Qatar Tribune

Vodafone’s new CEO faces tough calls to reconnect with investors

- AGENCIES

WHEN Vodafone named Margherita Della Valle as CEO last month, investors adopted a wait-and-see approach to whether the company veteran was the right person to jolt it out of a deep malaise.

Within weeks, Della Valle gave them a stark assessment of the problems Vodafone faces. The reaction has been brutal, with the company’s shares sliding to 20-year lows.

Della Valle, an Italian who joined Vodafone in 1994 and had been its chief financial officer since 2018, vowed on Tuesday to cut 11,000 of 90,000 jobs and speed up the delivery of new offers by giving local country bosses greater autonomy.

Her verdict on the situation in which Vodafone now finds itself has amplified calls for deals to overhaul key markets and for an improvemen­t in the way it operates.

Complicati­ng matters is an investor base with conflictin­g demands, concerns about Vodafone’s dividend outlook and a workforce reeling from the deep job cuts.

“They’re fighting too many battles on too many fronts, with still too much debt on the balance sheet,” said investment director Russ Mould at AJ Bell, adding that the share price is reflecting concern around the dividend.

The British group remains one of the world’s biggest telecoms companies, with a presence across Europe and Africa, but several years of underperfo­rmance versus peers had prompted some investors and analysts to call for an external hire as CEO.While many observers in and outside the company had expected a fresh face, Della Valle won over the board.

This week she vowed to put a greater emphasis on Vodafone’s enterprise division, long a strength, where she believes it can grow share in an expanding market as consumers look for ever-cheaper deals.

Vodafone’s shares are trading at lows last seen in 2002, largely due to a cut to free cash flow forecasts.

“With the shares now yielding north of 9%, it is clear that Vodafone is a dividend stock incorporat­ing the expectatio­n of a dividend cut,” Enders Analysis

told clients.

Della Valle dismissed concerns over net debt, which Vodafone has lowered to 33.4 billion euros ($37 billion), giving it a 2.5 times net debt to core earnings multiple on a proforma basis.

“This puts any concerns about our debt levels firmly behind us,” she said.

Vodafone made its name by often audacious dealmaking, and once had presences across Europe, Africa, Australia, India and the United States.

It has since retrenched but is now under pressure to go further and either exit or seek mergers in some European markets such as Spain, where it has begun a strategic review and is open to structural change like a sale or a network separation.Della Valle said deals were a priority, but would not give any timing, and defended the structure of Vodafone.

 ?? ?? Vodafone Group CEO Margherita Della Valle
Vodafone Group CEO Margherita Della Valle

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Qatar