Toronto Star

Rogers beats expectatio­ns as wireless segment grows

Telecom company reports net income of $594 million and boosts its full-year outlook

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Strong wireless results helped Rogers Communicat­ions Inc. beat analyst expectatio­ns in the third quarter and raise its fullyear outlook.

Wireless revenue climbed 5 per cent while churn, a measure of customer retention, was the best in a decade, said company CEO Joe Natale in a conference call Friday.

“In wireless we’ve delivered another strong quarter. We’ve continued to reduce post-paid churn, delivering the best Q3 postpaid churn since 2009.”

The improved financial picture saw the company increase its outlook for adjusted earnings growth before taxes and other charges by two percentage points to between seven and nine per cent.

Cable revenue climbed a modest 1 per cent in the quarter, but the company expects to see future growth with its new Ignite TV system introduced in the quarter.

The move to the internetba­sed television product, which Natale said they’re rolling out at a “thoughtful pace,” has the company seeing an end to convention­al television products some time in the future to drive down costs and boost simplicity.

“At some point in the future you will see us stop selling legacy TV, and then really kind of drive further efforts in getting the built op-ex and cap-ex efficienci­es of that move,” he said.

Installati­on costs alone would lead to substantia­l savings, with convention­al cable costing about $1,100 for a full install, compared with $400 and potentiall­y lower with internetba­sed services, said Natale.

Service costs would also be lower in the future with fewer systems, he said.

“Having various vintages of TV set-top boxes and home gateways drives complexity in the field for our people.”

The new service, which allows customers to browse Netflix and YouTube as well as cable channels from one source, will also allow a boost to revenues per account as they spend more time watching.

“Customers have an easier time finding content, navigating through content, and therefore we think a much easier time consuming content,” said Natale.

“We’ll continue to find other ways of packaging and merchandis­ing content in the fullness of time, which we think will also help with economics of the business.”

Overall, Rogers net income was up 17 per cent to $594 million for the quarter ending Sept. 30 from the same quarter last year.

The telecom company says the earnings per share for the quarter worked out to $1.15 per diluted share, up from 98 cents per share last year.

Adjusted net income hit $625 million, or $1.21 per share, which beat analyst expectatio­ns of $601 million and $1.17 per share according to Thomson Reuters Eikon.

Overall revenue was up three per cent to $3.77 billion, driven by the wireless gains. Media revenue was down 5 per cent because of lower revenue from the Toronto Blue Jays.

 ?? DARREN CALABRESE THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Cable revenue climbed just 1 per cent, but Rogers expects to see future growth with its new, Internet-based Ignite TV system.
DARREN CALABRESE THE CANADIAN PRESS Cable revenue climbed just 1 per cent, but Rogers expects to see future growth with its new, Internet-based Ignite TV system.

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