How you helped Safaricom make Sh48 billion profit

What you need to know:

  • For the richest company in East Africa, money has been coming in from all directions, day and night.

  • Kenyans’ love for chatting, transacting business conveniently using their phones, surfing the Internet, betting, catching up and having funky beats as their ringtones has created a behemoth with Sh213 billion in revenue.

Safaricom’s record-breaking Sh48 billion profit announced on Wednesday was not unexpected.

For the richest company in East Africa, money has been coming in from all directions, day and night.

Kenyans’ love for chatting, transacting business conveniently using their phones, surfing the Internet, betting, catching up and having funky beats as their ringtones has created a behemoth with Sh213 billion in revenue.

The company made a profit of Sh48.4 billion in the year to March 2017 from its 28 million subscribers who keep the corporate juggernaut rolling.

Notably, many of Safaricom’s peers at the Nairobi Securities Exchange have announced lower profits, leaving the telco basking in individual glory.

MOBILE MONEY

This was a 27 per cent increase from last year. While Safaricom was initially formed as a telecommunications company, phone calls now constitute only 45.8 per cent of its revenue or Sh93.5 billion.

The rest is from your use of data bundles and charges you pay when using the popular money transfer service M-Pesa. Kenyans send and receive more than Sh15 billion a day.

One M-Pesa user is Patrick Kairu, a director of the four-star White Rhino Hotel in Nyeri. According to him, more than 60 per cent of guests to the prestigious hotel use M-Pesa to pay for services and some book online using their phones, giving Safaricom money through data bundles.

“We love it because it has reduced our cash handling costs and chances of theft are nil,” Mr Kairu said.

The guests at White Rhino are among the 19 million Kenyans using M-Pesa every day to either pay their bills, a service, or send money. On average, each of the registered users carry out 10 transactions a month.

'PREDICTABLE PATTERN'

Consequently, the amount of revenue that Safaricom made from the M-Pesa transactions clocked Sh55.1 billion, a 32 per cent increase from last year.

Ann Musau, an M-Pesa agent in Nanyuki, records close to 120 transactions a day. They vary between Sh200 and Sh5,000 but can go as high as Sh20,000 during month-end and the beginning of the school term.

She is one of the more than 40,000 agents across the country. Charges for sending money vary from Sh11 to Sh100, and up to Sh330 for withdrawing.

“Clients send money to parents during end-month and others when schools are opening. It’s a predictable pattern,” she said.

Most schools have adopted the use of M-Pesa to pay fees, generating more transaction charges.

Safaricom’s Lipa na M-Pesa continues to be adopted by businesses as a payment platform. It now has more than 50,000 merchants who are active throughout the month and millions of customers.

DOUBLE-EDGED RELIANCE

But the reliance on the service is also double-edged.

On April 24, guests at the White Rhino Hotel were stranded at the reception fumbling on their phones. They needed to check out after a weekend spent there and were struggling to pay the bills, as the M-Pesa platform was down as a result of technical problems.

According to Mr Kairu, the hotel had to make arrangements for guests to pay using cards and some were taken to banks to physically withdraw cash.

Sales generated from selling data bundles, technically known as mobile data revenue, grew by 38 per cent to Sh29.3 billion.

This was driven by an 18.1 per cent growth in 30-day active mobile data customers to 16.6 million, increased bundle users and more people owning smartphones.

Betting, messaging and social media growth have also dovetailed to raise Safaricom’s revenue from data bundles

Hilda Muthoni, a student at Kenya Methodist University, is one of the drivers of the growth. She loves chatting, posting photos on social media and reading celebrity gossip on her phone.

Her friend uses the Internet to check which football matches to bet on.

'MY CLASSMATES'

“I buy 200MB for Sh99 a week mostly on WhatsApp, Instagram and Snapchat. My classmates use double that amount for betting,” said the third-year student at the university’s Nairobi campus.

Her ringtone and those of her peers earned musicians more than Sh150 million in revenue.

“Football was the third most searched item with people searching for matches like Arsenal vs Manchester City and Chelsea vs Tottenham. Other football searches that topped the trends included Barclays Premier League and Champions League,” a report released by Google this month shows.

Businesses and homes using Safaricom’s fibre also increased its cash by 37.4 per cent to Sh5.2 billion, attributed to 21.2 per cent growth in fixed service customers.

As the company rolls out the faster 4G service and the government continues to digitise its services, more people will require data bundles.

And on Wednesday, the company rolled out M-Pesa One Tap, which will enable customers to use M-Pesa cards to make payments with just a tap.

That means more billions next year.