- Footprint to reshape industry
- MTN, Airtel Africa to face tough competition
- But some analysts otherwise see capital flow into African exchanges: JSE, NGX, KSE
Jio Platforms of India, owned by billionaire Mukesh Ambani, operating with 500 million subscribers and a planned $4 billion initial public offering (IPO) in Mumbai, is reported to be quietly laying groundwork for expansion into Africa, starting with Ghana, a move considered could shake up the continent’s telecom market, reports said.
Ambani, one of Asia’s richest men, is preparing to take his telecom and digital arm Jio Platforms public in a roughly $4 billion IPO, in what could potentially rank among India’s largest share sales, reshaping global perceptions of telecom value creation.
With 500 million subscribers, Jio Platforms’ planned entry into Africa starting with a partnership in Ghana potentially surpasses the entire scale of MTN Group’s 307 million and Airtel Africa’s 183.5 million combined, which is around 490.5 million.
This solidifies its global telecom status, positioning it as one of the most powerful telecom players in the world, industry watchers say.
Jio is reported to be quietly testing Africa expansion, beginning with a partnership with Ghana’s Next-Gen InfraCo (NGIC) to supply 4G and 5G solutions.
Details of the investment expansion stake in Africa are still sketchy. But telecom experts are already saying it will position Ambani’s vision of showcasing India as capable of building globally competitive tech companies.
For Africa’s telecom giants, the Mumbai capital markets listing is more than a milestone. It is a signal for tough competition. MTN Group, with 307 million subscribers, according to latest figures, carries a market valuation of roughly $12 billion, while Airtel Africa, serving 183.5 million users, is valued at around $4.5 billion.
Contrary to that background, Jio Platforms’ scale indicates how far an Indian telecom champion has moved in its ability to draw capital and build subscriber dominance in a single market.
Further than Mumbai’s capital markets, Jio Platforms has an Africa appetite, and is said to be quietly laying early groundwork for expansion into Africa. Ambani has framed the proposed listing of Jio Platforms as a statement of India’s global technological ambition.
“The proposed listing of Jio will demonstrate to the world that India can build technology companies of global scale, global capability, and global value,” he said, while speaking at Reliance Industries’ annual shareholder meeting, according to the BBC.
Jio Platforms’ board has approved a draft prospectus for the initial public offering, confirming the formal push toward listing the telecom and digital arm of Reliance Industries, the BBC reported.
Media reports said while final pricing and valuation details have not yet been disclosed, the combined listings linked to Jio and India’s National Stock Exchange could raise more than $3 billion, placing them among India’s largest equity market events in recent years.
Put together, the Jio and NSE listings would place alongside India’s biggest recent deals, matching Hyundai Motor India’s $3.3 billion share sale which was completed two years ago.
BBC reports said, investment bank Jefferies estimated in November 2025 that Jio Platforms was worth around $180 billion, an estimation that would make it one of the world’s most valuable telecom companies, reinforcing its position as a hybrid telecom and digital platform more than a traditional operator.
Jio Platforms’ Africa footprint starts in Ghana
As Jio has reportedly taken a baby step into African market via the Ghana Next-Gen InfraCo partnership, in which it will be supplying 4G and 5G network facilitites and digital solutions, analysts see the move as early steps for future broader expansion, likely targeting next Nigeria, South Africa, and Kenya should the initial rollout succeed.
Telecom analysts say the Jio capital raise at home (in India) is an indication of preparation to enter Africa’s budding telecom infrastructure space,
The analysts said, however, in the immediate term, Jio might not be contending directly with MTN or Airtel Africa for subscribers. Rather, the Indian giant will be focusing on infrastructure, exporting low-cost, large-scale telecom systems rather than operating as a mobile network provider.
However, some adduce that in the long run, this will introduce structural pressure, as its model combines cheap network architecture with a wider digital ecosystem spanning data and fintech services.
Development analysts rather see the broader implications extending beyond competition, which indicate a $4-billion listing for Jio signifying capital that could otherwise flow into African exchanges such as the JSE, NGX, and KSE.
By far, global investors favour platform-style telecom companies. However, Jio’s gradual entry into Africa raises a bigger question for MTN and Airtel Africa: if they can evolve fast enough to migrate from traditional telecom operators into digital platforms before new global players reshape the industry.






