BT's first-quarter
results for 2007/8 showed a modest three per cent growth in group revenue and
profit over the same period last year. Profit for the quarter was £0.7bn on
revenue of £5bn.
Three per cent may not seem like a stunning performance but, unlike many
other telcos, BT does not have a large mobile division to drive growth.
"To achieve consistent growth as a fixed line business is a considerable
achievement," Mike Cansfield, telecoms practice leader at analyst firm
Ovum, told
vnunet.com.
BT's global business, which has previously grown at double-digit rates,
slowed to five per cent growth over the quarter.
But BT's wholesale division has recently struck deals with
T-Mobile
and Royal
Mail and is set to become the company's star performer, according to
Cansfield.
"If [BT Wholesale] can continue to win deals of this type under
new chief executive
Sally Davis it will show that investment in 21CN was a means to turn the
network into a source of new revenues and much more than a network upgrade," he
said.
A fifth of BT's revenue derives from networked IT services. "BT is no longer
a traditional telephony-only business," said Cansfield. "We can expect more to
be driven by software and IT in the future."
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