Sharechat Logo

Telecom posts $146m Q1 profit

By NZPA

Tuesday 12th November 2002

Text too small?
Telecom Corp today posted a first quarter net profit of $146 million, down 3.3 percent on the $151 million recorded for the same period a year earlier.

The result, for the three months to September 30, was 15 percent lower than earlier market expectations of about $170 million.

Telecom last week took the unusual step of warning the market of the weak result, saying it was aware of a wide range of estimates for the quarter.

The profit warning sent Telecom's share price spiralling 9 percent downwards.

Last year's result was buoyed by a $14 million gain on prepayment of a cross-border lease and an $11 million gain on the sale of international network capacity.

On an adjusted basis, taking into account those one-off gains, net earnings for the three-month period increased 8.1 percent on the previous corresponding quarter.

Telecom recorded total group revenues of $1.3 billion during the period, down slightly on the $1.4 billion clocked up a year earlier.

After taking into account operating expenses, total group revenue for the quarter was flat at $340 million, from $339 million in September 2001.

Earnings before interest, taxation, depreciation and amortisation (ebitda) came in at $541 million, against $537 million previously.

Telecom will pay an interim dividend of 5 cents per share, unchanged on last year.

Telecom chief executive Theresa Gattung said the group was maintaining a good operating performance in the current demanding environment.

"In New Zealand, we continue to generate strong operating cash flows and reap the benefits of an ongoing focus on cost reduction," she said.

Net earnings for the New Zealand division were up 3.2 percent on the year ago quarter to $390 million.

Ebitda from Telecom's Australian operations -- seen as the Achilles heel of the group -- matched capital expenses at $391 million, giving a net result of zero, compared with a $12 million loss a year earlier.

"Across the Tasman, our positive cash flow position (ebitda less capital expenditure) has been reinforced, during a period of structural change," Ms Gattung said.

"We continue to focus on higher value customers and on negotiating better prices with suppliers."

Ebitda from Telecom's Australian consumer segment, which includes AAPT's residential, small business and wireless customers, grew by 200 percent during the period as a result of improved revenue mix and reduced cost of sales.

However, calling, cellular and other mobile and resale revenues all decreased.

In other results, Telecom's New Zealand mobile business recorded a 4.1 percent revenue increase during the first quarter compared with September 2001, although total connections fell by 4.7 percent due to a shift in focus from connection growth to targeting higher value customers.

As at September 30, 2002, Telecom had 1.25 million mobile customers compared with 1.3 million a year earlier.

Of those customers, about 194,000, or 15.5 percent, were connected to the co-division multiple access (CDMA) network.

Total operating revenue at Telecom's New Zealand international division decreased by 30.9 percent as a result of lower calling rates and a strengthening of the New Zealand dollar.

Data revenue fell by 25 percent as a result of lower pricing for data services and the expiry of a leased circuit contract.

Total capital expenditure for the first quarter was $76 million, down 45.7 percent on the previous corresponding period.

Shares in Telecom closed down a cent at $4.81 yesterday, compared with $5.22 before last week's profit guidance, but up from a 2002 low of $4.58 in August.

Telecom fell 11 cents, 2.2 percent, to $4.70 in immediate response to the result.

The stock, which has a market capitalisation of $8.9 billion and makes up 23 percent of the NZSE-40 capital index, has had a rocky ride in the past week as investors were spooked by both the profit warning and rulings on Telecom's interconnect agreement with rival telecommunications companies.

Competition watchdog the Commerce Commission last week set a price of 1.13 cents a minute on the rate Telecom and TelstraClear can charge for carrying each others' toll calls on their networks, less than half what Telecom had previously charged.

No further details were given in today's result about Telecom's full-year expectations.

Telecom said last week it was confident of meeting market forecasts of $676 million-$760 million, adding that the seasonal factors that affected today's result would be ironed out by the end of the year.

  General Finance Advertising    

Comments from our readers

No comments yet

Add your comment:
Your name:
Your email:
Not displayed to the public
Comment:
Comments to Sharechat go through an approval process. Comments which are defamatory, abusive or in some way deemed inappropriate will not be approved. It is allowable to use some form of non-de-plume for your name, however we recommend real email addresses are used. Comments from free email addresses such as Gmail, Yahoo, Hotmail, etc may not be approved.

Related News:

Telecom Corporation of New Zealand (TEL)
Telecom in drive to latch on to growing data usage with 4G mobile launch next month
Telecom lines up to buy 700MHz spectrum to extend reach of 4G network
Telecom backs setting copper prices until 2020, warns against getting too far away from input cost
Telecom puts $60M price tag on new Auckland data centre, Hawkins, AECOM win build
Telecom ends jobs purge, looks for ‘more sophisticated’ ways to save money
Telecom FY earnings fall to bottom of guidance range, sees unchanged dividend in 2014
Telecom takes spat with Vodafone to regulator after dropping court action
Telecom unbundling key to regulator's copper conundrum
Telecom lures customers to faster services in EPL deal