YoY % 1Q03
Transcription
YoY % 1Q03
Investor Day Agenda Date Location June, 23 20:00 Palácio de Xabregas June, 24 8:30 am Carlton Palace R. Jau, 54 Lisbon Cocktails “Madredeus” Concert Dinner with Management Registration Group Overview & Strategy (Miguel Horta e Costa, CEO) Financial Overview (Zeinal Bava, CFO) Wireline Businesses (Carlos Vasconcellos Cruz, Exec. Officer and Wireline CEO) Coffee TMN (Iriarte Esteves, Executive Officer and TMN CEO) PTM (Zeinal Bava, PT Multimedia CEO) Cash Cost Reduction & Centralized Service Platforms (Paulo Fernandes, Exec. Officer and IT CEO) Lunch Vivo (Francisco Padinha, Vivo CEO) Wrap-up & Outlook (Zeinal Bava, CFO) Closing Remarks (Miguel Horta e Costa, CEO) Q&A´s End of Session 20:30 21:15 22:15 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30 – 13:30 13:45 14:15 14:45 15:00 16:00 2 Group Overview & Strategy Miguel Horta e Costa Group CEO Safe Harbour All the presentations in this Investor Day contains statements which constitute forward looking statements within the meaning of the U.S. Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These statements are based on the beliefs and assumptions of our management and on information available to management at the time such statements were made. Forward-looking statements include information concerning possible or assumed future results of our operations, earnings, industry conditions, demand and pricing for our products and other aspects of our business. These statements are not guarantees of future performance and involve risks and uncertainties that are difficult to predict. Further, certain forward looking statements are based upon assumptions as to future events that may not prove to be accurate. Therefore, actual outcomes and results may differ materially from the plans, objectives, expectations, estimates and intentions expressed or implied in such forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements speak only as of the date they are made, and we do not undertake any obligation to update them in light of new information or future developments or to provide reasons why actual results may differ. You are cautioned not to place undue reliance on any forwardlooking statements. You are encouraged to consult our annual report on Form 20-F, as well as our current filings made on Form 6-K, which are on file with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. 2 The Management Team Miguel Horta e Costa Zeinal Bava Carlos Vasconcellos Cruz Iriarte Esteves Paulo Fernandes Corporate Functions CEO CFO HR & Marketing R&D Business Development Operating Media Multimedia Wireline Mobile IT 3 Program June, 24 8:30 am Carlton Palace R. Jau, 54 Lisbon Registration Group Overview & Strategy (Miguel Horta e Costa, CEO) Financial Overview (Zeinal Bava, CFO) Wireline Businesses (Carlos Vasconcellos Cruz, Exec. Officer and Wireline CEO) Coffee TMN (Iriarte Esteves, Executive Officer and TMN CEO) PTM (Zeinal Bava, PT Multimedia CEO) Cash Cost Reduction & Centralized Service Platforms (Paulo Fernandes, Exec. Officer and IT CEO) Lunch Vivo (Francisco Padinha, Vivo CEO) Wrap-up & Outlook (Zeinal Bava, CFO) Closing Remarks (Miguel Horta e Costa, CEO) Q&A´s End of Session 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30 – 13:30 13:45 14:15 14:45 15:00 16:00 4 2002 Wrap-Up Profound change in Corporate Governance Independent Directors on the Board Restructuring of PT into flexible business units with decision making at Executive Board level Creation of Vivo in Brazil Impeccable operating and financial execution 5 2002 Goals and Achievements 2002 Year End Targets Status • Maintain growth momentum 9 • Reduce Capex • Maximise cash flow to equity holders 9 9 • Turn-around at PT Multimedia 9 • Drive JV in Brazil to maximise returns whilst capping investments 9 • Increase dividends to shareholders 9 6 Highlights ∆ 01/02 Highlight Subscribers +14% 64% are mobile Revenues -2.5% 73% is non-fixed telephone service EBITDA +5% Non-PTC businesses up +18% Capex -41% Sustainable capex to sales ratio EBITDA minus Capex +80% Increased contribution from mobile Net Debt -26% Robust Balance Sheet is a strategic competitive advantage 7 Mission Remain the leading provider of telecoms and multimedia services in Portugal and achieve a clear status for world-class efficiency and quality of service Retain wireless leadership combined with a superior return on capital in Brazil 8 Service Reach Telecoms Multimedia Voice Pay TV ADSL Data Broadband Cable Corporate Solutions Cinema Exhibition & Distribution Video & Games Distribution Media Brazil: Mobile Portugal 9 Products and Brands Segment Wireline Domestic Mobile Multimedia Company Products Market Position Share Voice & Data #1 92% Corporate Solutions #1 80% Sapo ADSL #1 80% www.sapo.pt #1 45% Voice & Data #1 52% Pay TV Cinema Video & Games Newspapers News Radio #1 #1 #1 #1 #1 84% 10 Challenges Weather the current economic environment Drive economies of scale through our businesses Integrate services across the group to increase revenues and reduce churn Manage regulatory threat 11 Strategic Objectives Position PT as a fully integrated provider of telecoms and multimedia Retain leadership and a strong market share of best clients in Portugal and in Brazilian mobile Be in the Top #3 of the most efficient Telecommunications Operators in Europe within 3 years Attract and retain the best human talent available 12 Operational Initiatives Revenue • Wireline: Traffic Stimulation and Customer Retention • TMN: Traffic Stimulation, Service Development, Market Share and Loyalty Cash Costs • Integrated Back- Office • Centralised Purchasing • Headcount Reduction • Capex Control • Cable: ARPU Growth through penetration of premium services • Vivo: Nationwide Player Culture & Human Resources • One Company Culture Financial • ROIC • Career and Talent Management • Return Excess Cash to Shareholders • Performance Based Compensation Schemes • Maintain Credit Rating Investment Grade 13 Organised for Success • • • • Integrated Products & Services Wireline Holding PT Contact PT Pro PT Compras PT SI PT Inovação PT Meios TMN Cable & Entertainment PT Corporate PT Prime Internet Unit Voice Unit Media Strategy, Financial Reporting, Planning & Control, Marketing Call Centers Back Office Integration Purchasing IT Integration Technology and platforms development Media Buying 14 Strategic Management Focus Top Line stimulation Cost reduction Customer loyalty and churn reduction Capex control and cash-flow generation Maximize shareholder returns through debt reduction and cash repatriation 15 Financial Overview Zeinal Bava Group CFO Financials Highlights € million 1Q03 ∆ YoY% Revenues 1,312 -8.1 Domestic demand and BR$ devaluation Operating Costs excl. D&A 793 -8.9 Focus on addressable costs albeit worsening PRBs EBITDA 520 -6.9 Growth of 7.5% at constant BR$ EBITDA margin (%) 39.6 +0.5pp Interest Costs 32.9 -15.8 85 -5.9 64% growth excluding curtailment and BR$ Capex 122 -23.1 Sustainable capital allocation management EBITDA minus Capex 398 -0.5 3,834 -25.7 Net Income Net Debt Key Notes Margin performance despite top line Cost of debt of 3.4% and 1.6% excluding Brazil Ongoing focus and used to reduce debt 1.8 net debt to annualised EBITDA 2 Revenues Wireline 1Q03 ∆ YoY (€ million) (%) 541 -6.0 Revenues Structure Multimedia Vivo TMN 307 +2.3 VIVO 243 -32.6 Multimedia 163 +7.7 58 +41.0 Other 12.5% Other 4.4% 18.5% Wireline TMN 41.2% 23.4% TOTAL 1,312 -8.1 3 Group Revenues Overview Exchange Other & Rate BR$/€ +5.4% Consolidation Multimedia (Constant BR$) +11.7 Vivo 1,429 Wireline -30.0 TMN +0.3 +76.8 +18.7 -194.0 -8.1% € million 1,312 1Q02 1Q03 4 Revenues Drivers – Wireline (non-consolidated) MOU – € 3.5 M 613.3 Line Loss -13.5 Net Revenues – € 0.3 M ARPM – € 6.0 M -4.9% F2F F2M -9.5 ADSL +7.8 Other -5.3 583.3 € million -9.5 1Q02 1Q03 5 Revenues Drivers – TMN (non-consolidated) 491 thousand net adds Growth of 12.9% of av. base Subs MOU Growth Dilution -23.4 +41.3 352.4 Billed ARPM Terminat. +6.0 Other -20.0 -3.0 +0.1% Sales -0.6 352.7 127.7 min. in 1Q02 118.4 min. in 1Q03 1Q02 € million Decline of 7.3% 1Q03 6 Revenues Drivers – Vivo * 1,771 thousand net adds +12.4% Growth of 17.6% of av. base Subs ARPU -138 1,618 +284 Sales 1,818 +54 BR$ 41 in 1Q02 BR$ 37 in 1Q03 1Q02 * 100% of Vivo (non-consolidated) BR$ million Decline of 8.5% 1Q03 7 Revenues Drivers – Multimedia (non-consolidated) Product Sales + € 5.2 M Pay-to-basic +7.2pp Video Games - € 3.8 M +14.7% Premium ARPU +14.6% Other 163.5 +5.7 € million 142.6 Pay TV Subs +6.7 Broadband Subs Advert. Pay TV -2.1 +7.2 ARPU +3.4 1Q02* * Pro-forma figures excluding PTM.com and Deltapress 1Q02 reported figure was € 151.8 million implicating a 1Q03 YoY growth of 7.7% (€ 11.7 milliion) 1Q03 8 Operating Costs Overview 1Q03 ∆ YoY (€ million) (%) Wireline 307 -4.6 TMN 153 0.0 VIVO 143 -35.3 Opex Structure Multimedia 17.2% Other 6.8% Vivo 18.0% Multimedia Other TOTAL ex- D&A 136 +2.3 54 +28.6 793 -8.9 Wireline 38.7% TMN 19.3% 9 Operating Costs – Wages and Salaries 1Q03 Struct. Wireline (€ million) (%) • • 167 21.0 Post Retirement Benefits 55 6.9 • • Telecommunication Costs 148 18.6 Costs of Products Sold 92 11.6 Marketing and Publicity 27 3.4 Provision for Doubtful Rec. 25 3.1 223 28.1 56 793 Wages and Salaries Other G&A Other Opex excl – D&A Amounted to € 79 M, representing 47.6% of Group total Decreased 4.3% in the 1Q03 on the back of 425 redundancies ≈ 1,500 staff reduction planned for year 2003 ≈ € 45 million annualised savings TMN • • • • Amounted to € 13 M Increased 17.1% in the 1Q03 as UMTS no longer capitalized No new staff Wage increase indexed to inflation 7.3 • • • Contributed with € 15 M Decreased 27.3% in the 1Q03 pro-forma Redundancies of 444 employees since launch 100 Multimedia Vivo • • • Amounted to € 21 M Decreased 8.3% in the 1Q03 Shift in staff profile to enhance QoS 10 Operating Costs – PRBs 1Q03 Struct. (€ million) (%) 167 21.0 Post Retirement Benefits 55 6.9 Telecommunication Costs 148 18.6 Costs of Products Sold 92 11.6 Marketing and Publicity 27 3.4 Provision for Doubtful Rec. 25 3.1 223 28.1 56 7.3 793 100 Wages and Salaries Other G&A Other Opex excl – D&A Wireline • • • • >99% is wireline business Amounted to € 54 M Increased by € 9 M or 19.7% in the 1Q03 Full year 2003 PRBs will be ≈ € 210 M, comprised of: • Interest cost: € 110 M For correct analysis, should be reclassified as a financial cost as related to unfunded pension fund • • Service cost: € 30 M Amortization of actuarial gains/losses: € 70 M 11 Operating Costs – Telecoms Costs 1Q03 Struct. Wireline (€ million) (%) • • 167 21.0 • 55 6.9 Telecommunication Costs 148 18.6 Costs of Products Sold 92 11.6 Marketing and Publicity 27 3.4 Provision for Doubtful Rec. 25 3.1 223 28.1 56 7.3 • 793 100 Multimedia Wages and Salaries Post Retirement Benefits Other G&A Other Opex excl – D&A Amounted to € 114 M, representing 77.4% of Group total Decreased 8.5% in the 1Q03 due to lower volumes and fixed-to-mobile interconnection fees Market share of TMN is key to reduce costs further due to network effect TMN • • • Amounted to € 74 M on a stand alone basis Decreased 13.7% in the 1Q03 due to lower mobile-tomobile interconnection fees PTC / TMN traffic stimulation is key focus Vivo • • Impacted by migration to SMP Amounted to € 6 M on a stand alone basis But 95% disappear on consolidation 12 Operating Costs – COGS 1Q03 Struct. (€ million) (%) 167 21.0 Post Retirement Benefits 55 6.9 Telecommunication Costs 148 18.6 Costs of Products Sold 92 11.6 Marketing and Publicity 27 3.4 Provision for Doubtful Rec. 25 3.1 223 28.1 56 7.3 793 100 Wages and Salaries Other G&A Other Opex excl – D&A Wireline • • Amounted to € 7 M on a stand alone basis Increased 7.1% in the 1Q03 due to higher sales TMN • • Amounted to € 35 M on a stand alone basis Decreased 10.1% in the 1Q03 due to lower sales and subsidization of handsets Vivo • Subsidization of 10.5% versus 15% in 2002 Multimedia • • Amounted to € 14 M on a stand alone basis Decreased 31.5% in the 1Q03 due to lower sales and lower price of the cable modem 13 Operating Costs – Marketing and Provisions 1Q03 Struct. (€ million) (%) Marketing and Publicity Wages and Salaries Post Retirement Benefits Telecommunication Costs 167 21.0 55 6.9 148 18.6 Costs of Products Sold 92 11.6 Marketing and Publicity 27 3.4 Provisions (Doubtful Rec. and Other) 25 3.1 Other G&A Other Opex excl – D&A 223 28.1 56 7.3 793 100 • • Low marketing costs a reflection of reduction in unit costs of GPR’s May need to reinforce marketing going forward Provisions (Doubtful Receivables and Other) • • Policy in line with best practices Despite difficult economic environment, provisions have not been growing as a result of a strict receivables policy: • % of Revenues 2001 2002 1Q03 2.3% 2.4% 1.9% 14 Operating Costs – Other G&A 1Q03 Struct. (€ million) Wages and Salaries (%) 167 21.0 Post Retirement Benefits 55 6.9 Telecommunication Costs 148 18.6 Costs of Products Sold 92 11.6 Marketing and Publicity 27 3.4 Provision for Doubtful Rec. 25 3.1 223 28.1 56 7.3 793 100 Other G&A Other Opex excl – D&A • PT Pro • PT Compras • PT SI • PT Inovação • PT Meios • PT Contact Back Office Integration Purchasing IT Integration Technology development Media Buying Call Centers 15 Revenues and Cost Structure Domestic Revenues Profile 17.0% 14.9% 3.3% 52.2% 5.3% 50.2% 6.8% 30.8% 34.8% 2001 1Q03 Cost Profile 26.2% Staff Costs 43.6% Variable 17.4% 30.2% Other 1995 2002 Other Mobile Data 55.1% Traffic Broadband Monthly Fees Focus on “fixed” revenues with higher gross margins 27.5% Guarantying a flexible cost structure 16 EBITDA EBITDA Structure -6.9% 558.4 Wireline -19.4 +6.8 +4.6% Vivo -39.3 PTM +8.6 -28.2% +45.6% Other +4.7 519.8 1Q02 39.1% Vivo Multimedia 19.3% 5.2% Other 0.7% € million -7.6% TMN TMN Wireline 29.6% 45.2% 1Q03 40.3% 43.7% 41.3% 16.7% - 39.6% Mg 17 Capex Capex Structure 158.4 Wireline -23.1% Multimedia -21.5 -43.9% 13.0% TMN -21.7 Vivo 121.9 7.7% Wireline Vivo 22.5% 18.5% € million +5.8 -31.8% +35.0% PTM +0.7 +4.4% Other +0.1 Other TMN 1Q02 11.1% 1Q03 5.1% 15.2%* 9.3% 9.7% * Including the acquisition of certain OniWay assets - 9.3% 38.3% % of Sales 18 EBITDA minus Capex TMN 400.0 Wireline +2.1 +1.0% Vivo +28.5 -45.0 +36.1% EBITDA minus Capex Structure -0.5% PTM +7.9 Other +4.4 397.9 Vivo Multimedia 19.5% 2.9% Other - 1.5% -36.7% TMN € million 27.0% Wireline 52.1% 1Q02 1Q03 19 RoIC 19.0% 17.6% 13.4% 12.9% 14.3% 16.3% 15.0% RoIC excl. Goodwill 13.7% 11.6% 11.9% RoIC 9.7% 1996 16.8% 1997 1998 1999 2000 10.3% 8.8% 2001 2002* * Excluding the acquisition of the fixed network in 2002; based on quarterly figures. 20 RoIC by Business Area 2002 % total NOPLAT % total Inv. Capital RoIC PT Comunicações 45% 62% 13.7% TMN 35% 14% 47.9% TCP 21% 22% 18.2% 0% 6% 1.5% 100% 19.0% PT Multimedia PT 100% PT including Goodwill - - 10.3% NOPLAT = EBIT x (1-33%) and amounting € 849 million for PT Group Total Invested Capital: Average Invested Capital based on quartly figures and amounting € 8,278 million for PT Group including goodwill and € 4,467 million excluding goodwill 21 Balance Sheet Discipline Debt • • • • • De-leveraging: Net debt at € 3.8bn and 1.8x annualised EBITDA Hedging of Brazilian liabilities Locked in interest rates: 80% of total debt at fixed rates Extend maturities: 92% of total debt was M/L term and maturity at 4.7 years Review and restructuring of assets under management in Pension fund Assets • Clean up intangibles • • • Independent fair value review Write down leading to tax credits Non-core asset review – Goodwill as % of total assets reduced from 26.1% in 2001 to 17% in 1Q03 – Internet & dot.com assets reduced from 1.4% in 2001 to 1.3% in 1Q03 Shareholder funds • • Change in law to allow for “top up” of carried forward losses from share premium reserves to allow for dividend payment in relation to 2002 Re-denominated Goodwill over Vivo to BR$ to reduce risk of additional impairments in the future 22 Net Debt Evolution Drivers 1Q03 (€ million) Cash Generated from Operations • • • EBITDA Non-Current Increase in Provisions Decrease in Working Capital (EBITDA related) Payments to Fixed Asset Suppliers • • Capex Decrease of A/P to Capex Suppliers Finance Function & Other Impacts • • • • • 530 520 6 4 (232) (122) (110) (95) Acquisitions of Financial Investments Interest Paid Translation of US$ and BR$ debt Gains on FX instruments (27) (95) 6 48 Other (27) Net Debt reduction in 1Q03 of € 203 million Net Debt at the end of 1Q03 stands at € 3,834 million 23 Brazil Exposure Net exposure to Brazil (assets minus liabilities) amounts to BR$ 7,387 M (€ 2bn considering a BR$/€ exchange rate of 3.6589) 95% is accounted for by PT’s 50% investment in Vivo PT’s assets denominated in BR$ amounted to € 3,332 million, equivalent to 26% of total assets 12.7% of net debt was denominated in BR$ All debt in Vivo is BR$ denominated or is hedge to BR$ under derivative contracts PT does not hedge equity exposure to Brazil 24 PT’s Pension Fund – December 2002 Health Care € 639 M Unfunded € 1,990 M Pensions € 1,351 M Total Liabilities • Junior debt • • • Not all senior debt 6% discount rate 16 years to fund it € 3,654 M Pension Fund Assets € 1,664 M • • • • Equities 22% Fixed Income 56% Real Estate 10% Cash 12% 25 Conclusion for 2003 Top line performance to remain under pressure but EBITDA to be underpinned by cost cuts Vivo Cellular financials helped by stable outlook for Real whilst it is self funding Balance sheet restructuring completed including write-off of goodwill Strong cash generation with domestic businesses accounting for more than 90% of cash flow Cash repatriation will become an increasing focus and PT will have ample financial flexibility in 2004 Sarbanes – Oxley compliance: actively monitoring impacts on PT is working to fully compliance with significant developments already made 26 Sarbanes – Oxley Compliance Timing Section 301 302 404 406 Rule Audit Committees CEO and CFO certifications Management`s Reports on Internal Controls Code of Ethics for Senior Financial Officers PT Progress Compliance Date 31/Jul/2005 29/Ago/2002 Definition and Evaluation of Disclosure Controls and Procedures Implementation of a certification model within PT Group to support the CEO and CFO certification to comply with section 302 of SarbOx Establishment of a Disclosure Committee, which will have an oversight responsibility over Disclosure Controls and Procedures Definition of a Corporate Internal Control Model and implementation of Internal Controls for Financial Reporting in the principal subsidiaries of the PT Group in order to support the requirements of section 404 of SarbOx 15/Apr/2005 Planning of the evaluation of Internal Controls for Financial Reporting to support the section 404 attestation Establishment of an Internal Audit Function at Corporate level, responsible for the evaluation of Internal Controls for Financial Reporting 15/Jul/2003 Establishment of an Audit Committee which will have an advisory role to the Board of Directors in respect of financial reporting, internal controls and relationships with the external auditors 27 Wireline Businesses Carlos Vasconcellos Cruz Executive Officer and Wireline CEO Contents 1. Wireline Business in Portugal: Background 2. Financials 3. May Update: Key Operating Data 4. Volumes 5. Pricing 6. Market Share 7. Strategic Focus – Reinventing the Business 7.1 Revenue Initiatives 7.2 Costs Initiatives 7.3 Capex & Quality of Service 8. Conclusion 2 Wireline in PT Group Revenues 41.2% 45.2% EBITDA 52.1% EBITDA minus CAPEX 1Q03 0.0% 10.0% 20.0% 30.0% 40.0% 50.0% 60.0% 3 Background – European Context Strong Performance Challenging Context Low Fixed Penetration High Mobile Penetration Low Ratio of Fixed vs. Mobile Tariffs Market Share Margins Capex Intensity Labour Efficiency Economy Capital Return: 14% RoIC 4 Financials Key Financial Highlights € million FY02 ∆ YoY % 1Q03 ∆ YoY % Revenues 2,441 -3.9 583 -4.9 Operating Costs (excl. D&A)* 1,456 -1.2 348 -3.0 EBITDA 985 -7.7 235 -7.6 EBITDA margin (%) 40.4 -1.6pp 40.3 -1.2pp Capex 256 -35.8 27 -43.9 Capex to Revenues (%) 10.5 -5.2pp 4.7 -3.3pp EBITDA minus Capex 729 9.1 207 +1.0 * Excluding PRB, Opex would have decreased by 4.5% in 2002 and 6.2% in 1Q03 5 May Update: Key Operating Data 2002 ∆ YoY % 1Q03 YTD ∆ YoY % 4,196 -2.5 4,177 -2.0 4,185 -1.1 PSTN 3,318 -5.3 3,279 -4.7 3,266 -3.9 ISDN 826 3.2 819 0.9 821* -0.6 53 n.m. 78 n.m. 98 n.m. 42 n.m. 61 n.m. 78 n.m. 158.0 n.m. 44.4 -3.5 56.3 -25.5 20,065 -3.1 4,770 -5.5 7,920 -6.9 Retail 8,235 -9.2 2,053 1.5 3,416 -0.1 F2F 6,479 -12.8 1,528 -7.4 2,527 -8.1 11,830 1.6 2,717 -10.1 4,503 -11.4 10.6 -3.2 10.5 -2.5 10.3 -4.5 Customers (‘000) ADSL, of which: Retail Net Disconnections (Lost Lines) Total Traffic (min.106) Wholesale MoU Originated (min./line/day) ∆ YoY % * ISDN Penetration: 20% 6 Volumes Change in Originated and F2F Traffic Y.o.Y 2001 1Q 2Q 2002 3Q 4Q 1Q 2Q 2003 3Q 4Q 1Q 1% -0% -4% -6% -7% -6% -6% -7% -9% -15% -6% -10% -16% -17% -19% Originated Traffic excl. Internet -18% -9% Originated Traffic excl. Internet: stable F2F: a decrease of 6% in 4Q02 and 7% in 1Q03 (less than half the decline 2001-02) -17% F2F Traffic 7 Wireline Prices Price cap regime for 2003 (already implemented): • • CPI minus 2.75% 2.5% - 2.75% = -0.25% nominal The Portuguese regulator has stated that pricing is reasonably in line with its European peers Cumulative price basket nominal change since liberalization (2000) • • -9.1% in nominal terms -19.5% in real terms Interconnection rates already below EU average • • • Termination: -24.6% Origination: -26.9% Transit: -19.8% An average decrease of 25% in 1Q03 8 Market Share Estimates 100% 95% 94.8% (share of accesses) 91.7% Total Orig. Traffic (indirect access) 90% 88.4% Local 88.1% F2M 85.1% International 84.6% DLD 84.4% Regional 85% 80% 4Q00 1Q01 2Q01 3Q01 4Q01 1Q02 2Q02 3Q02 4Q02 1Q03 Competitor Lines (K) Cabovisão (K) Market Share 224 162 3.7% May03 9 Wireline Competition Player ONI Shareholders EDP 56% BCP 22.8% Total Revenues (1Q03) Voice 7 M€ Data 34 M€ Target Market Global Operator with strong presence in the Corporate Market BRISA 17% GALP 4.2% NOVIS France Telecom 43.33% Sonae.Com 56.7% VODAFONE VODAFONE Plc 100% CABOVISÃO Cable Satisfaction International Inc. 100% JAZZTEL JAZZTEL Plc. 100% NOVIS 37 M€ CLIX 10 M€ - NOVIS: Addresses the global market, higher presence in SME’s CLIX: Second largest ISP after Telepac Focus on SME’s and SOHO Voice 7 M€ Internet 6 M€ - Residential Focus on SME’s and SOHO 10 Strategic Focus Revenue Initiatives Traffic stimulation ADSL rollout Cost reduction Smart Capex spending Wireline Re-invention Customer retention Free Cash Flow Cost Initiatives 11 Revenues Priorities Reverse the trend of access loss Stimulate usage of voice traffic Enhance growth of new services Initiatives 1. Access retention by redefining processes for proactive and reactive retention 2. Installation of new accesses 3. New products and services 4. Management of pricing perception vis-à-vis mobile telephony 5. Definition of a new pricing strategy based on an aggressive promotion of flat-rate family plans 6. Reinforcement of the convenience of fixed telephony by promoting new terminals (namely cordless and video) and VAS aimed at stimulating MoU 7. Leadership of broadband (ADSL) roll-out – access and content 8. Restructuring of product portfolio around solutions 9. Enhancement of data services penetration in the corporate segment of the market 12 Customer Retention Mobile net adds in 2002: 975 K 158 K disconnections in 2002 or 3.7% of base 24 Run rate excl. January: 8K 26 Target 2003: 100K disconnections 19 16 Mobile net adds In 1Q03: 139 K 16 14 13 11 14 12 10 10 9 6 6 6 2 Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul 2002 Customers in pre - selection reduced by 12K over the last 12 months Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May 2003 Disconnections (K) 12 months rolling average 13 Customer Retention Customer Retention Proactive retention outbound unit Reactive retention inbound center shops program New Lines 50% Improvement in Customer Retention Dedicated sales team New direct channels: door-to-door sales force Partnership with banks and real estate agents Immediate installations 14 New Products and Services VOICE PLUS Need: Economic solution Target or audience: permanent residence/young couples/seniors VOICE EXTRA ADSL PLUS ADSL ADSL EXTRA Analog network line Fixed phone Sapo Free Need: Economic solution and voice mobility Target or audience: young couples/small families Analog network line Wireless phone Sapo Free Need: Economic solution and fast internet access Target or audience: internet heavy users, juniors/families Need: Solution of total mobility Target or audience: VIP families/professionals Need: Full solution for professionals, with full mobility Target or audience: technology advanced businesses/SoHo in general Analog network line Fixed phone ADSL Analog network line Wireless phone ADSL Analog network line Wireless phone ADSL Wireless switchboard 15 Stimulating Voice Traffic Rationale Description 3. Management of pricing perception Wrong price perception hampers fixed business - Fixed perceived as more expensive than mobile, although the latter is 3 to 4 times more expensive - Surveys show that price of fixed perceived as 2 to 3 times higher than it is in reality Launching of marketing campaigns focused on improving price perception of fixed vis-à-vis mobile Monitor impact of campaigns on perception as well as on traffic 4. Evolution of pricing strategy towards a flat-rate philosophy Migration to a fixed revenue basis Changes in the competitive arena visà-vis mobile Maximization of communication impact to end customer Development of a price plan pack under a flat-rate concept, aimed at meeting customer needs whilst being easy to communicate to the massmarket 5. Evolution towards a strategy of terminals that promotes the convenience of fixed telephony Fixed telephony perceived as less convenient and less functional than mobile Usage of wireless terminals stimulates traffic Redesign of portfolio of terminals Launch of new functions (e.g., SMS and video) 16 Price Comparison Average price per minute. Euro cents Mobile is 3-4 times more expensive than fixed telephony … … but it is perceived as 10% cheaper Launch of campaigns to act upon price perception - December 2002 x0.9 x0.9 x3.4 x3.4 27 x0.6 x0.6 18 16 - February 2003 8 x2.3 x2.3 Actual price gap Source: Survey over the phone Perceived price gap 17 Price Plans Concept of family “PT Preços para si” Subfamily Description Daily minutes not cumulative in off-peak periods for a specific destination against payment of monthly fee Launch Launch of of plans plans with with daily daily minutes minutes not not cumulative cumulative for for specific specific traffic traffic against against payment payment of of aa monthly monthly fee fee Plans Portugal France Germany Destinations UK Spain USA and Canada Daily minutes not cumulative of local and regional traffic with PT network in specific periods against payment of monthly fee Evenings and weekends Schedules After hours Part-time in the morning Part-time in the afternoon Daily minutes not cumulative for 1 to 10 specific numbers in offpeak periods against the payment of monthly fee Friends 1 to 1 Friends 1 to 3 Groups 18 Plans Sold to Date As of May 31 250,000 21,100 7,521 Significant Significant impact impact on on ARPU ARPU (∆) (∆) 90,998 –– Plano Plano Portugal Portugal +3.6€ +3.6€ –– After After hours hours +5.8€ +5.8€ 62,377 –– Evening Evening & & Weekends Weekends +3.9€ +3.9€ –– Part-time Part-time in in the the morning morning +4.1€ +4.1€ –– Part-time Part-time in in the the afternoon afternoon +7.1€ +7.1€ Destinations Schedules Groups Total 2003 Objective 19 Terminals Strategy Preliminary results of PT Free (cordless phone) campaign Analysis for 7,078 customers that activated the phone between 23/12/2002 e 14/02/2003 –– Launching Launching of of aa new new terminals’ portfolio terminals’ portfolio organized organized in in six six product product families families (PT (PT Basic, Basic, PT PT Fun, PT Classic, PT Fun, PT Classic, PT Image, Image, PT PT Evolution, Evolution, PT PT Design) Design) –– Equipments Equipments with with VAS VAS stimulators of stimulators of ARPU ARPU •• SMS SMS •• Caller Caller ID ID •• Voice Voice mail mail Traffic evolution Percentage Traffic revenues evolution Percentage 4.2 1.6 11.8 11.8 pp pp 12.5 12.5 pp pp -7.6 PT Free Average customer -10.9 –– 55 55 thousand thousand cordless cordless phones phones sold sold as as of of May May 31 31 –– 2003 2003 sales sales objective objective of of 200200280 280 cordless cordless phones phones –– potential potential revenues revenues impact impact of of 3.3 3.3 –– 4.7 4.7 M€ M€ 20 Fixed SMS Product launch campaign Product launch campaign built on Mother´s Day – from April 24 to May 4 Advertising campaign (TV, press….) SMS sent to TMN customers Audio diffusion to PT customers “Now your home fixed phone can send and receive SMS ” “Send SMS to any terminal from PT network” As As of of May May 31 31 ► ► ~~ 33 thousand thousand SMS SMS activation activation ► ► ~~ 125 125 thousand thousand SMS SMS sent sent and and received received 21 ADSL Penetration Levers Description Development of differentiated offers to the distinct customer segments Product Product • • SMEs Development of bundles aimed at maximizing ADSL penetration • • Commercial Commercial actuation actuation Residential ADSL + voice Strong growth potential ADSL + PC Development of a program aimed at increasing commercial aggressiveness of sales channels Provisioning Provisioning Redesign of the ADSL provisioning process in order to reduce the activation period to 3 days After-sale After-sale service service Redesign of the after-sale service in order to improve service levels and minimize complaints 35 thousand ADSL net adds as of May 2003 22 ADSL Deployment ADSL Accesses 98 Retail Dedicated sales force 78 53 Bundle offer for “first time voice” customers 78 61 61 Thousand 42 21 5 7 4 5 1Q 2Q 2002 14 3Q 4Q 1Q YTD Broadband portal leverage - new Sapo XL portal Market share of 80% 2003 23 Data Services Segment Monosite Monosite PT PT Business Business Net Net Monosite Monosite companies companies Multisite Multisite PT PT Linhas Linhas Privadas Privadas Standard Standard PT PT Linhas Linhas Privadas Privadas Premium Premium Less Less sophisticated sophisticated companies companies Medium/Highly Medium/Highly sophisticated sophisticated companies companies Product components Access –Business internet package: ADSL access to internet (Telepac), domain, mail boxes, hosting, Wizard Web Design Terminals equipment Other services: inclusion in Sapo directory, Dial- up access accounts Access: ADSL access to VPN, centralized firewall, internet connectivity Terminals equipment Web services (domain, mail boxes, hosting, Wizard Web Design, inclusion in Sapo directory) Access: Permanent access, centralized firewall, internet connectivity Terminals equipment Web services (domain, mail boxes or mail relay, hosting, Wizard Web Design, inclusion in Sapo directory) ~ 5,000 ADSL sold ~ 100 packages sold in the first month 24 Data Communication Web Capacity Sales and Data Communications Accesses 35.5 35.5 35.7 35.3 1,430 Thousand 35.3 35.8 PT Prime 1,181 PT Prime offers: Mbps 847 524 678 413 1Q 2Q 3Q 2002 Web Capacity Sales 4Q PT Prime is the commercial front end for corporate customers with approximately 6,500 accounts 1Q YTD 2003 • • • • • • Integrated voice and data telecommunications solutions Information systems Internet e-commerce B2B, and Outsourcing of communications networks Data Com. Accesses 25 ISP and Portals Total Accesses and Penetration ISP and Portal – PTM.com 3.0% Broadband 10.4% 948 11.0% 10.3% 10.3% 151 189 259 309 883 870 809 823 10.0% 122 ARPU dial-up €25; ARPU ADSL €35 1Q 2Q 3Q 2002 Dial-up 4Q 1Q 2003 Broadband 2.7 million unique users per month and over 307 million page views per month 27% New broadband channel - Sapo XL - including live video streaming, movie trailers, video game demos and exclusive sport’s content 73% PT is the best placed player to take advantage of broadband development Broadband market share of approximately 80% and global market share of 35% Accesses / Pop 26 Opex Structure of PTC Telecomun. 35% Other 4% COGS 2% Other G&A ∆ 1Q03/02 1Q 2003 Advertising 1% Call Centers 2% -14% +10% IT 3% -2% Network Maintenance 5% -3% 21% HR 38% Other 10% -13% Excluding Depreciation and Amortization Operational merger of fixed line, data and Internet businesses with significant cost gains, Capex efficiency and customer focus 27 Staff Reduction at PTC 19.4 460 18.5 17.4 390 16.7 418 403 319 246 188 206 230 1,500 redundancies in 2003, a 15% reduction (425 in 1Q and the remaining 1,000 in 2/3Q) 13.3 11.0 10.3 10.3 8.8 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003E No. of Employees (K) 460 lines per employee in 2003 (Top Tier European Telcos) Wages and Salaries savings cruise speed full year of Euro 45 million Additional 10% from headcount related cost savings Main lines per Employee 28 Non-HR Cost Reduction Programs Cost pool Expected savings Major initiatives 12 months - 2004 Network maintenance Programme “Operational Efficiency” (fault prevention and productivity increase in repairing) Contracts renegotiation Information Systems Renegotiation of outsourcing contracts and of licence fees Storage and application consolidation Invoicing and accounts receivable Consolidation of customer payment channels Bi- monthly invoicing Electronic channels 11% Call Centres Consolidation of call centres Alignment of KPIs with best practices 10% Premises Rationalization of power consumption, supplies and tariffs Consolidation of premises Renegotiation of security and cleanup contracts Vehicles 30% 8% Phasing out of network operations vehicles and improvement of fleet management Consolidation of maintenance contracts Total 32% ~ ~ – € 20M 9% 100% 29 Capex - PTC Capex Evolution Capex Structure 16.2% 9.9% 5.3% 4.6% 40 31 2Q 3Q 2002 Capex New Business(1) 15% Core Business(2) 32% 65 1Q IT 19% 92 25 4Q FY Euro million 6.8% % 11.3% 228 Other 5% 1Q 2003 Capex to Revenues (%) Baseline(3) 29% Network 76% (1) ADSL, WiFi, SMS, Ethernet. (2) Demand Change (ULL, IN, etc). (3) Technology substitution, OPEX reduction, monitoring&control, regulatory obligations. 30 Quality of Service QoS Indicators 99.9% 99.9% 99.8% 11.6 10.3 10.2 2002 1Q03 YTD The quality of service continues to improve, as a result of specific QoS programmes, despite the reduction in the maintenance and repair costs per line Call Completion Rate Notified faults per 100 access lines 31 Wi Fi – Internet Mobility Target • • • • • Business Executives Mobile Sales Force Students Early Technology Adopters Business Market (SMEs and Corporate) Hot Spots • 250 to 300 end of 1st year Time To Market • • Free Trial since 15.06.03 until 31.08.03 Commercial Offer – 01.09.03 Commercial Offer • • • Post Paid access Pre Paid access Pay as You Go Services • • Internet Access Wireless Virtual Private Networks 32 Wrap-up Fall in volumes is totally market related Strong operational performance focused on: • • • • • Strong cash flow Strong margins Strong market share position Strong cost control and headcount reduction Capex management Profound cultural change Ö Building a customer centric organization focused on: • • • • • Outstanding service levels Customer retention Segmentation Solutions Innovation New revenues streams • • • ADSL WIFI New pricing schemes – Traffic stimulation – Flat rates concept 33 Conclusion Wireline Businesses Building a customer centric, efficient and market aggressive organization Focused Customer Satisfaction Free Cash Flow 34 Mobile Businesses Iriarte Esteves Executive Officer and TMN CEO Mobile Businesses: Overview Subscribers Market Ranking Market Share MediTel Mascom 100% 31.3% 50.01% Portugal Morocco Botswana 4.5 million #1 52% 1.7 million #2 41% Disposal almost complete 50% Brazil 16.9 million #1 60% 23.1 million mobile subscribers 2 TMN Financials Key Financial Highlights € million 2002 ∆ YoY % 1Q03 ∆ YoY % Revenues 1,475 5.8 353 0.1 Operating Costs excl. D&A 852 -0.5 199 -3.2 EBITDA 623 15.7 154 4.6 EBITDA margin (%) 42.3 3.6pp 43.7 1.9pp Capex 283 -0.2 46.7 -31.8 Capex % Revenues 19.2 -1.1pp 13.2 -6.2pp EBITDA minus Capex 341 33.5 107 36.1 3 May Update: Key Operating Update 2002 ∆ YoY % 1Q03 4,426 13.3 4,474 TMN Net Additions (‘000) 521 -46.1 Data (% of Service Revenues) 7.4 TMN Active Customers (‘000) ARPU (Euro) Customer Bill (Euro) Interconnection (Euro) MOU (minutes) ∆ YoY % YTD* ∆ YoY % 12.3 4,494 11.1 47 -38.3 68 -51.6 1.4pp 8.5 1.9pp 8.4 1.7pp 27.1 -9.8 24.1 -11.2 24.6 -9.3 19.0 -4.3 17.3 -4.6 17.7 -4.3 8.1 -20.6 6.8 -24.5 6.8 -20.1 130.5 -5.1 118.4 -7.3 119.8 -7.5 * Cumulative 4 The Year to Date Market leadership 4.5 million subs, a rise of 12.3% y.o.y. Tariff adjustment of approximately +3% across the board New services launch like Kolmi and video MMS ARPU drop of 11.2% to € 24 driven by interconnection decreases (24.3% in M2M and 21.1% in F2M) SACs and CCPU down by 11.4% and 11.9% y.o.y respectively EBITDA margin improvement to 43.7% 5 Strategic Focus Market Share Leadership Promoting Customer Loyalty and Retention Stimulating Voice Bill Managing Regulatory Risks Development of new services Containing Cash Costs (Focus on AMPU = ARPU – CCPU) UMTS Rollout Management of a sustainable Capex Intensity 6 Market Leadership Market Share Market Perception 80,0 - + 70,0 60,0 Tariffs 50,0 Technology 40,0 Coverage 30,0 20,0 10,0 0,0 50.1% 51.9% 52.1% Communic. More experienced 1995 TMN 2002 Vodafone 1Q03 Optimus Quality TMN Customer Care Innovation Vodafone + Optimus April 2003 7 TMN vs. Vodafone Subscriber Evolution 4,474 4,426 3,905 1,389 1,389 1,118 2,939 624 3,085 3,037 2,787 2,315 2000 2001 TMN 2002 1Q03 Vodafone 8 Brand Power and Loyalty I know it … I have tried it … Spontaneous recognition (in %). TMN Among users that know it, those of them which have already been customers (in %). 99.5 Vodafone 98.5 Optimus 96.9 TMN 56.8 Vodafone Optimus 40.1 24.4 Avg: 40.4 Avg: 98.3 I stayed with it … …, I am loyal to it. Among users which have been customers, those that still are (in %). Among users that have stayed as customers, those which are loyal (in %). 88.7 TMN Vodafone 97.8 96.8 Vodafone 80 TMN Optimus 77.5 Optimus Avg: 82.1 95.1 Avg: 96.6 Source: “Imagem e Fortaleza da Marca” – First Half of 2003 Once TMN always TMN 9 TMN “Miles” Club % of Members in TMN’s Customer Base +338.000 Customers Main Discounts in 2002 80,0 Partnerships 2% Gifts 3% Services 3% Handsets 10% 5% Parts 25% 18% 2002 2003 Credits 77% 10 Distribution Network Balanced Use of Channels Low weight p/ channel (less than 10% per agent) Long term exclusive contracts (partnerships w/ more than 8 years) Partnerships w/ main distribution chains Market Intensive Coverage Large Commercial Scale 2,000 points of sale Large customer relationship 200 POS w/TMN full branding More than 1 million gross adds per year 22 million of annual client visits More than 1,000 commercial assistants Presence in all major retail outlets experienced and trained Telecomunicações Móveis Nacionais TMN strength in commercial distribution can hardly be achieved by any competitor 11 ARPU ARPU 18.1 26.9 18.9 28.1 20.0 9.0 8.0 8.1 1Q 2Q 3Q 26.3 % of Roamers 1.9% Data 6.6% 24.6 18.9 17.3 17.7 7.4 6.8 6.8 4Q 1Q YTD 2002 Billing 24.1 Euro 27.1 2003 Interconnection 2.7% 4.7% 2.3% 2.0% 2.2% 6.9% 7.5% 8.5% 8.5% 8.4% 12 ARPU Evolution 27.1 MOU -2.0 ARPM Interconn. Data 24.1 +0.3 € -1.7 ARPM Billing +0.4 1Q02 1Q03 13 Regulation F2M Termination vs. Benchmark (€ cents) Evolution M2M 1st Half 02 € 0.247 2nd Half 02 € 0.187 st 1 Quarter 03 SUI HOL - 24.3% GRE BEL € 0.187 UK 19.75 POR ITA F2M st SP 1 Quarter 02 € 0.237 DEN 2nd Quarter 02 € 0.217 GER 3rd Quarter 02 € 0.207 4th Quarter 02 € 0.197 FRA - 21.1% IRL F2M Termination Tariff European Average = 17.34 AUT SUE 1st Quarter 03 € 0.187 LUX FIN Overall impact on ARPU: -7.6%, - € 2 NOR 0 9 18 27 April 2003 Source: Cullen International and TMN 14 Subscriber Usage MOU Traffic Structure (1Q03) TMN – Other Mobile 277 TMN- Fixed 266 262 128 118 120 98 90 91 4Q02 1Q03 YTD MoU Post Paid MoU Prepaid MoU TMN – Int’l 4.2% minutes 7.5% 13.9% TMN- TMN 74.4% 15 Voice Margins Total Margin Customer Bill Margin 299 297 83.1% 207 194 80.9% 75.7% 70.7% 57 1Q02 Service Revenues 50 1Q03 Interconnection Costs 57 1Q02 Billing Revenues 50 1Q03 Interconnection Costs 16 Pricing Price Comparison Pricing Tariff Change Post Paid Pre Paid From May 1, 2003, GSM tariffs increased approximately 3% GER FRA ITA No visible impact in May daily MOU UK SUE POR/TMN 33.3 0% 69.8 100% On net 29.3 0,0 0% 20,0 40,0 Off net 60.0 60,0 100,0 100% 80,0 2.7% increase in billing ARPM of originated traffic, from April to May Source: CMT, TMN 17 SMS Revenue Structure Penetration 45% SMS/user : 39 P2P + Infotainment 51 P2P + Infotainment + Interconnection Revenues €mn 1Q02 1Q03 SMS 100% 100% 77% 69% 7% 17% 16% 14% P2P Infotainment Interconnection Penetration 48% SMS/user : 39 P2P + Infotainment 50 P2P + Infotainment + Interconnection 30% growth ≈15 partners 150 different services ≈ 30 partners ≈ 350 different services 18 New Services Kolmi Karga MMS MMS Video GPRS PayShop Bundled Solutions MMS Album ARPU enhancement Brand Churn & Customer Retention 19 UMTS – Progress to Date PT intends to be the first to launch UMTS Vodafone has mentioned that it may launch in 1Q04 Anacom may revise UMTS license obligations “Gentle” rollout of UMTS to add capacity Estimated Capex 2003 € 60 to 100 million * * Including Oniway assets 20 Operating Costs excl. D&A 1Q 2003 Wages & Salaries 6.4% Cost of Telecoms 37.3% Lower interconnection fees Cost of Products Sold 17.8% Less subsidization OG&A 25.0% Contents & promotion of new services Other 13.5% 100% Personnel freeze EBITDA Margin: 43.7% 21 EBITDA ARPU minus CCPU EBITDA 2002 13.6 Euro +4.6% 13.4 14.2 12.7 170 14.0 12.0 169 12.6 154 137 Euro million 147 Mg 43.7% 1Q 2Q 3Q 2002 4Q 1Q YTD 2003 1Q 2Q 3Q 2002 4Q 1Q 2003 22 Capex Capex Evolution Capex Structure / GSM in 2002 26.6 19.4 Other 4% 18.3 12.4 13.2 65 48 47 3.8 1Q 2Q 3Q 2002 Capex 4Q Radio 40% IT 9% 1Q 2003 Infrastructure 5% Euro million 68 101 Handsets 9% Real Estate 14% Switching 19% Capex to Revenues Excl Oniway Assets 23 Capex per Minute & Subscriber 119.7 107.0 105.3 102.3 88.0 77.0 73.1 72.5 78.1 74.1 71.3 65.2 50.8 52.9 49.5 43.6 63.9 44.1 58.4 40.3 Cumulative Capex per Client 2000 1Q 01 2Q 01 3Q 01 4Q 01 1Q 02 2Q 02 3Q 02 4Q 02 Euro Cumulative Capex per 1000 min 1Q 03 24 Conclusion Market Share Leadership Stimulating Voice Bill Development of new services Promoting Customer Loyalty and Retention Managing Regulatory Risks Containing Cash Costs (Focus on AMPU = ARPU – CCPU) UMTS Rollout Management of a sustainable Capex Intensity 25 Multimedia Business Zeinal Bava Executive Officer and PTM CEO PT Multimedia Overview Pay TV # 1 Pay TV operator in Portugal # 1 Broadband internet access provider in Portugal Ownership of football rights (SportTV) Audiovisual Entertainment Exclusive holder of key Pay TV content Media National Daily Newspapers News radio station (TSF) Cinema exhibition and distribution Magazines DVD and videogames distribution - Exclusive PS2 distributor Revenues: EUR 364.2 mn Revenues: EUR 119.1 mn Revenues: EUR 135.7 mn EBITDA: EUR 71 mn EBITDA: 13 mn EBITDA: 1 mn 58.5% Total Revenues 19.1% Total Revenues 21.8% Total Revenues 2 Key Financials € million 2002 ∆ YoY % 1Q03 ∆ YoY % Revenues 623 17.4 164 14.7 Operating Costs excl. D&A 544 14.7 136 9.0 79 40.1 27 54.9 12.7 2.1pp 16.7 4.3pp 79 -35.0 16 5.3 12.7 -10.2pp 9.7 -0.9pp 0 n.m. 11 344.2 EBITDA EBITDA margin (%) Capex Capex % Revenues EBITDA minus Capex 3 May Update: Key Operating Data 2002 ∆ YoY % 1Q03 YTD* ∆ YoY % 2,390 2,048 1,307 1,017 4.6 42.3 12.7 8.7 2,405 2,084 1,346 1,038 3.8 35.5 13.4 9.6 2,413 2,110 1,358 1,045 3.3 22.9 12.2 8.7 DTH 290 29.5 308 28.3 313 25.7 Premium 916 24.6 968 26.2 980 23.1 140 21.6 19.0 31.3 125.8 11.9 4.4 4.3 162 23.4 19.8 30.6 116.0 14.3 4.9 15.9 174 23.4 19.7 30.4 97.2 12.9 3.8 13.3 TV Cabo 364 30.9 102 27.2 170 22.5 Audiovisuals 119 8.4 28 -10.8 45 -20.8 Media 136 -2.4 35 14.1 60 11.3 Homes Passed (‘000) Homes with two way cap (‘000) Subscribers (‘000) Cable Broadband ARPU (Eur) Pay TV Broadband ∆ YoY % Segment Revenues (Eur mn) * Cumulative 4 The Year to Date Sustainable double digit subscriber and revenues growth Strong consolidated EBITDA margin improvement Growing positive free cash flow Launch of digital platform with pay per view and other services Launch of the Lusomundo premium movie channels (replacing Telecine) Media restructuring underway but no help from advertising market Acquisition of the 50% stake in Warner Lusomundo that was not already owned by PT 5 Strategic Focus Continued Subscriber and ARPU growth Bring to bear full extent of synergies of ownership and control of windows of rights from theatrical distribution to pay-TV Margin expansion through lower programming costs Increase viewing share and advertising revenues Excel in the execution of the turnaround of Lusomundo Media Build financial strength and ROCE 6 ARPU Growth Broadband Penetration Tariffs 0.1 Premium Penetration Digital Services 0.1 1.9 0.9 Subs: 162 k +116% YoY Subs: 968 k +26% YoY Euros 20.4 23.4 1Q02 1Q03 7 Up-sell Opportunity % of Customer Base ARPU (1Q03) Customer Bill Basic & Premium + Broadband 6% € 52.4 € 25.1 - € 96.6 Basic + Broadband 11% € 38.8 € 15.7 - € 45.1 24% € 28.6 € 25.1 - € 67.2 59% € 15.0 € 10.5 - € 15.7 Basic + Premium Basic Package 8 Killer Content Major Producers Paramount, Sony, Dreamworks and Walt Disney Pictures Movies Independent Producers Spyglass, Revolution Studios and other Exclusive rights for Portuguese 1st league Additional international soccer rights (English, Spanish, German, Brazilian and Italian leagues) and other sports rights (i.e. tennis, golf, basketball) Sports No risk: rights acquired with no upfront payment for PTM Portuguese news channel with 6.3% share of audience with advertising revenues reverting 100% to TV Cabo Local SIC Mulher, SIC Radical, SIC Gold, TV Saúde and NTV Content More to come… Additional 2 to 4 channels to be launched before mid 04 9 Broadband Success Factors Pricing Flat fee “eat as much as you can” Cap on heavy users who pay after 1 GB of downloads Per usage fee “pay as you go” Installation Self Installation Kit New adds 85% self installed Wi-Fi Solution 2% of Subs with Wi-Fi PS2 Option Content Exclusive content Tailored for the broadband experience Relevant to the local market Branding power Blended ARPU: € 30.8 10 Sapo XL Online TV SIC Games Demos & downloads Online Radio TSF & RR Video Streaming sports, cinema, music & breaking news 11 Digitalization Already 74K cable and DTH digital enabled boxes Pay per view capability Piracy control Pre-paid services via SMS/ATM Lusomundo’s video library will provide killer content for Pay Per View Set Top Box technology identical across satellite and cable Box factory gate price below €120 Rented to subscribers with payback over 24 months 12 Cost Control TV Cabo Cost Structure 1Q03 Programming 41.1% Renegotiation of content contracts supported by viewing share analysis and substitutability of channels Wages and Salaries 9.3% Scope for further reduction on an absolute basis, notwithstanding the fact that need to have talent in marketing and costumer care Telecommunication 7.7% Benefits from economies of scale as major increase was due to dual-path connectivity, and from unit prices fall Marketing 1.6% Low as own channels are used to promote service G&A 28.9% Scope for further reduction mainly related to: Call center costs, which are expected to drop as no. of faults declines and calls are being billed Other 11.4% Sales commissions will be linked to customer loyalty and should fall as direct sales increase EBITDA target of above 30% in Q4 13 Programming Costs Breakdown € 120 mn 9.0% 3.0% 1.8% 6.6% 17.4% 21.7% 40.5% Sports Portuguese Content Movies Documentary Children Music Other FY 02 14 Channel Redundancy General Entertainment News Music Documentary Movies Children Sports 15 Renegotiation Process Update 2002 2003 Renegotiated %Total Programming Costs (FY02) 8% 2004 In Progress 22% 18% Savings (% renegotiated amount) 50% 35% 16 Synergies with Lusomundo Content Wholesaler Platform 1st window - Cinema Content Distributor 75 films distributed in 2002 134 Screens 41% Market Share 46% Market Share UIP, Buena Vista & Independents AOL Time Warner 8.1 mn admissions Direct sale & rental 45% Market Share Time Scale Video Pay-TV Columbia, Disney, Paramount & Independents Rights distribution to pay TV PPV VOD Premium Subscription + Free to Air Television Rights distribution to all FTA: RTP, SIC & TVI 17 Movie Channels Previous Situation Current Situation -43% Cost per Subs. 6.23 3.50 Content Represented 34% of US Box Office Revenues Representing 53% of US Box Office Revenues 18 Advertising Cable Daily Press -12.7% 5.7% 4.1% 10,475 4.1% 9,143 Euro Million 3.2% 1Q02 Viewing Share 1Q03 Advertising Share 1Q02 1Q03 Daily Press Market* *Medium Agencies 19 Lusomundo Media Restructuring Product revamp • • • Graphical changes and creation of transversal supplements Paper saving format changes Changes in the radio product Commercial optimization • • Regional cross-selling, new channels and sales network reinforcement New points of sale G&A • • Staff Reduction Back office structures rationalization 20 Conclusion Continued subscriber and ARPU growth Improve quality of customer service and rollout of digital STB to reduce churn Bring to bear full extent of synergies of ownership and control of windows of rights from theatrical distribution to pay-TV Margin expansion through lower programming costs Increase viewing share and advertising revenues Excel in the execution of the turnaround of Lusomundo Media Implement lean corporate structure Build financial strength and ROCE 21 Cash Cost Reduction and Centralized Service Platforms Paulo Fernandes Executive Officer and IT CEO Progress to Date Euro million -7.0% -8.9% 3,603 3,352 870 FY02 1Q02 793 Opex FY01 1,316 -41.0% -23.1% 776 Capex FY01 FY02 EBITDA minus Capex FY01 158 122 1Q02 1Q03 -0.5% +79.9% 808 1Q03 1,454 400 398 FY02 1Q02 1Q03 2 Main Efficiency Driven Projects Purchasing: PT Compras Back-Office: PT Pro IT Systems: PT SI Real estate Reduce unit prices Contain and control cash out Aggregate and optimize accounting, treasury, logistical and administrative procedures Integrated and efficient IT/IS Platform Optimization of PT’s real estate portfolio 3 PT Compras PT Compras will consolidate and amplify the efficiency gains already obtained: • Higher professionalisation in the relation with the group’s companies • Increased institutional presence, robustness and transparency • More precise cost allocation • Consulting and negotiation services rendering to third parties February 2003 June 2002 Purchasing model definition Creation of PT’s purchasing central for VIVO (JV PT-Telefónica) June 2003 Creation of PT Compras, S.A. 2002 2003 July to December 2002 May 2003 July to December 2003 Centralization of PT Comunicações’, TMN’s and PT Multimedia’s purchasing VIVO’s integration in the corporate purchasing system Refining of the purchasing model and migration of smaller companies 4 Main Objectives of Purchasing Centralization Approach Scope Independence Portugal Systematic approach Transparency Brazil Rigour Ambition Other markets Robustness Separation between... Order Negotiation Payment Savings in 2002: €38 million OPEX and €25 million Capex 5 Systematic Review of the Entire PT’s Supplier Base Today Process under way 1st wave (from July 2002 to December 2002) 2nd wave (from January 2003 to June 2003) 3rd wave (from July 2003 to December 2003) Mobile handsets and mobile networks Services (Temporary Labor, Security and Cleaning Services, Energy, Fleet, Travel, etc.) Mobile networks’ supply and maintenance (GSM, CDMA, GPRS, UMTS and service platforms) Infrastructure’s supply and maintenance (ADSL, etc) ADSL and Cable modems Wireline handsets Network interventions IS projects (desktop maintenance, CRM, etc.) Postage Others (underwater cables, etc.) Lusomundo’s materials and merchandising products SIM cards Contract programming Marketing and advertising Construction Billing IS maintenance Transportation Next Generation networks Data Centers Others Average 20% to 30% price reduction on renegotiated items 6 Unit Cost Reduction Examples Optical Fibre Local Loop Copper 12% 2000/01 2001/02 39% 27% 2001/02 Approved Suppliers - Cabelte - Cunha Barros Approved Suppliers - Cabelte Approved Suppliers - Cunha Barros - Cabelte - Alcatel Cable Ibérica - Cunha Barros - Alcatel Cable Ibérica - Corning Cables € 2.5 million decrease per year 54% Approved Suppliers - Cabelte - Cel-Cat - Enertel Approved Suppliers - Cabelte - Cel-Cat - Enertel - Cunha Barros - Nexans Ibérica (Alcatel) - Alcobre/Cables de Comunicaciones € 2.6 million decrease per year 7 Purchasing Power Examples Sample Negotiation Processes Prior to Centralized Negotiation Unit Price Savings (€ million) Telesp Celular Handsets 82 13% Submarine Cable 22 36% Wireline Switching Maintenance 19 30% ADSL Infrastructure 6 50% TMN Handsets 39 6% ADSL and Cable Modem 4 24% CTT (Mail company) 14 6% Desktop Hardware Maintenance 4 18% Sintra/Sirel Hardware for Environment 2 18% 8 PT Pro’s rational Main Advantages Capture of scale economies through Aggregate back office aggregation Redesign and standardization of all back functions of PT’s subsidiaries in office processes and procedures increasing its efficiency, verifiability and reliability Continuous improvement of productivity Portugal into a single mode through optimization of process scale-meaningful and Increased focus and higher professionalism in execution specialized company Allows far greater focus and flexibility to the business areas 9 First 100 Days Achievements of PT Pro 40% of the PT’s back office processes already migrated to PT Pro Implementation and migration plan on target High service levels assured for all critical processes Productivity improvements in some early win processes already achieved 10 Quick Wins: PT Pro Main Advantages Cash Pooling The initiative resulted in estimated savings of around € 2,8 million per year; induce savings were also obtained from better average transaction costs (a reduction of approximately 8% per transaction). Travel Management The new travel management model introduce in 2003 will allow the group to reduce travel costs by around 15%. Savings for the first year after implementation of the new policy are estimated at around 0,35 million euros. Merchandising & other miscellaneous materials Outsourcing to specialized brokers for management off merchandise materials (e.g. outdoors), company papers (e.g. envelopes), printing (e.g. magazines, management accounts) and several other related materials will allow the group to obtain estimated savings around 20% per year. 11 Next Steps until December 2003 PT Comunicações’ back office migration to PT PRO Common processes redesign (SAP Template) Launch the second wave of “quick win” projects (facilities management, fleet management, treasury management, etc.) Goal: Full gains to be gradually obtained until 2005 and should exceed €20 millions 12 IT systems: Action Plan in place since 2001 Calendar: Main Goals: Stage I Concluded “Increase Efficiency and Competitiveness” Stage II “Transform our Information Systems ” 2001 and 2002 2003 to 2005 Aggregation of PT’s Applications and Information Systems operations in a single company - PT-SI Acquisition of PT SI’s minorities Company turnaround focused on improving its efficiency and competitiveness Reinforcement of central IT strategic planning Reinforcement of internal skills in the IT area OPEX and CAPEX rationalization on all IS/IT divisions Major contracts renegotiation Substantial improvement in the quality of the services provided Kick-off of webification project Selectively pursue market opportunities (focus on bundling IS/IT with telecom services) Today 13 Central IT Services to PTC Example Centralized IT cost savings passed on to PTC Euro million Initial Contracts 24.2 26.6 25.5 3.3 9.3 The strong efficiency gains achieved by PTSI have been transferred to internal clients 2000 Cost Savings 2001 2002 13% 35% 14 Next Steps Additional Fronts under “attack” for IT/IS Optimization Applications Integrated strategic vision Web-related platforms consolidation Centralized sourcing model Consolidation of applications and licenses Infrastructures Organization Centralized network management Back-offices consolidation and reduction Datacenters consolidation Consolidation of development teams Desktop management integration Rationalization of support teams Smart outsourcing Performance oriented analytical accounting External Market Total Bundled offer of IT/IS solutions with telecoms for large corporate clients (selective and in coordination with PT Corporate) 15 Real-estate Optimization Levers Increase occupation density Optimize building location and costs Open space as the new standard Increase occupation density by 30 to 40% (in line with best practices) In some units occupation area from 15m2 to 6.15 m2 per employee Concentrate business units in single buildings or in nearby areas Vacate the most expensive buildings Renegotiate all building related cost (e.g. security, cleaning, electricity,…) Sell vacant real-state Sell gradually vacant real-estate, releasing capital to invest in core businesses and/or reduce debt Negotiate all real-estate centrally Increase PT’s bargaining power through centralized and specialized negotiation of all real-estate Consider more structural solutions Analyse stronger centralization for main cities 16 Space Released Example – Lisbon area action plan Space Under Release Buildings Releasing Program Going Forward Area (‘000 sq m.) Buildings Estimated Timing ► Entreposto 18.2 ► Expo ► Expo 13.3 ► Taguspark Inovação II 2Q03 ► Arquiparque 7.8 ► Prodiário – Av. 5 de Outubro 2Q03 ► Taguspark Inovação I & II 4.1 ► JN – António Augusto Aguiar 2Q03 ► Defensores de Chaves 1.1 ► Taguspark Tecnologia I 3Q03 ► Taguspark Tecnologia I & II 1.1 ► Taguspark Tecnologia II 3Q03 ► Prodiário 1.0 ► Arquiparque - Miraflores 4Q03 ► JN 0.5 ► Defensores de Chaves 2Q04 ► F. Pereira de Melo, 32 (in 2005) 3.2 ► F. Pereira de Melo, 32 2005 Sold 17 Wrapping Up… 1. The restructuring program launched by PT one year ago was timely, and initiatives already impacting the bottom-line 2. The centralization of the purchasing process already delivered significant savings through new negotiation procedures and the systematic review of PT’s supplier base 3. “PT Compras” creation will consolidate and amplify the efficiency gains 4. PT Pro’s creation was an important step in improving PT’s overall efficiency. The project’s progress to date has been very favourable with 40% of the Group’s back office processes already migrated 5. More ambitious objectives have already been set for PT Pro: PT Comunicações’ back office migration by the end of 2003 and full gains of €20 million to be gradually obtained in full in 2005 6. The vigorous action plan launched in the Information Systems areas has already generated significant cost savings in 2002. PT-SI proved to be financially viable and is the prime contractor of IT service for PT Group 7. The group-wide Information Systems consolidation will progress vigorously and PT-SI will continue to evolve towards organizational and business excellence 8. Key-axis for real-estate optimization are already being “attacked”. This optimization will have a significant impact in PT’s results (full potential captured gradually until 2005) 9. These are just four examples. PT Group’s transformation will continue on many other fronts (no rock unturned mode) 18 2003 Estimated Savings Examples of restructuring projects Savings in OPEX (as a percentage of the Group’s EBITDA) Savings in CAPEX (as a percentage of the Group’s CAPEX) Purchasing central creation 1.3 to 1.9% 2.1 a 3.0% Shared services ~1.0%(1) - Information systems 0.5 to 0.8% - Real estate optimization 0.1 to 0.2% 6.0 to 8.6%(2) (one –off) Total 2.9 to 3.9% 8.1 to 11.6% (1) Savings in steady-state; (2) Due to the sale of real estate assets; 19 Wrap-up and Outlook Zeinal Bava Chief Financial Officer Main Trends for the Future From To PT’s Initiative Driving Dial up Broadband Rev. up Voice Data Product Offer Integrated Services Offer • Net Cabo • i9 • PT Corporate Acquisition Retention Costs down Back Office & Procurement Management Integrated & Centralised Management • Loyalty Program • PT Pro “Variable” Revenues & “Fixed” Costs Structure “Fixed” Revenues & Flexible Costs Structure Rev. & Mg up Rev. up Costs down PT Compras PT Meios 2 Closing Remarks Miguel Horta e Costa Group CEO Investment Case PT: Financial Year 2003 Restructuring benefits ensures sustainable returns Unparalleled scope of business in domestic market Brazil upswing brings additional growth through Vivo leadership Management will return cash Build on a solid track record 2 Ongoing Benefits Restructuring benefits ensures sustainable returns • Headcount reduction • Capex control • Cash Opex control • Interest & Tax cost savings 3 Business Scope Unparalleled scope of business in domestic market • • • • • • • • • Position Customers Revenues* Wireline #1 4.1 M 574 Domestic Mobile #1 4.5 M 353 Brazilian Mobile (100% Vivo) #1 16.9 M 486 Pay TV #1 1.3 M 81 Broadband #1 224 k 24 Cinema Exhibition/Distribution #1 2.2 M 12 Portals (Monthly Unique Visitors) #1 2.6 M 2 Newspapers (Daily Circulation) #1 213 k 32 News Radio (Daily Listeners) #1 366 k 2 * Non-consolidated 1Q03 revenues in € million 4 Brazil Upswing Brazil upswing brings additional growth through Vivo leadership Vivo EBITDA ∆ 02/03% 20% × Vivo weight 25% of PT’s P&L in PT Contribution to PT growth Year End Average ∆ 02/03% 18 to 22% growth in BR$ = 4.5% 5% 5.5% 4 3.9 -29% 3.5 3.7 -24% 3 3.4 -19% € 410M € 440M € 470M 5 Portugal Telecom, SGPS, S.A. 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