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Press release - Orange: 2016 full-year results

Press releaseParis, 23 February 2017 2016 full-year results                                       Return to growth in revenues and adjusted EBITDA in 2016 Proposed increase in 2017 dividend to 0.65 eurosCommercial momentum remained strong in the 4 thquarter, led by fibre...
London, (informazione.it - comunicati stampa - telecomunicazioni)

Paris, 23 February 2017

2016 full-year results


2017 outlook

Orange has set an objective for 2017 of adjusted EBITDA that is higher than the level achieved in 2016 on a comparable basis, lifted by the strong commercial momentum supported by CAPEX, and continuing efforts to transform the cost structure.
The Group maintains the objective of a ratio of net debt to adjusted EBITDA from telecoms activities of about 2x in the medium term to preserve Orange's financial strength and investment capacity. Within this context, the Group is maintaining a policy of selective, value-creating acquisitions by concentrating on markets in which it is already present.
The Group confirms the payment of a dividend of 0.60 euros per share for 2016 . An interim dividend for 2016 of 0.20 euros per share was paid on 7 December 2016 and the balance of 0.40 euros per share will be paid on the 14 June .

The Board of Directors will propose to the Annual General Meeting of Shareholders in 2018 a dividend of 0.65 euros per share for 2017, and plans to pay an interim dividend for 2017 of 0.25 euros per share in December. This dividend increase of 5 euro cents reflects the improvement in the Group's profitability, begun in 2015 and clearly confirmed by the results of 2016. It is also an expression of the Group's confidence in the continuation of this momentum and the constant search for the right balance between funding investments necessary for the development of the Group's operations, sharing value with employees, and providing returns to shareholders.

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*     *

Commenting on the 2016 results, Stéphane Richard, Chairman and CEO of Orange Group, said:

* EBITDA adjustments are described in appendix 6. Adjusted EBITDA is the new term for aggregate restated EBITDA; the definition of this indicator is unchanged.

** The method of calculating the adjusted ratio of net debt to Adjusted EBITDA from telecoms activities is described in appendix 4.

·    Quarterly data

* EBITDA adjustments are described in appendix 6. Adjusted EBITDA is the new term for aggregate restated EBITDA; the definition of this indicator is unchanged.

** Operating income from telecoms activities of the 4 quarter of 2016 reflects impairment of goodwill and fixed assets in the total amount of 805 million euros, mainly related to Poland, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Cameroon and Egypt.  

*

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The Board of Directors of Orange SA met on 22 February 2017 and examined the Group's financial statements.

The Group's statutory auditors audited those financial statements, and the audit reports relative to their certification are in the process of being issued.

More detailed information is available on the Orange website: www.orange.com

Revenues

The Orange Group had revenues of 40.918 billion euros in 2016, an increase of 0.6% (+249 million euros) on a comparable basis after the stabilisation observed in 2015 of -0.1% (-47 million euros). Fixed broadband services rose 5.2%, led by fibre and TV content in France and Spain, while mobile services increased 0.3% despite the impact of the reduction in revenues from national roaming in France and roaming price decreases in Europe.
In the 4 quarter of 2016, revenues were up 1.0% on a comparable basis, after rising 0.8% in the 3 quarter and 0.3% in the 1 half.
In France, fixed broadband services continued their steady climb (+4.9% in the 4 quarter), led by fibre and TV content. Mobile services were down 4.6% due in particular to the downturn in national roaming.
In the Europe zone, revenue growth accelerated, rising 4.5% in the 4 quarter after increases of 2.8% in the 3 quarter and 1.9% in the 2 quarter:

In Africa and the Middle East, growth slowed to 1.6% in the 4 quarter linked to the decline in services to operators and less favourable conditions in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
In the Enterprise segment, IT and integration services rose 3.9% in the 4 quarter, following on from the 3 quarter, led by security services (+26%) and the Cloud (+20%).

Customer base growth

In France, net additions of mobile contracts remained strong (131,000 in the 4 quarter), both for Orange offers (63,000) and for Sosh (68,000), while growth in fibre accelerated with 145,000 net additions for the quarter. Fibre had a total of 1.452 million customers at 31 December 2016.
In Spain, commercial momentum remained strong both in fixed broadband, with 199,000 net fibre additions for the quarter (1.610 million customers at 31 December 2016), and in mobile contracts, with 177,000 net additions.
In Poland, the growth of mobile contracts accelerated with 368,000 net additions in the 4 quarter. For the full year 2016, the contract base was up an additional 1.092 million customers, after the addition of 683,000 customers in 2015. In Belgium, mobile contracts rose as in previous quarters.  
In Africa and the Middle East, the mobile customer base was 120.7 million at 31 December 2016. It included the contribution from Burkina Faso (5.9 million customers) and Sierra Leone (1.5 million customers), both consolidated in the 4 quarter. On a comparable basis, net quarterly additions gradually improved, with 208,000 additional customers in the 4 quarter following 96,000 added in the 3 quarter. Orange Money had 28.9 million customers at 31 December 2016.
In all, the Group's mobile customer base was 201.7 million at 31 December 2016, an increase of 0.9% on a comparable basis. In particular, contracts (69.9 million customers) had sustained growth (+8.4% year on year), led by France and the Europe zone.
Fixed broadband (18.3 million customers) was up 3.5%. Fibre, with 3.3 million customers at 31 December 2016, grew very strongly (+74.9% year on year) and retail convergent offers counted 9.2 million customers (+10.2% year on year).
At the same time, TV services had a total of 8.5 million customers at 31 December 2016, compared with 7.9 million at 31 December 2015, a year-on-year increase of 6.9%.     

Adjusted EBITDA

The adjusted EBITDA of the Group was 12.682 billion euros in 2016, an increase of 1.3% (+158 million euros) on a comparable basis.
Adjusted EBITDA from telecoms activities was 12.694 billion euros in 2016, an increase of 1.3% (+164 million euros) on a comparable basis. The adjusted EBITDA margin for telecoms activities was 31.0%, an improvement of 0.2 percentage points in relation to 2015.
In the 4 quarter of 2016, adjusted EBITDA from telecoms activities was 3.184 billion euros, an increase of 4.8% on a comparable basis (+145 million euros) compared with the 4 quarter of 2015, and the adjusted EBITDA margin for telecoms activities was 30.3% (+1.1 percentage points).
The increase in adjusted EBITDA from telecoms activities in the 4 quarter was tied to: revenue growth; a reduction in labour expenses (with the average number of full-time equivalent employees falling 2.8% in the quarter); the effects of the Explore2020 operational efficiency plan, in particular with the reduction in overheads and distribution costs; and increased revenue from asset disposals linked with the property optimisation plan. Interconnection costs, content costs and the purchase of equipment for customers increased to support the revenue growth.

Operating income

The Orange Group had operating income of 4.077 billion euros in 2016. This includes 85 million euros of operating income from the activities of Orange Bank.
Operating income from telecoms activities was 3.992 billion euros, a decrease of 750 million euros compared with 2015 (on an historical basis). This decrease is mostly tied to goodwill impairment of 772 million euros, asset impairment of 207 million euros (mainly concerning Poland, Egypt, the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Cameroon), and to an increase of 263 million euros in amortisation and depreciation , partially offset by increased EBITDA from telecoms activities (+454 million euros).

Net income

The net income for the Orange Group was 3.263 billion euros in 2016, compared with 2.958 billion euros in 2015 (on an historical basis). The increase of 305 million euros between the two years is linked to the increase of 1.805 billion euros in net income from discontinued operations related to EE, partly offset by the decrease in operating income of 665 million euros, the net write-down of BT shares of 533 million euros, and the increase of 321 million euros in corporate income tax.

CAPEX

The Group's CAPEX (6.971 billion euros in 2016) rose 3.0% on a comparable basis. CAPEX in telecoms activities (6.956 billion euros) was up 2.8%, and CAPEX as a proportion of revenues from telecoms activities was 17.0% (+0.4 percentage points compared with 2015).
Investments in fibre increased 10% on a comparable basis. This was principally related to France, Spain and Poland. A total of 20.3 million households had fibre connectivity across the Group at 31 December 2016 (+57% year on year), of which 9.6 million were in Spain, 6.9 million in France, 2.0 million in Romania (following the cross-network-sharing agreement with Telekom Romania), 1.5 million in Poland and 350,000 in Slovakia.
Investments in very high-speed mobile services continued, following on from the previous year. The 4G coverage rate at 31 December 2016 was 88% of the population in France, 90% in Spain, 99% in Poland, 99.6% in Belgium, 80% in Romania and Slovakia, and 97% in Moldova. In France and Spain, investments also sought to improve service quality for recreational areas and in transportation. At the same time, 4G+ deployment continued in France and in the other European countries.
In Africa and the Middle East, 3G is deployed in the 21 countries of that segment, with 4G commercially available in 10 of them (Botswana, Cameroon, Côte d'Ivoire, Guinea Bissau, Jordan, Liberia, Morocco, Mauritius, Senegal and Tunisia). Moreover, Orange Egypt announced on 14 October that it had acquired a 4G licence.
In the area of Internet of Things (IoT), a dedicated network based on LoRa technology is being deployed in France and already covers 18 urban areas (120 towns). 
Substantial CAPEX is devoted to information systems and service platforms, with the datacentre optimisation programme in France, investment related to the integration of Jazztel in Spain, and ongoing projects to improve the customer experience in Africa and the Middle East.
Capital spending on customer equipment also increased, with the launch of the New Livebox and its TV decoder in France last May.
Upgrades to the stores continue. At 31 December 2016, the Group had 157 stores based on the new Smart Store concept, 65 of which are in France, 79 in the other European countries, and 13 in Africa and the Middle East.

Changes in asset portfolio

In January 2016, Orange and Deutsche Telekom finalised the sale of 100% of EE, their joint venture in the United Kingdom, to BT Group. Upon closing of the sale, Orange received 4.5 billion euros in cash and a 4% interest in BT Group.
In Africa, the Group reinforced its presence with acquisitions in four countries in 2016: Cellcom in Liberia, Tigo in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and entities of the Bharti group in Burkina Faso and Sierra Leone. The Group also announced 5 April its acquisition of an interest in Africa Internet Group, the e-commerce leader in Africa. On 10 June 2016, Orange completed the sale of its entire 70% interest in Telkom Kenya to Helios Investment Partners.
In the Europe zone, on 18 October 2016, Orange completed the acquisition of 100% of the capital of Sun Communications, the leading supplier of paid television in Moldova which will enable Orange to propose broadband convergent offers on the Moldovan market.
In the area of enterprise services, the Group announced on 15 April 2016 that it had acquired 100% of Lexsi, a European leader in cybersecurity and a specialist in threat intelligence services. Orange also announced on 20 July 2016 the acquisition of Log'in Consultants which specialises in integration services for workstation virtualisation.
In October 2016, Orange acquired 65% of Groupama Banque which was renamed Orange Bank on 16 January 2017. The Orange Bank online banking offer will be available in France in the 1 half of 2017.
Over the course of 2016, Orange Digital Ventures, the Group's investment firm, acquired interests in five promising start-ups, in line with the goals of the Essentiels2020 plan: SecBi, PayJoy, BandwidthX, KissKissBankBank and Jumia.

Net financial debt

The Orange Group had total net financial debt of 24.444 billion euros at 31 December 2016, a reduction of 2.108 billion euros compared with 31 December 2015, due in particular to the sale of EE in January 2016, for which Orange received 4.481 billion euros net in cash and a 4% interest in BT Group.
The Group also pursued its policy of selective acquisitions for a net total (acquisitions minus other disposals) of 1.191 billion euros, in particular with the acquisition of operations in Burkina Faso, Sierra Leone, Liberia, the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Moldova. In addition to this is added the net effect of the acquisition of a majority interest in Groupama Banque (now Orange Bank). Additionally, a total of 1.800 billion euros was paid for telecommunication licences in 2016 and concerned in particular the 4G licenses in Poland and Egypt and the 700 MHz licences in France.
The ratio of net financial debt to adjusted EBITDA from telecoms activities was 1.93x at 31 December 2016, versus 2.01x at 31 December 2015. It is in line with the target of a ratio of net debt to adjusted EBITDA from telecoms activities of about 2x in the medium term.
Items related to the change in net financial debt and to the ratio of net debt to adjusted EBITDA from telecoms activities are presented in appendix 4.

France

from France declined a modest 0.8% in the 4 quarter of 2016 after falling 0.6% in the 3 quarter on a comparable basis.
Mobile services declined 4.6% in the 4 quarter after falling 3.8% in the 3 quarter, marked by a decline of national roaming revenues, as well as the impact of roaming price reductions in Europe. SIM-only offers continued their rapid growth and represented close to two thirds (65%) of retail contracts at 31 December 2016 (+13 percentage points in one year).
Open convergent offers and Sosh offers continued to grow strongly, with 7.830 million retail Open customers at 31 December 2016 (+11.2% year on year) and 3.277 million Sosh customers (+11.5% year on year). There were 20.775 million contract customers at 31 December 2016 (up 2.5% year on year), with 4G customers (11.3 million) making up 54% of that customer base.
Fixed services rose 1.4% in the 4 quarter of 2016, after climbing 0.7% in the 3 quarter. The growth of fixed broadband services continued to be strong (+4.9% in the 4 quarter after rising 5.8% in the 3 quarter), led by an increase in the customer base and a rise in ARPU. The fixed broadband customer base was 11.151 million subscribers at 31 December 2016 (+3.9% year on year). It included 1.452 million fibre subscribers, up 51% year on year. Fixed broadband ARPU recorded growth of 0.8% at 31 December 2016, reflecting the growing share of fibre and premium offers (Play and Jet offers) and the development of TV content offers. Convergent offers represented 57% of the retail fixed broadband customer base at 31 December 2016 (+3 percentage points in one year).
Fixed services to carriers also increased in the 4 quarter (+5.2%) with fibre deployment, increased ADSL revenues (accesses and collection of data traffic) and infrastructure services. The downward trend in traditional telephony was 12.2% in the 4 quarter.

for France increased 0.5% in 2016 on a comparable basis, and the adjusted EBITDA rate (37.6%) improved by 0.6 percentage points compared with 2015. The decline in revenues was offset by a reduction of commercial expenses (in particular due to a streamlining of the distribution network), and the reduction of labour expenses and overheads achieved in connection with the Explore2020 operational efficiency plan.

in France climbed 10.5% in 2016, and was equivalent to 18.0% of revenues (+1.9 percentage points compared with 2015), led by a sharp increase in fibre investment meaning a total of 6.9 million connectable households at 31 December 2016 (+1.8 million households in one year). Substantial investment in very high-speed mobile continued: 88% of the population had 4G coverage at 31 December 2016 (+8 percentage points year on year), and 43% of 4G sites were equipped with 4G+ at that date.

Europe

growth from the Europe zone accelerated in the 4 quarter of 2016, rising 4.5% after the 2.8% increase of the 3 quarter, on a comparable basis.
Across the Europe zone, revenues from mobile services followed the trend of previous quarters, increasing 3.1% in the 4 quarter of 2016 on a comparable basis. There continued to be strong momentum in commercial contract activity for the third consecutive quarter, with 726,000 net sales in the 4 quarter. The total contract customer base was 33.6 million customers at 31 December 2016, an increase of 6.9% year on year, representing close to two thirds (65.9%) of the total mobile customer base at that date (+3.5 percentage points year on year).
Fixed broadband revenues rose 7.7% in the 4 quarter after rising 4.8% in the 3 quarter (on a comparable basis), reflecting the rapid development of fibre and TV content offers in Spain. The fixed broadband customer base was 6.2 million customers at 31 December 2016 (+3.0% year on year), including 1.8 million fibre customers, mainly in Spain. At 31 December 2016, fixed broadband also included customers of convergent offers recently marketed via cable in Belgium and via fibre in Romania.

for the Europe zone rose 4.2% in 2016 on a comparable basis and the adjusted EBITDA margin rate was 27.9% (+0.5 percentage point compared with 2015). The increase in revenues and decrease in labour expenses were partly offset by higher external purchases, in particular content costs, commercial expenses, and interconnection and connectivity costs.

in the Europe zone was 1.960 billion euros in 2016, equivalent to 18.6% of revenues, slightly down compared with the previous year. The roll-out of mobile 4G and 4G+ services continued and investments in fibre remained high, principally in Spain and Poland.

Spain

growth remained very high in Spain in the 4 quarter of 2016, rising 7.9% after the 7.8% increase of the 3 quarter (on a comparable basis).
The growth was principally due to the development of mobile services, which increased 7.5% in the 4 quarter of 2016, and particularly the enrichment of mobile offers including the deployment of 4G. There were 7.9 million 4G customers at 31 December 2016 (up 1.5x year on year) and the contract customer base also continued to grow (11.431 million customers at 31 December 2016, up 3.6% year on year). Mobile services supplied to other carriers also increased sharply, led by the MVNOs and network sharing. 
Fixed services rose 5.4% in the 4 quarter of 2016, continuing the trend seen in the previous three quarters. Fixed broadband revenue growth accelerated, rising 10.7% in the 4 quarter after a 7.8% increase in the 3 quarter. Fixed broadband had 3.940 million customers at 31 December 2016 (+5.0% year on year), and ARPU rose 7.5% following the rapid development of fibre and TV services. Fibre had 1.610 million customers at 31 December 2016 (up 2.0x in one year) and represented 41% of the fixed broadband customer base at that date (+19 percentage points in one year). TV services increased sharply, with 507,000 customers at 31 December 2016 (up 1.7x year on year) and convergent offers represented 84.5% of the retail fixed broadband customer base at 31 December 2016 (+1.8 percentage points year on year).

for Spain rose 13.4% in 2016 on a comparable basis and the adjusted EBITDA margin rate (26.9%) improved 1.8 percentage points compared with 2015. Both benefitted from strong revenue growth and substantial synergies related to the consolidation of Jazztel, partially offset by increased commercial expenses and content purchases.

in Spain was 1.086 billion euros and was equivalent to 21.7% of revenues. The deployment of very high-speed services continued: at 31 December 2016, there were 9.6 million connectable households (+2.8 million year on year) and 90% of the population had 4G mobile coverage (+6 percentage points year on year).

Poland

from Poland rose 1.9% in the 4 quarter of 2016 after falling 3.9% in the 3 quarter on a comparable basis. The 4 quarter benefitted from a very strong increase in mobile equipment sales (linked to faster development of sales on the instalment payment plan) and from a recovery of ICT .
Mobile services declined 3.4% in the 4 quarter after falling 3.1% in the 3 quarter. Commercial momentum remained strong in the 4 quarter with 368,000 net contract sales, after 309,000 in the 3 quarter. The contract customer base rose 13% year on year (+1.1 million net additions) and there were 4.3 million 4G users at 31 December 2016 (up 2.1x year on year). The prepaid contract customer base posted a net loss of 1.0 million customers over the year partly related to migrations to contracts, and partly due to the recording of customer identities, which has become mandatory and began last July, though this had a limited impact on the revenue trend.  
Fixed services declined 7.4% in the 4 quarter after falling 8.6% in the 3 quarter. Most of the decrease was related to traditional fixed services (fixed telephony and carrier services). Fixed broadband also declined (-6.8% in the 4 quarter) due to a decrease in ADSL customers and to ARPU erosion. Nonetheless, the customer base trend improved in the 4 quarter with a significant increase in net sales of very high-speed VDSL offers and fibre (+56,000 compared with +44,000 in the 3 quarter). At 31 December 2016, very high-speed offers had a total of 492,000 customers (including 88,000 fibre subscribers), an increase of 65% year on year, and there were 566,000 convergent offer customers on the retail market, up 23% year on year.  

for Poland declined 10.2% in 2016 on a comparable basis with the adjusted EBITDA rate (27.4%) down 2.4 percentage points. The decreased revenues and increased interconnection costs and commercial expenses were partially offset by a reduction of labour expenses and of subcontracted operations and technical maintenance.

in Poland rose 2.4% in 2016 on a comparable basis and was the equivalent of 17.2% of revenues (+0.8 percentage points in relation to 2015). The increased CAPEX was linked to the deployment of very high-speed fixed and mobile services. At 31 December 2016, a total of 1.5 million connectable households (2.1x in one year) and 99% of the population had 4G coverage (+15 percentage points year on year).

Belgium & Luxembourg

were stable in Belgium and Luxembourg in the 4 quarter (-0.2%). Increases from mobile and fixed services were offset by decreased mobile equipment sales.
Mobile services grew 2.0% in the 4 quarter, despite the impact of international roaming price cuts in Europe. The mobile contract customer base (2.345 million customers at 31 December 2016) grew 1.9% year on year, and quarterly ARPU from contracts in Belgium rose 1.8%. The MVNO customer base had 2.043 million customers at 31 December 2016 (+14.3% year on year).
Fixed services rose 3.1% in the 4 quarter, led by the recent marketing of convergent offers in Belgium. At 31 December 2016, Orange Belgium had 33,400 Internet and IPTV convergent offer customers, with 56,700 associated mobile contracts.

in Belgium and Luxembourg increased 14.4% in 2016. Excluding the impact of the pylon tax agreement with Wallonia, adjusted EBITDA was 300 million euros in 2016, an improvement of 1.1% compared with 2015. The decrease in interconnection costs and network and IT expenses and a reduction of commissions, labour expenses and bad debts offset the increased costs of advertising and promotion, and connectivity costs (cable network accesses) linked to the launch of convergent offers.

in Belgium and Luxembourg was 168 million euros in 2016. Investments in fixed broadband services (IT and customer equipment) increased in connection with the deployment of convergent offers on cable. High investment in 4G+ continued, and at 31 December 2016, 99.6% of the population had 4G coverage and 54% had 4G+ coverage.

Central European countries

in the Central European countries rose 2.6% in the 4 quarter of 2016, after rising 0.8% in the 3 quarter (on a comparable basis). The trend in the 4 quarter improved across all three countries:

The mobile customer base of the Central European countries was 15.1 million at 31 December 2016. Contracts (8.2 million customers) increased 4.2% and represented 54.1% of the mobile customer base (+2.4 percentage points in one year). The 4G mobile customer base doubled in one year to 3.2 million at 31 December 2016 (41% of the contracts, excluding machine-to-machine). The fixed broadband customer base had 212,000 customers at that same date, including 123,000 very high-speed customers.

for the Central European countries rose 0.6% in 2016 on a comparable basis. The revenue growth was partly offset by increased interconnection costs and commercial expenses (purchases of mobile handsets).

in the Central European countries was 251 million euros in 2016, the majority of which was related to mobile services, in particular the continued deployment of 4G+ in Romania and of 4G in all three countries. In Romania, the agreement signed at the end of 2015 with Telekom Romania for the use of its fibre network in urban areas gave access to 2.0 million connectable households, enabling the marketing of convergent offers.

Africa & Middle East

in the Africa & Middle East segment grew 1.6% in the 4 quarter of 2016, after rising 2.5% in the 3 quarter, on a comparable basis. The slowing of growth in the 4 quarter was linked to a decrease in services to operators and less favourable conditions in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
In parallel, the growth of mobile data services remained strong, reaching 31% in the 4 quarter, while revenues from Orange Money were up 58%. Orange Money had 28.9 million customers at 31 December 2016, including 8.4 million active customers.
The principal contributors to revenue growth in the 4 quarter were Mali, Burkina Faso, Guinea and Côte d'Ivoire.
The mobile customer base in the Africa and Middle East segment totalled 120.7 million customers at 31 December 2016, compared with 113.5 million at 30 September. The increase of 7.2 million customers in the 4 quarter was linked to the consolidation of Burkina Faso (5.9 million customers) and of Sierra Leone (1.5 million). On a comparable basis, the mobile customer base of the Africa and Middle East segment was down 0.3% year on year. It was impacted throughout 2016 by an unprecedented level of disconnections linked to the strengthened requirements regarding the verification of customer identities in most countries.

for the Africa and Middle East segment was down 1.0% in 2016 on a comparable basis, and the adjusted EBITDA margin (31.6%) was down 1.2 percentage points.
Excluding the impact of the devaluation of the Egyptian pound on operating expenses (-32 million euros), the adjusted EBITDA margin for the 2 half remained stable at 31.6%, despite the slowing of revenue growth and rising taxes in some countries.

in the Africa and Middle East segment remained sustained (962 million euros in 2016), particularly related to entities brought into the scope of consolidation during 2016, and due to the development of mobile data networks. However, CAPEX declined 4.2% on a comparable basis following the substantial investments of previous years, particularly in Morocco and Jordan.

Enterprise

from the Enterprise segment were stable (-0.1%) in the 4 quarter of 2016 on a comparable basis, after the 1.0% increase over the first nine months of the year. Growth in IT and integration services offset a decline in voice services and data services. Full year 2016 revenues rose 0.7% after falling 0.9% in 2015.
IT and integration services rose 3.9% in the 4 quarter, following on from an increase of 4.5% in the first nine months of the year. Security services climbed 26% over the quarter, and Cloud revenues rose 20%.
Voice services declined 0.6% in the 4 quarter. The decline of traditional telephony was partially offset by an increase in voice-over-IP and customer relations services (contact number services).
Data services fell 2.8% in the 4 quarter, in part due to a decline of television broadcasting (-11.3%). Revenues from IPVPN subscribers fell 1.5% over the quarter but increased 1.3% for the full year. There were 352,000 IPVPN subscribers at 31 December 2016, up 0.9% year on year.

for the Enterprise segment rose 8.0% in 2016 on a comparable basis, and the adjusted EBITDA margin (15.9%) improved 1.1 percentage points compared with the previous year. In addition to the revenue growth, external purchases were reduced in connection with the decline of activity on the legacy networks in France and actions taken to improve profitability internationally.

in the Enterprise segment increased 5.1% on a comparable basis, related to IT services: new product development, investment in network virtualisation and migration of added-value services over IP.

International Carriers & Shared Services

from the International Carriers and Shared Services segment fell 2.2% on a comparable basis in 2016, to 1.812 billion euros. The decline in voice services to international operators was partially offset by the growth of Orange Marine (submarine cable-laying and maintenance).

for 2016 was down 52 million euros compared with the previous year on a comparable basis, reflecting increased CAPEX on the development of the Orange brand (change of brand in Belgium, Egypt and Morocco; sponsorship of EURO 2016), partially offset by increased revenues from property asset disposals connected with the property portfolio optimisation plan.

amounted to 277 million euros in 2016, a decrease of 75 million euros on a comparable basis, following the sharp increase in 2015 (+127 million euros) generated by investments in submarine cables and projects to refurbish and upgrade the property portfolio, in particular the creation of the Orange Gardens eco-campus for Innovation.

Orange Bank

for Orange Bank, consolidated from 4 October 2016 (three months of activity), represented a loss of 12 million euros in 2016, a net banking income (NBI) of 21 million euros and a bank loan cost of risk of 2 million euros.

from Orange Bank was positive at 85 million euros, including a 97 million-euro profit related to Orange's acquisition of a majority interest in Groupama Banque (now called Orange Bank).

Orange Bank (15 million euros in 2016) related to preparation for the commercial launch of the business, scheduled for the 1 half of 2017.



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