Business World

Australia’s Telstra profit slumps on competitio­n

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SYDNEY — Australia’s dominant telecommun­ications company Telstra Thursday reported a surprise slump in first-half profit with its fixed-line and mobile businesses taking a hit amid increased competitio­n and a shift towards digital.

Net profit after tax for the six months to Dec. 31 fell 14.4% to A$1.79 billion ($1.38 billion) from the previous correspond­ing period.

The figure sent Telstra’s share price tumbling 4.43% to A$4.96 in mid-day trade in Sydney.

“It’s a weak result... you’ve got revenue and underlying profit all missing (market expectatio­ns) by a decent chunk,” IG Markets Chief Strategist Chris Weston told AFP.

“The implied volatility in a stock like Telstra is so low that this is as big a miss you are going to get.”

Revenue for fixed-line services dropped by 4.7% and by 8.7% for mobile services for the period. Overall sales revenue dipped by 3.4% to A$12.79 billion.

The company declared an interim dividend of 15.5 Australian cents.

Chief Executive Andrew Penn said Telstra had “performed well in a highly competitiv­e market.”

“Data volumes have increased and intense competitio­n on pricing across fixed, bundles, mobile, data and IP has had an impact.

“Those are in parallel with the accelerati­on of the rollout of ( the National Broadband Network) which, over the longer term, will have a negative impact on EBITDA (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciati­on and amortizati­on) of A$2-3 billion.”

The NBN, or national broadband network, aims to connect most Australian homes to superfast Internet over the next few years, replacing Telstra’s existing copper network. —

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