Daily Mail

Struggle for BT’s future

- Alex Brummer

You might think that BT would be a big winner from lockdown. As the nation’s dominant broadband operator, owner of the EE mobile network with strong sports video content, it should be among the handful of FTSE 100 stocks having a good pandemic, if such a thing is possible.

Instead, the shares are languishin­g at around 100p. putting a value of £10.4bn on the enterprise.

In context, that is less than the £12.5bn former chief executive Gavin Patterson shelled out for mobile provider EE in 2016.

The arrival of Worldpay pioneer and former private equity whizz Philip Jansen in January 2019 signalled the start of a new era. He promised more fibre-to-the premises broadband and pledged a £12bn investment to fit the uK with ultra-fast broadband by 2025.

But, like his predecesso­rs, Jansen is finding delivery to be hard going. It was quite encouragin­g recently when reports emerged of private equity possibly becoming a partner in network arm openreach, which would enable delivery to be properly financed and speeded up.

A precedent for this was set in August when KKR bought into Telecom Italia’s broadband network. Jansen is gung-ho for change and a financial restructur­ing to release value for BT’s small investors (including this writer). He is keen to provide the upgraded service for workers fed up with the flimsy quality in their homes.

He is thought to be encounteri­ng some resistance from Jan du Plessis, the chairman who hired him. Neither is he getting the full support he would like from his executive team including finance director Simon Lowth, who was in place when he arrived.

There is nothing new about BT foot-dragging. Two decades ago, when Netflix was still posting out videos and CDs, uK startup Video Networks, a Stevenage company that had done deals with Hollywood to deliver up to 5,000 movies, developed technology which could use BT copper wires and offered the telecoms firm a 50pc stake.

After initially providing encouragem­ent, BT backed out of the deal. using similar technology, Netflix has grown into a movie and production giant worth £168bn and become a must-have in lockdown. BT is beset with indecision.

There are a range of ideas for giving BT a new lease of life. It could bring private equity into openreach and/or sell global networks. Another possibilit­y is restructur­ing EE to better compete with the merger between Telefonica-controlled o2 and Liberty-controlled Virgin Media.

Galvanisin­g a recalcitra­nt board and cutting through a complacent culture becomes more necessary every day.

Pandemic surfers

So WHo are Britain’s Covid-19 stock market beneficiar­ies?

Among the bigger beasts, cancer drug innovator Astrazenec­a is a winner and has been rewarded by investors for pursuing the oxford Jenner Institute vaccine with a real sense of urgency.

other, smaller pharma firms such as university of Southampto­n spin-out Synairgen have enjoyed spectacula­r rises on the back of promising treatments. online shopping has come into its own. ocado, has had a spectacula­r rise, and is now worth £21bn – more than all the other grocers added together – and a fraction less than market leader Tesco at £22bn.

Digital fashion firm Asos has almost doubled in value since the start of the year and is worth £5.3bn. Boohoo is worth £4bn.

A more surprising return to form is the unfashiona­ble B&Q and Screwfix owner Kingfisher. Less-known risers are the Cambridge video-game developer Frontier and fantasy war games retailer Games Workshop. Even eternal struggler model train maker Hornby is enjoying a virus halo.

Fancy that!

Scotland the brave

THE century-old Edinburgh fund manager Baillie Gifford has put the zip back into the reputation of Scottish finance with its cornerston­e investment­s in Silicon Valley.

Now it has obtained a private fund management licence in China and has registered a Shanghai asset management arm to attract local institutio­ns and billionair­es.

It will also give it clearer sight of Chinese tech and start-ups in which it has £39bn invested, and has played a key role in the upward journey of the Scottish Mortgage Investment Trust.

Best that Donald Trump doesn’t know.

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