Category: SingTel
SingTel – BT
SingTel Q3 profit drops on weaker contributions
Group’s profit of $902m falls short of analysts’ average estimated net profit
SINGAPORE Telecommunications (SingTel) saw a 9.6 per cent drop in third-quarter net profit from $998 million to $902 million on weaker contributions from its associates, with Bharti’s 3G losses making themselves felt.
The group’s quarterly performance fell short of the $922 million average estimated net profit by four analysts that Reuters surveyed.
Earnings per share for the three-month and nine-month period ended Dec 31, 2011 stood at 5.66 cents and 16.95 cents respectively, down from 6.28 cents and 17.79 cents a year ago.
Group revenue for the same period grew 2.7 per cent to $4.83 billion, boosted by a better performance from local operations and Optus.
SingTel’s share of its associates’ ordinary pre-tax earnings shrank 8.3 per cent to $475 million. Bharti accounted significantly for the shrinkage, with its contribution falling 30.3 per cent to $128 million.
The Indian operator incurred higher costs from its 3G rollout, while its venture in Africa took a hit from acquisition financing costs.
SingTel’s group CEO Chua Sock Koong pointed out, however, that Bharti’s African operations had made ‘impressive’ progress, with a 16 per cent increase in operating revenue to US$1.06 billion because of higher customer base and increased average minutes of use.
‘Execution in Africa has been tracking well,’ Ms Chua said.
Where Bharti’s Indian operations are concerned, the magnitude of the fallout from the Indian Supreme Court’s move to yank back 122 telco licences awarded in 2008 remains difficult to determine.
‘It is still too early to say how it will affect Bharti . . . The terms of the new licences are not out yet,’ Hui Weng Cheong, SingTel’s CEO International, said.
Indonesia’s Telkomsel and Thailand’s AIS saw improved earnings, with contributions that were 5.6 per cent and 23.4 per cent higher, at $226 million and $84 million, respectively.
The group’s losses from its investments in Warid and Pacific Bangladesh Telecom Ltd (PBTL), however, widened to losses of $15 million and $11 million, respectively.
Back in Singapore, the group’s local operations posted a 4.3 per cent dip in net profit for the quarter, at $333 million, driven in part by higher subscriber acquisition costs. This was compounded by structural separation costs that the telco booked.
Local operating revenue for the quarter grew 2.5 per cent to $1.68 billion on the back of higher handset sales fuelled by the iPhone 4S. SingTel’s mobile customer base also enjoyed a 9.9 per cent lift, growing by 61,000 to 3.55 million.
Its fibre rollout revenue saw a drop, coming in 38.8 per cent lower at $44 million, as it passed the peak of its OpenNet rollout. As of end-2011, OpenNet had more than 80 per cent coverage of homes here. Meanwhile, SingTel’s fibre customer base grew to 55,000, up 18,000 year on year.
mio TV’s revenue for the quarter saw a 32 per cent growth in revenue to $28 million, as its customer base grew by 18,000 during the quarter to 353,000.
The telco said yesterday that it will throw its hat into the ring for the 2013-2016 package of broadcasting rights for the Barclays Premier League (BPL) when bidding starts in March. As of last August, pay-TV operators were obliged to make available their competitors’ exclusive content if their subscribers request it. This reduced some of the impetus for signing exclusive content.
Before the new guidelines kicked in, SingTel won the exclusive broadcast rights for the previous BPL cycle, for what was rumoured to cost at least $300 million.
Allen Lew, SingTel’s CEO, said that this time, any bidding will ‘take into consideration the new regime’.
‘It would be premature for me to discuss this but we are well-prepared . . . we are starting the process,’ Mr Lew said.
On the Australian front, Optus saw its quarterly net profit grow 4.4 per cent to A$177 million (S$238.7 million), boosted by increased service revenue and lower subscriber costs.
For the nine months ended Dec 31, 2011, net profit for the group fell 4.7 per cent to $2.7 billion, even as group revenue grew 4.6 per cent to $14.05 billion.
Its counter closed six cents higher at $3.13 in trading yesterday.
SingTel – BT
SingTel Q3 profit drops on weaker contributions
Group’s profit of $902m falls short of analysts’ average estimated net profit
SINGAPORE Telecommunications (SingTel) saw a 9.6 per cent drop in third-quarter net profit from $998 million to $902 million on weaker contributions from its associates, with Bharti’s 3G losses making themselves felt.
The group’s quarterly performance fell short of the $922 million average estimated net profit by four analysts that Reuters surveyed.
Earnings per share for the three-month and nine-month period ended Dec 31, 2011 stood at 5.66 cents and 16.95 cents respectively, down from 6.28 cents and 17.79 cents a year ago.
Group revenue for the same period grew 2.7 per cent to $4.83 billion, boosted by a better performance from local operations and Optus.
SingTel’s share of its associates’ ordinary pre-tax earnings shrank 8.3 per cent to $475 million. Bharti accounted significantly for the shrinkage, with its contribution falling 30.3 per cent to $128 million.
The Indian operator incurred higher costs from its 3G rollout, while its venture in Africa took a hit from acquisition financing costs.
SingTel’s group CEO Chua Sock Koong pointed out, however, that Bharti’s African operations had made ‘impressive’ progress, with a 16 per cent increase in operating revenue to US$1.06 billion because of higher customer base and increased average minutes of use.
‘Execution in Africa has been tracking well,’ Ms Chua said.
Where Bharti’s Indian operations are concerned, the magnitude of the fallout from the Indian Supreme Court’s move to yank back 122 telco licences awarded in 2008 remains difficult to determine.
‘It is still too early to say how it will affect Bharti . . . The terms of the new licences are not out yet,’ Hui Weng Cheong, SingTel’s CEO International, said.
Indonesia’s Telkomsel and Thailand’s AIS saw improved earnings, with contributions that were 5.6 per cent and 23.4 per cent higher, at $226 million and $84 million, respectively.
The group’s losses from its investments in Warid and Pacific Bangladesh Telecom Ltd (PBTL), however, widened to losses of $15 million and $11 million, respectively.
Back in Singapore, the group’s local operations posted a 4.3 per cent dip in net profit for the quarter, at $333 million, driven in part by higher subscriber acquisition costs. This was compounded by structural separation costs that the telco booked.
Local operating revenue for the quarter grew 2.5 per cent to $1.68 billion on the back of higher handset sales fuelled by the iPhone 4S. SingTel’s mobile customer base also enjoyed a 9.9 per cent lift, growing by 61,000 to 3.55 million.
Its fibre rollout revenue saw a drop, coming in 38.8 per cent lower at $44 million, as it passed the peak of its OpenNet rollout. As of end-2011, OpenNet had more than 80 per cent coverage of homes here. Meanwhile, SingTel’s fibre customer base grew to 55,000, up 18,000 year on year.
mio TV’s revenue for the quarter saw a 32 per cent growth in revenue to $28 million, as its customer base grew by 18,000 during the quarter to 353,000.
The telco said yesterday that it will throw its hat into the ring for the 2013-2016 package of broadcasting rights for the Barclays Premier League (BPL) when bidding starts in March. As of last August, pay-TV operators were obliged to make available their competitors’ exclusive content if their subscribers request it. This reduced some of the impetus for signing exclusive content.
Before the new guidelines kicked in, SingTel won the exclusive broadcast rights for the previous BPL cycle, for what was rumoured to cost at least $300 million.
Allen Lew, SingTel’s CEO, said that this time, any bidding will ‘take into consideration the new regime’.
‘It would be premature for me to discuss this but we are well-prepared . . . we are starting the process,’ Mr Lew said.
On the Australian front, Optus saw its quarterly net profit grow 4.4 per cent to A$177 million (S$238.7 million), boosted by increased service revenue and lower subscriber costs.
For the nine months ended Dec 31, 2011, net profit for the group fell 4.7 per cent to $2.7 billion, even as group revenue grew 4.6 per cent to $14.05 billion.
Its counter closed six cents higher at $3.13 in trading yesterday.
SingTel – DMG
A Tick Lower as Margin Weakens
THE BUZZ
Singtel reported consolidated revenue of SGD4.8bn for the December quarter (3QFY12), up 4.8% q-o-q while core earnings improved 1.1% q-o-q to SGD895m. For 9MFY12, core earnings dipped 5.3% y-o-y to SGD2.65bn on the back of a 4.6% improvement in revenue to SGD14.0bn.
OUR TAKE
Falling short. At 67% and 70% of our and street estimates respectively, Singtel’s 9MFY12 earnings were below expectations, largely weighed down by the weaker than expected EBITDA margin at Optus. The key takeaways were the better sequential showing at its Singapore operation and Optus, helped by seasonality. The appreciation of the AUD and stronger EBITDA helped drive overall group EBITDA a tick higher q-o-q although margins were crimped by higher handset cost. The share of associate contribution fell 5% q-o-q and 10% y-o-y in 9MFY12, mainly dragged down by 3G related costs at Bharti.
Telkomsel’s performance normalizes; robust showing at AIS on data uptake. Telkomsel’s share declined 3% q-o-q from the +11% q-o-q exhibited in 2QFY12 as the IDR depreciated 6% q-o-q and where it had capitalized on the tariff promotions during the September quarter. The stronger revenue growth at AIS of 8% came on the back of continued brisk data growth, up 34% y-o-y.
Stronger roaming traffic and handset sales fuel Singapore revenue. Sing business revenue grew 5% q-o-q and 2% in 9MFY12 led by higher roaming revenue and the launch of the iPhone 4S. The IT and engineering business contracted 2% q-o-q given the high base of 14% q-o-q growth in the previous quarter.
55k Sing fiber customers, largest share of sub adds in 4Q2011 but slower prepaid. While the postpaid addition of 44k was above the 40k recorded in the Sept quarter, helped by the new iPhone 4S and the attractive array of Android models offered, prepaid subs were surprisingly lower q-o-q during the year-end high season. SingTel continued to garner over 50% share of new fiber customers, adding 18k users in the Dec quarter from both the commercial and residential segments.
Forecast under review. There is no change to management’s previous guidance for Sing/Optus’ revenue to grow at low single digits, EBITDA for Singapore expected to be stable (which could imply further weakness in EBITDA margin over the next quarter) while Optus’ EBITDA is expected to grow at a low single digit. Our forecast and fair value are under review pending the results call with management today. We maintain our NEUTRAL rating on the stock.
SingTel – BT
Bharti Airtel profit slides 22% in Q3 to 10b rupees
(MUMBAI) Bharti Airtel Ltd, India’s largest wireless operator, reported profit that missed analysts’ estimates as customers curbed mobile-phone use amid rising call rates.
Third-quarter net income fell 22 per cent to 10.1 billion rupees (S$255.6 million) in the three months ended Dec 31, from 13 billion rupees a year earlier, New Delhi- based Bharti said in a statement yesterday.
That lagged behind the 13.9 billion rupee median of 25 analysts’ estimates compiled by Bloomberg.
Bharti raised call rates 20 per cent in most parts of India last year, after a price war sparked by the entry of Telenor ASA and NTT DoCoMo Inc into the world’s second-largest wireless market drove tariffs to less than a penny a minute.
The mobile-phone carrier controlled by billionaire Sunil Mittal added fewer new customers in the quarter than smaller rivals Reliance Communications Ltd and Idea Cellular Ltd.
‘Bharti’s subscriber additions are lower because they’re not in growth mode any more, so incremental minutes growth is lower,’ Unmesh Sharma, an analyst at Macquarie Capital Securities in Mumbai, said before the announcement. ‘It’s a sign of their maturity in the market.’
Bharti closed 6.5 per cent lower in Mumbai trading yesterday, compared with a 0.48 per cent advance by the benchmark Sensitive Index. The stock was the biggest percentage loser on the Sensex.
Average monthly minutes of use per user in India fell 7 per cent to 419 minutes in the three months ended Dec 31, from 449 minutes a year earlier.
The number of mobile- phone customers in the South Asian country increased 15 per cent to 175.7 million, Bharti said. — Bloomberg
SingTel – BT
Bharti Airtel profit slides 22% in Q3 to 10b rupees
(MUMBAI) Bharti Airtel Ltd, India’s largest wireless operator, reported profit that missed analysts’ estimates as customers curbed mobile-phone use amid rising call rates.
Third-quarter net income fell 22 per cent to 10.1 billion rupees (S$255.6 million) in the three months ended Dec 31, from 13 billion rupees a year earlier, New Delhi- based Bharti said in a statement yesterday.
That lagged behind the 13.9 billion rupee median of 25 analysts’ estimates compiled by Bloomberg.
Bharti raised call rates 20 per cent in most parts of India last year, after a price war sparked by the entry of Telenor ASA and NTT DoCoMo Inc into the world’s second-largest wireless market drove tariffs to less than a penny a minute.
The mobile-phone carrier controlled by billionaire Sunil Mittal added fewer new customers in the quarter than smaller rivals Reliance Communications Ltd and Idea Cellular Ltd.
‘Bharti’s subscriber additions are lower because they’re not in growth mode any more, so incremental minutes growth is lower,’ Unmesh Sharma, an analyst at Macquarie Capital Securities in Mumbai, said before the announcement. ‘It’s a sign of their maturity in the market.’
Bharti closed 6.5 per cent lower in Mumbai trading yesterday, compared with a 0.48 per cent advance by the benchmark Sensitive Index. The stock was the biggest percentage loser on the Sensex.
Average monthly minutes of use per user in India fell 7 per cent to 419 minutes in the three months ended Dec 31, from 449 minutes a year earlier.
The number of mobile- phone customers in the South Asian country increased 15 per cent to 175.7 million, Bharti said. — Bloomberg