DUBAI: Du, the UAE’s No. 2 telecom operator, beat quarterly profit forecasts, helped by a buoyant local economy, and said it was dropping plans to expand into Saudi Arabia because it would need to find a partner.
Chief executive Osman Sultan said du did not meet the criteria to bid for one of three so-called mobile virtual network operator (MVNO) licenses for sale in Saudi Arabia. “We wouldn’t qualify directly (and) going there through some kind of partnership would make the financial equation less interesting,” he said. “I don’t see us going into regional expansion at least in the coming two years in the traditional way, which is new licenses.”
MVNOs lease capacity from conventional mobile operators and pay a percentage of their revenue to them, as well as fees.
Dubai-based du had hoped to expand beyond its UAE base as mobile penetration growth stagnated, but with the country’s economy buoyant this now appears less of a priority.
The UAE government has estimated GDP grew around 4 percent in 2012, while it attracted AED 30 billion ($ 8.2 billion) of direct foreign investment last year.
Du said its fourth-quarter net profit more than doubled after it wrote back tax provisions. Its per-customer revenue also rose and its mobile subscriber base increased by nearly a quarter from a year earlier.
Sultan said du’s 2013 capital expenditure would be roughly the same as last year’s AED 1.7 billion, with the money to be spent on expanding and improving its mobile network and broader infrastructure.
Du, which ended rival Etisalat’s domestic monopoly in 2007, made net profit of AED 994 million in the three months to Dec. 31, up from AED 440 million in the year-earlier period. Analysts had on average forecast a profit of AED 809.7 million, in a Reuters poll.
Du’s shares surged 11.7 percent to their highest close since November 2008. Fourth-quarter revenue was AED 2.74 billion. This compares with AED 2.4 billion a year earlier. UAE telecom operators are taxed via royalties under licenses from the federal government. The latter announced a new formula in December that includes a levy on revenues as well as profits.
Du had expected to pay 50 percent of its profit in royalty fees through the year, the same rate as the longer-established Etisalat. But the new formula means it pays less tax as a percentage of profit than 2011, enabling it to write back some of the provisions it set aside in the first nine months of 2012.
Du proposed a cash dividend of 30 fils per share.
The operator had 6.46 million mobile subscribers as of Dec. 31, up from 5.2 million a year earlier, giving it a market share of 48.7 percent. Average revenue per user rose to 117 dirhams in the quarter from AED 110 in the third quarter.
The company has sought to sign up more mobile customers to monthly, or post-paid, contracts, with these customers typically spending more and being less likely to switch provider. Post-paid subscribers accounted for about a quarter of du’s fourth-quarter mobile revenue of 2.18 billion dirhams, but less than a tenth of subscribers.
Dubai telecom firm du drops plans to expand in Kingdom
Dubai telecom firm du drops plans to expand in Kingdom
European gas prices soar almost 50% as Iran conflict halts Qatar LNG output
- Analysts warn prolonged disruption could push prices higher
- Some shipments of oil, LNG through Strait of Hormuz suspended
- Benchmark Asian LNG price up almost 39 percent
LONDON: Benchmark Dutch and British wholesale gas prices soared by almost 50 percent on Monday, after major liquefied natural gas exporter Qatar Energy said it had halted production due to attacks in the Middle East.
Qatar, soon to cement its role as the world’s second largest LNG exporter after the US, plays a major role in balancing both Asian and European markets’ demand of LNG.
Most tanker owners, oil majors and trading houses have suspended crude oil, fuel and liquefied natural gas shipments via the Strait of Hormuz, trade sources said, after Tehran warned ships against moving through the waterway.
Europe has increased imports of LNG over the past few years as it seeks to phase out Russian gas following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
Around 20 percent of the world’s LNG transits through the Strait of Hormuz and a prolonged suspension or full closure would increase global competition for other sources of the gas, driving up prices internationally.
“Disruptions to LNG flows would reignite competition between Asia and Europe for available cargoes,” said Massimo Di Odoardo, vice president, gas and LNG research at Wood Mackenzie.
The Dutch front-month contract at the TTF hub, seen as a benchmark price for Europe, was up €14.56 at €46.52 per megawatt hour, or around $15.92/mmBtu, by 12:55 p.m. GMT, ICE data showed.
Prices were already some 25 percent higher earlier in the day but extended gains after QatarEnergy’s production halt.
Benchmark Asian LNG prices jumped almost 39 percent on Monday morning with the S&P Global Energy Japan-Korea-Marker, widely used as an Asian LNG benchmark, at $15.068 per million British thermal units, Platts data showed.
“If LNG/gas markets start to price in an extended period of losses to Qatari LNG supply, TTF could potentially spike to 80-100 euros/MWh ($28-35/mmBtu),” Warren Patterson, head of commodities strategy at ING, said. The British April contract was up 40.83 pence at 119.40 pence per therm, ICE data showed.
Europe is also relying on LNG imports to help fill its gas storage sites which have been depleted over the winter and are currently around 30 percent full, the latest data from Gas Infrastructure Europe showed. In the European carbon market, the benchmark contract was down €1.10 at €69.17 a tonne










