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Saudi Telecom Q2 profit down

By Reuters
Riyadh, 18 Jul 2007

Saudi Telecommunications (STC), the Arab world's largest telecom firm by market value, said second quarter net profit fell 8.6% to 3.1 billion riyals ($826.6 million), beating analysts expectations.

Analysts' forecasts for second quarter profit ranged from 2.73 billion riyals to 2.97 billion riyals, according to a Reuters survey last month.

It was STC's fourth straight decline in quarterly profit after it lost its monopoly on mobile phone services when Etihad Etisalat started operations in 2005. Saudi Telecom is set to lose its fixed-line monopoly this year.

But second-quarter earnings showed an improvement compared to the first quarter of this year, mainly in terms of cost control.

Revenue inched down 0.5% in the second quarter to 8.44 billion riyals, resulting in an operating profit of 3.22 billion riyals, down 7.1% from the three months to 30 June 2006, according to Reuters calculations based on the statement and earlier reports.

Operating costs fell to 5.21 billion riyals in the second quarter, down 3.4% from the first quarter but up only 1.2% from the year-earlier period. In the first quarter, operating costs were up 6.9% from the same period in 2006.

STC made a net profit of 5.82 billion riyals in the six months to 30 June, down 14.5% from a year earlier, the company said in a statement.

First-half operating profit was down 11.4% to 6.15 billion riyals.

"The drop (in operating profit) is due to a rise in fees for the use of external networks, knowing that the company achieved a 17.3% growth in the number of customers compared to the same period (first half) of last year," it said.

It did not give a figure on the rise of external networks costs, which were up 18.2% in the first quarter of this year.

Earnings per share fell to 2.91 riyals from 3.41 riyals. The company will pay a dividend of 1.25 riyals per share for the first half of 2007, it added.

STC made a first-quarter net profit of 2.72 billion riyals, down 20.5% from the three months ending 31 March 2006.

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