Telenor raises revenue outlook based on Asian markets growth

Telenor growth Asian markets
FILE PHOTO: Telenor's logo is seen in central Belgrade, Serbia, March 21, 2018. REUTERS/Marko Djurica/File Photo

STOCKHOLM/OSLO (Reuters) -Telenor raised its full-year revenue outlook on Tuesday, despite the Norwegian telecoms operator posting weaker-than-expected quarterly earnings on the negative impact of currency effects. 

Adjusted earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) for April-June slumped to 12.35 billion Norwegian crowns ($1.38 billion), from 13.18 billion crowns a year earlier. Analysts in a company-compiled poll, on average, had expected 12.7 billion crowns. 

“Telenor returned to growth in the second quarter. The growth was driven by strong performance in the Nordics, combined with a growing subscriber base and increased data consumption in the Asian markets,” Chief Executive Sigve Brekke said in a statement.

Telenor said negative currency effects, however, offset an underlying improvement by decreasing its EBITDA by 1.6 billion crowns.

The company, which plans to sell its Myanmar telecom assets, now expects organic subscription and traffic revenue growth of 0-1% and organic EBITDA growth of 0-2%, up from a previous forecast of maintaining the 2020 level. Telenor kept its forecast for the CAPEX-to-sales ratio unchanged at 15-16%.

Telenor, which serves 170 million customers in nine countries across Europe and Asia, wrote off the value of its Myanmar operations earlier this year following a military coup, and the business is now excluded from its reporting.

Citing difficulties of operating under the military junta, Telenor in July agreed to sell its business in the Southeast Asian nation to Lebanese investment firm M1 Group for $105 million.

Separately, the Oslo-listed firm agreed to merge its Malaysian mobile operations with local rival Axiata, forming a new market leader.

($1 = 8.9672 Norwegian crowns)

(Reporting by Supantha Mukherjee in Stockholm and Nora Buli in Oslo; Editing by Niklas Pollard and Sherry Jacob-Phillips)

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