12:15 12.05.2006 | All news from "Tech News and Articles"
Delay 'handicaps' Deutsche Telekom
The admission puts pressure on Kai-Uwe Ricke, chief executive, to come up with other ideas for spurring growth at Europeð# largest telecoms company.
Court action by minority shareholders, who claim the group is under-paying for the buy-back of the unit it floated six years ago, proved a drag on first-quarter results as DT sought a remedy for fixed-line woes.
In the past year the company lost 2.7m, or 4.8 per cent, of fixed-line and broadband customers, leaving it with 53.9m subscribers at the end of March. Mobile customer numbers rose by 8.7m, or 11 per cent, to 86.6m, with US growth strongest. Deutsche Telekom said sales gains at T-Online could not counter the decline at the T-Com unit. Combined sales fell 6.1 per cent to òæ.2bn ($8bn), while adjusted earnings before interest, tax and other items fell 6.8 per cent to òâ.3bn.
Mr Ricke said the unitsðÐdelayed merger, slated for 2005 and still blocked by appeals, meant DT was ðandicappedðÐwhen it came to offering the ðundlingðÐof telephone and internet services that customers were demanding.
On top of that, fierce competition for internet customers meant that T-Onlineð# adjusted earnings fell 45 per cent from òè8m last year to òä3m. Only better-than-expected results at DTð# T-Mobile wireless unit helped quarterly group sales record a 4 per cent rise to òá4.8bn. Adjusted earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation rose 2.7 per cent to òåbn.
Spurred by strong growth in the US T-Mobile revenues in its 11 countries rose by 12.3 per cent to òç.6bn as adjusted earnings before interest and other items rose 8 per cent to òâ.3bn.
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