Live prices for Morocco's listed telecom stock and an overview of the wider sector. Three operators serve the domestic market - Maroc Telecom (IAM), Inwi, and Orange Maroc - but only IAM is publicly listed, making it the single proxy for telecom exposure on the Bourse de Casablanca.
Morocco has three mobile network operators serving roughly 50 million SIM subscriptions across a population of about 37 million - meaning average penetration sits well above 100% because many users carry more than one SIM. The competitive structure was set by ANRT licensing decisions in the early 2000s, when the regulator broke the historical monopoly of the incumbent and licensed two challengers. The market has stayed at three operators ever since, with no fourth licence issued.
For investors, the structural fact that matters is this: only one of the three operators is publicly traded. Maroc Telecom (IAM) is the only way to get telecom exposure on the BVC. Inwi is privately held by Al Mada, the royal-linked investment holding. Orange Maroc is jointly owned by Orange Group of France and the Moroccan FinanceCom holding, but neither parent has chosen to list the local subsidiary. So when MASI trackers talk about telecom weight in the index, they are talking about IAM alone.
IAM is the historical state telephone operator, partially privatised in 2001 when Vivendi acquired a 35% stake. Vivendi later sold its position to Etisalat of the United Arab Emirates, which today holds the controlling stake. The Moroccan state retains a meaningful minority. IAM is dual-listed on the Bourse de Casablanca and on Euronext Paris, which makes it one of the few Moroccan stocks accessible to European retail investors through standard brokerage accounts without a special MAD account.
Beyond the domestic Moroccan business, IAM operates the Moov Africa group - a portfolio of subsidiaries in roughly ten sub-Saharan countries including Mali, Côte d'Ivoire, Burkina Faso, Niger, Chad, Gabon, Mauritania, and others. The African subsidiaries together add a meaningful share of group revenue and provide geographic diversification, but they also expose IAM to currency volatility in CFA franc and dollar-denominated markets, plus political risk in countries with unstable governance.
Inwi rebranded from Wana Corporate in 2010 and is the second-largest mobile operator. Its ownership structure runs through Al Mada, which evolved out of the SNI holding and is closely associated with the royal family's investment portfolio. Inwi has been particularly aggressive in mobile data and fiber-to-the-home rollouts, often pushing prices below the incumbent and forcing IAM to follow.
Orange Maroc was previously branded Méditel and rebranded in 2016 after Orange Group of France increased its stake. It is the third operator by subscriber base. Orange Maroc has leveraged the parent group's brand recognition and its relationships with French expat and immigrant communities for international call traffic.
The Agence Nationale de Réglementation des Télécommunications, established in 1997 alongside the partial privatisation of the incumbent, sets the rules of the market. Three regulatory levers matter most for stock performance. The first is mobile termination rates - the wholesale price one operator pays another for terminating a call on its network. ANRT has steadily reduced these rates over the past decade, compressing IAM's wholesale revenue from inbound traffic. The second is spectrum auctions, which set the cost of expanding network capacity. ANRT's 5G spectrum allocation in late 2024 set a new round of capital expenditure obligations on all three operators. The third is fixed-line and fiber regulation, where ANRT has pushed for unbundling rules that allow Inwi and Orange to offer fiber over IAM's last-mile infrastructure on regulated terms.
Because IAM is the only listed telecom, its share price reflects three different things at once: the domestic Moroccan telecom business, the African subsidiaries portfolio, and the dividend policy that prices the stock as a yield instrument. Dividend yield is unusually high - IAM consistently pays out a large share of earnings, which makes the stock attractive to income-focused investors but also means the share price reacts strongly to any signal that the payout might be reduced. Free cash flow, capex commitments tied to 5G and fiber, and the trajectory of the African business are the three numbers analysts watch most closely each reporting season.