The Guardian Australia

Vodafone hails turnaround progress as Germany returns to growth

- Jane Croft

Vodafone has said its turnaround plan is starting to show results as Germany, its largest business, returned to growth last year after the sale of its Italian and Spanish operations.

The telecoms company has been undergoing a transforma­tion programme under its chief executive, Margherita Della Valle, who has sought to simplify the group and taken action in three underperfo­rming markets where Vodafone’s returns were below the cost of capital.

Vodafone sold off its Spanish division for €5bn (£4.3bn) as well as announcing an €8bn sale of its operations in Italy and a proposed merger with CK Hutchison’s Three in the UK which is being considered by the Competitio­n and Markets Authority (CMA), the anti-trust regulator.

The telecoms company reported a 74% fall in operating profits for the year ended 31 March 2024 to €3.7bn against €14.4bn because results in the previous year were bolstered by exceptiona­l gains including an €8.6bn gain on the sale of its Vantage Towers business as well as sales of Vodafone Hungary and Vodafone Ghana.

Vodafone is pressing ahead with cost-cutting measures. It has shed 5,000 roles and is cutting a further 2,000 as part of a €1bn cost reduction target; its aim is to axe up to 11,000 jobs by 2026.

Della Valle said that underlying performanc­e in Germany was expected to improve so that by 2026 the country “will come back to being an important growth engine for the group”. She added that Vodafone was holding “deep conversati­ons” with the CMA in the UK as the regulators examine the Three deal. The CMA has warned mobile customers could face higher prices and reduced quality as a result of the potential merger.

Della Valle said: “Much more still needs to be done in the year ahead. We will step up investment in our customer experience, improve our underlying performanc­e in Germany and accelerate our momentum in business, while also continuing to simplify our operations.”

Vodafone has already said it will rebase its dividend and plans share buy-backs over two years, with €2bn from the proceeds of the Spanish business in 2025 and a further €2bn proceeds from the Italian arm in 2026.

The telecoms group faces questions about the 14.6 % stake held by its largest investor Emirates Telecommun­ications, which the UK government has identified as a national security risk. Ministers have ordered a national security committee to be set up at Vodafone to help oversee sensitive work.

However a recent report authored by three barristers including Sir Robert Buckland KC, a former lord chancellor, concluded that the UAE’s stake in Vodafone raised serious concerns given UAE’s intelligen­ce gathering apparatus and poor human rights record.

The barrister Ben Keith, who co-authored the report, has urged that the planned national security committee should be independen­t of Vodafone and include national security experts. There should also be enhanced data security and audits and also Vodafone should collaborat­e with human rights organisati­ons and conduct regular assessment­s, the barristers suggested.

Vodafone said of the report: “Vodafone has extensive data security and privacy measures in place. Sensitive customer data is not visible to anyone – including the group CEO – outside our specific, security-vetted customer teams. Vodafone has a long-establishe­d human rights policy, which is developed in line with internatio­nal standards as well as industry-specific principles.”

 ?? ?? Vodafone is pressing ahead with cost-saving measures, including job cuts. Photograph: Ben Stansall/AFP/Getty Images
Vodafone is pressing ahead with cost-saving measures, including job cuts. Photograph: Ben Stansall/AFP/Getty Images

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