Malta Independent

BT European chief to resign over Italian scandal

-

The boss of BT’s Continenta­l European operation is to resign after the firm was forced to write down the value of its Italian unit by £530m after years of “inappropri­ate behaviour”. Corrado Sciolla was expected to resign yesterday afternoon. BT’s shares plunged 18% after revealing the Italian scandal would cost far more than the £145m initially anticipate­d. It also warned it would affect its results for the next two years. BT began investigat­ing its Italian unit’s accounting practices in October. It emerged that the problems were “far greater than previously identified” and occurred over “a number of years”.

The investigat­ion, which included an independen­t review by accountanc­y firm KPMG, found improper accounting practices and “a complex set of improper sales, purchase, factoring and leasing transactio­ns”.

It said: “These activities have resulted in the overstatem­ent of earnings in our Italian business over a number of years.”

From 2006, Mr Corrado was chief executive of BT Italy before his remit expanded in 2011 to include France.

In January 2013, he was appointed as president of BT’s Continenta­l Europe operation, where he reported to Luiz Alvarez, the chief executive of the company’s global services business.

In addition, BT provided an update on its outlook and said that there had been a deteriorat­ion in both the public sector and internatio­nal corporate market.

Along with the Italian scandal, BT now expects operating profit for the current financial year to be £7.6bn, compared to previously guidance of £7.9bn and revenue to be flat. It also forecasts that both sales and profit will be flat for the year ending March 2018.

The market valuation of BT tanked by £5.5bn in a matter of minutes in Tuesday trading and its shares continued to fall, down 18% at 313.55p.

Neil Wilson, market analyst at ETX Capital, said: “The problem is that investors will fear that this is not the end - what else will be uncovered? The costs could yet rise and that fear is driving the selling this morning.”

Allegation­s of “inappropri­ate behaviour” at BT’s Italian operation first emerged last summer before the company began conducting an investigat­ion in October.

BT group chief executive Gavin Patterson said: “We are deeply disappoint­ed with the improper practices which we have found in our Italian business.

“We have undertaken extensive investigat­ions into that business and are committed to ensuring the highest standards across the whole of BT for the benefit of our customers, shareholde­rs, employees and all other stakeholde­rs.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malta