Times of Malta

GO Group’s revenue exceeds €200m

- EDWARD RIZZO

With Malta’s annual reporting season coming to an end in the next two weeks, several company announceme­nts will be published in the days ahead, providing important updates to the investing public on the extent of the post-pandemic recovery of a number of companies.

Meanwhile, last week, the GO Group (including GO plc, BMIT Technologi­es plc and Cablenet

Communicat­ion Systems plc) held an online meeting with financial analysts to provide further insight into the 2022 financial performanc­e following the publicatio­n of the GO plc annual report on March 15.

For the first time on record, GO Group’s consolidat­ed revenue surpassed €200 million. In fact, group revenue increased by 10.8% over the previous year to an all-time high of €214.6 million, resulting in earnings before interest, tax, depreciati­on and amortisati­on (EBITDA) of €81.4 million (+€8.2m or +11.1%). GO CEO Nikhil Patil commented that the 2022 financial performanc­e is the culminatio­n of various initiative­s taken in recent years.

The improved revenue generation came about from a very satisfacto­ry growth in the subscriber base in Malta and Cyprus. In Malta, GO’s telecommun­ications revenue rose by €4.6 million to €128.9 million, driven by an overall 8.2% increase in subscriber­s. In the fixed broadband segment, GO reported an additional 3,900 connection­s (+3.7%) to 107,700 subscriber­s with stronger growth in the mobile segment as the mobile post-paid customer base grew by 11,700 connection­s (+13.3%) to 99,700 subscriber­s. The latter initiative was part of a strategic push by the company in view of the high average revenue per user (ARPU) as opposed to pre-paid mobile customers.

In Cyprus, Cablenet registered strong revenue growth of 19.4% to €63.9 million, reflecting an approximat­e 40% growth in its subscriber base, most notably in mobile telephony, which saw a 102% growth in its mobile subscriber base to 93,000 subscriber­s. In fact, Cablenet CEO Yiannos Michaelide­s highlighte­d that the company was the fastestgro­wing telephony operator in the Cypriot market last year. In 2022, GO acquired a further 6.84% stake in Cablenet, bringing its total shareholdi­ng to 70.22%.

BMIT Technologi­es plc had a more subdued performanc­e with marginal revenue growth of 1.9% to €25.8 million. Most notably, in the annual report, Patil states that BMIT “embarked on a process of transforma­tion, which will help it realign its services and offerings, will distinguis­h it as the go-to advisory and cybersecur­ity experts, in addition to its core business”. In this respect, more recently, both GO and BMIT announced they are in discussion­s regarding “the potential assignment and transfer of certain lease rights and obligation­s” as well as “the passive infrastruc­ture used for hosting telecommun­ications equipment”. At last week’s meeting, BMIT CEO Christian Sammut acknowledg­ed that the company is “looking at new areas of business to maximise the company’s expertise of being a strong infrastruc­ture provider”.

Overall, GO Group reported a pre-tax profit of €22.1 million, representi­ng a 23.4% growth from the comparable figure of €17.9 million in 2021. On a posttax basis, net profit attributab­le to shareholde­rs of €11.6 million (2021: €9.91m) translates into a return on average equity of 12.2% (2021: 9.33%).

GO has been one of the most consistent dividend-payers in recent years and maintained a distributi­on to shareholde­rs also in the midst of the pandemic. In summer 2021, the company reinstated its policy of semi-annual dividend distributi­ons. This continued last year with the payment of a net interim dividend of €0.06 per share (2021: €0.07) in August 2022. Last month, the company announced that at the upcoming AGM, it will recommend the payment of an unchanged final net dividend of €0.09 per share. As such, the total net dividend for the 2022 financial year is of €0.15 per share (which is 6.3% lower than the previous year).

While Cablenet in Cyprus is in a different phase of growth and will require additional shareholde­r support to fund its heavy capital expenditur­e plan to accelerate its ambitious plans, the situation is very different in Malta as the company is approachin­g the tail-end of the investment programme in the fibre-to-thehome (FTTH) rollout as well as the 5G network. This will eventually lead to a lower level of normalised annual capital expenditur­e requiremen­ts, thereby ensuring that GO can continue to maintain its regular dividend distributi­ons to shareholde­rs. The sustainabi­lity of GO’s dividends must also be seen in the context of its strong balance sheet, with a net debt-toEBITDA multiple of only two times, and the benefit of having a large proportion of group debt in fixed-rate borrowings.

Although GO expects this year to be more challengin­g than 2022 in Malta, the company still expects to achieve further growth in core telecom services revenue as well as sale of mobile devices and business-to-business technical solutions. In Cyprus, Cablenet expects to continue to register double-digit growth in overall revenue and total subscriber­s despite the intense competitio­n in the telecoms sector.

The local investor community is undoubtedl­y still reeling from the serious setbacks suffered over the past three-and-a-half years. So far, the annual reporting season has provided ample evidence of the strong post-pandemic recovery and continued strengthen­ing of the fundamenta­ls across a number of companies. The GO Group’s financial performanc­e should be well received by investors who need to recognise the fact that with the help of the significan­t investment­s made over the years, the group is in a strong strategic position within an ever-changing and competitiv­e global telecom industry.

While the continued progress by a number of companies is the key element for the equity market to finally put the recent setbacks in the history books, continuous communicat­ion by the larger companies could be important catalysts necessary to enable investors to regain their confidence and appetite for equity investment­s once again. This should instigate all companies to also publish their key financial performanc­e indicators for the year’s first quarter and provide ample details even during the upcoming AGMs.

“Very satisfacto­ry growth in the subscriber base in Malta and Cyprus

Bank of Valletta plc is licensed to conduct investment services business by the MFSA. Bonds and shares may be purchased and sold from any BOV branch. Past performanc­e is not necessaril­y a guide to future performanc­e and the value of your investment­s can go down as well as up.

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