London, May 2, 2026, 22:04 BST
Airtel Africa ended the session Friday in London at 353.20 pence, slipping 0.39%. A report out May 1st pointed to the group lining up an IPO for Airtel Money, eyeing between $1.5 billion and $2 billion in proceeds. London looks to be the front-runner for the listing, with the unit potentially fetching a valuation as high as $10 billion.
This comes into focus as Airtel Africa prepares to release its full-year numbers on May 8, followed by a management call with analysts and investors at 1300 BST. The results call puts the company on the spot to discuss details—timing, venue, structure—around the mobile money listing, though the final shape of the deal is still up in the air.
Airtel Africa aims to take Airtel Money public in the first half of 2026, sticking to earlier guidance. Reuters, citing Bloomberg and sources with knowledge of the situation, said this week the IPO could fetch between $1.5 billion and $2 billion.
The growth story here isn’t limited to voice and data—payments are carrying weight, too. Airtel Money posted a 29.4% jump in revenue at constant currency, reaching $986 million for the nine months through December 2025. That constant currency figure ignores currency swings, so the numbers reflect pure operational performance.
Back in January, Airtel Africa chief executive Sunil Taldar put Airtel Money’s customer count at 52 million, with annualised total processed value above $210 billion. “We remain on track for the listing of Airtel Money in the first half of 2026,” Taldar said at the time.
With mobile money, people can send funds, settle bills, and purchase services using their phones—no bank account required. Airtel Money brings in revenue from wallet features, money transfers, payments, and a range of financial products, including loans, insurance, and savings.
Competition isn’t just about Airtel here. MTN Uganda recently got the green light to carve out its fintech arm, planning a local listing somewhere in the next three to five years. Investor interest has also picked up around Safaricom, MTN, and Vodacom, as these African telecom giants move further into payments.
For months, analysts have kept a close eye on the unit. Back in November, Deutsche Bank’s John Karidis, as quoted by Reuters, pointed to the ongoing strength of Airtel’s telecom and money operations—calling them resilient for years to come. He argued Airtel Money deserves a richer multiple than the main telecom segment.
The deal would put London’s appeal for major Africa-focused fintech listings in the spotlight. Citigroup was tapped as lead adviser, according to a May 1 report, and other banks might still be added. Details like structure and timing, though, are still being worked out.
Risks are in play. That $1.5 billion to $2 billion figure isn’t from an official company filing—just reports so far—and markets aren’t standing still. Currency remains a headache for Airtel Africa; past naira devaluations chopped into dollar growth, but Nigerian tariff hikes coming in 2025 have given earnings a lift.
Costs are squeezing margins. On Saturday, AP reported that telcos in Africa—Airtel Africa among them—are rolling out more solar and hybrid tower systems due to surging diesel prices. Airtel’s partnership with ENGIE Energy Access has already slashed diesel usage by over 50% at its locations in Zambia and Congo.
Investors eyeing the May 8 call face a lot more than the usual results risk. The numbers could reveal if Airtel Africa is pushing mobile money growth quickly enough to justify a stand-alone valuation—even as it juggles network spending, rising power bills, and currency swings in 14 markets.