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Vodafone posts rise in Q1 revenue as Europe returns to growth – Metro US

Vodafone posts rise in Q1 revenue as Europe returns to growth

Different types of 4G, 5G and data radio relay antennas
Different types of 4G, 5G and data radio relay antennas for mobile phone networks are pictured on a relay mast operated by Vodafone in Berlin

By Paul Sandle

LONDON (Reuters) -Mobile operator Vodafone reported a better-than-expected rise in first-quarter service revenue on Friday as more stores reopened and tourism made a tentative return following last year’s COVID-19 disruption.

Chief Executive Nick Read said the company was back to service revenue growth in Europe as well as Africa as it reported a 3.3% rise in service revenue.

“This growth was broad-based within both consumer and business segments, with the vast majority of our markets contributing,” he said.

Vodafone shares were trading 2% higher in early deals on Friday as revenue growth beat analysts’ forecasts of a 1.4% rise.

Retail footfall across its four largest markets was up 70% year-on-year but still 40% below pre-COVID levels, Read said.

Roaming and visitor revenue also made only a partial recovery, up 56% on last year when strict COVID-19 restrictions were in place in Europe but 54% lower than pre-pandemic levels.

“The recovery was never going to be linear,” Read told reporters.

“We would like to think that when we get to September and the back to school season that we are largely in a more normalised environment. But it won’t be normal, it will be normalising.”

The company said it maintained momentum in its biggest market Germany, with growth accelerating to 1.4% against 1.2% in Q4, while both Britain and Spain returned to quarter-on-quarter growth as COVID-19 restrictions eased.

Continued competition in Italy resulted in a 3.6% decline, against a 7.8% decline in the previous quarter.

Vodafone reported strong growth in Africa, where its financial platform M-Pesa saw transaction volumes increase 45% year-on-year.

The group said it was on track to deliver its full-year targets of 15.0-15.4 billion euros in adjusted earnings and at least 5.2 billion euros in free cash flow.

(Editing by Kate Holton and Joe Bavier)