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BT SHARES PLUNGE AS JOB CUTS LEAVE INVESTORS COLD

The former phone monopoly forecast a flat dividend and a 2 per cent revenue decline next fiscal year

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BT Group pledged to cut 13,000 jobs as part of a cost purge that failed to impress investors, who focused instead on the bleak sales outlook and lack of free cash flow growth, driving the stock down the most in 15 months.

The former phone monopoly, facing price cuts mandated by regulators, political pressure to invest in faster broadband and rising inflation, forecast a flat dividend and a 2 per cent revenue decline next fiscal year alongside a drop in earnings and free cash flow, as it boosts spending on its fibre network.

“Probably from 2021 onwards we can see Ebitda grow again,” chief executive Gavin Patterson said. He characteri­sed BT’s commitment to the dividend as a sign of confidence, after expectatio­ns from some analysts that it would make a cut.

“We’re also signalling to the market that we think it will be unchanged for the next two years,” he said.

The stock fell as much as 10 per cent and was down 7.8 per cent to 220 pence at 9.54am in London, the lowest intraday since October 2012. The company’s €1.3 billion (Dh5.67bn) of March 2026 bonds fell the most in three weeks, dropping 0.3 cents on the euro to about 101 cents, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

“It’s the outlook” driving the plunge, said Jefferies analyst Jerry Dellis, referring to BT’s free cash flow guidance coming in 10 per cent below analysts’ estimates. The spending forecast that’s eating into cash flow comes before any accelerati­on by BT of its fibre build targets, Mr Dellis said, pointing to the risk the carrier will need to invest more.

The flurry of news releases Thursday morning by BT, alongside fourth-quarter and full-year results that were in line with expectatio­ns, followed a busy year of review and restructur­ing for Mr Patterson, who’s been contending with demands on BT’s cash from all fronts while seeking to bounce back from an accounting scandal in Italy and a profit warning revealed in early 2017.

He has already cut thousands of jobs, overhauled management and changed BT’s strategy for its struggling global services business, as the owner of the UK’s largest fixed network and biggest mobile operator seeks to get back in investors’ good books.

The strategy update was meant to answer uncertaint­y over BT’s outlook that had weighed on the stock, which is down 46 per cent over the past two years, compared with a 4.4 per cent decline for the Stoxx 600 Telecommun­ications Index.

Savings from cost-cutting and changes to BT’s operations to improve productivi­ty announced Thursday would take three years to offset other pressures on its finances, Mr Patterson said. “We’re too complex and we’re overweight and that’s why we need to make this change,” he said.

BT plans to eliminate 13,000 back office and middle management jobs but hire 6,000 workers in network deployment and customer service.

The cuts amount to more than double several forecasts from analysts ahead of Thursday’s announceme­nt and will come at a cost of £800 million (Dh3.96bn).

The company will vacate its central London headquarte­rs to focus on 30 other modern sites. The job cuts meant very little, given BT was also hiring, Dhananjay Mirchandan­i, an analyst at Bernstein, wrote in a note.

“But what it also tells us is that this management team has quite obviously run out of ideas for a simple and articulate equity story: one that springs few surprises and rests on consistent delivery capabiliti­es without political and regulatory acrimony,” Mr Mirchandan­i said.

“BT has now firmly gone from being a reasonably predictabl­e growth story, an outlier in the incumbent landscape across Europe, to becoming a cost restructur­ing story.”

The carrier will owe top-up payments of £2.bn over the next three years on a £11.3bn pension deficit, it said, revealing the results of a long-awaited review with trustees. The outcome is in line with expectatio­ns from analysts, who had forecast the deficit could come in at £10bn to £12bn, according to Morgan Stanley.

BT will pay a final dividend of 10.55 pence a share, bringing the full-year dividend to 15.4 pence – unchanged from the prior year.

That’s less than the 15.7 pence forecast, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Fourth-quarter adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciati­on and amortisati­on rose 1 per cent per cent to £2.08bn, in line with the median estimate of five analysts.

This management team has quite obviously run out of ideas for a simple and articulate equity story DHANANJAY MIRCHANDAN­I Analyst, Bernstein

 ??  ?? The BT Tower as seen from the Leadenhall Building, in the financial district of London. The company will cut 13,000 back office and middle management jobs Bloomberg
The BT Tower as seen from the Leadenhall Building, in the financial district of London. The company will cut 13,000 back office and middle management jobs Bloomberg

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