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Orange : 1st quarter 2018 financial information

Press releaseParis, 26 April 20181 stquarter 2018 financial information Continued revenue growth with improvement in adjusted EBITDA margin and increase in Operating Cash Flow            Q1 2018Q1 2017Q1 2017 change ...
London, (informazione.it - comunicati stampa - telecomunicazioni)

Paris, 26 April 2018

1 quarter 2018 financial information

Following two consecutive years of growth in the Group's revenues and adjusted EBITDA, the positive trend has continued into the 1 quarter of 2018. The Group is also reporting an increase in Operating Cash Flow, building on the positive performance achieved in 2017 .

This financial performance confirms the relevance of the Group's strategy, which is focused on convergence and very high-speed broadband, with the aim of increasing customer loyalty and usage through enriched offers and strengthening its position in the high-end market.

Commenting on the 1 quarter of 2018 results, Stéphane Richard, Chairman and CEO of the Orange Group, said:

The Board of Directors of Orange SA met on 25 April 2018 and examined the Group's results to 31 March 2018.

The financial data and comparable basis data in this press release are unaudited.

More detailed information is available on the Orange website:

www.orange.com

Key figures

* Adjustments to the presentation of EBITDA are described in appendix 2.

Orange Group revenues were 10.082 billion euros in the 1 quarter of 2018, an increase of 2.0% (+197 million euros) on a comparable basis , following a 1.2% increase in 2017. This includes the favourable impact of digital media apps in France, launched on 5 October.
The revenues trends for the 1 quarter of 2018 by region were as follows (data on a comparable basis):
In France, revenue grew 2.1% in the 1 quarter of 2018. Excluding the impact of digital media apps, growth was +0.8% for the quarter, driven by convergence offers.
In Spain, growth remained steady, up 4.3% in the 1 quarter of 2018, or 4.9% excluding the reduction in mobile termination rates on 1 February. The growth in convergence offers was boosted by the rapid rollout of fibre, although competition intensified at entry-level offers.
In Poland, revenues edged down 0.6%. The growth of convergence offers (driven by fibre) and wholesale, offset the decline in Only services (Fixed and Mobile) and equipment sales.
In Belgium and Luxembourg, revenues were up 0.9%. The growth in retail services was strong (+6.2% in the 1 quarter), partly offset by the fall in MVNOs.  
In Central European countries, revenues were up 7.3% in the 1 quarter, driven by growth in Romania (+11.1%) and Slovakia (+1.8%). Moldova remained virtually unchanged at +0.1%.   
In the Africa & Middle East segment, revenues rose 6.2% in the 1 quarter of 2018, confirming the recovery witnessed in the previous quarter. Stronger growth was recorded in Morocco and Egypt, with a return to growth in the Democratic Republic of Congo for the second consecutive quarter.
In the Enterprise segment, revenues dipped 1.3% in the 1 quarter of 2018, mainly linked to connectivity (voice and data). The development of Orange Cyberdefense and the Cloud continued apace, with revenues rising 20% and 17% respectively.

In France , convergence offers generated a total of 64,000 net sales in the 1 quarter of 2018, driven by the rapid uptake of fibre (130,000 net sales). The momentum in mobile contract sales also remained solid, with 78,000 net sales in the 1 quarter.
In Spain, convergence offers continued to enjoy solid growth with 56,000 net sales in the 1 quarter, driven by fibre (169,000 net sales). Mobile contracts generated 42,000 net sales amid tough competition, particularly in the entry-level segment.
In Poland, the rapid development of convergence offers continued with 55,000 net sales in the 1 quarter, driven by fibre and Fixed 4G.
In the Belgium and Luxembourg, mobile contracts accounted for 16,000 net sales in the 1 quarter. Convergence offers had 114,000 customers with 17,000 net sales during the quarter.
In the Africa & Middle East segment, the mobile base was 120.9 million customers at 31 March 2018, a year-on-year increase of 6.9% on a comparable basis (+7.8 million customers). Orange Money had 36.7 million customers, of which 35.2% were active customers.
Group-wide, the number of mobile customers was 201.9 million at 31 March 2018, up 4.5% year on year (+8.7 million new customers) on a comparable basis. Contract customers (75.3 million) rose 7.5% year on year (+5.3% excluding machine-to-machine).
Fixed broadband (19.6 million customers at 31 March 2018) grew 4.1% year on year and very high speed fixed broadband, with 5.1 million customers, was up 39.5% year on year.
Convergent offers had 10.541 million customers (+10.4% year on year), of which 6.042 million were in France, 3.138 million in Spain, 1.090 million in Poland and 114,000 in Belgium & Luxembourg. Romania and Slovakia are also marketing convergent offers.
TV services increased 6.1% year on year to 9.097 million customers at 31 March 2018.

The adjusted EBITDA of the Group was 2.605 billion euros in the 1 quarter of 2018, an increase of 3.8% on a comparable basis (+95 million euros).
Adjusted EBITDA for telecom activities came to 2.635 billion euros in the 1 quarter of 2018, an increase of 4.4% on a comparable basis (+111 million euros).
The growth in the Group's adjusted EBITDA is primarily due to revenue growth (+197 million euros), partially offset by an increase in external purchases (-135 million euros), mainly related to commercial expenses (purchases of equipment intended for customers) and to a lesser extent content costs. At the same time, interconnection and network access costs decreased (+41 million euros).
The Group's labour expenses rose 1.0% in the 1 quarter of 2018 (-21 million euros), due to changes in labour expenses globally and the inclusion in the 1 quarter of the share award plan for employees apportioned to 2018 (Orange Vision 2020). In parallel, the average number of full-time equivalent employees of the Group fell 2.7% in the 1 quarter, on a comparable basis.

Group CAPEX was 1.533 billion euros in the 1 quarter of 2018, an increase of 3.7% compared with the 1 quarter of 2017, on a comparable basis. For telecom activities, CAPEX as a percentage of revenues was 15.1%, an increase of 0.2 percentage points compared with the 1 quarter of 2017. 
Investments in fibre mainly concerned France, Spain and Poland. In France and Spain, the growth in fibre investment remained strong, benefiting in part from significant co-financing from other operators. At 31 March 2018, 27.7 million households, across the Group, had connectivity to very high-speed broadband (an increase of 6.2 million, or 28.9% year on year), including 12.2 million in Spain, 9.6 million in France, 2.7 million in Poland and 2.4 million in Romania (following the mutual network sharing agreement with Telekom Romania).
Investment in 4G and 4G+ services remains high, with accelerated rollout in France, Spain and in the Africa & Middle East segment. The 4G coverage rate at 31 March 2018 was 97.0% of the population in France, 96.0% in Spain, 99.8% in Poland, 99.7% in Belgium, 93.4% in Romania, 90.2% in Slovakia, and 98.0% in Moldova. In France and Spain, investments focused on enhancing the customer experience, including enhancing coverage outside urban areas and increasing connection speeds in major cities. In Africa & the Middle East, rollout continued in countries where 4G is commercially available, with significant investment in Côte d'Ivoire, Morocco and Egypt.
The increased investment in information systems and service platforms is mainly due to the launch of transformation and digitisation projects in Belgium and Spain.
Investment in customer equipment is falling, due to lower prices for Livebox and set-top boxes and increased equipment recycling.
The store modernisation program is continuing: at 31 March 2018, the Group had 412 stores based on the new Smart Store concept, including 124 in France, 236 in the other European countries and 52 in the Africa & Middle East segment.

On 21 February 2018, Orange Business Services acquired Enovacom, a leading player in e-health. The acquisition forms part of the strategy for Orange Healthcare, the health subsidiary of Orange Business Services, to be a major partner in the digital transformation of health care facilities in France and worldwide.

Orange re-affirms its targets for 2018:

For 2019 and 2020, the Group reiterates its objectives of growth in adjusted EBITDA, decrease in CAPEX and growth in Operating Cash Flow.

The Group confirms payment of a 0.65-euro dividend per share for 2017 . An interim dividend of 0.25 euros per share was paid on 7 December 2017 and the remainder 0.40 euros per share will be paid on 7 June. The ex-dividend date will be 5 June 2018 and the record date will be 6 June 2018.

With confidence in the momentum and financial strength across the Group, the Board of Directors will propose at the 2019 Annual General Meeting of Shareholders the payment of a dividend payment of 0.70 euros per share for the 2018 fiscal year. The 5-euro cents increase in dividend will be reflected in the interim dividend (0.30 euros per share), which is payable in December 2018.

In France, revenues grew for the 4 consecutive quarter, increasing 2.1% in the 1 quarter of 2018. As in the previous quarter, the 1 quarter of 2018 benefited from the favourable impact of digital media apps, launched on 5 October. Excluding this impact, revenues grew 0.8% for the quarter, driven by the steady uptake of convergence offers and the increase in equipment sales, including an upmarket shift in the type of mobile handsets sold.

Despite intense competitive pressure, particularly in the entry-level segment, Orange France's customer base has continued to grow: +3.9% year on year for mobile contract customers (18.903 million customers at 31 March 2018) and +3.0% for fixed broadband customers (11.285 million customers). Growth continues to be supported by fibre (­+34.8%), with 2.129 million FTTH customers at 31 March 2018.

For offers revenues rose 14.8% in the 1 quarter of 2018, driven by the steady growth in the customer base: the number of SIM cards for convergent offers reached 9.4 million at 31 March 2018 (+11.1% year on year), while 6.0 million customers had fixed broadband access (+7.6% year on year). Added to this is the +5.3% growth in convergent ARPO compared with the 1 quarter of 2017 (+2.3% excluding digital media apps), buoyed by the development of complementary services such as content and mobile multi-line offers.

In services, revenues dipped 1.0%. The fall in customer base (-6.2% year on year), was principally related to the migration of clients towards convergent offers and subsequent decline in pre-paid customers (-16.8%). This was largely offset by the 2.8% rise in Mobile Only ARPO (+1.1% excluding digital media apps), with a favourable trend in customer mix (the number of contract customers falling less sharply than prepaid customers).

revenues rose 2.0%, driven by the 4.4% growth in ARPO (+1.9% excluding digital media apps). The broadband Fixed Only customer base declined by 1.9% year on year (5.243 million customers at 31 March 2018).

In parallel, revenues continued their downward trend (-11.5% in the 1 quarter of 2018). was also down 2.9%, following a decline in national roaming and lower tariffs on unbundling.

Spain's rate of revenue growth remained steady at +4.3% in the 1 quarter of 2018 (+4.9% excluding the impact of reduced mobile termination rates from 1 February), amid strong competition in the entry-level segment of the mobile and fixed broadband market.
Despite this, the mobile customer base continued to grow, driven by contract customers , which led to 42,000 net sales in the 1 quarter of 2018. At 31 March 2018, the customer base had grown by 1.7% year on year (11.488 million customers). At the same time, the rollout of 4G continued, with 9.5 million customers at 31 March 2018 (+15% year on year).
Fibre uptake remained strong, with 169,000 net sales in the 1 quarter and 2.428 million customers at 31 March 2018 (+34.5% year on year). Fibre accounted for 58.7% of the fixed broadband customer base at that date. TV services also grew significantly, with 641,000 customers at 31 March 2018 (+19.6% year on year).
The growth of offers remained steady in the 1 quarter of 2018, with revenues up 7.0%. This was driven both by the growth in customer base (+2.1% year on year) and the growth in convergent ARPO (+3.8%), following the sharp increase in fibre access and TV services. The convergence customer base represented 85.1% of consumer fixed broadband customers at 31 March 2018 (+3.1 percentage points year on year). 

services decreased by 3.2% in the 1 quarter of 2018, reflecting the fall in prepaid customers (-7.3%), while Mobile Only contract customers rose slightly (+0.5% year on year). At the same time, Mobile Only ARPO was down 1.0% compared to the 1 quarter of 2017.

revenues were up 0.9% in the 1 quarter of 2018. The development of solutions for the enterprise segment was partly offset by the revenue decline in Fixed Only broadband services. The Fixed Only broadband customer base fell 8.9% (in line with the growth in convergence), while Fixed Only broadband ARPO rose 5.9% in the 1 quarter of 2018.

rose by 5.7% in the 1 quarter of 2018, driven by the uptake of fibre services and national roaming.

In Poland, revenues edged down 0.6% in the 1 quarter of 2018, on a comparable basis. This was mainly due to the success of offers, which saw a 42.9% increase in revenues, outpacing growth in 2017 (+32.1%) and reflecting the rapid expansion of the customer base for both mobile convergent offers (+52.7% year on year) and fixed broadband (+47.6% year on year). At the same time, convergent ARPO fell 10.4% in the 1 quarter of 2018. This was due to the success of attractive Orange Love offers, which represents a significantly higher share of the convergent customer base (69% at 31 March 2018, compared to 8% a year earlier).

The sales momentum for fixed broadband remained steady in the 1 quarter of 2018, with 34,000 net fibre sales and 42,000 net fixed 4G sales. This translated into a 9.2% year-on-year increase in the total fixed broadband customer base to 2.477 million customers, including 248,000 fibre customers at 31 March 2018. TV services had 875,000 customers at that date, a 12.5% year-on-year increase. In parallel, mobile contract customers generated 21,000 net sales in the 1 quarter of 2018 and 3.1% growth year on year (9.747 million customers), while prepaid offers fell by 20.6%, with a limited impact on revenues.
Revenues for services recorded a 6.0% drop. The decline in customer base (-11.7% year on year), which mainly related to prepaid offers, was partly offset by the increase in Mobile Only ARPO (+0.9%).

services reported an 11.4% fall in the 1 quarter of 2018, with a continued decline in traditional telephony (-13.8%) and lower Fixed Only broadband revenues (-10.2%) mostly caused by the migration to convergent offers. 

grew 13.2%, driven by national roaming, incoming mobile traffic and services to international carriers. 

Meanwhile, fell 12.0% during the quarter, in line with the reduction in mobile handset subsidies and the uptake of SIM-only offers.

Revenues for Belgium and Luxembourg rose 0.9% in the 1 quarter of 2018 on a comparable basis, despite the impact of the revenue decline from MVNOs and the end of roaming charges in Europe since last July.

Retails services rose 6.2% on a comparable basis, driven by offers, which saw strong revenue gains in the 1 quarter of 2018 (+158.4%), attributed to the rapid development of convergent mobile customer bases (+154.9% year on year) and of fixed broadband (+150.2% year on year), driven by the success of Love offers. Convergent ARPO in Belgium was 71.9 euros in the 1 quarter of 2018.

Mobile Only services saw a limited decline in revenues (-1.0% on a comparable basis). The contraction of the customer base (-3.5% year on year), relating primarily to prepaid offers (-13.5%), was partially offset by the increase in Mobile Only ARPO in Belgium (+2.9%).

The mobile contract customer base in Belgium and Luxembourg reached 2.439 million customers at 31 March 2018. There were 16,000 net sales in the 1 quarter of 2018 providing a 3.8% increase year on year.

At the same time, rose 9.9%, driven by sales of mobile handsets, while revenues fell 14.2%, notably due to the significant decline in MVNOs with the migration of Telenet customers to the BASE network and the end of the Lycamobile contract last July.

Revenues from the Central European countries rose 7.3% in the 1 quarter of 2018 (after rising 5.5% in 2017 on a comparable basis). Approximately 60% of the growth in the 1 quarter was from mobile . Added to this, (+12.8%) and (+67.6%) both grew, whereas services were down 1.3%, notably due to the end of roaming fees in Europe last July.
The mobile contract base grew 1.9% year on year on a comparable basis, with 7.8 million customers at 31 March 2018. However, strong competition resulted in net negative sales for the 1 quarter          (-16,000 contracts), linked to Romania and Slovakia, while the customer base continued to grow in Moldova. The 4G mobile base also continued to see strong growth (+36.3% year on year) with 4.8 million customers at 31 March 2018.
Fixed broadband had 418,000 customers on 31 March 2018 (+31.0% year on year) and convergent offers (sold in the three countries) accounted for 157,000 customers on that date, compared to 71,000 a year earlier.

Revenue growth was sustained in with an 11.1% increase in the 1 quarter of 2018 (following +8.0% in 2017) driven by mobile equipment sales (+38.8%), wholesale (+13.2%) as well as the increase in incoming mobile traffic and visitor roaming, and a very significant increase in convergence revenues (+454%). Consumer convergent offers reached 95,000 customers at 31 March 2018, compared with 16,000 a year earlier.
In , the improving trend which began last year continued with revenue growth of 1.8% in the 1 quarter of 2018 (following +0.6% in 2017). The growth in wholesale (+25.5%), with notably the development of national roaming, was partially offset by slowing growth in Mobile Only (-3.5%) due to the end of roaming fees in Europe last July.
Revenues were stable in , increasing 0.1% in the 1 quarter of 2018. Mobile Only services grew by 5.3% thanks to contracts, and equipment sales were up 25.4%. Wholesale revenues fell 34.4%, with, in particular, the significant decline in incoming international mobile traffic.

in the Africa & Middle East segment increased 6.2% in the 1 quarter of 2018 (on a comparable basis) confirming the recovery seen in the previous quarter (+5.7%) with accelerated growth in Morocco and Egypt, and a return to growth in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

services grew 9.4% in the 1 quarter of 2018 on a comparable basis. Growth in mobile data services remained very strong and accounted for nearly two-thirds of the growth in Mobile Only services, driven by 4G (11.7 million customers at 31 March 2018). In addition, Orange Money revenues grew 49% in the 1 quarter with 36.7 million customers at 31 March 2018 , of which 35.2% were active customers. Mobile voice services stabilised with the development of offers enabling increased usage. Despite varying market conditions, this growth dynamic was similar across all of the sector's geographies.
In the Africa & Middle East segment, the mobile customer base reached 120.9 million at 31 March 2018, a year-on-year increase of 6.9% (+7.8 million customers). Mobile contracts in particular (11.2 million at 31 March 2018), grew 19.3% (+1.8 million) year on year, primarily in Egypt.

services grew 1.1% in the 1 quarter of 2018 on a comparable basis. The growth in fixed broadband (Morocco, Côte d'Ivoire and Senegal) was partially offset by the decline in traditional fixed-line telephony (Jordan, Côte d'Ivoire and Senegal).
Overall, rose 8.5% in the 1 quarter of 2018 on a comparable basis. With regard to total revenues from retail services and equipment sales, enterprise sales grew 9.8% on a comparable basis, while B2C sales rose 8.9%.

was down 6.9% in the 1 quarter of 2018 (on a comparable basis), as a result of the decline in services to international carriers and, to a lesser extent, in incoming mobile traffic and visitor roaming.

Revenues in the Enterprise segment saw a small decline of 1.3% in the 1 quarter of 2018, on a comparable basis, in a market environment which continues to be challenging. 

services were down 1.6%. The downward trend in traditional fixed-line telephony was partially offset by growth in Voice-over-IP and customer relationship services (contact number services).

services fell 3.4% in the 1 quarter of 2018, reflecting the change in IP VPN and broadcast services. IP VPN services reached 354,000 accesses at 31 March 2018 (a 0.2% increase year on year).

rose 0.4%. Excluding equipment sales, the increase was 4.2% in the 1 quarter of 2018. Growth continued to be driven by Cloud services (+17%), Orange Cyberdefense (+20%) and Applications (+19%).

increased 1.8% in the 1 quarter of 2018, driven by equipment sales, while services were impacted by the end of roaming fees in Europe last July. The number of contracts reached 2.788 million at 31 March 2018 (+4.4% year on year) and the number of machine-to-machine SIM cards continued to grow sharply (+20.5% year on year).

Revenues from the International Carriers and Shared Services segment recorded a 6.5% decline on a comparable basis. This was related to (-11.1%) with a decline in services to international carriers in the voice services market, particularly for African destinations and the Maghreb.

increased 10.6%, on a comparable basis: the growth of Viaccess (secure TV access), and Sofrecom (consulting), was partially offset by the slowdown in the laying and maintenance of submarine cables.

Orange Bank enriched its line of bank products at the end of March with the launch of a personal loan that's unique in the market. Orange Bank enables its customers to take out a personal loan and receive the amount when they need it, within a six-month period.

This press release contains forward-looking statements about Orange. Although we believe these statements are based on reasonable assumptions, they are subject to numerous risks and uncertainties, including matters not yet known to us or not currently considered material by us, and there can be no assurance that anticipated events will occur or that the objectives set out will actually be achieved. Important factors that could cause projected results to differ from actual results include, among others: the inappropriate release or modification of individual customer data, risks associated with the development of banking activities and mobile financial services, exposure to geopolitical risks, macroeconomic factors as well as regulatory or corruption risks, the risk of not being able to maintain control over customer relations when facing competition with OTT players, the success of Orange's strategy of diversification to develop new steams of growth, network or software failures due to cyberattacks, fraudulent activity that could target Orange or its customers, its dependence on a small number of important suppliers, damage to networks caused by natural disasters or intentional interference, risks associated with the brand strategy, Orange's ability to retain the necessary skills given the high level of employee retirements and changes in its offers, possible adverse health effects associated with exposure to electromagnetic fields from telecommunications equipment, various human factors linked to the safety of people and psycho-social risks, the results of litigation regarding regulations and competition, the terms of access to capital markets, interest rate or exchange rate fluctuations, Orange's credit ratings, changes in the assumptions underlying the accounting value of certain assets resulting in their impairment, and credit risks or counterparty risks on financial transactions. More detailed information on the potential risks that could affect our financial results is included in the Registration Document filed on 4 April 2018 with the French Financial Markets Authority ( - AMF) and in the annual report on Form 20-F filed on 4 April 2018 with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Other than as required by law, Orange does not undertake any obligation to update them in light of new information or future developments.

* Adjustments to the presentation of EBITDA are described in appendix 2.

Data on a comparable basis: data based on comparable accounting principles, scope of consolidation and exchange rates are presented for previous periods. The transition from data on an historical basis to data on a comparable basis consists of keeping the results for the period ended and then restating the results for the corresponding period of the preceding year for the purpose of presenting, over comparable periods, financial data with comparable accounting principles, scope of consolidation and exchange rate. The method used is to apply to the data of the corresponding period of the preceding year, the accounting principles and scope of consolidation for the period just ended as well as the average exchange rate used for the income statement for the period ended. Changes in data on a comparable basis reflect organic business changes. Data on a comparable basis is not a financial aggregate as defined by IFRS and may not be comparable to similarly-named indicators used by other companies.

Reported EBITDA: operating income before depreciation and amortisation, before impacts related to acquisitions of controlling interests, before reversal of reserves of liquidated entities, before impairment of goodwill and assets, and before income from associates. Reported EBITDA is not a financial aggregate as defined by IFRS standards and may not be directly comparable to similarly-named indicators in other companies.

Adjusted EBITDA: reported EBITDA (see definition), adjusted for the impacts of key disputes, specific personnel expenses, the review of the portfolio of shares and operations, restructuring and consolidation costs, and, as applicable, other specific and systematically identified items. Adjusted EBITDA is not a financial aggregate as defined by IFRS standards and may not be directly comparable to similarly-named indicators in other companies.

CAPEX: capital expenditure on tangible and intangible assets excluding telecommunication licences and investments through finance leases. CAPEX is not a financial performance indicator as defined by IFRS standards and may not be directly comparable to indicators referenced by similarly-named indicators in other companies.

Operating Cash Flow: corresponds to adjusted EBITDA less CAPEX. Orange uses this indicator to measure the performance of the Group in generating cash from its operations. Operating Cash Flow is not a financial aggregate defined by IFRS and may not be comparable to similarly-named indicators used by other companies.

The customer base and the revenues invoiced to convergence services customers (excluding equipment sales) was for convergent offers defined as the combination of, at a minimum, a fixed broadband access and a mobile contract subscribed by retail market customers.

Convergent ARPO: the average quarterly revenues per convergent offer (ARPO) is calculated by dividing revenues from retail convergent services offers invoiced to customers generated over the past three months (excluding IFRS 15 adjustments) by the weighted average number of retail convergent offers over the same period. ARPO is expressed by monthly revenues per convergent offer.

Revenues from Mobile Only services consists of revenues invoiced to customers of mobile offers excluding retail convergence and equipment sales. The customer base includes customers with a contract excluding retail convergence, machine-to-machine contracts and prepaid cards.

Mobile Only ARPO: the average quarterly revenues from Mobile Only is calculated by dividing the revenue from Mobile Only services (excluding machine-to-machine and IFRS 15 adjustments) generated over the past three months by the weighted average of Mobile Only customers (excluding machine-to-machine) over the same period. The ARPO is expressed as monthly revenues per Mobile Only customer.

Revenues from Fixed Only services include the revenue of fixed services excluding retail convergence and equipment sales: traditional fixed-line telephony, fixed broadband and enterprise solutions and networks . The customer base consists of fixed-line telephony and fixed broadband customers, excluding retail convergence customers.

Fixed Only Broadband ARPO: the average quarterly revenues from Fixed Only Broadband is calculated by dividing the revenue from Fixed Only Broadband services (excluding IFRS 15 adjustments) generated over the past three months by the weighted average of Fixed Only Broadband customers over the same period. ARPO is expressed as monthly revenues per Fixed Only Broadband customer.

Revenues from IT and integration services include revenue from unified communication and collaboration services (Local Area Network and telephony, consulting, integration, project management and video conferencing offers), hosting and infrastructure services (including cloud computing), application services (customer relations management and other application services), security services, machine-to-machine services (excluding connectivity), as well as equipment sales for the products and services above.

Revenues from other carriers consists of (i) mobile services to other carriers including incoming traffic, visitor roaming, network sharing, national roaming and MVNOs (Mobile Virtual Network Operators), and (ii) fixed services to other carriers including national interconnection, services to international carriers, high-speed and very high-speed broadband access (fibre access, unbundling of telephone lines and xDSL access sales) and the sale of telephone lines on the wholesale market.



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