Telkom exits iWayAfrica and Africa Online Mauritius

Telkom South Africa has sold its pan-African business, iWayAfrica and Africa Online Mauritius through a private sale to Gondwana International Networks.

Financial terms were not disclosed.

iWayAfrica was formed as the result of the amalgamation of MWEB Africa and Africa Online in 2007 when MWEB Africa was purchased by Telkom.

Telkom has struggled to drive growth and profitability in the iWayAfrica business since it was acquired.

The iWayAfrica business operates in eight countries on the continent offering terrestrial wireless and VSAT services to business and residential users as well as via its channel partners in many other countries on the continent.

Huawei expects revenues of US$4 billion from LTE in 2014

Huawei expects that revenues from its 4G sales will double in 2014 to at least US$4 billion, David Wang, president of Huawei Wireless Network, told reporters in Shanghai.

This year the company expects to have sold around US$2 billion worth of LTE based network equipment.

Huawei had signed 241 LTE deployment contracts in total up to the end of last month and says that it has deployments in nearly half of the 244 commercially launched LTE networks worldwide.

The company claims 110 deployments, compared to 100 from Ericsson, making it the largest winner of LTE contracts by contract volume. Financial volume was not compared.

Apple enters landmark deal to distribute iPhones with China Mobile

Apple and China Mobile today announced they have entered into a multi-year agreement to bring iPhone to the world’s largest mobile network. As part of the agreement, iPhone 5s and iPhone 5c will be available from China Mobile’s expansive network of retail stores as well as Apple retail stores across mainland China beginning on January 17, 2014.

China Mobile now has over 1.2 million 2G/GSM, 3G/TD-SCDMA, 4G/TD-LTE base stations and over 4.2 million Wi-Fi access points, providing broad coverage to quality networks for iPhone 5s and iPhone 5c customers. China Mobile is rolling out the world’s largest 4G network. By the end of 2013, China Mobile’s 4G services will be available in 16 cities including Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou and Shenzhen. By the end of 2014, China Mobile plans to complete the rollout of more than 500,000 4G base stations, which will cover more than 340 cities with 4G service. The collaboration between Apple and China Mobile will give a big boost to the development of China’s home-grown 4G/TD-LTE technology. iPhone on China Mobile supports major cellular network standards, making a global phone a reality for China Mobile customers.

China Mobile is the world’s largest mobile services provider by network scale and subscriber base, serving over 760 million customers.

BlackBerry’s fiscal Q3 results raise red flags

BlackBerry announced its fiscal Q3 2014 to November 30 results, with the company revealing a US$4.4 billion GAAP-adjusted loss for the quarter, which included a write-down on current inventory of around US$1.6 billion. BlackBerry “recognised revenue” on only 1.9 million handsets, compared to 3.7 million in the same period a year ago, but it claims that it sold around 4.3 million BlackBerrys through to end-customers, of which 3.2 million were BlackBerry 7 handsets.

BlackBerry stressed the growth of Enterprise Services, Messaging, and QNX Embedded OS in auto and cloud as high points, and noted a change in corporate structure in which those are given more equal weight against its Devices unit. And as for the Devices unit, BlackBerry announced a partnership with Foxconn that will span five years and kick off with a smartphone unit designed specifically for “Indonesia and other fast-growing markets in early 2014.”

This partnership could offload the majority of BlackBerry’s hardware inventory management duties to Foxconn, and Mexico is named as another early target for devices coming out of the arrangement.

Essentially, it sounds like BlackBerry is making Foxconn a licensee with control over its smartphone division, while it continues to work on services and software in-house.

Cote d’Ivoire government to sell down stake in telco

The government of the Ivory Coast is planning a swathe of privatisations that also includes Cote d’Ivoire Telecom.

In total, some 15 companies will see stakes sold in an effort to reduce the national debt, as well as introduce competition into some markets.

The sale is expected to take place within the next few months, and shares will be listed on the local stock exchange.

President Alassane Ouattara told Reuters in an interview this month that he was "in a hurry for it (the sell-off) to be finished."

The government currently owns just under half of Cote d’Ivoire Telecom and is expected to reduce its stake by 28 per cent; raising around CFA4.3 billion (US$9 million). The majority owner with 51 per cent is Orange, with a fraction of a per cent held by the employees.

The company recently agreed to outsource its tower operations to IHS, although it retains ownership of the infrastructure.