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LINE
OF BUSINESS RESULTS FOR 2006 AND 2005
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BT Retail
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2006
£m |
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2005
£m |
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Revenue
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8,452 |
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8,698 |
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Gross
margin
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2,354 |
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2,354 |
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Sales,
general and administration costs
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1,563 |
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1,600 |
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EBITDA
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791 |
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754 |
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Operating
profit
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644 |
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607 |
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Capital
expenditure
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153 |
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170 |
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BT Retails
results demonstrated a continued strategic shift towards
new wave products with growth in broadband, networked
IT services and mobility revenues. Despite the substitution
by new wave products, traditional revenue was defended
by changes in pricing structure and packages to benefit
frequent users and marketing campaigns focusing on key
customer service promises. BT Privacy, a service to address
the problem of unwanted calls by giving customers greater
control over the calls they receive, was launched on 1 July
2005, with 3.7 million customers registered by 31 March
2006. As at 31 March 2006, 16.2 million customers were
on BT Together packages. In the SME UK business market
the focus remains on placing customers on commitment packages
whereby lower call prices are received for annual committed
spend. By 31 March 2006 there were 513,000 Business Plan
sites, up 15% in the year. Cost transformation programmes
continued to successfully reduce the cost base of the
traditional business, allowing investment in new wave
products and services.
BT
Retails revenue decreased by 3% in the 2006 financial
year to £8,452 million. The growth in new wave revenue
of 38% in the 2006 financial year continued to reduce
our dependence on traditional revenue, the decline in
which was driven by the impact of regulation and competition.
After adjusting for the regulatory impact of the reduction
in mobile termination rates, revenue declined by 2% in
the 2006 financial year. Revenue for the two years is
summarised as follows:
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2006 |
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2005 |
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£m |
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£m |
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BT
Retail revenue
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Traditional
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7,088 |
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7,712 |
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Networked
IT services
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363 |
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304 |
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Broadband
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730 |
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502 |
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Mobility
and other
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271 |
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180 |
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New
wave
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1,364 |
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986 |
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Total
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8,452 |
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8,698 |
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Traditional
revenue comprises calls made by customers on the BT fixed
line network in the UK, analogue lines, equipment sales,
rentals and other voice products. Overall revenue was
8% lower in the 2006 financial year. The reduction includes
the effect of continued high levels of migration to broadband
which is reflected in a 46% fall in dial up minutes over
the year, a reduction of 10% in ISDN lines and general
competitive pressure. The decline in private circuits
and ISDN reflects customers migrating to new wave products
and services, including broadband and IPVPN.
New
wave revenue grew by 38% to £1,364 million in the
2006 financial year driven primarily by broadband, mobility
and networked IT services. New wave revenue comprised
16% of BT Retails
revenue in the 2006 financial year, compared to 11% in
the 2005 financial year.
Broadband
revenue grew by 45% to £730 million in the 2006
financial year. The growth of broadband continues to accelerate
with 2,584,000 BT Retail connections at 31 March 2006,
an increase of 47% over last year.
BT
Retail had net additions of 832,000 broadband customers
in the year, a 31% market share of the broadband DSL net
additions.
Broadband
is increasingly critical to the success of SMEs and BT
Business Broadband revenue continues to grow.
Revenue
from mobility and other new wave services increased by
49% to £268 million in the 2006 financial year.
During the year we launched BT Fusion, the worlds
first seamless combined fixed and mobile communications
services on a single handset. The consumer launch was
in June 2005 and the business market launch was in February
2006.
Networked
IT services revenue increased by 19% to £363 million
in the 2006 financial year. SMEs have become increasingly
interested in the benefits they can achieve by converging
their voice and data into one network and BT Business
networked IT services are integrating and simplifying
the way customers are unifying their organisations
voice and data services. The portfolio includes IP infrastructure
WAN/LAN and IP telephony and also Data Centre Services,
Security, Applications and outsourcing.
BT
Retails gross margin percentage increased by 0.8
percentage points in the 2006 financial year reflecting
improved margin management and greater efficiency in managing
the service provider network.
Gross
margin is revenue less costs directly attributable to
the provision of the products and services reflected in
revenue in the period. Selling, general and administration
costs are those costs that are ancillary to the business
processes of providing products and services and are the
general business operating costs.
Cost
transformation programmes in the 2006 financial year generated
selling, general and administration cost savings of £206
million. These savings were driven by cost reduction programmes
focused on elimination of failure, channel effectiveness,
overheads and removal of inefficiencies and duplication.
The majority of these initiatives were targeted at people
related costs, with significant savings in billing, IT
operations and other support functions.
BT
Retails EBITDA increased by 5% to £791 million
in the 2006 financial year. This is a significant improvement
compared to last year, which experienced EBITDA decline.
The benefits from the investment in new products and value
added services have contributed to an improved EBITDA
performance in the current year. This was also reflected
in the 6% improvement in operating profit to £644
million in the 2006 financial year.
Capital
expenditure for the 2006 financial year was £153
million, a decrease of 10% resulting from tight controls
over expenditure. |
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