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Vodacom posts 19% half-year profit rise a year after share scheme hit

Published 11/11/2019, 07:45
Updated 11/11/2019, 07:53
Vodacom posts 19% half-year profit rise a year after share scheme hit
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JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) - South African mobile operator Vodacom (J:VODJ) on Monday reported an 18.9% rise in half-year profits, partly reflecting the absence of one-off costs related to a share scheme offered to black investors.

After initially rising, Vodacom's shares fell over 2% despite the improved result, with revenue flat in South Africa and growth in overall group service revenue slowing.

"Our international portfolio remains a star performer, growing service revenue by 15.5% in a period characterised by macro and political stability and high demand for data," CEO Shameel Joosub said in a statement.

A stagnant economy at home has left many South African firms, Vodacom included, relying on businesses elsewhere to bolster earnings.

Even with a turnaround in the second quarter, Vodacom said service revenue in South Africa rose just 0.3% for the six months to Sept. 30 while its overall group service revenue rose 4.2% versus 6.1% a year earlier.

Headline earnings per share (HEPS), the main profit measure in South Africa, rose to 460 from 387 cents a year earlier.

The company, majority owned by Britain's Vodafone (L:VOD), has been trying to raise data usage by cutting prices, and diversify its revenue by offering other services such as insurance and on-demand video, steps it said were paying off.

Vodacom now reaches a combined 115 million customers group-wide, with Safaricom, Kenya's largest mobile operator which Vodacom partly owns, alone adding 2.7 million customers.

Safaricom runs the popular mobile financial services platform M-Pesa which provided a boost in the first half of the year.

Vodacom and Safaricom are planning to expand M-Pesa internationally after acquiring the intellectual property rights for it from Vodafone, a move that will also save both money on royalty fees.

The company's mid-year earnings last year were hit by 1.5 billion rand in costs related to a black economic empowerment transaction.

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