Calgary Herald

BCE boosts profit with gains in wireless customers

- EMILY JACKSON

BCE Inc.’s quarterly profit edged up on strong wireless performanc­e despite weaker-than-expected results in the hotly contested Internet and television market.

Canada’s largest telecommun­ications company reported adjusted net earnings of 94 cents per share on Thursday, topping analysts’ consensus estimate of 91 cents for the second quarter.

Bell beat its biggest rival, Rogers Communicat­ions Inc., when it came to the number of new wireless subscriber­s and how much revenue it earned from each user. The Montreal-based company credited more smartphone customers using more data on Bell’s faster 4G LTE network for the strong results.

But it blamed its competitor­s’ aggressive pricing for fewer additions to its broadband segment, citing deals on television in Quebec and high-speed Internet in Toronto. The Big Three, including Telus Corp., are duking it out for success in high-speed Internet and Internet-protocol television to make up for declines as consumers cut the cord on traditiona­l telephone and TV sets.

“We chose not to match some of the aggressive pricing we saw in the market in Toronto,” CEO George Cope said in a conference call with analysts Thursday morning.

Cope said he’s confident that Bell’s residentia­l fibre Internet and TV services are close to offsetting losses from the business and telephone segments as the costs to deliver wireline services drop.

Bell added 69,848 post-paid wireless subscriber­s, topping both analysts’ consensus estimate of 52,000 and the 65,000 adds Rogers reported in July. Average revenue per user, an important industry metric, increased 2.9 per cent to $64.32.

Fewer wireless contracts expired so Bell kept more of its customers and spent less to retain them since fewer upgraded their phones. The weak Canadian dollar, however, made it more expensive to attract new customers who increasing­ly want premium smartphone­s.

Revenue dropped 2.1 per cent in its wireline segment, where the addition of 35,255 Fibe TV customers and 7,539 Internet subscriber­s (only half of analysts’ estimates) tempered the loss of 33,154 satellite TV customers and 88,825 telephone subscriber­s.

Bell blamed the soft results on the sale of a call centre subsidiary last September, fewer wholesale Internet customers and the ongoing drift away from traditiona­l voice services. Cope downplayed the loss of 10,000 wholesale customers, citing volatility in the wholesale segment and higher margins are in the residentia­l segment.

Bell will continue to build its fibre network and expects to connect around three million premises by the end of the year, up from 2.6 million.

“There’s no doubt IPTV and where we have fibre is where we see the best market share growth for us,” Cope said, adding he expects an “enormous” amount of household additions in 2017 when the Toronto build-out is complete.

 ?? GALIT RODAN/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Bell says it expects to connect about three million premises by the end of the year as it continues to build its fibre network.
GALIT RODAN/THE CANADIAN PRESS Bell says it expects to connect about three million premises by the end of the year as it continues to build its fibre network.

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