around 4.4.
MTN, which owns an 85 percent stake in MTN Sudan, said the unit's revenue in 2012 was 2.16 billion rand ($217.1 million), up 11 percent from a year earlier as its subscriber base rose by nearly a third to 7.9 million, although APRU fell to $3.2 last year from $4.5 in 2011. It did not provide a net profit figure.
It also said vendor financing and current accounts in Sudan resulted in a foreign exchange loss of 373 million rand.
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