Earnings Release • Apr 29, 2019
Earnings Release
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Pursuant to Article 17(1) of the Regulation (EU) No. 596/2014 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 16 April 2014 on market abuse (market abuse regulation) and repealing Directive 2003/6/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council and Commission Directives 2003/124/EC, 2003/125/EC and 2004/72/EC, the Management Board of Orange Polska S.A. hereby provides selected financial and operating data related to the activities of the Orange Polska Capital Group ("the Group", "Orange Polska") for 1Q 2019.
Disclosures on performance measures, including adjustments, are presented in the Note 2 to Condensed IFRS Quarterly Consolidated Financial Statements of the Orange Polska Group for the 3 months ended 31 March 2019 (available at http://orange-ir.pl/results-center/results/2019).
| key figures (PLN million) | 1Q 2019 (IFRS16) |
1Q 2018 comparable basis (IFRS16) |
Change | 1Q 2018 reported (IAS17) |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| revenue | 2,778 | 2,708 | +2.6% | 2,710 | |
| EBITDAaL* | 643 | 659 | -2.4% | n/a | |
| EBITDAaL margin* | 23.1% | 24.3% | -1.2 p.p. | n/a | |
| operating income | 71 | n/a | n/a** | 33 | |
| net loss | -2 | n/a | n/a** | -50 | |
| capex* | 463 | 351 | +31.9% | 388 | |
| organic cash flow* | -99 | -159 | +37.7% | -155 |
* EBITDAaL (EBITDA after Leases) is management's new principal financial indicator of operating performance using IFRS16 figures. Since the adoption of IFRS16, EBITDA is considered less representative of operating performance because it excludes operating expenses due to leases. Operating income is considered less representative of operating performance owing to the impact of changes in asset lives. At the same time, to preserve consistency, certain other alternative performance measures (capex, organic cash flow and net debt) were slightly amended and comparative unaudited figures were provided for 2018. More information is presented in the note 2 to the financial statements for 1Q 2019.
**Year-on-year evolution of operating income and net income is not comparable because of the changes in accounting standards. Starting from 2019 Orange Polska applied a new accounting standard IFRS16 without restatement of comparative periods. Data for 1Q 2018 were prepared under previous accounting standard IAS17.
| KPI ('000) | 1Q 2019 | 1Q 2018 | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| convergent customers (B2C) | 1,276 | 1,090 | +17.1% |
| mobile accesses (SIM cards) | 14,837 | 14,368 | +3.3% |
| post-paid | 9,970 | 9,747 | +2.3% |
| pre-paid | 4,867 | 4,621 | +5.3% |
| fixed broadband accesses (retail) | 2,576 | 2,477 | +4.0% |
| fixed voice lines (retail) | 3,328 | 3,613 | -7.9% |
"In 1Q, in line with the priorities set out in our Orange.one strategic plan, we maintained our focus on value: pushing convergence, monetising fibre and continuing to transform the business. These are the critical factors for the success of our turnaround strategy. In March we refreshed our Orange Love offer: we created two new packages for customers looking for richer TV content and more abundant mobile data packages. We anticipate good customer reception and higher value generation. Our convergent customer base keeps on increasing, and already includes almost 60% of individual fixed broadband customers.
Our fibre network now covers in excess of 3.5 million households – almost 25% of all households in Poland. Furthermore, in all the major cities (above 100,000 population) our reach is already close to 50%. Such a wide, truly fibre-to-the-home network is a unique asset that gives us a powerful advantage in the competitive marketplace. Our fibre customer base passed the 400,000 milestone at the beginning of April. The service adoption rate exceeded 11% and keeps on increasing every quarter.
We are satisfied with the solid commercial performance and stable underlying business trends in 1Q, and we are looking forward to the second quarter when we plan to launch a number of attractive and value-accretive offers."
Revenues totalled PLN 2,778 million in 1Q, up 2.6% or PLN 70 million year-on-year. There were five main factors influencing the revenue trend.
Firstly, high growth of revenues from convergent services (27% year-on-year) driven by robust customer growth and upsell of new services. Secondly, revenues from mobile-only and fixed broadband-only services decline (6.4% year-on-year) as a result of migration to convergence, value focus reflected in service pricing and market competition. However combined revenues of these three categories were up 1.6% year-on-year in 1Q.
Thirdly, revenues from IT and integration services continued to grow quickly advancing by 31% year-on-year. This is consistent with the adopted strategy of focusing on process digitalisation of business customers. Fourthly, the year-on-year trend of wholesale revenues is no longer supported by higher national roaming revenues. Finally, successful development of energy resale business boosted other revenues (up 110% year-on-year).
Our commercial activity is very much focused on delivering a package of mobile and fixed services, which we define as convergence. It is our competitive edge, it increases customer loyalty and allows us to upsell more services, winning a higher share of household media and telecom budgets.
In 1Q our B2C convergent customer base increased by 40,000 or 17% year-on-year. At the end of March, 59% of our B2C broadband customers were convergent versus 52% a year ago. In B2C mobile handset customer base, penetration of convergence increased to 48% versus 40% at the end of March 2018. The total number of services used by B2C convergent customers exceeded 5.2 million, which implies that on average every customer uses more than four services. ARPO from convergent customers was broadly stable, both year-on-year and quarter-on-quarter.
Total fixed broadband customer base increased by 16,000 or 4% year-on-year. The share of highspeed broadband customers increased to 35% from 29% a year ago. It is driven by growth of fibre customer base which expanded 61% year-on-year, adding 34,000 in 1Q. Our non-convergent broadband customer base continues to shrink as a result of migration to convergence but also due to churn.
Total post-paid customer base increased by 48,000 in 1Q 2019. In handset offers, net customer additions of 55,000 reflected solid performance of convergence and low erosion of mobile-only customer base. ARPO from mobile-only handset offers was down 8% year-on-year, an improvement over 9% year-on-year decline in 4Q 2018 and 10% decline year-on-year in full-year 2018.
In fixed voice, the net loss of lines was 79,000 with key trends broadly unchanged. The number of VoIP services is growing, as they are part of the Orange Love package. Excluding VoIP services, the loss of lines is stable and continues to reflect structural negative market trends.
EBITDAaL for 1Q 2019 came in at PLN 643 million and was down 2.4% year-on-year. However it was broadly flat excluding PLN 14 million year-on-year lower gains on sale of assets. Decline in the direct margin was almost entirely compensated by further indirect costs optimisations. Lower direct margin resulted from ongoing pressure on high-margin legacy services that was only partly offset by growth in convergence and IT/IS. Indirect costs (excluding gains on sale of assets) were down 4% year-on-year and reflected mainly further savings in labour (the second year of social plan implementation), advertising & promotion and CRM subcontracting.
Net loss for 1Q 2019 came in at PLN 2 million. It was a result of EBITDAaL performance, depreciation (that reflected PLN 48 million positive impact of extension of useful life of certain assets) and lower year-on-year financial costs (as discount expense benefitted from lower provisions and favorable FX movements). The net result in 1Q 2019 is not entirely comparable with 1Q 2018 due to the change in accounting standards.
Organic cash flow for 1Q 2019 came in at PLN -99 million, an improvement over PLN -159 million in 1Q 2018. Capital expenditure cash outflows were PLN 664 million in 1Q 2019 and were around PLN 100 million up year-on-year as a result of higher capex of the current quarter. This was however offset by two positive developments. Firstly, working capital requirement was around PLN 100 million lower than in 1Q 2018, mainly due to lower incremental growth of instalment receivables and higher year-on-year positive effect of reverse factoring transactions. Secondly proceeds from sale of assets amounted to PLN 103 million and included cash from certain transactions finalised in 2018.
"Our financial performance in 1Q 2019 was in line with our expectations. Excluding variations in the closure dates of real estate disposals, EBITDA after Leases (our new operating performance indicator under IFRS16 accounting standard) was stable year-on-year. We continue to execute our value-oriented commercial strategy and to optimise indirect costs. We are confident that this approach will allow us to grow our profitability in the quarters to come. We reiterate our guidance for growth of both revenues and EBITDAaL in 2019 as well as outlook for capex."
4
| in PLNm | 1Q 2019 IFRS16 |
1Q 2018 IAS17 |
|---|---|---|
| Operating income | 7 1 |
3 3 |
| Add-back of depreciation, amortisation and impairment of property, plant and equipment and intangible assets |
583 | 641 |
| Interest expense on lease liabilities | -10 | -1 |
| Estimation of IFRS 16 impact on operating leases for Q1 2018 | - | -6 |
| Depreciation of property, plant and equipment financed by finance lease in Q1 2018 | - | -9 |
| Adjustment for the impact of employment termination programs | -2 | - |
| Adjustment for the impact of deconsolidation of subsidiaries | 1 | 1 |
| EBITDAaL (EBITDA after Leases) | 643 | 659 |
Disclosures on performance measures are presented in the Note 2 to Condensed IFRS Quarterly Consolidated Financial Statements of the Orange Polska Group for the 3 months ended 31 March 2019 (available at http://orange-ir.pl/results-center/results/2019)
This press release contains forward-looking statements, including, but not limited to, statements regarding anticipated future events and financial performance with respect to our operations. Forward-looking statements can be identified by the fact that they do not relate strictly to historical or current facts. They often include words like 'believe', 'expect', 'anticipate', 'estimated', 'project', 'plan', 'adjusted' and 'intend' or future or conditional verbs such as 'will,' 'would,' or 'may.' Factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from expected results include, but are not limited to, those set forth in our Registration Statement, as filed with the Polish securities and exchange commission, the competitive environment in which we operate, changes in general economic conditions and changes in the Polish and/or global financial and/or capital markets. Forwardlooking statements represent management's views as of the date they are made, and we assume no obligation to update any forward-looking statements for actual events occurring after that date. You are cautioned not to place undue reliance on our forward-looking statements.
30th April 2019 Start: 11.00 CET Venue address: Orange Polska S.A. Aleje Jerozolimskie 160, (Conference room – ground floor) 02-326 Warsaw, Poland
The presentation will also be available via a live webcast (http://infostrefa.tv/orange/en) and via a live conference call
Time: 11:00 (Warsaw) 10:00 (London) 05:00 (New York) Dial in numbers: PIN: 51708305# Poland Toll-Free: 008001215222 Poland Toll: 48225839021 Canada Toll: 14162164194 France Toll: 33172727403 Germany Toll: 4969222225429 Netherlands Toll: 31207095119 United Kingdom Toll: 442071943759 United Kingdom Toll-Free: 08003766183 United States Toll-Free: 8442860643
| 2018 | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| amounts in PLN millions | 1Q | 1Q | 2Q | 2Q | 3Q | 3Q | 4Q | 4Q | FY | FY |
| Income statement | reported (IAS17) |
comparable basis (IFRS16)* |
reported (IAS17) |
comparable basis (IFRS16)* |
reported (IAS17) |
comparable basis (IFRS16)* |
reported (IAS17) |
comparable basis (IFRS16)* |
reported (IAS17) |
comparable basis (IFRS16)* |
| Revenues | ||||||||||
| Mobile services only | 688 | 686 | 682 | 680 | 690 | 687 | 676 | 673 | 2,736 | 2,726 |
| Fixed services only | 627 | 629 | 628 | 620 | 610 | 602 | 596 | 590 | 2,461 | 2,441 |
| Narrowband | 287 | 285 | 275 | 274 | 265 | 263 | 257 | 255 | 1,084 | 1,077 |
| Broadband | 232 | 232 | 233 | 232 | 230 | 229 | 226 | 225 | 921 | 918 |
| B2B Network Solutions | 108 | 112 | 120 | 114 | 115 | 110 | 113 | 110 | 456 | 446 |
| Convergent services B2C | 291 | 291 | 316 | 316 | 336 | 336 | 353 | 353 | 1,296 | 1,296 |
| Equipment sales | 351 | 351 | 307 | 307 | 336 | 336 | 410 | 409 | 1,404 | 1,403 |
| IT and integration services | 112 | 112 | 134 | 144 | 127 | 138 | 216 | 225 | 589 | 619 |
| Wholesale | 579 | 579 | 571 | 572 | 576 | 576 | 582 | 582 | 2,308 | 2,309 |
| Mobile wholesale | 312 | 312 | 329 | 329 | 332 | 331 | 334 | 334 | 1,307 | 1,306 |
| Fixed wholesale | 188 | 188 | 176 | 176 | 176 | 176 | 176 | 176 | 716 | 716 |
| Other | 79 | 79 | 66 | 66 | 68 | 68 | 72 | 72 | 285 | 285 |
| Other revenues | 62 | 60 | 68 | 65 | 80 | 77 | 97 | 91 | 307 | 293 |
| Total revenues | 2,710 | 2,708 | 2,706 | 2,704 | 2,755 | 2,752 | 2,930 | 2,923 | 11,101 | 11,087 |
| Labour expenses** | (432) | (431) | (397) | (395) | (370) | (368) | (383) | (383) | (1,582) | (1,577) |
| External purchases | (1,549) | (1,491) | (1,529) | (1,470) | (1,582) | (1,518) | (1,789) | (1,721) | (6,449) | (6,200) |
| - Interconnect expenses | (448) | (447) | (471) | (471) | (470) | (469) | (460) | (460) | (1,849) | (1,847) |
| - Network and IT expenses | (148) | (146) | (152) | (157) | (148) | (150) | (160) | (162) | (608) | (615) |
| - Commercial expenses | (578) | (578) | (551) | (551) | (562) | (561) | (743) | (743) | (2,434) | (2,433) |
| - Other external purchases | (375) | (320) | (355) | (291) | (402) | (338) | (426) | (356) | (1,558) | (1,305) |
| Other operating incomes & expenses | (51) | (46) | (33) | (31) | (58) | (56) | (77) | (70) | (219) | (203) |
| Impairment of receivables and contract assets | (23) | (23) | (41) | (41) | (46) | (46) | (52) | (52) | (162) | (162) |
| Gains on disposal of assets*** | 19 | 19 | 3 | 3 | 93 | 93 | 77 | 77 | 192 | 192 |
| Amortization and impairment of right-of-use assets Interest expense on lease liabilities |
(67) (10) |
(66) (13) |
(70) (14) |
(74) (14) |
(277) (51) |
|||||
| Adjusted EBITDA | 674 | 709 | 792 | 706 | 2,881 | |||||
| EBITDAaL (EBITDA after Leases) | 659 | 691 | 773 | 686 | 2,809 | |||||
| % of revenues | 24.9% | 24.3% | 26.2% | 25.6% | 28.7% | 28.1% | 24.1% | 23.5% | 26.0% | 25.3% |
| Depreciation, amortisation and impairment of property, plant and equipment and intangibles assets |
(641) | (636) | (617) | (647) | (2,541) | |||||
| Add-back of interest expense on lease liabilities | ||||||||||
| Adjustment for the impact of employment termination programs** | 0 | 0 | 0 | 5 | 5 | |||||
| Adjustment for the impact of deconsolidation of subsidiaries*** | ||||||||||
| Operting income / (loss) | 33 | 73 | 175 | 64 | 345 | |||||
| % of revenues | 1.2% | 2.7% | 6.4% | 2.2% | 3.1% | |||||
| Finance costs, net | (86) | (87) | (61) | (71) | (305) | |||||
| - Interest expense on lease liabilities | ||||||||||
| - Other Interest expenses, net (excl. Interest expense on lease liabilities) |
(62) | (54) | (54) | (52) | (222) | |||||
| - Discounting expense | (24) | (33) | (7) | (19) | (83) | |||||
| Income tax | 3 | (2) | (23) | (8) | (30) | |||||
| Consolidated net income / (loss) | (50) | (16) | 91 | (15) | 10 |
*2018 comparable basis includes the following effects resulting from developments in 2019:
(1) In 2019 we made certain changes in grouping of revenue categories between IT & integration services and other lines to better reflect business performance. 2018 figures were adjusted for comparability.
(2) Impact of deconsolidation of subsidiaries
(3) Introduction of EBITDAaL as new measure of operating profitability under IFRS16 resulting in changes in certain cost categories
** Labour expenses exclude adjustment due to employment termination program
*** Gains on disposal of assets exclude impact of deconsolidation of subsidiaries
| customer base (in thousands) | 2018 | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1Q | 2Q | 3Q | 4Q | 2019 1Q |
|||
| Convergent customers | 1,376 | 1,436 | 1,483 | 1,547 | 1,592 | ||
| o/w B2C | 1,090 | 1,137 | 1,178 | 1,236 | 1,276 | ||
| o/w B2B | 287 | 298 | 304 | 311 | 316 | ||
| Fixed telephony accesses | |||||||
| PSTN | 2,738 | 2,623 | 2,527 | 2,426 | 2,322 | ||
| VoIP | 875 | 918 | 953 | 981 | 1,006 | ||
| Total retail main lines | 3,613 | 3,541 | 3,480 | 3,407 | 3,328 | ||
| o/w B2C convergent | 678 | 718 | 755 | 755 | 778 | ||
| o/w B2C PSTN convergent | 110 | 104 | 100 | 54 | 44 | ||
| o/w B2C VoIP convergent | 568 | 614 | 655 | 701 | 734 | ||
| Fixed broadband access | |||||||
| ADSL | 1,278 | 1,238 | 1,200 | 1,149 | 1,098 | ||
| VHBB (VDSL+Fibre) | 724 | 767 | 807 | 869 | 921 | ||
| o/w VDSL | 476 | 481 | 484 | 503 | 522 | ||
| o/w Fibre | 248 | 286 | 324 | 366 | 399 | ||
| CDMA | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||
| Wireless for fixed | 475 | 502 | 522 | 542 | 557 | ||
| Retail broadband - total | 2,477 | 2,506 | 2,530 | 2,560 | 2,576 | ||
| o/w B2C convergent | 1,090 | 1,137 | 1,178 | 1,236 | 1,276 | ||
| TV client base | |||||||
| IPTV | 359 | 386 | 410 | 435 | 455 | ||
| DTH (TV over Satellite) | 515 | 514 | 511 | 508 | 503 | ||
| TV client base - total | 875 | 900 | 921 | 943 | 958 | ||
| o/w B2C convergent | 597 | 641 | 680 | 725 | 758 | ||
| Mobile accesses | |||||||
| Post-paid | |||||||
| Mobile Handset | 7,310 | 7,358 | 7,416 | 7,498 | 7,553 | ||
| Mobile Broadband | 1,164 | 1,104 | 1,052 | 989 | 934 | ||
| M2M | 1,273 | 1,328 | 1,385 | 1,436 | 1,483 | ||
| Total postpaid | 9,747 | 9,790 | 9,853 | 9,922 | 9,970 | ||
| o/w B2C convergent | 2,085 | 2,183 | 2,259 | 2,369 | 2,434 | ||
| Total pre-paid | 4,621 | 4,694 | 4,761 | 4,883 | 4,867 | ||
| Total | 14,368 | 14,484 | 14,614 | 14,805 | 14,837 | ||
| Wholesale customers | |||||||
| WLR | 507 | 487 | 467 | 437 | 408 | ||
| Bitstream access | 165 | 156 | 151 | 144 | 137 | ||
| LLU | 87 | 83 | 80 | 76 | 73 |
| quarterly ARPO in PLN per month | 2019 | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1Q | 2Q | 3Q | 4Q | 1Q | ||
| Convergent services B2C | 100.8 | 102.4 | 103.0 | 101.9 | 101.4 | |
| Fixed services only - voice | 36.6 | 36.4 | 36.2 | 36.5 | 36.3 | |
| Fixed services only - broadband | 56.5 | 56.6 | 56.4 | 56.0 | 55.5 | |
| Mobile services only | 21.9 | 21.7 | 21.7 | 20.9 | 20.0 | |
| Postpaid excl M2M | 29.1 | 28.7 | 28.6 | 27.7 | 26.9 | |
| Mobile Handset | 31.0 | 30.5 | 30.5 | 29.5 | 28.6 | |
| Mobile Broadband | 19.0 | 18.3 | 17.7 | 17.0 | 16.4 | |
| Prepaid | 11.9 | 12.3 | 12.6 | 12.2 | 11.4 | |
| Mobile wholesale (convergent + mono) | 7.2 | 7.6 | 7.6 | 7.6 | 7.1 |
| Other mobile operating statistics | 2018 | 2019 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10 | 2Q | 3Q | 4Q | 1Q | |
| Number of smartphones (thousands) | 6.886 | 7.006 | 7,223 | 7.447 | 7,521 |
| AUPU (in minutes) | |||||
| post-paid | 353 9 | 349 7 | 344 6 | 353.3 | 357 9 |
| pre-paid | 162.0 | 166.3 | 164.1 | 163.6 | 161 9 |
| blended | 285.8 | 284.7 | 279.9 | 284.7 | 286.5 |
| Quarterly mobile customer chum rate (%) | |||||
| post-paid | 3.1 | 27 | 28 | 28 | 2.8 |
| pre-paid | 14.6 | 11.3 | 10.4 | 8.9 | 10.8 |
| SAC post-paid (PLN) | 75.2 | 79.9 | 95.8 | 116.1 | 82.4 |
| SRC post-paid (PLN) | 39.7 | 29.5 | 35.8 | 45.8 | 43.9 |
| Employment structure of Group as reported | 2018 | 2019 |
| Employment structure of Group as reported | 2018 | 2019 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Active full time equivalents (end of period) | 10 | 20 | 30 | 40 | 10 |
| Orange Polska | 14.372 | 13.730 | 13.492 | 13.197 | 13.077 |
| 50% of Networks | 348 | 345 | 347 | 348 | 355 |
| Total | 14.720 | 14.075 | 13.839 | 13.545 | 13.432 |
Terms used:
ARPO – average revenue per offer
Average Usage per User (AUPU) – The average monthly total usage of minutes divided by the average number of SIM cards (excluding M2M) in a given period.
Churn rate – the number of customers who disconnect from a network divided by the weighted average number of customers in a given period.
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 wireless for fixed) and a mobile voice contract (excluding MVNOs) with a financial benefit. Convergent services revenues do not include incoming and visitor roaming revenues.
Convergent services B2C ARPO – The average monthly revenues from convergent services generated by retail customers (B2C) divided by the average number of B2C convergent customers in a given period.
Fixed broadband-only services – Revenues from fixed broadband offers (excluding B2C convergent offers and equipment sales), including TV and VoIP services.
Fixed broadband-only services ARPO – The average monthly revenues from fixed broadband only services divided by the average number of accesses in a given period.
Mobile-only services – Revenues from mobile offers (excluding consumer market convergent offers) and Machine to Machine (M2M) connectivity. Mobile-only services revenues do not include equipment sales and incoming and visitor roaming revenues.
Mobile-only services ARPO – The average monthly retail revenues from mobile only services excluding M2M connectivity, divided by the average number of SIM cards (excluding M2M) in a given period.
Mobile-only broadband ARPO – The average monthly retail revenues from SIM cards dedicated to mobile broadband access (excluding B2C convergent offers and equipment sales) divided by the average number of these SIM cards in a given period.
Mobile-only handset ARPO – The average monthly retail revenues from SIM cards dedicated to mobile handset access (excluding B2C convergent offers and equipment sales) divided by the average number of these SIM cards in a given period.
Subscriber Acquisition Cost (SAC) – Customer acquisition costs divided by the number of gross customers added during the respective period. Customer acquisition costs comprise commissions paid to distributors and net subsidies resulting from the sale of the handset.
Subscriber Retention Cost (SRC) – Customer retention costs divided by the number of customers retained during the respective period. Customer retention costs comprise commissions paid to distributors and net subsidies resulting from the sale of the handset.
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