FRIDAY, April 19, 2024
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US investment agency begins financing of first Myanmar project

US investment agency begins financing of first Myanmar project

YANGON - The US government's development finance institution has launched operations in Myanmar with a US$250 million loan to a telecoms company, it said on Wednesday.

The Overseas Private Investment Corporation (OPIC) will lend the money to Yangon-based Apollo Towers Myanmar Limited, whichis focused on the construction and maintenance of telecommunications towers.
"OPIC is pleased to be working with Apollo on this first, important investment in Burma," Elizabeth Littlefield, OPIC president and chief executive said in a statement.
"Telecommunications are a critical part of ongoing development across the world, and through this project, OPIC islooking to have a significant impact on those who previously lacked access to telecommunications coverage in the country."
The liberalisation of telecoms under the previous government of President Thein Sein was one of the most successful reforms enacted by his administration, which in 2011 ended 49 years of direct military rule in Myanmar, also known as Burma.
Norway's Telenor and Qatar's Ooredoo broke up a state monopoly on telecoms when they won operating licences in 2013.
In the face of new competition, Myanmar Posts andTelecommunications (MPT), the state-owned provider, has partnered with Japan's KDDI Corp and Sumitomo Corp to bolster its operations.
SIM cards now cost a few dollars, down from hundreds, and Myanmar's mobile penetration jumped to just over 60 per cent, but remains well behind other countries in the region.
Apollo has put up about 1,800 telecoms towers, OPIC said, and has plans to build an additional 2,000 as operators look to expand beyond urban centres.
About 70 per cent of Myanmar's 51.5 million people live inrural areas, according to the United Nations, but basic infrastructure in much of the country is greatly lacking.
"I think the sector is very, very vibrant," said Thura Ko Ko, senior adviser to the US private equity firm TPG, which has invested in Apollo.
"There is already congestion in some areas, but more importantly none of the telcos or tower companies have reached the outer regions of our country," Thura Ko Ko told Reuters. 
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