Airtel Nigeria and some other foreign telecom companies operating in Nigeria have rejected the Corporate Governance provision by the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) on the repatriation of funds.
Section 14 (16) of the Corporate Governance Guidelines published by the NCC, which the operators are frowning at states:
“The Board shall ensure a licensee seeking to repatriate funds over 30 per cent of its annual net profit shall obtain the prior written approval of the Commission.”
Expressing their displeasure during a public inquiry on the draft guidelines, the telecom operators, including IHS Nigeria, ATC Nigeria, and Airtel Nigeria argued that the provision would discourage investments even as it contradicts existing laws on the repatriation of funds by foreign companies operating in Nigeria.
In its written submission during the inquiry, a tower company, ATC Nigeria Wireless Infrastructure Limited, stated:
“Repatriation of funds ensures that foreign investors successfully reap the dividend of their investment (particularly when the licensee has mainly foreign investors). Waiting for the approval of the NCC before funds are repatriated will lead to investor dissatisfaction and affect the smooth operation of the company.
“We respectfully suggest that the approval of the NCC be obtained where the repatriation involves a significant amount that might jeopardize the company’s operations. The repatriation threshold that would require the approval of NCC be fixed at 80 per cent.”
Expressing similar concern over the same provision, Airtel Nigeria in its submission to the regulator said the Section 14(16) Guidelines are in contravention of Section 15(4) of the Foreign Exchange (Monitoring and Miscellaneous Provisions) Act Chapter F34, 1995 18 which guarantees unrestrictive transferability of returns from Foreign Direct Investment.
“It is also at variance with the Federal Government’s policy guaranteeing 100 per cent repatriation of profit from investments in the country.
This pre-approval requirement from the Regulator to repatriate more than 30 percent of net profit could discourage Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) in the industry.
According to HIS Nigeria, the provision has far-reaching implications and would only create bottlenecks and discourage investments, both local and foreign.
“Given that foreign shareholders and bondholders are entitled to receive dividends and interest respectively depending on the capital structure of the entities, the inability to timely meet interest repayments portends a negative connotation for the country especially as lenders would be reluctant to extend further credit to local borrowers and this eventually adversely impacts sovereign credit ratings.
“Requiring prior written approval of the Commission to repatriate funds is unduly restrictive and at variance with the policy position of the current government administration which has expressed the desire to attract foreign investments.
Meanwhile, the Nigerian Communications Commission in its response to the operators’ concern said it had taken note of all their submissions and would take care of it in its ongoing review of the document.