Right direction for the country, Mbadi defends Safaricom stake sale

Business
By Ronald Kipruto | Dec 05, 2025

John Mbadi Cabinet Secretary The National Treasury and Economic Planning speaking during 2025/2026 Deloitte Kenya National Budget Analysis. [Wilberforce Okwiri, Standard]

National Treasury Cabinet Secretary John Mbadi has defended the government's plan to sell 15 per cent of its 35 per cent Safaricom stake for Sh204.3 billion, dismissing concerns over valuation and positioning the move as critical infrastructure financing.

Speaking during a television interview on Friday, December 5, Mbadi described the transaction as "unlocking value of a mature asset" and rejected claims the proceeds would plug budget deficits.

"This is the right direction that this country needs to take. We need some bold decision where we are not in a very comfortable position in terms of the economy, and something needs to be done," Mbadi said.

The sale would lift Vodacom's stake to 55 per cent, crossing the regulatory threshold for effective control. Vodacom currently holds 40 per cent, the government 35 and the public 25.

Mbadi said proceeds would support the National  Infrastructure Fund and the Sovereign Wealth Fund to finance public projects nationwide.

"We are not selling Safaricom shares to meet short-term budget deficits. We are not taking this money to finance our budget in the ordinary sense of it," he noted.

The transaction follows four stages: proposal initiation, approval, execution and reporting.

A public notice on Tuesday outlined the deal, which includes internal restructuring within Vodafone and Vodacom Group. Vodafone will take formal control after the share transaction.

However, Kiharu MP Nyoro has challenged the sale, accusing the government of undervaluation and lack of competitive bidding.

"There was no competitive bidding. How did they set the price, and how did they pick Vodacom as the buyer?" Nyoro told reporters in Nairobi on Thursday, December 4.

The former Budget and Appropriations Committee member questioned the pricing, saying the government risks short-changing taxpayers.

"We cannot sell a share at Sh34 unless there has been a deliberate suppression of the valuation. The government is underselling the stake at the detriment of Kenyans," Nyoro added.

Share this story
Right direction for the country, Mbadi defends Safaricom stake sale
National Treasury Cabinet Secretary John Mbadi has defended the government's plan to sell 15 per cent of its 35 per cent Safaricom stake for Sh204.3 billion, dismissing concerns over.
Who owns Kenya?: 2pc control over half of arable land
A handful of Kenyans hold more than half of arable land, which is largely idle with allegations that a substantial proportion of this land has been acquired irregularly.
Treasury pockets Sh245b from Safaricom sale
Vodacom also agreed to buy the right to receive future Safaricom dividends and will make an upfront payment of Sh40.2 billion to the Treasury.
Mbadi: Cash raised from Safaricom shares sale to fund infrastructure
The government’s planned sale of a 15 per cent stake of its shareholding in Safaricom to Vodafone Kenya for Sh244.5 billion will help to raise money for critical infrastructure projects.
CS Joho on spot over licencing of Devki's multi-billion iron ore deal
The Ministry of Mining is on the spot for issuing Devki Group of Companies permission to extract iron ore for his Sh11 billion steel plant without consent from ranch owners.
.
RECOMMENDED NEWS