MTN Nigeria Records ₦355.5 billion in Q1, Fears Diesel Cost Could Wipe Gains

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MTN Nigeria’s first-quarter 2026 results deliver what, on the surface, looks like a breakout moment: profit after tax surged 165.9 per cent year-on-year to ₦355.5 billion, reinforcing the telco’s position as the dominant force in Nigeria’s digital economy.

But beneath the strong numbers lies a more complex narrative, one that reflects not just commercial success, but the structural vulnerabilities shaping the future of telecoms in Nigeria.

A Quarter of Strong Fundamentals

By every conventional metric, MTN’s performance was robust. Service revenue climbed 41.8 per cent to ₦1.5 trillion, while EBITDA rose 68.1 per cent to ₦828.3 billion. Subscriber numbers expanded to 89.5 million, with active data users reaching 55 million, clear evidence of deepening digital adoption.

Free cash flow also strengthened significantly, rising 55.6 per cent to ₦326.5 billion, giving the company the financial headroom to sustain aggressive network investments.

This is not just growth, it is quality growth. Increased data usage, rising customer engagement, and expanding broadband penetration all point to a structural shift in how Nigerians consume connectivity.

“We continue to monitor developments in the operating environment, including energy price volatility and regulatory dynamics,” Chief Executive Officer Karl Toriola said in the Q1 report.

The Real Driver: Nigeria’s Digital Demand Engine

MTN’s results underscore a broader trend: Nigeria’s digital economy is accelerating rapidly, driven by mobile internet, fintech, content consumption, and remote work.

The growth in data users, up 9.5 per cent, signals that connectivity is no longer optional; it is foundational. From streaming and gaming to banking and e-commerce, Nigerians are building more of their daily lives online.

In that sense, MTN is not just a telecom operator, it is critical infrastructure.

Investment Surge Signals Long-Term Play

MTN nearly doubled its capital expenditure to ₦390.3 billion in Q1, up 92.8 per cent year-on-year, channeling funds into network expansion, fibre infrastructure, and fixed broadband rollout.

This aggressive investment reflects a strategic pivot: owning the pipes of Nigeria’s digital future.

Fibre-to-the-home expansion and fixed wireless access are particularly important, as the company seeks to capture demand beyond mobile, especially in urban and peri-urban areas where data consumption is surging.

The Energy Problem: Telecoms’ Hidden Cost Crisis

Yet, the biggest takeaway from the results may not be the growth, it is the warning.

MTN flagged a potential 1.8 to 2.0 percentage point decline in EBITDA margin if diesel prices average ₦2,000 per litre in the second half of 2026.

This is not a minor concern. It is a structural risk. Nigeria’s telecom sector runs on diesel.

With over 20,000 base stations nationwide, most of them off-grid, operators rely heavily on generators to maintain network uptime.

According to the Africa Finance Corporation, the sector consumes over 40 million litres of diesel monthly, translating to more than 480 million litres annually and over $350 million in costs.

That dependence makes telecom operators highly exposed to fuel price volatility.

Global Tensions, Local Impact

The pressure on diesel prices is not purely domestic. Global geopolitical tensions, particularly disruptions around the Strait of Hormuz involving the United States, Israel, and Iran, have pushed crude oil prices above $100 per barrel.

For Nigeria, which still imports a significant portion of refined fuel, this translates directly into higher diesel costs.

Even with the $20 billion Dangote Refinery beginning to influence local supply, diesel prices remain elevated, hovering between ₦1,750 and ₦2,000 per litre in key markets.

For MTN, every increase in diesel price hits margins.

Profit vs Sustainability

This is where the contradiction emerges: MTN is delivering record profits, yet its cost base remains fragile.

The company’s ability to sustain profitability will depend not just on revenue growth, but on how effectively it manages energy costs, arguably the single biggest operational threat to telecom margins in Nigeria.

Strategic Implications

MTN’s results raise broader questions for the industry:

  • Can telecom operators continue to absorb rising energy costs without passing them to consumers?
  • Will higher costs eventually translate into increased tariffs?
  • How quickly can the sector transition to alternative energy sources such as solar and hybrid power systems?

There is also a policy dimension. Telecom infrastructure is widely regarded as critical national infrastructure, yet operators still bear the full burden of power generation.

What MTN’s Q1 results ultimately reveal is a sector at a crossroads.

On one hand, demand is surging, revenues are growing, and investment is accelerating. On the other, structural inefficiencies, especially in energy, continue to erode long-term sustainability.

For now, MTN’s scale, market leadership, and financial strength give it a buffer.

But the warning is clear; Nigeria’s digital future may be growing fast. but it is still being powered by diesel.

And that, increasingly, is the industry’s biggest vulnerability.

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