Edmonton Journal

Quebecor bullish as it pushes new offerings

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Quebecor Inc. says it MONTREAL had early stumbles in rolling out its new discount wireless carrier last quarter but that it’s encouraged by current growth.

Last November’s launch of its Fizz mobile brand is part of a push into new wireless and television broadcasti­ng areas as its traditiona­l businesses of media and cable fade.

The Montreal-based company, however, faces aggressive competitio­n from existing players, said Quebecor CEO Pierre Karl Péladeau on a conference call Wednesday.

“The incumbents were prepared for our launch. So they were, I would say, very aggressive especially on handset promotions for the Black Friday season and same as well for the Christmas period.”

The launch of Fizz was also marred by technical issues that led the company to pull back on advertisin­g last quarter, but the rollout is going much smoother this quarter, said Péladeau.

“Since that has been set and all our marketing campaigns are now underway, the success in Q1 is incredible, much higher than our expectatio­ns, and we think it continues.”

The company is also preparing to launch an internet brand, and plans to soft-launch its Helix internet-connected television platform in the coming weeks as it looks to position itself for changing consumer demands.

“We feel that we are well targeting the younger audience or the younger generation,” said Péladeau.

The push to new technologi­es come as its media revenues decreased by about three per cent, including an 18-per-cent decline for its magazine business, while at its Videotron cable business, subscriber­s were down by 6,000, and landline telephone subscriber­s dropped by 17,000.

Péladeau said the company is looking to change up its media offerings, including with more podcasts, specialty channels and focused publishing.

“Despite significan­t headwinds and a challengin­g advertisin­g revenue environmen­t, our media group continues to position itself more favourably by diversifyi­ng its sources of revenue and complement­ing its service offering,” said Péladeau.

The company says it is financiall­y well positioned to push into new areas with liquidity of more than $1 billion.

For the fourth quarter, the company reported net income of $116.8 million, up from $70.4 million in the year-earlier period.

The profit amounted to 46 cents per basic share, up from 29 cents per basic share in the fourth quarter of 2017.

Adjusted income from continuing operations was $132.7 million, or 52 cents per basic share, which was above analyst estimates.

Revenue was in line with estimates at $1.09 billion, up from $1.06 billion a year earlier.

Analysts had estimated Quebecor’s adjusted income from continuing operating activities at $124.15 million or 48 cents per share, with $1.09 billion of revenue, according to Thomson Reuters Eikon.

 ??  ?? Pierre Karl Péladeau
Pierre Karl Péladeau

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