Earnings Release • Apr 23, 2020
Earnings Release
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Financial information for the first quarter of 2020
Updated dividend in the COVID-19 context
| Q1 2019 | Q1 2020 | change | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mobile postpaid customer base (in '000) | 2,490 | 2,588 | 3.9% |
| Net adds (in '000) Mobile only postpaid ARPO (€ per month) |
21 20.8 |
9 20.3 |
-58.3% -2.5% |
| Convergent customer base (in '000) | 200 | 280 | 40.0% |
| Net adds (in '000) B2C convergent ARPO (€ per month) |
20 77.4 |
21 75.9 |
8.1% -1.9% |
| Convergent mobile customer as % mobile contract customer base | 12.7% | 17.4% | 470 bp |
| reported | comparable1 | comparable | reported | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| in €m | Q1 2019 | Q1 2019 | Q1 2020 | change | change |
| Revenues | 318.2 | 327.7 | 333.9 | 1.9% | 4.9% |
| 214.9 | |||||
| Retail service revenues EBITDAaL |
205.7 58.0 |
57.8 | 224.8 62.2 |
4.6% 7.6% |
9.3% 7.1% |
| margin as % of revenues eCapex |
18.2% -36.9 |
17.6% -36.9 |
18.6% -35.1 |
100 bp -4.8% |
38 bp -4.8% |
| Operating cash flow2 | 21.1 | 20.9 | 27.0 | 29.6% | 27.9% |
| Net financial debt | 252.1 | 229.0 | -9.2% |
Comparable base includes BKM 2019 before acquisition
Operating cash flow defined as EBITDAaL – eCapex
Everybody has been profoundly affected by the COVID-19 pandemic. In this global crisis context, our main priority is the protection of our employees, our customers, suppliers and subcontractors, as we comply fully with the decisions and recommendations of the competent authorities. In addition, we concentrated our efforts on ensuring service continuity as connectivity is more than ever critical for Belgian consumers, businesses, hospitals and administration. Finally, we believe we have an important societal role to support the country in this difficult time. We proactively promoted the 'StayHome' message, we supported our customers with a dedicated platform and additional data, and we helped the government monitor mobility via anonymised data. We also provided concrete and meaningful support to hospitals and nursing homes, with masks, cyber-security and communication solutions. Orange Belgium together with the members of its Executive Committee in their personal capacity made a joint donation to finance a COVID-19 middle care unit.
On 9 March, we launched GO, our revamped mobile portfolio, introducing exclusive mobile family discounts, and confirming once again our Bold Challenger position. Our Love Duo and Trio convergent offers continued to attract many new customers.
However, the lockdown measures have impacted our sales, with the temporary closure of the shops, only partially mitigated by the increase of other channels, mainly digital and telesales. We are preparing to reopen our shops when it becomes possible, with all the necessary protection equipment and sanitary measures.
In April, the regulator submitted its draft decision on the wholesale cable tariffs to the European Commission, including amongst others, a major change in the methodology of cost recovery compared to the last draft decision that would be massively detrimental for customers. This major change in the final steps of the process would mean significantly overcompensating cable owners' actual costs. In addition, the assumptions made lead to a far excessive and unjustified increase of the wholesale tariffs by up to 25% over time. As such, the draft decision would necessarily lead to significant price increases year after year in the Belgian broadband market, although it is already amongst the most expensive broadband markets in Europe. In the interest of Belgium customers, we urge the European Commission and the regulators to materially improve the draft decision, based on the reality of the costs and avoiding any overcompensation.
The measures taken following the pandemic crisis will impact on the company's financial performance. The first quarter of this year was impacted for a period of about two weeks, so it is too early to say how this will impact the rest of the year. But we can imagine an impact on revenue, caused by lower gross adds in mobile and convergence partially offset by a reduction in churn. The decrease in handset sales will have an impact on the topline but may also see a rebound after the crisis. Therefore, we managed to adjust our costs, which were also reduced through the decrease of the customer acquisition cost. Hence, we only expect a limited impact on EBITDAaL over the year. We will re-evaluate the COVID-19 impact and the potential change to our guidance after the second quarter. Additionally, Orange Belgium has a robust balance sheet with a leverage of 0.8.
The launch of our new mobile portfolio will not only lead to simplicity for our customers, but will also help to streamline our processes aiming at lowering the costs for managing those portfolios.
In the light of the Bold Inside programme we have continued to make the necessary efforts to control our costs, which provided its results with stable costs versus last year in a revenue growth context.
The confirmation of the competition authorities that no additional interim measures are needed anymore for the execution of the mobile network access sharing agreement with Proximus has enabled us to transfer employees to the newly created joint venture, MWingz and to start the implementation of our agreement.
| 1. | Key highlights4 | |
|---|---|---|
| 1.1 Operational highlights 4 | ||
| 1.2 Regulatory highlights 5 | ||
| 2. | Comments on the financial situation6 | |
| 2.1 Consolidated figures for the Orange Belgium Group 6 | ||
| 2.2 Consolidated statement of comprehensive income6 | ||
| 2.3 Liquidity and capital resources7 | ||
| 2.4 Activities of the Orange Belgium Group by segment8 | ||
| 2.4.1. Orange Belgium8 | ||
| 2.4.2. Orange Communications Luxembourg 9 | ||
| 3. | Financial risks and risk management9 | |
| 4. | Disputes10 | |
| 5. | Significant event after the end of the first quarter of 202011 | |
| 6. | Outlook11 | |
| 7. | 2020 Financial calendar11 | |
| 8. | Conference call details11 | |
| 9. | Shares11 | |
| 10. | Consolidated financial statements 12 | |
| 11. | Glossary15 | |
| About Orange Belgium 17 |
Orange Belgium is fully mobilised to ensure network and service continuity and to support its customers. Network and service continuity is critical in managing the COVID-19 crisis. The network has been capable of handling the increased traffic without any major issues for customers. Technical teams permanently monitor the network and reinforce it if necessary to guarantee seamless communication at all times. In addition, Orange Belgium offered its residential and business postpaid customers 5GB of mobile data volume for free to make sure they can stay connected anywhere, anytime.
Orange Belgium launched a broad awareness campaign on the importance of complying with the authorities' lockdown and social distancing measures, in order to slow the spread of the coronavirus. As a responsible operator, Orange Belgium intends to play its part in fighting it. The company therefore launched its StayHome campaign to support the lockdown measures. By 23 March, Orange Belgium had already changed its network name on customers' phones from 'Orange B' to 'StayHome Orange B'. The company is an active part of the Data Alliance against Coronavirus, a partnership with multiple telecom providers and Big Data specialists, led by the government that focuses on using anonymised data to better track the spread of coronavirus and guide the public authorities in their strategic decisions. Orange Belgium goes further in its contribution to the safety of Belgian society, providing hospitals with real support, taking into account some of their most important needs in the current context.
The COVID-19 measures also impact the company's financial and operational performance. The closure of shops has impacted the gross adds both in mobile and convergent offers, as well as in handset revenues (the latter being a lowmargin activity). The company has put additional capacity into telesales and online contact in order to partially compensate this decrease and to respond to the additional demand from these channels. The decrease in gross adds in the market has led to a reduction in churn as well, and a decrease in commercial costs (a large part of the commercial costs are variable). Due to the strict national and international travel restrictions, voice and data traffic have increased while roaming traffic has decreased. Depending on the duration of the measures, from a 12-month outlook, there may be a reduction in eCapex overall. Impact will be on revenues but less on EBITDAaL, while eCapex may slightly decrease.
On 9 March Orange Belgium announced a new mobile data increase in its mobile offers to further support the evolution of consumer usages. The result is a revamped mobile portfolio, named GO. This simplified GO portfolio consists of no more than 4 mobile subscriptions at a competitive price point and offers more mobile data. Orange GO is interesting for families, with yet innovating family discounts, without having to share a collective data bundle.
Orange Belgium launches as of 16 February a revamped Shape portfolio, characterised by a major increase of the data cap. To fit the increasing need for mobile data by B2B clients, the revamped Shape portfolio offers increased mobile data to its customers for the same price. Also, all those changes will be applied automatically, without any customer intervention, and free of charge. In addition, every Shape subscription includes a free layer of cybersecurity and Fleet Management Solutions.
Orange Belgium confirms that its customers will remain able to roam-like-at-home in the UK without any extra charge even after Brexit, thanks to specific agreements the operator has with every roaming partner in the United Kingdom.
The United Kingdom (England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland) therefore joins a list of other non-EU countries and territories that are included in Orange Belgium's roam-like-at-home list.
Orange Belgium will support embedded SIM – eSIM - the new technology vowed to replace the traditional little plastic SIM cards, bringing a brand new customer experience. An embedded SIM is a small chip directly built into a device, and that works just as a conventional SIM when activated.
For the 9th time, Orange Belgium was elected as TOP EMPLOYER by the Top Employers Institute. It is a great recognition for Orange Belgium's numerous efforts in providing a digital and caring working environment to its more than 1,400 employees.
To guarantee a seamless indoor connectivity and with respect to new construction standards, Orange Belgium launches today the Mesh WiFi, a new and smart technology aimed at reinforcing the connectivity at home of its LOVE customers.
By its decision of 4 September 2019, the court of appeal rejected the cable operators' appeals against the market analysis decisions of June 2018. The cable operators may still appeal this decision at the Supreme Court.
The BIPT's market analysis decision of 2018 set out a number of service and operational improvements, of which the single-installer approach and the possibility to offer fixed broadband without TV services. These improvements were implemented in July/August 2019.
The decision also put forward that over time 'fair tariffs' (cost + reasonable margin) would be defined. A public consultation on the draft decision defining these tariffs took place from 5 July 2019 to 6 September 2019.
The Belgian regulators have submitted their draft proposal to the European Commission beginning of April. The Commission will have one month to provide their comments to the Belgian regulators after which they will be able to issue their final decision. Orange Belgium has expressed its concerns regarding the draft submitted to the European Commission as it over-compensates the actual cost of the cable network operators, and may hinder progress towards a more competitive market. A final price decision is now expected to apply as of Q2 2020, according to the BIPT's draft workplan for 2020.
The Royal Decrees regarding the allocation of the 700, 1400 and 3400-3800 MHz band and the renewal/reallocation conditions of the 900, 1800 and 2100 MHz bands were not finalised by the previous government.
End 2019, the BIPT launched a consultation regarding various spectrum related matters, such as the means for the BIPT to prolong the 900 MHz, 1800 MHz and 2100 MHz licenses beyond the current expiry date of March 2021, the proposal to increase the reserve price for the 3.6 GHz spectrum band, and the conditions for private 5G networks in the 3.8-4.2 GHz band.
At the moment, it is unlikely that an auction for any of the before-mentioned spectrum will be organised before 2021. Via a communication on 31 January 2020, the BIPT announced an exceptional procedure and call for candidates for the attribution of temporary licenses in the 3.6-3.8 GHz band. As a result of the call for candidates, the BIPT launched a consultation on 24 March 2020, on the granting of temporary usage rights for the 3.6GHz-3.8GHz band. The five candidates retained by the BIPT for temporary 5G licenses are: Orange Belgium, Proximus, Telenet, Cegeka and Entropia. Each operator would get 40 MHz of spectrum. The licenses would expire at the start of the usage rights of the auctioned spectrum. Orange Belgium considers that spectrum allocations should go along with long-term visibility, together with deployment obligations in order to ensure that operators effectively invest in networks and use spectrum in an efficient and effective way.
On 20 February 2020, the BIPT issued a call for candidates for the remaining license of 2 x 15 MHz in the 2.6 GHz band. This license was not allocated during the attribution process in 2012. Citymesh has expressed to be interested in this license.
| reported | comparable | comparable | reported | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| in €m | Q1 2019 | Q1 2019 | Q1 2020 | change | change |
| Revenues | 318.2 | 327.7 | 333.9 | 1.9% | 4.9% |
| Belgium | 305.5 | 315.0 | 321.9 | 2.2% | 5.4% |
| Luxembourg | 16.2 | 16.6 | 2.4% | ||
| Interco elimination | -3.5 | -4.6 | 34.6% | ||
| EBITDAaL | 58.0 | 57.8 | 62.2 | 7.6% | 7.1% |
| Belgium | 56.4 | 56.1 | 59.4 | 5.8% | 5.3% |
| Luxembourg | 1.6 | 2.8 | 70.2% | ||
| margin as % of revenues | 18.2% | 17.6% | 18.6% | 100 bp | 38 bp |
Group revenues grew by 1.9% to €333.9m. Retail service revenues increased by 4.6% on a comparable basis to €224.8m mainly thanks to revenue growth in mobile services. Wholesale revenues declined by 2.1% mainly because of decrease in SMS traffic.
| reported | comparable | comparable | reported | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| in €m | Q1 2019 | Q1 2019 | Q1 2020 | change | change |
| Convergent service revenues | 38.1 | 38.1 | 51.7 | 35.8% | 35.8% |
| Mobile only service revenues | 154.4 | 154.4 | 148.4 | -3.9% | -3.9% |
| Fixed only service revenues | 12.2 | 12.8 | 14.3 | 11.5% | 17.6% |
| IT & Integration Services Retail service revenues |
1.0 205.7 |
9.6 214.9 |
10.4 224.8 |
8.9% | 896.2% 9.3% |
| Equipment sales | 31.4 | 31.4 | 32.7 | 4.6% | 4.4% |
| Wholesale revenues | 66.8 | 66.8 | 65.4 | 4.4% -2.1% |
-2.1% |
| Other revenues | 14.4 | 14.7 | 11.0 | -23.7% | |
| Revenues | 318.2 | 327.7 | 333.9 | -25.4% 1.9% |
4.9% |
EBITDAaL increased by 7.6% on a comparable basis to €62.2m. This improvement is mainly because of a positive result in EBITDAaL of cable operations (€2.5m vs loss of €1.1m), MVNO revenues (€4.1m), and cost control (Bold Inside).
| in €m | Q1 2019 | Q1 2020 |
|---|---|---|
| Operating profit (EBIT) | -7.4 | 2.5 |
| Add back Depreciation, amortization of other intangible assets and property, plant and equipment |
60.8 | 58.5 |
| Other restructuring costs | 4.6 | 1.8 |
| Lease interest expense | -0.7 | |
| EBITDAaL | 58.0 | 62.2 |
| margin as % of revenues | 18.2% | 18.6% |
Total operational expenses reached €271.7m in Q1'20 (+0.6%) compared to €270.0m in the previous year on a comparable basis. The following table provides an overview of the different expenses.
| reported | comparable | comparable | reported | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| in €m | Q1 2019 | Q1 2019 | Q1 2020 | change | change |
| Direct costs | -145.3 | -149.7 | -141.0 | -5.8% | -2.9% |
| Labour costs | -36.9 | -41.8 | -39.3 | -6.0% | 6.7% |
| Indirect costs including RouA and finance lease costs | -78.0 | -78.4 | -91.3 | 16.4% | 17.1% |
| of which RouA and finance lease costs | -10.9 -260.2 |
-10.9 -270.0 |
-12.8 -271.7 |
0.6% | 4.4% |
Direct costs decreased by 5.8% to €141.0m. This is mainly due to an important decrease in SMS interconnection cost, and internalization of commissions.
Labour costs decreased by 6.0% on a comparable basis to €39.3m, due to the positive impact following role optimization partially offset by partners' internalization and indexation.
Indirect costs increased by 16.4% to €91.3m mainly because of the inclusion of the brand fee (€4.1m, which was not present during the first quarter of 2019) and a seasonality effect of advertising spend.
Restructuring costs for the quarter amounted to €1.8m.
| Non-recurring items | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| in €m | Q1 2019 | Q1 2020 | change | ||
| Restructuring costs | -4.6 | -1.8 | -60.2% | ||
| -4.6 | -1.8 | -60.2% |
Depreciation and amortization decreased from €60.8m to €58.5m.
Net financial expenses (including finance lease cost for an amount of €0.7m) amounted to €1.5m.
The group reported a tax expense of €0.5m in Q1'20 vs a tax credit in Q1'19 of €0.1m due to its pre-tax loss.
Orange Belgium reported a net profit of €0.6m during Q1'20 vs a net loss of €8.3m during Q1'19
The Group uses Operating cash flow and Organic cash flow as the main metrics for analysing cash generation. Operating cash flow is defined as EBITDAaL less eCapex. Organic cash flow measures the net cash provided by operating activities less eCapex.
Operating cash flow increased from €21.1m to €27.0m in comparison to Q1'19, due to higher EBITDAaL and lower eCapex.
| Operating cash flow | ||
|---|---|---|
| in €m | Q1 2019 | Q1 2020 |
| EBITDAaL | 58.0 | 62.2 |
| eCapex | -36.9 | -35.1 |
| Operating cash flow | 21.1 | 27.0 |
Organic cash flow amounted to €6.3m in Q1'20.
| Q1 2019 | Q1 2020 |
|---|---|
| 83.8 | 65.4 |
| -36.9 | -35.1 |
| -23.5 | -11.8 |
| -10.9 | -12.2 |
| 12.5 | 6.3 |
Net debt at the end of quarter stood at €229.0m, compared to €234.3m at the end of 2019. Gearing, as measured by the net debt/Reported EBITDAaL ratio, remained stable at 0.8x.
| Net debt €m, period ended |
31.12.2019 | 31.03.2020 |
|---|---|---|
| Cash & cash equivalents | ||
| Cash | -1.9 | -0.6 |
| Cash equivalents | -18.3 | -25.7 |
| -20.2 | -26.4 | |
| Financial liabilities Intra-group long term loan |
245.0 | 236.0 |
| Intra-group short term loan | 9.4 | 19.2 |
| Third-party short term loan | -1.8 | -1.2 |
| Derivatives (net) | 1.8 | 1.4 |
| 254.4 | 255.3 | |
| Net debt | 234.3 | 229.0 |
| Net debt/Reported EBITDAaL | 0.8 | 0.8 |
The following gives a breakdown of Orange Belgium Group's activities in greater detail:
Orange Belgium's convergence customer base continued to grow in Q1'20. During the quarter, the Love offer attracted 21k new subscribers to reach 280k Love customers. B2C customers represent almost 90% of convergence subscriber base. 14% of the customer base is Love Duo customers.
| Q1 2019 | Q1 2020 | Q1 2019 | Q1 2020 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Convergent customer base | change | Net-adds | ||||
| B2C convergent customer base | 180 | 250 | B2C convergent customer base | 18 | 19 | |
| B2B convergent customer base | 20 | 29 | 39.2% | B2B convergent customer base | 2 | 2 |
| 200 | 280 | 47.4% | 20 | 21 | ||
| 40.0% | ||||||
| ARPO (in € per month) | ||||||
| B2C convergent | 77.4 | 75.9 | ||||
| -1.9% |
Orange Belgium added 33k B2C mobile convergent customers to reach a customer base of 385k. The B2C convergent ARPO reached €75.9 in Q1'20. On the B2B mobile convergent segment, the customer base increased to 65k.
Orange Belgium maintained a stellar commercial momentum during the quarter.
The company achieved net-adds of 9k subscribers in the postpaid segment The postpaid customer base increased by 3.9% to 2.6 million while the prepaid customer base decreased by 8.9%.
Postpaid mobile ARPO retreated by 2.5% to €20.3 in the first quarter of 2020. Growing access revenues partially mitigated lower out-of-bundle revenues. Prepaid ARPO increased by 2.0% to €6.7 in the first quarter of 2020.
| Q1 2019 | Q1 2020 | Q1 2019 | Q1 2020 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mobile customers | change | Net-adds | ||||
| B2C convergent | 272 | 385 | B2C convergent | 29 | 33 | |
| B2B convergent | 44 | 65 | 41.4% | B2B convergent | 5 | 7 |
| Mobile only | 2,173 | 2,137 | 47.9% | Mobile only | -12 | -31 |
| Postpaid | 2,490 | 2,588 | -1.7% | Postpaid | 21 | 9 |
| Prepaid | 561 | 511 | 3.9% | Prepaid | -6 | -21 |
| M2M | 1,161 | 1,430 | -8.9% | M2M | 48 | 50 |
| 4,213 | 4,529 | 23.1% 7.5% |
63 | 37 | ||
| MVNO customers | 10 | 322 | MVNO customers | -2 | -1 | |
| Mobile only ARPO (€ per month) | ||||||
| Blended | 18.0 | 17.7 | ||||
| Postpaid (mobile-only) | 20.8 | 20.3 | -1.3% | |||
| Prepaid | 6.6 | 6.7 | -2.5% 2.0% |
Revenues in Belgium grew by 2.2% on a comparable basis to €321.9m whereby convergence service revenues were the main factor for growth.
During Q1'20, retail service revenues continued to grow. Retail service revenues increased by 5.2% to €214.3m due to sustained uptake of convergent services revenues. Convergent services revenues continued its growth trajectory in the first quarter with a year-on-year increase of 35.8%. This growth stems from the sustained uptake of customers opting for Orange Belgium's Love offer, resulting in both an increase of the cable broadband and digital TV customer base, as well as an increase of convergent mobile customers.
Equipment sales remained stable around €29m in Q1'20.
Wholesale revenues decreased by 2.0% to €63.9m due to a decrease in SMS revenues, offset by increase of MVNO revenues (Medialaan).
| reported | comparable | comparable | reported | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| in €m | Q1 2019 | Q1 2019 | Q1 2020 | change | change |
| Convergent service revenues | 38.1 | 38.1 | 51.7 | 35.8% | 35.8% |
| Mobile only service revenues | 145.5 | 145.5 | 140.1 | -3.7% | -3.7% |
| Fixed only service revenues | 9.9 | 10.5 | 12.1 | 14.9% | 22.7% |
| IT & Integration services | 1.0 | 9.6 | 10.4 | 8.9% | 896.2% |
| Retail service revenues | 194.5 | 203.7 | 214.3 | 5.2% | 10.2% |
| Equipment sales | 29.0 | 29.0 | 28.9 | -0.1% | -0.1% |
| Wholesale revenues | 65.2 | 65.2 | 63.9 | -2.0% | -2.0% |
| Other revenues | 16.8 | 17.1 | 14.8 | -13.9% | -12.1% |
| Revenues | 305.5 | 315.0 | 321.9 | 2.2% | 5.4% |
| EBITDAaL | 56.4 | 56.1 | 59.4 | 5.8% | 5.3% |
| margin as % of revenues | 18.5% | 17.8% | 18.4% | 63 bp | -2 bp |
EBITDAaL increased by 5.8% due to an increase of retail service revenues, inclusion of MVNO revenues (Medialaan) and cost control, amongst other in cable operations (which had a positive EBITDAaL of €2.5m, while having a loss of €1.1m in Q1 2019).
2.4.2. Orange Communications Luxembourg
Orange Luxembourg delivered good Q1 commercial results, especially on handsets, accessories and on its BeUnlimited offer, despite communication efforts of other providers. In addition, operators continue to heavily discount broadband plans.
Orange Communications Luxembourg increased its mobile subscriber base to 199k.
| Q1 2019 | Q1 2020 | change | Q1 2019 | Q1 2020 | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mobile customers | Net-adds | |||||
| Postpaid | 111 | 115 | Postpaid | 2 | 0 | |
| Prepaid | 13 | 14 | 2.9% | Prepaid | 1 | 1 |
| M2M | 70 | 71 | 5.5% | M2M | -1 | -1 |
| 194 | 199 | 1.3% | 2 | 0 | ||
| 2.5% | ||||||
| MVNO customers | 3 | 3 | 6.3% | |||
Revenues grew by 2.4% to €16.6m. Retail services decreased by 6.4% to €10.5m. Mobile-only services decreased (- 7.0%), while equipment sales increased by 57.5%to €3.8m.
EBITDAaL increased by 70.2% to €2.8m. The improvement is due to higher revenues and stable operating costs.
| Reported | comparable | comparable | reported | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| in €m | Q1 2019 | Q1 2019 | Q1 2020 | change | change |
| Mobile only service revenues | 8.9 | 8.3 | -7.0% | ||
| Fixed only service revenues | 2.3 | 2.2 | -4.1% | ||
| Retail service revenues | 11.2 | 10.5 | -6.4% | ||
| Equipment sales | 2.4 | 3.8 | 57.5% | ||
| Wholesale revenues | 2.4 | 2.3 | -5.5% | ||
| Other revenues | 0.2 | 0.1 | -71.6% | ||
| Revenues | 16.2 | 16.6 | 2.4% | ||
| EBITDAaL | 1.6 | 2.8 | 70.2% | ||
| margin as % of revenues | 10.1% | 16.8% | 668 bp |
There were no changes to the information disclosed on p.78-79 and p.120-121 in the 2019 annual report.
Since 1997, certain municipalities and four provinces have adopted local taxes, on an annual basis, on pylons, masts or antennas erected within their boundaries. Orange Belgium continues to file fiscal objections against each tax assessment notice received concerning these taxes. These taxes are currently being contested in Civil Courts (Courts of First Instance - Tax Chamber and Courts of Appeal).
Discussions are currently ongoing on with the Walloon government for the coming period regarding potential investments in return of reduction of taxes, similar to those that were applicable during the period 2016-2019. These discussions are not conclusive yet.
Mid-2011 the telecom and media regulators decided to impose access obligations on the cable operators, i.e. the resale of analogue TV, the access to digital TV platform and the resale of broadband in combination with TV. The cable operators attacked these decisions before the Court of appeal of Brussels (now: the Marketcourt) which dismissed these appeals. In December 2015 Telenet and Coditel/AIESH launched a cassation appeal against these judgments. Coditel/AIESH's appeal was rejected in April 2017. On 26 April 2018 the Supreme Court rejected Telenet's appeal and confirmed definitively the 2011 decision.
On 29 June 2018 the telecom and media regulators (CRC) adopted new decisions on the broadband and broadcast markets which maintain the access obligations on the historical operators of fixed networks, among which the cable operators, Telenet, Nethys and Brutélé. The decisions imply additional obligations compared to the ones imposed in the 2011 decision and foresee a reduction of the applicable wholesale charges. Telenet attacked the observations of the EC on the draft decision before the General Court of the European Union. The cable operators also attacked the market analysis decisions before the Marketcourt of Brussels. Orange Belgium intervenes in the national proceedings to support the CRC decisions. On 3 October 2018 the Marketcourt delivered an intermediary judgment deciding to put the national proceedings on hold until the judgment of the European Court while reserving its decision on maintaining or suspending the decisions in the intermediate period. A few weeks later Telenet withdrew the appeal at EU level. On 30 January 2019 the Marketcourt rejected the claim of Telenet, Nethys and Brutélé to suspend the decisions during the intermediate period. The appeal on the merits was also rejected by the Marketcourt on 4 September 2019.
It cannot be excluded yet that one of the cable operators will introduce an appeal against the judgment of the Marketcourt at the Supreme Court.
After Orange Belgium paid the provision for the cable wholesale access set-up fees, Coditel Brabant (Telenet) failed to provide such access within the regulatory 6-month period. This, in combination with the lack of progress on the development of an effective wholesale service, prompted Orange Belgium to initiate legal action against Coditel/Telenet for breach of its regulatory obligations end of December 2016. Taking the implementation of a technical solution was still ongoing beginning 2018, the proceedings were put on hold. The case is reactivated and Telenet submitted briefs on 6 March 2020. The court announced an intermediary hearing in April or May. If the file is ready for the court to proceed there should be a hearing in Q3 2020.
Based on the decisions on regulated access to the cable networks Orange Belgium is entitled to offer 'own channels' to its retail TV customers, i.e. channels that are not commercially offered by the cable operators. While VOO provided such own channel (Eleven Sports 3) on its network, Telenet refused to offer such access at reasonable conditions. Beginning 2018, Orange Belgium initiated proceedings against Telenet for breach of its regulatory obligations before the Commercial Court of Antwerp. On 30 May 2018 the Commercial Court of Antwerp dismissed Orange Belgium's claim.
Orange Belgium appealed this judgment. On 11 April 2019 the Court of appeal found Telenet in breach of its regulatory obligations as well as guilty of abusing its dominant position. The Court ordered Telenet to provide reasonable conditions within one month subject to penalty payment of €2500/day afterwards. Telenet appealed the decision of the Court of Appeal at the Supreme Court. Orange Belgium issued a claim of €250,000 (total amount of the penalty) against Telenet for non-compliance with the decision of the Court of Appeal. This claim is attacked by Telenet with the attachment judge. The pleadings were foreseen on 9 April 2020 but postponed due to COVID-19 related measures.
Under the regulation of the access to the cable networks alternative operators have the right to commercialize internet profiles that are not commercialized by the regulated cable operator ('own internet profiles'), i.e. an internet profile with different upload/download speeds and/or volumes than the internet speeds and/or volumes offered by the cable operator to its own retail clients. Despite several requests made by Orange Belgium to Telenet since 2015, Telenet refused to grant such own profile until May 2018. In view of the damages incurred by Orange Belgium linked to the refusals, Orange Belgium filed a formal complaint against Telenet with the regulator in February 2018. On 22 October 2018 the regulator published its decision finding Telenet in breach with its regulatory obligation for not providing an own profile to Orange Belgium. Orange Belgium sent a formal notice to Telenet in January 2019 requesting a compensation for the damages incurred. Facing the refusal of Telenet to pay damages, Orange Belgium introduced a damage claim before the Enterprise Court. The pleadings took place on 17 January 2020. On 14 February 2020 the Enterprise Court found Telenet in breach with its regulatory obligations and granted a part of the claimed damages. Orange Belgium decided to appeal the judgement, which will be filed in Q2 2020.
On 19 February 2016, Lycamobile Belgium Limited and Lycamobile BVBA initiated legal proceedings against Orange Belgium (previously Mobistar) before the Brussels Commercial Court claiming damages for the alleged belated commercial launch of Lycamobile's 4G services. The case was heard on 10 March 2017. By judgement on 12 May 2017, the Brussels Commercial Court dismissed the claim and ordered Lycamobile to pay Orange Belgium €18,000 as compensation for procedural costs. The judgement was served on 3 July 2017 and Lycamobile paid the full amount. On 11 August 2017, Lycamobile filed an appeal before the Brussels Court of Appeal. An introductory hearing took place on 21 September 2017 and a calendar for the filing of trial briefs was set. Parties have exchanged trial briefs. No pleading date has been set.
On 2 April 2015, Orange Belgium was summoned by the receivers of Euphony Benelux NV to a hearing on 17 April 2015 at the Brussels Commercial Court. The bankruptcy receivers claim that Orange Belgium should pay a provisional amount of one (1) euro for overdue commissions as well as an eviction fee. In this context, the bankruptcy receivers claim that Orange Belgium should submit all relevant documents to allow the bankruptcy receivers to calculate the amounts claimed.
On 17 April 2018, the Court dismissed the claim relating to the eviction fee and appointed an expert for the claim relating to the overdue commissions. Orange Belgium has filed an appeal at the Brussels Court of Appeals. An introductory hearing took place and the Court of Appeals has set a calendar for the filing of trial briefs. Parties have exchanged trial briefs. No pleading date has been set.
On 20 November 2018, the BIPT adopted a new FTR decision. 3Starsnet attempted to get the decision annulled via the Market Court but this was rejected. 3Starsnet has turned to the Supreme Court to get the decisions of the Market Court annulled. Orange Belgium intervenes in the procedures to defend the BIPT position. Orange Belgium submitted briefs (mémoire) on 25 February 2020.
In addition to the facts disclosed in the section 'Operational highlights' of this document, the government has decided to extend the lockdown period until 3 May 2020.
Taking into account the impact of COVID-19 on the performance, Orange Belgium will consider an update of its 2020 financial guidance after the Q2 period. As a reminder, the financial outlook provided in February for 2020 was low-single digit revenue growth, an EBITDAaL between €310m and €330m, and total eCapex stable in comparison to 2019.
| 06 May | Annual General Meeting of Shareholders |
|---|---|
| 03 July | Start of quiet period |
| 24 July | Financial results Q2 2020 (7:00 am CET) – Press release |
| 24 July | Financial results Q2 2020 (2:00 pm CET) – Audio conference call |
| 02 October | Start of quiet period |
| 23 October | Financial results Q3 2020 (7:00 am CET) – Press release |
| 23 October | Financial results Q3 2020 (2:00 pm CET) – Audio conference call |
This is a preliminary agenda and is subject to changes
| Date: | 23 April 2020 |
|---|---|
| Time: | 10:00 (CET), 9:00 (UK), 04:00 (US/NY) |
| Conference call: | Pin code 72762610# |
Please aim to access the conference call ten minutes prior to the scheduled start time.
Share trading volumes and closing prices are based on trades made on NYSE Euronext Brussels.
| Q1 2019 | Q1 2020 | |
|---|---|---|
| Trading of shares | ||
| Average closing share price (€) | 17.7 | 18.2 |
| Average daily volume | 66,232 | 90,698 |
| Average daily value traded (€ m) | 1.2 | 1.7 |
| Shares and market values | ||
| Total number of shares (m) | 60.01 | 60.01 |
| Treasury shares (k) | 10.9 | 81.0 |
| Closing price (€) | 19.2 | 16.0 |
| Market capitalization (€ m) | 1,152.3 | 962.6 |
| in €m | 31.03.2019 | 31.03.2020 |
|---|---|---|
| Retail service revenues | 205.7 | 224.8 |
| Convergent service revenues | 38.1 | 51.7 |
| Mobile only service revenues | 154.4 | 148.4 |
| Fixed only service revenues | 12.2 | 14.3 |
| IT & Integration Service | 1.0 | 10.4 |
| Equipment sales | 31.4 | 32.7 |
| Wholesale revenues | 66.8 | 65.4 |
| Other revenues | 14.4 | 11.0 |
| Revenues | 318.2 | 333.9 |
| Purchase of material | -46.7 | -45.7 |
| Other direct costs | -97.7 | -94.4 |
| Impairment loss on trade and other receivables, including contract assets | -0.9 | -0.9 |
| Direct costs | -145.3 | -141.0 |
| Labour costs | -36.9 | -39.3 |
| Commercial expenses | -9.9 | -12.0 |
| Other IT & Network expenses | -23.6 | -26.5 |
| Property expenses | -4.2 | -3.6 |
| General expenses | -12.4 | -15.9 |
| Other indirect income | 11.0 | 4.5 |
| Other indirect costs | -27.9 | -25.1 |
| Depreciation of right-of-use of leased assets | -10.9 | -12.1 |
| Indirect costs | -78.0 | -90.6 |
| Other restructuring costs* | -4.6 | -1.8 |
| Depreciation and amortization of other intangible assets and property, plant and equipment | -60.8 | -58.5 |
| Operating Profit (EBIT) | -7.4 | 2.5 |
| Financial result | -1.1 | -1.5 |
| Financial costs | -1.1 | -1.5 |
| Profit (loss) before taxation (PBT) | -8.5 | 1.1 |
| Tax expense | 0.1 | -0.5 |
| Net profit (loss) for the period ** | -8.3 | 0.6 |
* Restructuring costs consist of contract termination costs, redundancy charges and acquisition costs.
** Since there are no discontinued operations, the net profit or loss of the period corresponds to the result of continued operations
| in €m | 31.12.2019 | 31.03.2020 |
|---|---|---|
| ASSETS | ||
| Goodwill | 118.7 | 118.7 |
| Other intangible assets | 258.6 | 251.2 |
| Property, plant and equipment | 747.6 | 731.6 |
| Rights of use of leased assets | 297.3 | 286.4 |
| Interests in associates and joint ventures | 5.3 | 5.3 |
| Non -current financial assets |
3.1 | 3.1 |
| Other non -current assets |
0.6 | 0.6 |
| Deferred tax assets | 2.6 | 2.6 |
| Total non -current assets |
1,433.8 | 1,399.6 |
| Inventories | 32.0 | 25.7 |
| Trade receivables | 224.8 | 212.1 |
| Other assets related to contracts with customers | 64.8 | 62.6 |
| Current financial assets | 0.4 | 0.4 |
| Current derivatives assets | 0.5 | 0.3 |
| Other current assets | 5.2 | 3.9 |
| Operating taxes and levies receivables | 0.5 | 1.2 |
| Current tax assets | 1.5 | 0.3 |
| Prepaid expenses | 14.0 | 22.6 |
| Cash and cash equivalents | 20.2 | 26.4 |
| Total current assets | 363.8 | 355.6 |
| Total Assets | 1,797.6 | 1,755.2 |
| EQUITY AND LIABILITIES | ||
| Share capital | 131.7 | 131.7 |
| Legal reserve | 13.2 | 13.2 |
| Retained earnings (excl. legal reserve) | 447.4 | 448.3 |
| Treasury shares | -0.2 | -1.3 |
| Equity attributable to the owners of the parent | 592.1 | 591.9 |
| Total Equity | 592.1 | 591.9 |
| Non -current financial liabilities |
245.0 | 236.0 |
| Non -current lease liabilities |
244.6 | 240.1 |
| Non -current derivatives liabilities |
0.8 | 0.8 |
| Non -current provisions for dismantling |
75.3 | 75.2 |
| Other non -current liabilities |
2.6 | 3.3 |
| Deferred tax liabilities Non -current liabilities |
7.5 575.9 |
6.7 562.0 |
| Current fixed assets payable | 52.9 | 41.1 |
| Trade payables | 314.0 | 281.5 |
| Current financial liabilities | 9.4 | 19.2 |
| Current lease liabilities | 51.7 | 45.2 |
| Current derivatives liabilities | 1.5 | 0.9 |
| Current employee benefits | 35.8 | 36.6 |
| Current provisions for dismantling | 2.1 | 2.2 |
| Current restructuring provisions | 1.9 | 0.6 |
| Other current liabilities | 10.4 | 6.4 |
| Operating taxes and levies payables | 78.7 | 98.2 |
| Current tax payables | 3.5 | 4.2 |
| Liabilities related to contracts with customers | 65.7 | 63.3 |
| Deferred income | 2.0 | 1.9 |
| Total current liabilities | 629.6 | 601.2 |
| Total Equity and Liabilities | 1,797.6 | 1,755.2 |
| in €m | 31.03.2019 | 31.03.2020 |
|---|---|---|
| Operating activities | ||
| Consolidated net profit | -8.3 | 0.6 |
| Adjustments to reconcile net profit (loss) to cash generated from operations | ||
| Operating taxes and levies | 16.4 | 15.3 |
| Depreciation, amortization and impairment of other intangible assets and property, plant and equipment | 60.8 | 58.5 |
| Depreciation of right-of-use assets | 10.7 | 12.1 |
| Changes in other provisions | 2.2 | -0.5 |
| Income tax expense | -0.1 | 0.5 |
| Finance costs, net | 1.1 | 1.5 |
| Share-based compensation | -0.1 | 0.0 |
| Impairment loss on trade and other receivables, including contract assets | 0.9 | 0.9 |
| 91.8 | 88.3 | |
| Changes in working capital requirements | ||
| Decrease (increase) in inventories, gross | 7.7 | 6.2 |
| Decrease (increase) in trade receivables, gross | -2.6 | 11.7 |
| Increase (decrease) in trade payables | 5.0 | -33.5 |
| Change in other assets related to contracts with customers | 0.4 | 2.0 |
| Change in liabilities related to contracts with customers | -1.2 | -2.5 |
| Changes in other assets and liabilities | -0.9 | 0.1 |
| 8.4 | -15.9 | |
| Other net cash out | ||
| Operating taxes and levies paid | -8.6 | -6.3 |
| Interest paid and interest rates effects on derivatives, net | -0.8 | -1.7 |
| Income tax paid | 1.2 | 0.4 |
| -8.2 | -7.6 | |
| Net cash provided by operating activities | 83.8 | 65.4 |
| Investing activities | ||
| Purchases of property, plant and equipment and intangible assets | ||
| Purchases of property, plant and equipment and intangible assets | -36.9 | -35.1 |
| Increase (decrease) in fixed assets payables | -23.5 | -11.8 |
| Organic cash flow* | 12.5 | 6.3 |
| Cash paid for investments securities and acquired businesses, net of cash acquired | 0.0 | 0.0 |
| Decrease (increase) in securities and other financial assets | 0.0 | 0.0 |
| Net cash used in investing activities | -60.4 | -46.9 |
| Financing activities | ||
| Long-term debt redemptions and repayments | 0.0 | -11.0 |
| Repayment of lease liabilities | -10.9 | -12.2 |
| Increase (decrease) of bank overdrafts and short-term borrowings | -13.6 | 12.0 |
| Purchase of treasury shares | -0.2 | -1.1 |
| Net cash used in financing activities | -24.7 | -12.2 |
| Net change in cash and cash equivalents | -1.4 | 6.2 |
| Cash and cash equivalents | ||
| Opening balance | 26.6 | 20.2 |
| Closing balance | 25.2 | 26.4 |
* Net cash flow from operations less acquisitions of tangible and intangible assets plus proceeds from disposals of tangible and intangible assets minus repayment of lease liabilities.
| Revenues | |
|---|---|
| revenues in line with the offer | Provide Group revenues split in convergent services, mobile only services, fixed only services, IT & integration services, wholesale, equipment sales and other revenues. |
| retail service revenues | Revenue aggregation of revenues from convergent services, mobile only services, fixed only services, IT & integration services. |
| convergent services | Revenues from B2C convergent offers (excluding equipment sales). A convergent offer is defined as an offer combining at least a broadband access (xDSL, FTTx, cable or Fixed-4G (fLTE) with cell-lock) and a mobile voice contract (excluding MVNOs: Mobile Virtual Network Operator). Convergent services revenues do not include incoming and visitor roaming revenues. |
| mobile only services | Revenues from mobile offers (excluding B2C convergent offers and equipment sales) and M2M connectivity, excluding incoming and visitors roaming revenues. |
| fixed only services | Revenues from fixed offers (excluding B2C convergent offers and equipment sales) including (i) fixed broadband, (ii) fixed narrowband, and (iii) data infrastructure, managed networks, and incoming phone calls to customer relations call centres. |
| IT & integration services | Revenues from collaborative services (consulting, integration, messaging, project management), application services (customer relationship management and infrastructure applications), hosting, cloud computing services, security services, video-conferencing and M2M services. It also includes equipment sales associated with the supply of these services. |
| Wholesale | Revenues with third-party telecom operators for (i) mobile: incoming, visitor roaming, domestic mobile interconnection (i.e. network sharing and domestic roaming agreement) and MVNO, and for (ii) fixed carriers services. |
| equipment sales | Revenues from all mobile and fixed equipment sales, excluding (i) equipment sales associated with the supply of IT & Integration services, and (ii) equipment sales to dealers and brokers. |
| other revenues | Include (i) equipment sales to brokers and dealers, (ii) portal, on-line advertising revenues, (iii) corporate transversal business line activities, and (iv) other miscellaneous revenues. |
| Profit & Loss | |
| Data on a comparable basis | Data based on comparable accounting principles, scope of consolidation and exchange rates are presented for previous periods. The transition from data on an historical basis to data on a comparable basis consists of keeping the results for the period ended and then restating the results for the corresponding period of the preceding year for the purpose of presenting, over comparable periods, financial data with comparable accounting principles, scope of consolidation and exchange rate. The method used is to apply to the data of the corresponding period of the preceding year, the accounting principles and scope of consolidation for the period just ended as well as the average exchange rate used for the income statement for the period ended. Changes in data on a comparable basis reflect organic business changes. Data on a comparable basis is not a financial aggregate as defined by IFRS and may not be comparable to similarly-named indicators used by other companies. |
| EBITDAaL (since 1 January 2019) |
EBITDA after lease is not a financial measure as defined by IFRS. It corresponds to the net profit before: taxes; net interest expense; share of profit/losses from associates; impairment of goodwill and fixed assets; effects resulting from business combinations; reclassification of cumulative translation adjustment from liquidated entities; depreciation and amortization; the effects of significant litigation, specific labour expenses; review of the investments and business portfolio, restructuring costs. |
| Cash flow statement | |
| Operating cash flow | EBITDAaL minus eCapex since 1 January 2019. Prior to 31 December 2018 it was defined as Adjusted EBITDA minus Capex. |
| Organic cash flow | Organic cash flows correspond to net cash provided by operating activities decreased by capex/eCapex and the repayment of lease liabilities, increased by proceeds from sale of property, plant and equipment and intangible assets and adjusted for the payments for acquisition of telecommunications licences. |
| eCapex (since 1 January 2019) |
Economic Capex is not a financial measure as defined by IFRS. It corresponds to capital expenditures on tangible and intangible assets excluding telecommunication licenses and excluding investments through financial leases less proceeds from the disposal of fixed and intangible assets. |
| licences & spectrum | Cash out related to acquisitions of licences and spectrum. |
| change in WCR | Change in net inventories, plus change in gross trade receivables, plus change in trade payables, plus change in other elements of WCR. |
| other operational items | Mainly offset of non-cash items included in adjusted EBITDA, items not included in adjusted EBITDA but included in net cash provided by operating activities, and change in fixed asset payables. |
| net debt variation | Variation of net debt level. |
| Convergent | |
|---|---|
| B2Cconvergent customer base | Number of B2C customers holding an offer combining at least a broadband access (xDSL, FTTx, cable or Fixed-4G (fLTE) with cell-lock) and a mobile voice contract (excluding MVNOs). |
| B2C convergent ARPO | Average quarterly Revenues Per Offer (ARPO) of convergent services are calculated by dividing (a) the revenues from convergent offers billed to the B2C customers (excluding equipment sales) over the past three months, by (b) the weighted average number of convergent offers over the same period. The weighted average number of convergent offers is the average of the monthly averages during the period in question. The monthly average is the arithmetic mean of the number of convergent offers at the start and end of the month. Convergent ARPO is expressed as monthly revenues per convergent offer. |
| Mobile | |
| mobile customer base (excl. MVNOs) | Number of customers with active simcard, including (i) M2M and (ii) business and internet everywhere (excluding MVNOs). |
| Contract | Customer with whom Orange has a formal contractual agreement with the customer billed on a monthly basis for access fees and any additional voice or data use. |
| Prepaid | Customer with whom Orange has written contract with the customer paying in advance any data or voice use by purchasing vouchers in retail outlets for example. |
| M2M (machine-to-machine) | Exchange of information between machines that is established between the central control system (server) and any type of equipment, through one or several communication networks. |
| mobile B2C convergent customers | Number of mobile lines of B2C convergent customers. |
| mobile only customers | Number of mobile customers (see definition of this term) excluding mobile convergent customers (see definition of this term). |
| MVNO customers | Hosted MVNO customers on Orange networks. |
| mobile only ARPO (quarterly) | Average quarterly Revenues Per Offer (ARPO) of mobile only services are calculated by dividing (a) the revenues of mobile only services billed to the customers, generated over the past three months, by (b) the weighted average number of mobile only customers (excluding M2M customers) over the same period. The weighted average number of customers is the average of the monthly averages during the period in question. The monthly average is the arithmetic mean of the number of customers at the start and end of the month. Mobile only ARPO is expressed as monthly revenues per customer. |
| Fixed | |
| number of lines (copper + FTTH) | Number of fixed lines operated by Orange. |
| B2C broadband convergent customers | Number of B2C customers holding an offer combining at least a broadband access (xDSL, FTTx, cable or Fixed-4G (fLTE) with cell-lock) and a mobile voice contract (excluding MVNOs). |
| fixed broadband only customers | Number of fixed broadband customers excluding broadband convergent customers (see definition of this term). |
| fixed only broadband ARPO (quarterly) | Average quarterly Revenues Per Offer (ARPO) of fixed only broadband services (xDSL, FTTH, Fixed-4G (fLTE), satellite and Wimax) are calculated by dividing (a) the revenues from consumer fixed only broadband services over the past three months, by (b) the weighted average number of accesses over the same period. The weighted average number of accesses is the average of the monthly averages during the period in question. The monthly average is the arithmetic mean of the number of accesses at the start and end of the month. ARPO is expressed as monthly revenues per access. |
The scope of consolidation includes the following companies: Orange Belgium S.A. (100%), the Luxembourg company Orange Communications Luxembourg S.A. (100%), IRISnet S.C.R.L. (28.16%), Smart Services Network S.A. (100%), Walcom S.A. (100%), Walcom Liège S.A. (100%), Walcom Business Solutions S.A. (100%), A3COM S.A. (100%), A & S Partners S.A. (100%), Upsize N.V. (100%), BKM N.V. (100%), CCP@S B.V.B.A. (100%) and MWingz S.R.L. (50%).
Due to rounding, numbers presented may not add up precisely to the totals provided and percentages may not precisely reflect the absolute figures.
Orange Belgium is one of the leading telecommunication operators in the Belgian market, with over 3m customers, and in Luxembourg through its subsidiary Orange Communications Luxembourg.
As a convergent actor, we provide mobile telecommunication services, internet and TV to private clients, as well as innovative mobile and fixed line services to businesses. Our high-performance mobile network supports 2G, 3G, 4G and 4G+ technology and is the subject of ongoing investments.
Orange Belgium is a subsidiary of Orange Group, one of the leading European and African operators of mobile telephony and internet access, as well as one of the world leaders for telecommunication services to enterprises.
Orange Belgium is listed on the Brussels Stock Exchange (OBEL).
More information on: corporate.orange.be, www.orange.be or follow us on Twitter: @pressOrangeBe.
| Ana Castaño Lopez | +32 468 46 95 31 | |
|---|---|---|
| Koen Van Mol | [email protected] | +32 495 55 14 99 |
| [email protected] |
Annelore Marynissen [email protected] +32 479 016 058 Younes Al Bouchouari [email protected] +32 477 69 87 73
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