
Airtel Africa has reported the strongest financial performance in its history but is holding off on the public listing of its fast-growing mobile money arm, underscoring how global geopolitical uncertainty is reshaping big-ticket tech and fintech deals from Africa.
For the year ended March 31, 2026, Airtel Africa posted profit after tax of $813 million, a 147% jump from $328 million the previous year. Revenue rose 29.5% to $6.41 billion, driven largely by surging demand for data and mobile money services across its 14 African markets.
Alongside the record numbers, the company confirmed that the long-anticipated initial public offering (IPO) of Airtel Money will no longer take place in the first half of 2026, as originally planned.
The decision to delay comes even as Airtel Money emerges as the main growth engine inside the group. Over the past year, the mobile money business expanded its user base by 21.3% to 54.1 million users. The number of active transacting customers climbed 74%, while annualised transaction value surpassed $215 billion by the final quarter of the financial year.
These are the kinds of metrics that typically excite public market investors, especially for fintech-style assets operating at continental scale. Analysts had previously floated a valuation around $10 billion for Airtel Money, with expectations that the IPO could raise between $1.5 billion and $2 billion. The business already counts heavyweight institutional investors, including Mastercard, TPG, and a fund linked to Qatar’s sovereign wealth system.
Despite that investor interest, Airtel Africa CEO Sunil Taldar has linked the postponement to broader market conditions rather than the strength of the underlying business. The company is maintaining its commitment to an eventual listing but is opting to wait for more stability in global markets.
The backdrop is deteriorating geopolitical risk, particularly conflict involving Iran, which has unsettled financial markets, pushed up oil prices, and made investors more cautious about exposure to emerging markets. For a large African mobile money IPO seeking global capital in hubs like London or New York, walking into jittery markets could translate to weaker pricing or reduced demand.
In that sense, the delay looks more like a timing call than a change in strategy. Airtel appears to be betting that the same financial metrics that delivered a record year could command a better valuation once market sentiment improves.
Geopolitics hits both valuation and operating costs
The geopolitical tensions shaping capital markets are also filtering directly into Airtel Africa’s day-to-day operations. The company reported record EBITDA margins of 50.3% in the final quarter of its 2026 financial year, the highest in its history. At the same time, it warned that rising energy costs could pressure those margins.
Telecom networks across Africa depend heavily on diesel-powered infrastructure to keep base stations and network equipment running. When global oil prices spike, the cost of powering these networks rises quickly. The same conflict that is weighing on investor risk appetite is also quietly inflating Airtel’s operating costs.
This dual impact on both valuation outlook and cost structure illustrates how exposed African telecom and fintech infrastructure can be to external shocks far beyond their home markets. For Airtel Africa, which straddles voice, data, and mobile money, that exposure now cuts across communications and financial services.
Strategically, the latest results reinforce the view that Airtel Africa is evolving from a traditional telco to a fintech-heavy platform business, with mobile money at its core rather than as an auxiliary product. The most recent numbers show data and mobile money doing much of the heavy lifting behind revenue and profit growth.
The business fundamentals look stronger than ever, but the liquidity event that many had pencilled in for early 2026 is on hold. Airtel appears confident that waiting for calmer markets could allow Airtel Money to debut at a stronger valuation later in the year, even if that means frustrating some near-term expectations.
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