DUBAI: Viva Kuwait, the country’s second biggest mobile phone operator by subscribers, plans to list on the Kuwait Stock Exchange by year-end, nearly six years after it completed an initial public offer of shares, the company’s chairman said on Monday.
The comments by Adel Mohammad Al Roumi were carried on Kuwait’s state news agency Kuna and followed a statement from the company on Sunday that Viva Kuwait, an affiliate of Saudi Telecom Co, had received regulatory approval to join the market.
The company never publicly explained the delay in listing. The global financial crisis appeared to play a role; from its June 2008 peak, Kuwait’s main stock index plunged nearly 60 percent to February 2009, and it remains about 53 percent below that high.
The saga also underlined the complex and sometimes unpredictable regulatory environment in Kuwait; periodically during the last six years the company said it was preparing to list, but the listing never happened.
Viva Kuwait raised KD25m ($87.9m) from selling half its shares to Kuwaiti nationals in its IPO in September 2008, beginning services later that year.
It has since thrived, and had a 33 percent share of Kuwait’s mobile subscribers at the end of June. Rival Zain had 36 percent and Ooredoo subsidiary Wataniya had 31 percent, according to Zain’s earnings report.
Viva Kuwait made a net profit of KD24.3m for 2013, up from KD3.87m a year earlier. Viva valued its total assets at 178.99 million dinars at the end of 2013, according to its annual report.
Reuters