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Company Report

Telstra's performance during and since the depth of covid-19 demonstrates the resilience of its earnings and the strength of its balance sheet, especially given the negative impact on high-margin roaming revenue was material during the pandemic. The AUD 2.7 billion cost-out program under T22 has been delivered and management is now focused on hitting the AUD 500 million cost reduction target under the T25 plan.
Company Report

Telstra's performance during and since the depth of covid-19 demonstrates the resilience of its earnings and the strength of its balance sheet, especially given the negative impact on high-margin roaming revenue was material during the pandemic. The AUD 2.7 billion cost-out program under T22 has been delivered and management is now focused on hitting the AUD 500 million cost reduction target under the T25 plan.
Stock Analyst Note

The 4% rise in Telstra's fiscal 2024 underlying EBITDA to AUD 8.2 billion was well-telegraphed, meeting guidance reiterated just three months ago. The more encouraging news is the tightening of management's fiscal 2025 EBITDA projection to AUD 8.5 billion to AUD 8.7 billion from AUD 8.4 billion at the low end. We consider it a small but sentimentally positive upgrade so early in the new fiscal year.
Stock Analyst Note

Shares in Telstra are at an attractive 21% discount to our AUD 4.50 fair value estimate. There is no impact on that intrinsic valuation from the restructure and trading update, with fiscal 2024 earnings guidance reaffirmed and management's fiscal 2025 projections in line with our expectations.
Company Report

Telstra's performance during and since the depth of COVID-19 demonstrates the resilience of its earnings and the strength of its balance sheet, especially given the negative impact on high-margin roaming revenue was material during the pandemic. The AUD 2.7 billion cost-out program under T22 has been delivered and management is now focused on hitting the AUD 500 million cost reduction target under the T25 plan.
Stock Analyst Note

Shares in Telstra are trading at an attractive 16% discount to our AUD 4.50 fair value estimate. The underperformance since the fiscal 2023 results release in August, down 9% versus a 4% decline in the ASX 200 Accumulation Index, likely reflects lingering investor misgivings on the tardy progress toward T25 targets and the kyboshing of InfraCo-Fixed monetization.
Company Report

Telstra's performance during the depth of COVID-19 demonstrates the resilience of its earnings and the strength of its balance sheet, especially given the negative impact on high-margin roaming revenue was material. The AUD 2.7 billion cost-out program under T22 has been delivered and management is now focused on hitting the AUD 500 million cost reduction target under the T25 plan.
Company Report

The preliminary impact of COVID-19 on Telstra demonstrates the relative resilience of its earnings and the comfort of its balance sheet, although the impact on high-margin roaming revenue and delays to the productivity program are notable.
Stock Analyst Note

Efficient scale typically applies to firms that serve a market of limited size, in which potential competitors have little incentive to enter because doing so would lower the industry’s returns below the cost of capital. Although we observe efficient scale across nearly every sector, it is most common in highly regulated and capital-intensive industries, such as regulated utilities, telecom services, midstream oil and gas, REITs, and railroads.
Stock Analyst Note

Telstra released fiscal 2014 earnings, reporting underlying net profit after tax, or NPAT, of AUD 4 billion, in line with our forecasts. Underlying earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation, or EBITDA, rose 3% to AUD 10.7 billion, slightly ahead of our AUD 10.6 billion estimate. Confirmation of an AUD 1 billion off-market share buyback was a key positive takeaway.
Company Report

Telstra is the leading telecommunications and information service provider in Australia. It has either dominant or significant market share in each service category and is the lowest-cost provider, underpinning its narrow moat rating. While competition is robust, mobile market shares are likely to prove reasonably resilient. The industry is highly regulated and the extent of regulation can penalise Telstra due to its market position and historical ownership.
Stock Analyst Note

Ahead of a management briefing in late May, which will focus solely on Telstra Corporation's mobile business, we outline recent pricing trends and our market share expectations for the division. Broadly, we believe the competitive environment in the retail mobile market is improving. For almost 12 months there appears to have been a gradual reduction in handset subsidies by all three network operators. Although carriers have been broadly increasing data allowances on post-paid plans, voice pricing has been relatively stable, even increasing in some lower-value segments. Although we note that exact charges are difficult to compare given changes to headline price points. On a stand-alone basis, we expect plan and subsidy adjustment to be positive for Telstra mobile margins, although a full earnings period benefit may not emerge for 12 to 24 months.
Company Report

Telstra is the leading telecommunications and information service provider in Australia. It has either dominant or significant market share in each service category and is the lowest-cost provider, underpinning its narrow moat rating. While competition is robust, mobile market shares are likely to prove reasonably resilient. The industry is highly regulated and the extent of regulation can penalise Telstra due to its market position and historical ownership.
Company Report

Telstra is the leading telecommunications and information service provider in Australia. It has either dominant or significant market share in each service category and is the lowest-cost provider, underpinning its narrow moat rating. While competition is robust, mobile market shares are likely to prove reasonably resilient. The industry is highly regulated and the extent of regulation can penalise Telstra due to its market position and historical ownership.
Stock Analyst Note

Telstra released its first half fiscal 2014 results, reporting net profit after tax of AUD 1.74 billion – in line with our AUD 1.75 billion forecast. At an operational level there were small beats in mobile and fixed broadband, supported by better-than-expected subscriber growth and solid trends in average revenue per user, or ARPU. This was offset by lower-than-expected growth in network applications and services, or NAS, where margins were impacted by upfront costs associated with new contracts. For example, the new AUD 1.1 billion Department of Defence contract which commenced in the second half of fiscal 2013. Growth in NAS was still impressive, revenue was up 29% against the prior period.
Stock Analyst Note

Telstra has signed a non-binding memorandum of understanding with Telkom Indonesia to create a joint venture, or JV, that will provide network services in Indonesia. The proposed JV will be the exclusive provider of network application and services, or NAS, in Indonesia for both companies. Although in isolation this is a relatively small event for Telstra, the deal highlights one of the ways Telstra can deliver on its Asian growth strategy. Partnership with local players could provide Telstra a lower-risk alternative to acquisitions, which are also likely to form part of the expansion strategy. That said, these partnerships are "slow-burn" opportunities that are unlikely to deliver a material earnings contribution in the short to medium term.
Stock Analyst Note

Narrow-moat rated Telstra has agreed to sell a 70% stake in some of the assets of Sensis, its directories and advertising business. The directories and mapping operations of Sensis are the key assets included in the sale. Telstra will realise AUD 454 million from the sale, implying a total value for the assets of AUD 649 million. This implies a fiscal 2014 earnings multiple based on earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation, or EBITDA, of about 2.4 times. We believe this is a fair outcome given the ongoing structural decline and earnings deterioration within Sensis. Divestment will further strengthen the Telstra balance sheet and provides management with additional capacity to return cash to shareholders. We reiterate our view that a material increase in the dividend may be unlikely given limited excess franking credits.
Company Report

Telstra is the leading telecommunications and information service provider in Australia. It has either dominant or significant market share in each service category and is the lowest-cost provider, underpinning its narrow moat rating. While competition is robust, mobile market shares are likely to prove reasonably resilient. The industry is highly regulated and the extent of regulation can penalise Telstra due to its market position and historical ownership.

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