SK Telecom Sells Entire Stake in Skytel

SK Telecom announced today that it sold its entire stake in Skytel, Mongolia’s second largest mobile carrier, to existing Mongolian shareholders, including Sun Clay Group and Global Com LLC, for KRW 25.8 billion.

In 1999, SK Telecom acquired a 20% stake in Skytel through an in-kind contribution by providing Skytel with its analog telecommunication equipment that had been decommissioned in Korea since the company began deploying CDMA networks for the first time in the world. SK Telecom was then well recognized for its timely export of out-of-use analog telecommunication equipment. In 2002, SK Telecom increased its stake in Skytel to 29.3% by investing KRW 600 million in cash.

Following the sale of Skytel stakes, SK Telecom earned a total of KRW 28.3 billion, including KRW 25.8 billion from equity sales and KRW 2.5 billion of accumulated dividend income, which is 46 times higher than its original investment of KRW 600 million.

Skytel is Mongolia’s second largest mobile telecommunications provider, established 1999 through a joint venture between SK Telecom and Taihan Electric Wire Co., Ltd.

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Telegeography writes….G-Mobile, which won a government tender last year to establish a CDMA service to connect rural Mongolians with the country’s main telephone grid has begun building its infrastructure. The company plans to link 180 rural settlements by the end of the year and hopes to have every rural settlement connected by 2009. There are currently 135,000 Mongolian cellular subscribers using G-Mobile’s CDMA competitor Skytel. According to TeleGeography’s GlobalComms database, at the end of 2006 Mongolia was home to 710,000 wireless subscribers, of which MobiCom had a 75% share.

   

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