The Peterborough Examiner

BCE’s profit beats expectatio­ns

Adds wireless, internet, TV subscriber­s

- EMILY JACKSON

BCE Inc.’s profit edged up in the latest quarter as it added more subscriber­s than expected in both its wireless and wire line divisions, with chief executive officer George Cope crediting the boost in internet and TV subscriber­s to investment in high-speed fibre connection­s and a new, cheaper TV-streaming product.

Canada’ s largest telecommun­ications company, which is in the midst of an expensive fibre-to-thehome( FT TH) network build in the key Toronto market, reported Thursday a profit of $770 million in the three months ended Sept .30, up 2.4 per cent from $752 million in the same period last year.

While wireless remained a key growth driver—Bell added 117, 182 postpaid subscriber­s, the highest in its third quarter in five years and above analysts’ prediction­s of 111,000 — that was largely in-line with expectatio­ns as consumers’ ever-increasing demand for data continues to boost Canada’ s entire wireless industry.

Cope expects the strength to continue into the holiday season given the new Apple Inc. iPhones and watch.

“We love having new product for the fourth quarter,” he said on a conference call with analysts. He would not comment on the volume ofi Phone 8 and 8+ devices sold, saying “it’s only fair” to leave that to Apple. On Rogers Communicat­ions Inc. quarterly call, its CEO Joe Na tale said demand f or thei Phone 8 was “anemic” as consumers wait for the iPhone X.

But the real surprise came from Bell’ s wire line division, which beat Bay Street’ s expectatio­ns. It added 44,424 internet customers and 36,399 IPTV customers, topping consensus estimates of 29,000 and 26,000 respective­ly. Including its satellite TV customers, it added 1,738 TV subscriber­s overall.

It even lost fewer telephone subscriber­s than expected, losing 57,381 residentia­l landlines compared to 80,587 in the same period last year.

“Our fibre foot print obviously( is) beginning to provide the returns we want to see,” Cope said.

Bell expects to have enough homes connected in Canada’ s largest city to start am ass advertisin­g campaign by early 2018. This will increase competitiv­e intensity, as the upgraded connection­s enable speeds that Bell’s top rival Rogers Communicat­ions Inc. already offers across its entire footprint.

Cope also pointed to the success of Bell’s relatively new Alt TV service, a cheaper offering that allows customers to watch TV over the internet via an app and doesn’t require a set-top box or installati­on.

“It allows us to focus specifical­ly in the condo marketplac­e where there may have been cord cutters,” Cope said. While Alt TV didn’t make up the majority of its new TV subscriber­s, Cope said its low-cost nature is margin neutral.

Bell’s new low-cost internet product also led to more customer additions, Cope said. Bell started selling internet under its flanker brand Virgin, a strategy Rogers also employs with its lower-cost brand Fido. There’ s“clearly a consumer market for differenti­ated brands,” Cope said, adding this is better for Bell than if consumers choose wholesale brands such as TekSavvy or Distribute­l.

Bell’s overall revenue increased 5 per cent to $5.68 billion and adjusted earnings rose 5.8 percent to $2.36 billion. Earnings per share dropped one cent to 86 cents per share due to a higher number of shares outstandin­g from the Bell MTS acquisitio­n. The analysts’ average estimate was 85 cents, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

The financial results were in line with analysts’ expectatio­ns, although Bell posted slightly better margins than expected.

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