S&P downgrades Telkom

Cape Town - 120807 - Telkom SA was fined R449 million by the Competition Tribunal on Tuesday (7th August) for abusing its dominance in the telecommunications market. PICTURE: DAVID RITCHIE

Cape Town - 120807 - Telkom SA was fined R449 million by the Competition Tribunal on Tuesday (7th August) for abusing its dominance in the telecommunications market. PICTURE: DAVID RITCHIE

Published Dec 4, 2012

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Telkom received a downgrading by rating agency Standard & Poor's on Tuesday.

The agency downgraded Telkom's long-term rating from BBB to BBB- citing its current business problems and poor profitability.

“We think the continued decline in fixed line and losses in mobile will result in further profit erosion for South African telecommunications provider Telkom,” the agency said.

Last month, Telkom chief executive Nombulelo Moholi resigned from the fixed-line giant. Her resignation was accompanied by that of board director Neo Phakama Dongwana. Board chairman Lazarus Zim announced his retirement from the board in September.

Opposition parties called for Telkom to be privatised after the exodus.

The government is the JSE-listed company's largest shareholder, with a 39.8 percent stake. The Public Investment Corporation has a 10.9 percent stake.

“The downgrade reflects our expectations of Telkom's gradual and sustained weakening of operating performance. We believe that the likely steady revenue growth from its fixed-broadband and mobile services are unlikely to offset, over the next two years, the sharp downward trend in its core fixed-line voice revenues.”

The agency's view was based on the ongoing fixed-to-mobile substitution trend and rising pricing pressures from mounting competition, as well as a likely reduction in leased line revenues.

Standard & Poor's said the downward trend in Telkom's profitability in fixed-line voice traffic, its high fixed-cost base and operating losses for mobile operations would likely affect profitability over the next two years.

“This, combined with a projected surge in capital expenditures, could result in sustained, very weak, free cash flow generation.”

It expected a low- to mid-single-digit decline in sales from Telkom's core fixed-line business.

“Nevertheless, we expect the group to preserve robust credit measures...” the agency said.

Telkom could receive further lower ratings in the event of a more significant weakening in the company's business risk profile. - Sapa

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