DOHA: Qatar’s Ooredoo forecasts its revenue will fall by as much as 3 percent in 2015 and core earnings will drop by a similar margin, a presentation by the telecommunications operator on its website shows.
Ooredoo, which has expanded its operations into about 15 territories in the Middle East, Asia and Africa, is considered among the best-run of the Gulf operators, having avoided the excessive prices which its regional rivals paid to build up foreign portfolios.
But factors largely beyond its control have dulled Ooredoo’s lustre, and its profits for the past two quarters have missed analysts’ forecasts by a wide margin. Last year, annual profit dropped 17 percent to 2.13 billion Qatar riyals ($585 million), the lowest since 2007.
The company forecasts its consolidated revenue in 2015 will be flat to 3 percent lower than 2014’s 33.21 billion riyals, while earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) will fall by as much as 4 percent over the same period. Ooredoo’s 2014 EBITDA was 12.95 billion riyals.
HSBC cut its forecasts for the company in a note this month, predicting Ooredoo’s 2015 revenue would drop to 32.78 billion riyals.
The bank expects the operator’s 2015 annual net profit to fall to 1.83 billion riyals – slashing its previous forecast by more than 1 billion riyals – and will only increase slightly the year after.
“The fundamentals of the domestic market remain strong, but some international operations like Algeria, Tunisia, Indonesia and Iraq have seen sharp deterioration in margins,” HSBC wrote.
In terms of revenue, Qatar, Iraq and Indonesia are Ooredoo’s most important markets, but the latter two suffered double-digits declines last year – Indonesia because of the falling value of the rupiah, and Iraq because of loss of service in many areas held by Sunni rebel groups.
“We anticipated competitive pressure and political instability to weigh on overall group performance,” NBK Capital wrote in a note. “However, management’s current guidance is more bearish than our outlook. We will be revising our forecasts downwards.”