About this weblog

What you need to know: This weblog captures key data points about the global telecoms industry. I use it as an electronic notebook to support my work for Pringle Media.

Tuesday, November 16, 2021

Digital Tailwinds Drive Growth for Vodafone

 

Vodafone reported a 2.4% year-on-year rise in service revenue on an organic basis for the quarter ending September 30th. Group revenue for the half year to September 30th was almost 22.5 billion euros, up 5% on a reported basis. 

Looking forward, the multinational group pointed to three potential digital growth engines: 

1.  "We now have over 50 million customers subscribing to a digital service, which leads to higher ARPU, improved distribution efficiency, higher NPS and lower churn. We are focused on further developing our strong positions in consumer IoT, Vodafone TV, home services, device lifecycle services and loyalty applications."

2. "Our IoT service was established in 2008 and has grown to be the largest IoT connectivity provider globally, with 136 million devices connected....Vodafone IoT currently generates 900 million euros annual revenue with double-digit revenue growth and a strong double-digit ROCE. The total addressable market is 10 billion euros and expected to grow 16% per annum, with further stimulus from the NextGenerationEU recovery plan."

3. "Our financial services businesses in Africa – encompassing Vodacom Group, Safaricom and Vodafone Egypt – have collectively grown to be the leading FinTech in Africa. Vodacom Group and Safaricom together have 57 million customers, with MPesa transaction value of 26.8 billion US dollars per month in the first six months of financial year 2022. Our African FinTech business has significant growth opportunities through penetration growth in existing markets, expanding into new markets and scaling new products, including the recent launch of the VodaPay ‘super-app’ in South Africa. The Vodacom Group has clear financial ambitions to grow its new services, which include financial services, at or above 20% CAGR."

Source: Vodafone statement

Wednesday, November 10, 2021

KT Sees 5G Subs Double

 


KT announced a 3.6% year-on-year increase in operating revenue for the third quarter to 6,028 trillion Korean won (5.1 billion US dollars). It reported more than 5.6 million 5G subscribers, almost double the figure a year earlier. Source: KT statements 

Thursday, November 4, 2021

Telefónica Reports Healthy Growth

For the third quarter, Telefónica reported a 3.6% year-on-year rise in revenues on an organic basis to 9.3 billion euros. Service revenues in its Hispam region (Spanish speaking Latin America) rose 6%, on an organic basis, as fibre-to-the-home connections leapt 26%. 

The group said its fastest-growing unit was Telefonica Tech, which saw revenue growth up 25% year-on-year in the third quarter to an annualised revenue base of about one billion euros, following the integration of CANCOM U.K. and Ireland, now Telefonica Tech U.K. and Ireland, in August. 

Telefónica reported that its IoT connectivity revenues rose by almost 24%, lifted by demand from "connected cars, big data, Industry 4.0 and utilities." The telco said it is leveraging new connectivity technologies, such as NB-IoT/LTE-M and p-LTE/5G, with "best in class" partners to pursue the IoT opportunity. Source: Telefónica statements


BT Treads Water

BT reported revenue of 10.3 billion British pounds (12 billion euros) for the six months to September 30th, down 3% year-on-year, "primarily due to ongoing legacy product declines, the impact of prior year divestments and foreign exchange." BT said these factors were "partially offset by stronger recurring BT Sport revenue as a result of the easing of lockdown restrictions, and higher rental bases in fibre-enabled products and Ethernet." 

BT said revenue grew in Openreach (5%), was flat in Consumer, but declined in Enterprise (-5%) and Global (-14%) as a result of challenging market conditions. But excluding the impact of divestments and foreign exchange movements, revenue declined by just 5% to 1.65 billion pounds in the Global division.

In the third quarter of 2021, BT's revenue was down 2% to 5.2 billion pounds, as the performance of its Global division improved. The company said it is "continuing discussions regarding the future of BT Sport." Source: BT statement

Tuesday, November 2, 2021

Even More Momentum for Tesla

For the third quarter, Tesla reported a 57% year-on-year rise in revenues to 13.8 billion US dollars on the back of a 73% rise in vehicle deliveries.  The company's ancillary businesses also grew strongly with solar deployments up 46% to 83 MW, as solar roof deployments more than doubled year-on-year. Energy storage deployments increased by 71% amid strong demand for the Megapack. The Megapack is a large-scale rechargeable lithium-ion battery stationary energy storage product. Tesla recently announced a new Megapack factory with a capacity of 40 GWh, which compares to total Megapack deployments of 3 GWh in the past 12 months.

Telsa also highlighted the rollout of its “Safety Score” functionality, which will "also be used for our telematics insurance product. We actively monitor braking, turning, tailgating (unsafe following), forward collision warnings and forced autopilot disengagements in order to predict the probability of a collision," the company added. "We also launched our telematics insurance product in our first state – Texas – in early October. We believe our insurance premiums will be able to more accurately reflect chances of a collision than any other insurance product on the market. Additionally, we will proactively communicate to the user what driving adjustments need to be made to decrease probability of a collision." Source: Tesla statement

Amazon Anticipates Significant Slowdown

Amazon expects its net sales to be between 130 billion and 140 billion US dollars in the fourth quarter of 2021, which would represent growth of between 4% and 12% compared with the fourth quarter of 2020. This guidance anticipates an unfavourable impact of approximately 60 basis points from foreign exchange rates.

Andy Jassy, Amazon CEO, said: "We’ve nearly doubled the size of our fulfilment network since the pandemic began. In the fourth quarter, we expect to incur several billion dollars of additional costs in our consumer business as we manage through labour supply shortages, increased wage costs, global supply chain issues, and increased freight and shipping costs—all while doing whatever it takes to minimise the impact on customers and selling partners this holiday season. It’ll be expensive for us in the short term, but it’s the right prioritisation for our customers and partners.”

For the third quarter of 2021, Amazon reported a 15% year-on-year increase in sales to 110.8 billion dollars. Within that figure, sales of AWS rose by almost 39% to 16.1 billion dollars. Source: Amazon statement



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