Gulf telecoms companies, most of which are ultimately government-controlled, must further privatise and consolidate to survive in an increasingly tough environment, the former chief executive of Kuwait's Zain said.
Saad al-Barrak led Zain's rise over the last decade, turning it from a former monopoly operator with fewer than a million subscribers to a global player with operations in 23 countries.
Outspoken and flamboyant in a sector with a dominant culture of secrecy, Barrak's strategy of expansion was imitated by rival operators, but regional telecoms firms must now adapt again, he warned, as falling voice margins weigh heavy on the bottom line.
'Countries in the region are small and the industry is becoming global, so consolidation is extremely important, especially the smaller companies - I don't see how they will survive in the short-term,' Barrak told reporters on the sidelines of a conference in Dubai.
'In this part of the world, major companies - 90 per cent of them are government owned and it's politics, not economics that decide (their) next move. The first thing we should do is really privatise regional operators.'
With 11 of the Gulf's 15 mobile licences ultimately government controlled, Barrak conceded such a scenario was unlikely, but cited the Arab Spring, which has led to the exit of veteran rulers in Egypt, Yemen, Tunisia and Libya, as evidence the unexpected can happen in the Middle East.
When asked whether a failure to liberalise or further privatise telecoms companies could hurt operators' shares prices, Barrak said: 'definitely'.
This trend is already evident. The shares of UAE's Etisalat have fallen 48 per cent from a 2008 peak, while Zain's value has roughly halved since Etisalat scrapped a $12 billion bid for a controlling stake in the Kuwaiti firm in 2011.
That deal followed a reversal in Zain's strategy, which also led to Barrak's exit in 2010. He quit after major shareholder and key backer the Kharafi Group pushed through a $9 billion sale of Zain's African assets.
This reduced Zain to a seven-country operator and Barrak became CEO of affiliate Zain Saudi, only to resign in October last year.
The Kuwaiti now runs his own company, Ila, which has invested in two US companies and two from Egypt.
These include Redlambda. Ila bought a 30 per cent stake in the Florida-based cloud computing specialist for $10 million about 18 month ago, and the firm's shareholders are now looking to launch an initial public offering.
'We're probably targeting 2013 for that,' said Barrak. 'Today, we think its value is about $150 million to $200 million.'
Barrak said Redlamda had yet to decide what percentage of the company would be sold in the IPO or where it would list.
'The other possibility is a trade sale,' he concluded.
Small Cap Keeps QE Index in the Downward Territory
The QE index weavering between north and south again witnessed a bearish trend on Wednesday 19th June 2013. The index dropping 21.04 points or 0.23 percent reached at 9,340.01 levels.
Sma
ADX Index Sustains Upward March
The ADX General Index earlier slipped into the red territory but then jumped up into the green territory and closed the day at 3,664.99 levels on Wednesday 19th June 2013, up 5.45 points or 0.15 perc
Rakbank bags gold for AMAL TVC
Rakbank was announced the winner of the Gold Summit Creative Award (SCA) for its AMAL Launch Television campaign during the recent 2013 Summit International Award (SIA) held in the United States.
KFH capital increase subscribed amounts
Kuwait Finance House KFH Chairman Muhammad Ali Al-Khudairy said: The subscription process in the capital increase of 20% approved by the Extraordinary General Assembly on April 24th 2013 by a value