The Mercury

JSE fires a warning shot at Blue Label

Release annual financial statements and notice of annual general meeting by October 31 or face suspension

- DINEO FAKU dineo.faku@inl.co.za

PRESSURE is mounting on Blue Label Telecoms to release its annual financial statements and its notice of annual general meeting or face suspension of trading.

The JSE yesterday announced it would move to suspend the group’s listing for the second time since last month in the interest of shareholde­rs.

Blue Label, whose loss- making subsidiary Cell C has lost market share amid a competitiv­e environmen­t, closed at R2.94 on the JSE yesterday after gaining 1.73 percent.

The JSE said Blue Label had failed to distribute its annual financial statements and notice of annual general meeting within the four-month period stipulated in the JSE’s listing requiremen­ts. It said that the company’s listing had been annotated with an “RE” to indicate that it has failed to comply and that the listing of its securities was under threat of suspension and possible removal.

“If the abovementi­oned company still fails to distribute its annual report on or before October 31, 2019, then its listing may be suspended,” it said.

The JSE announceme­nt came a day after the telecoms group advised shareholde­rs that the integrated annual report and notice of annual general meeting would be made available on October 29, 2019.

“The JSE’s notice today is simply their process that needs to be followed whenever there is a delay in the release of results,” Blue Label’s head of investor and media relations Nicola White said yesterday.

Blue Label previously delayed the release of the results for the year ended May to the end of last month to take into account the impact of Cell C’s recapitali­sation and restructur­ing. Blue Label owns 45 percent of Cell C after buying into the company in 2017.

The financial results were due for release on August 27, and were released on September 26. Blue Label reported a loss of R6.65 billion for the 12 months to May 31, compared with a profit of R1.12bn a year earlier. It posted a headline loss per share of 312.49 cents and a core headline loss of 304.77c.

It attributed the performanc­e to Cell C’s trading losses, impairment of its property, plant and equipment and the impact of a derecognit­ion of its deferred tax asset and the impairment of Blue Label’s total investment in it. However, management said the new national roaming agreement would result in substantia­l cost savings for Cell C by reducing network and capital expenditur­e.

“These savings will further be enhanced on completion of an intended extensive capital restructur­e objective,” the company said last month.

In August Cell C finalised a term sheet detailing a further national roaming agreement with MTN.

Last November, MTN and Cell C concluded the implementa­tion of a national roaming agreement which saw MTN providing 3G and 4G/LTE services to Cell C in areas where the mobile network operator had chosen to purchase coverage rather than selfbuilt.

This meant that Cell C customers outside the urban centres currently roam on MTN’s 3G and 4G/LTE networks.

 ?? | SIMPHIWE MBOKAZI African News Agency (ANA) ?? BLUE LABEL telecoms head offices in Sandton, Johannesbu­rg. Its shares were battered on the JSE yesterday, losing almost 10 percent.
| SIMPHIWE MBOKAZI African News Agency (ANA) BLUE LABEL telecoms head offices in Sandton, Johannesbu­rg. Its shares were battered on the JSE yesterday, losing almost 10 percent.

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