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New Vodafone boss takes aim at costs with 11,000 worldwide job cuts

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New Vodafone boss Margherita Della Valle said she would cut 11,000 jobs globally over three years to help the telecoms group regain its competitiv­e edge after it warned that a poor performanc­e in its biggest market Germany would hit cash flow.

Shares in Vodafone, which has underperfo­rmed rivals in its major European markets, fell to their lowest level since 2002, and were trading down 9 per cent by mid-afternoon.

The job cuts are the biggest in the history of Vodafone, which employs 90,000 people directly across Europe and Africa.

Della Valle was tasked with turning Vodafone around when she permanentl­y took on the top job from the role of CFO last month.

Three major shareholde­rs could all benefit from a break up of the group.

"To consistent­ly deliver, Vodafone must change," she said. "My priorities are customers, simplicity and growth."

Della Valle targeted Vodafone's central operations when she took the helm at the start of the year, with 500 job cuts. In Germany 1,300 roles will be lost, the company said in March, while 1,000 are being shed in Italy.

The additional cuts announced on Tuesday will be spread across

its European markets, as well as more reductions in the centre, she said.

Germany, Vodafone's biggest market, was underperfo­rming, Della Valle said, while "structural change", meaning a full or partial sale, was an option in Spain.

Tuesday's share price fall was probably due to its forecast of 3.3 billion euros (US$3.6 billion) of cash flow this financial year, down from 4.8 billion euros in the year to end-march 2023, she said. Analysts had expected 3.6 billion euros.

The CEO put the lower forecast down to the timing of payments for cable TV in Germany due to a change in the law.

One large institutio­nal investor said there remained material portfolio value within Vodafone which the results did not substantia­lly change.

The dividend remained well covered, the investor said, but there was perhaps greater pressure to realise some of the potential steps to unlock the group's value.

Vodafone's dividend was a matter for the board, Della Valle said, but pointed to a "significan­t" cut in debt and said the group was comfortabl­e with its leverage.

"The new CEO has decided to maintain its dividend (a missed opportunit­y in our view and a concern the company remains unwilling to take necessary bolder action)," analysts at JP Morgan Cazenove said.

Vodafone reported a 1.3 per cent decline in group core earnings to 14.7 billion euros for the year, missing its own guidance.

Della Valle said the European telecoms market had long delivered a poor return on the capital invested in networks, but Vodafone's relative performanc­e had worsened over time.

Activist investors and rivals have also described the British group as unwieldy and slow to respond to market changes.

Emirati telecoms firm Etisalat has built up a 14.6 per cent stake and French telecoms billionair­e Xavier Niel, who competes with it in Italy, and Liberty Global, its partner in the Netherland­s are also investors.

Analysts have said all three are positioned for any sale of Vodafone's operations.

Setting out her roadmap, Della Valle said she would maximise the potential of business customers, a long-standing Vodafone strength, while focusing on the basics, such as customer service, for consumers.

 ?? Photo courtesy of Vodafone ?? A Vodafone store on Portobello Road, London, UK.
Photo courtesy of Vodafone A Vodafone store on Portobello Road, London, UK.

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