The Philippine Star

Globe net income up 46% to P34.6 B in 2022

- By Richmond meRcuRio

Globe Telecom Inc.’s net earnings rose by nearly half last year, driven by one-time net gains from partial sale of its data center business and the sale and leaseback of its tower assets.

Globe said net income for 2022 reached P34.6 billion, up by 46 percent from P23.7 billion a year earlier.

Excluding the one-time gains, Globe’s normalized net income would have been P20 billion, 13 percent higher yearon-year.

However, core net income, which excludes the impact of non-recurring charges and foreign exchange and markto-market charges, fell by 10 percent to P19.2 billion last year from P21.2 billion in 2021.

“Despite 2022 being a challengin­g year marked by inflationa­ry pressures, high interest rates and weakened consumer confidence, Globe once again showed resilience,” Globe president and CEO Ernest Cu said.

“We are happy that the Globe Group closed the year with strong topline and EBITDA growth,” he said.

Full year 2022 consolidat­ed EBITDA reached a record high P79.1 billion, six percent higher year-on-year.

The Ayala-led telco also closed the year with all-time high consolidat­ed service revenues of P158 billion, up four percent from P152 billion the previous year.

The topline expansion was driven by corporate data and mobile services, which was complement­ed by the continuous growth from non-telco services as more Filipinos adopt the digital lifestyle.

Globe’s mobile business sustained its strong showing with revenue of P107.5 billion, the second highest in company history.

The company said the revenue improvemen­t came mostly from prepaid with greater public mobility and the resumption of face-to-face classes and work.

Globe ended 2022 with a total mobile customer base of 86.7 million in 2022.

Home broadband revenue, on the other hand, saw an eight percent decline to P27.09 billion last year from 2021’s P29.39 billion.

This was mainly attributed to expected lower performanc­e of Globe At Home Prepaid WiFi, offsetting the increase in home broadband postpaid.

“Despite the performanc­e of the fiber business, the addressabl­e postpaid fiber market has reached saturation levels with the wider market remaining underserve­d. Public clamor for reliable and more importantl­y, affordable internet connectivi­ty continues,” Globe said.

“In response to this, Globe has shifted its focus to prepaid fiber, which it believes will open the industry to a new segment that could potentiall­y drive the next phase of growth for the home broadband industry,” it added.

Globe’s total home broadband subscriber count stood at 2.6 million as of end 2022.

For this year, Globe expects revenues to increase by midsingle digit from 2022 level, with relevant product platforms in place and aggressive network investment­s.

The telco said EBITDA margin may remain in the low 50s, as margins would be continuous­ly impacted by the increasing contributi­on of lower-margin datarelate­d products, but offset with efforts in managing costs.

“As we strive to future proof our network performanc­e, provide better customer experience, and continue with various digital innovation­s to address the everyday pain points of our fellow Filipinos, we are optimistic that our beyond-telco initiative­s will help enable the Philippine­s to become a truly digital nation,” Cu said.

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