TOP NEWS: BT half-year profit falls as energy prices increase

Archived article

Please note that tax, investment, pension and ISA rules can change and the information and any views contained in this article may now be inaccurate.

BT Group PLC on Thursday report lower profit in its financial first half, as costs for the telecommunications firm were increased by higher energy prices.

Pretax profit fell by 18% to £831 million in the six months that ended September 30 from £1.01 billion a year prior.

However, adjusted earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation rose 3.3% to £3.87 billion from £3.75 billion. The adjusted measure removes one-off items, share of profit and loss of associates and joint ventures, and net non-interest related finance expenses.

BT reported 0.6% growth in revenue to £10.36 billion from £10.31 billion.

BT posted a revenue decline in Enterprise and Global, where adjusted revenue fell by 5.2% and 2.2% respectively compared to a year ago.

Adjusted Ebitda in the two divisions fell by 23% to £660 million from £852 million in Enterprise and by 5.1% to £197 million from £207 million in Global.

Meanwhile, Openreach's adjusted revenue grew by 4.8% to £2.84 billion from £2.71 billion, while Consumer divisioin revenue rose by 2.8% to £4.99 billion from £4.86 billion.

BT maintained its dividend with an interim payout of 2.31 pence per share.

"Given the current high inflationary environment, including significantly increased energy prices, we need to take additional action on our costs to maintain the cash flow needed to support our network investments," said Chief Executive Officer Philip Jansen.

Looking forward, as a response to cost inflation, BT raised its gross annualised cost savings target for financial year 2025 to £3.0 billion from £2.5 billion.

BT shares were 6.2% lower at 119.89 pence each in London on Thursday morning.

Copyright 2022 Alliance News Limited. All Rights Reserved.