Telecom Italia revenues down 3% in Q1, fibre clients soar to 6 mln

Nieuws Algemeen Italië 21 MAY 2019
Telecom Italia revenues down 3% in Q1, fibre clients soar to 6 mln
Telecom Italia reported a 2.9 percent year-on-year decline in revenues to EUR 4.47 billion in the first quarter of 2019, hit by increased domestic competition and the decision to close low-zero margin wholesale contracts at its international services arm Sparkle. The company's EBITDA for the quarter likewise fell, by 2.1 percent year on year on organic terms, to EUR 1.79 billion. However, TIM added that the EBITDA result was essentially flat on comparable terms and a substantial improvement on the 9.9 percent slump posted in the final quarter of 2018 thanks in part to a 1.7 percent rise in revenues at its TIM Brasil unit, coupled with cost reduction and a 6.5 percent decline in capital expenditure due to increased efficiency.

Cuts debt and confirms 3-year guidance

Net debt was reduced by EUR 457 million to EUR 25.1 billion at the end of March and the company said it was aiming for “after-lease” debt of around EUR 20.5 billion in 2021, before non-organic operations, compared to EUR 22 billion under previous rules. It also confirmed its guidance for the next 3 years of a low single digit revenue decline this year, rising to low single digit growth for both 2020 and 2021, as well as a commitment to cover all of Italy with fibre, 5G and FWA networks.

In its domestic market, Telecom Italia’s first-quarter revenues fell 4.2 percent year on year to EUR 3.50 billion, attributed to stiffer competition, although the operator said the “washing-machine” effect of clients moving from one operator to another via MNP cooled down in the quarter and will turn into better revenue performance over time. TIM’s mobile customer base rose 2.3 percent year on year to 31.7 million at the end of March, 22.3 million of them human SIMs, with the impact of lower prices offset by fixed fibre growth.

Strong growth in fibre and fixed consumer ARPU

In fact, TIM’s fibre base surged 58 percent year on year and 10 percent sequentially to “almost 6 million lines” (counting retail and wholesale) at the end of Q1, while fixed consumer ARPU was up over 9 percent year on year to EUR 35.6 a month in March.

TIM added that its management presented an update on the network sharing partnership with Vodafone during the approval of the results and that, based on a preliminary analysis, the deal could eventually generate synergies of between EUR 100 and EUR 150 million a year. The board also gave CEO Luigi Gubitosi a mandate to finalise the exclusive negotiations over the sale of media unit Persidera after receiving a binding offer.

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