Vodafone
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| Vodafone Group, Plc.
<tr><td colspan="2" style="text-align:center; padding:16px 0 16px 0;">Image:VodafoneNewLogo.jpg</td></tr> | |
| Type | Public (LSE: VOD, NYSE: VOD, FWB:VOD) |
|---|---|
| Founded | 1983 as Racal Telecom, independent 1991 |
| Headquarters | Image:Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Newbury, England, UK
<tr><th style="text-align:right; padding-right:0.75em;">Key people</th><td>Sir John Bond, Chairman |
Vodafone Group plc is a British mobile phone operator headquartered in Newbury, England. It is the largest mobile telecommunications network company in the world by turnover and has a market value of about £65 billion (October 2006). Vodafone currently has equity interests in 27 countries and Partner Networks (networks in which it has no equity stake) in a further 33 countries. Its portfolio of global services, supported by its global brand, is available in a total of 59 countries. The name Vodafone comes from Voice data fone, chosen by the company to "reflect the provision of voice and data services over mobile phones."<ref>[1]</ref>
At 30 June 2006 Vodafone had 186.8 million proportionate customers in 27 markets across 5 continents. [2] ("Proportionate customers" means, for example, that if Vodafone has a 30% stake in a business with a million customers, that is counted as 300,000). On this measure it is the second-largest mobile telecom group in the world behind China Mobile. The six markets where it has more than ten million proportionate customers are the United Kingdom, Germany, the United States, Italy, Spain and Turkey. In the U.S., these customers come via its minority stake in Verizon Wireless, and in the other five markets Vodafone has majority-controlled subsidiaries.
On 30 May 2006, the company announced a loss before tax of £14.9 billion ($27.9bn) for 2005, the biggest loss in British corporate history. The loss for the year from continuing operations was £17.2 billion and the bottom line loss for the financial year was £21.8 billion. The company was pushed into loss by impairment charges of £23.5 billion, which related to the acquisition of Mannesmann several years earlier, and losses of £4.6 billion in relation to its discontinued business in Japan. At an operating level it remained highly profitable, with an operating profit on continuing operations of £9.4 billion before impairment costs.
Contents |
[edit] Vodafone in Europe
Vodafone currently operates in the following countries in Europe. The proportionate customer numbers are for 31 December 2005:
see About Vodafone: Global Footprint, 30 June 2006
[edit] History
- Vodafone was a division of Racal Electronics plc in the early 1980s. Then known as Racal Telecom, in 1982 the company won a tender to build and run the second UK cellular telephone network. This was launched as Vodafone on 1 January 1985.<ref>[3]</ref>
<ref>[4]</ref>
- Vodafone's name comes from the tying together of 3 words - Voice data phone - to form the word "Vodafone"
- October 1991: Racal Telecom is demerged from Racal Electronics and becomes Vodafone Group.
- June 1992: Vodafone Germany's (still as "Mannesmann Mobilfunk GmbH") network goes live.
- 1998: Introduces new logo, known as the Speechmark, as it is a quotation mark in a circle; the O's in the Vodafone logotype are opening and closing quotation marks, suggesting conversation. The logo often appears on the outline of a SIM card.
- 30 June 1999: Purchases AirTouch Communications, Inc. of the U.S., and changes its name to Vodafone Airtouch Plc. As Airtouch owns 30% percent of the Mobile Phone Division of the German Mannesmann group, Vodafone is required to shed its 17 percent holding in Germany's third-largest mobile provider, E-Plus.
- 21 September 1999: Announces a $70-billion joint venture with Bell Atlantic Corp. to be called Verizon Wireless, which was composed of the two companies' U.S. wireless assets.
- February - April 2000: Buys German conglomerate Mannesmann AG to get control over the mobile network operator Mannesmann Mobilfunk GmbH & Co KG, operating the "D2" network. The deal is one of the largest in European history and is Germany's first hostile takeover by a foreign firm. The conglomerate is subsequently broken up and all manufacturing related operations sold off.
- 28 July 2000: Reverts to its former name, Vodafone Group Plc
- 16 April 2001: First 3G voice call on Vodafone United Kingdom's 3G network.
- 2001: Takes over Eircell, then part of eircom in Ireland, and rebrands it Vodafone Ireland.
- 2001-2002: Acquires Japan's third-largest mobile operator J-Phone, which had introduced camera phones first in Japan.
- 17 December 2001: Introduces the concept of "Partner Networks" by signing TDC Mobil of Denmark. The new concept involves the introduction of Vodafone international services to the local market, without the need of investment by Vodafone. The concept would be used to extend the Vodafone brand and services into markets where it does not have stakes in local operators. Vodafone services would be marketed under the dual-brand scheme, where the Vodafone brand is added at the end of the local brand. (i.e., TDC Mobil-Vodafone etc.)
- 2 February 2002: Finland is added into the mobile community, as Radiolinja is signed as a Partner Network. Radiolinja later changed its named to Elisa.
- 2002: Rebrands Japan's J-sky mobile internet service as Vodafone live!™
- 3 December 2002: Brand is introduced in the Estonian market with signing of a Partner Network Agreement with Radiolinja (Eesti). Radiolinja (Eesti) later changed its name to Elisa.
- 7 January 2003: Signs a group-wide Partner agreement with mobilkom austria. As a result, Austria, Croatia, and Slovenia is added to the community.
- 16 April 2003: Og Vodafone is introduced in the Icelandic market.
- 13 May 2003:Omnitel is rebranded Vodafone Italy.
- 21 July 2003: Lithuania is added to the community, with the signing of a Partner Network agreement with Bité.
- 16 February 2004: Signs a Partner Network Agreement with Luxembourg's LuxGSM.
- 20 February 2004: Signs a Partner Network Agreement with Cyta of Cyprus. Cyta agreed to rename its mobile phone operations to Cytamobile-Vodafone.
- November 2004: Introduces 3G services into Europe.
- June 2005: Increases its participation in Romania's Connex to 99%; also buys Czech mobile operator Oskar.
- 1 July 2005: Oskar of Czech Republic is rebranded as Oskar-Vodafone.
- 17 October 2005: Vodafone Portugal launches a revised logo, using new text designed by Dalton Maag, and a 3D version of the Speechmark logo, but still retaining a red background and white writing (or vice versa). Also, various operating companies start to drop the use of the SIM card pattern in the company logo. (The rebranding of Oskar-Vodafone and Connex-Vodafone also does not use the SIM card pattern.) A custom typeface by Dalton Maag (based on their font family InterFace) forms part of the new identity.
- 28 October 2005: Connex in Romania is rebranded as Connex-Vodafone.
- 31 October 2005: Reaches an agreement to sell Vodafone Sweden to Telenor for approximately € 1 billion. After the sale, Vodafone Sweden becomes a Partner Network.
- 13 December 2005: Wins an auction to buy Turkey's second-largest mobile phone company, Telsim, for $4.5 billion. [5]
- December 2005: Vodafone Spain becomes the second member of the group to adopt the revised logo, and it is phased in over the following six months in other countries.
- 5 January 2006: Announces the completion of the sale of Vodafone Sweden to Telenor.
- 1 February 2006: Oskar Vodafone becomes Vodafone Czech Republic, adopting the revised logo.
- 22 February 2006: Announces that it is extending its footprint to Bulgaria with the signing of Partner Network Agreement with Mobiltel, which is part of mobilkom austria group.
- 12 March 2006: Former chief, Sir Christopher Gent, who was appointed the honorary post Chairman for Life in 2003, quits following rumours of boardroom rifts.
- 11 April 2006: Announces that it has signed an extension to its Partner Network Agreement with BITE Group, enabling its Latvian subsidiary "BITE Latvija" to become the latest member of Vodafone's global partner community.
- 20 April 2006: Vodafone Sweden changes its name to Telenor Sverige AB.
- 26 April 2006: Connex-Vodafone becomes Vodafone Romania, also adopting the new logo.
- 30 May 2006: Announces the biggest loss in British corporate history (£14.9 billion) and plans to cut 400 jobs; reports one-off costs of £23.5 billion due to the revaluation of their Mannesmann subsidiary.
- 25 August 2006: Announces the sale of 25% stake in Belgium's Proximus for Euro 2 billion. After the deal, Proximus will still be part of the community as a Partner Network.
- 5 October 2006: Vodafone announces first single brand partnership with Og Vodafone which will now operate under the name Vodafone Iceland
[edit] Vodafone in Asia-Pacific
Vodafone currently operates in the following countries in the Asia-Pacific region. The proportionate customer numbers are at 30 June 2006:
| Country | Network Name (former) | Ownership | Proportionate Number of Customers | Market Share | Official Website | Local Competitor/s |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Australia | Vodafone | 100% | 3,140,000 | 18% | www.vodafone.com.au | Telstra, Optus, 3, Virgin Mobile |
| China | China Mobile | 3.3% | 8,250,000 (30 June 2005) | 65% | www.chinamobile.com | China Unicom |
| Fiji | Vodafone | 49% | 95,000 | 100% | www.vodafone.com.fj | |
| Indonesia | XL | 0% | -- | www.xl.co.id | Telkomsel, Indosat IM3 | |
| Japan | SoftBank Mobile, (Vodafone K.K., J-Phone) | small % of preferred shares | -- | 17% | mb.softbank.jp | DoCoMo, KDDI
(au) |
| Hong Kong | SmarTone-Vodafone (SmarTone) | 0% | -- | www.smartone-vodafone.com | 3, Peoples, CSL, New World, PCCW | |
| India | AirTel | 10% | 1,633,000 | 22% | www.airtel.in | Hutchinson Essar, Bharat sanchar nigam limited,BPL mobile, Idea,Spice, Aircel |
| Malaysia | Celcom | 0% | -- | www.celcom.com.my | Maxis Communications, Digi.com | |
| New Zealand | Vodafone (BellSouth) | 100% | 2,100,000 | 52.4% | www.vodafone.co.nz | Telecom |
| Singapore | M1 | 0% | -- | 35% | www.m1.com.sg | SingTel, StarHub |
| Sri Lanka | Dialog | 0% | -- | www.dialog.lk |
[edit] History
- July 1993: BellSouth New Zealand's network went live.
- October 1993: Vodafone Australia's network went live.
- July 1994: Vodafone Fiji's network went live.
- November 1998: Purchases BellSouth New Zealand, it later becomes Vodafone New Zealand.
- 1999-2000: J-Phone launched the J-sky mobile internet service in response to DoCoMo's i-Mode service.
- December 2002: J-Phone's 3G network went live.
- 3 November 2003: Singapore becomes a part of the community as M1 is signed as partner network
- October 1 2003: J-Phone becomes 'Vodafone'; J-Phone's mobile internet service J-Sky becomes Vodafone Live!
- April 2005: Smartone changed the name of its brand from Smartone to 'SmarTone-Vodafone' after the both company signed the Partner Network Agreement.
- August 2005: Launches 3G technology in New Zealand
- October 2005: Begins launching 3G technology in Australia
- 28 October 2005: Announces the acquisition of a 10 per cent stake in India's Bharti Televentures, which operates the largest mobile phone network in India under the brand name AirTel.
- 22 December 2005: Announces the completion of the acquisition of the 10% stake in Bharti Televentures of India.
- 25 January 2006: Indonesia, Malaysia, and Sri Lanka are added to the Vodafone footprint as Vodafone Group signs a partner network agreement with Telekom Malaysia.
- 17 March 2006: Announces an agreement to sell all its interest in Vodafone Japan (to SoftBank for £8.9 billion of which £6.8 billion will be received in cash on closing of deal. Vodafone Japan later changed its name to Softbank Mobile
- 3 April 2006: Vodafone New Zealand officially adopts the group's new logo
- 9 October 2006:: Vodafone New Zealand buys New Zealand's 3rd largest I.S.P., iHug
- 1 November 2006: Vodafone Australia signs the Australian Football League (AFL)'s biggest individual club sponsorship deal with the Brisbane Lions from seasons 2007-2009
[edit] Vodafone in the Middle East and Africa
Vodafone currently operates in the following countries in the Middle East and Africa region. The proporationate customer numbers are as at 31 December 2005.
| Country | Network Name (former) | Ownership | Proportionate Number of Customers | Market Share | Status | Official Website |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bahrain | MTC-Vodafone | -- | -- | 30% | Partner | www.mtc-vodafone.com.bh |
| Democratic Republic of Congo | Vodacom | 25.5%* | 49% | * | www.vodacom.cd | |
| Egypt | Vodafone | 50.1% | 3,151,000 | 47% | Subsidiary | www.vodafone.com.eg |
| Kenya | Safaricom | 35% | 1,221,000 | 65% | Affiliate | www.safaricom.co.ke |
| Kuwait | MTC-Vodafone | -- | -- | Partner | www.mtc-vodafone.com | |
| Lesotho | Vodacom | 44.15%* | 80% | * | www.vodacom.co.ls | |
| Mozambique | Vodacom | 49%* | 33% | * | www.vm.co.mz | |
| South Africa | Vodacom | 50% | 7,043,000 | 59% | Subsidiary | www.vodacom.co.za |
| Tanzania | Vodacom | 32.5%* | 55% | * | www.vodacom.co.tz |
[edit] History
- October 1998: Vodafone Egypt network went live under the name ClickGSM.
- 18 September 2002: Vodafone signs a Partner Network Agreement with MTC group of Kuwait. The agreement involved the rebranding of MTC to MTC-Vodafone.
- 29 December 2003: Vodafone signs another Partner Network Agreement with Kuwait's MTC group. The second agreement involves the co-operation in Bahrain and the branding of the network as MTC-Vodafone.
- 3 November 2004: Announces that its South African affiliate Vodacom has agreed to introduce Vodafone's international services, such as Vodafone live! and partner agreements, to its local market.
- 3 November 2005: Announces that it is in exclusive talks to buy the 15% stake of VenFin in Vodacom Group, reaching agreement the following day. Vodafone and Telkom will then have a 50% stake each in Vodacom.
- 08 November 2006: Announces a deal with Telecom Egypt resulting in further co-operation in the Egyptian market; and increasing of stake in Vodafone Egypt. After the deal, Vodafone Egypt will be 55% owned by the group, while the remaining 45% will be owned by Telecom Egypt.
[edit] Vodafone in the Americas
Vodafone currently operates in the following countries in the Americas region.
[edit] United States
In the United States, Vodafone owns 45% of Verizon Wireless, the country's second largest mobile carrier. The percentage of the customer base and revenues of Verizon Wireless that Vodafone consolidates is slightly lower, since some Verizon Wireless subsidiaries have minority investors. (Hence the exact percentages that Vodafone and Verizon report vary from period to period: in June 2006 Vodafone reported that Verizon Wireless owned 98.6% of its customers at that date.) Before this joint venture was formed, Vodafone merged with AirTouch Communications of the U.S. in June 1999 and changed its name to Vodafone Airtouch Plc. In September 1999, Vodafone Airtouch announced a $70-billion joint venture with Bell Atlantic Corp. The first wireless business with a national footprint in the U.S., Verizon Wireless was composed of Bell Atlantic's and Vodafone AirTouch's U.S. wireless assets and began operations on April 4 2000. However, Verizon Communications—the company formed when Bell Atlantic and GTE merged on June 30 2000—owns a majority of Verizon Wireless and Vodafone's branding is not used, nor is the CDMA network compatible with GSM phones. This relationship has been quite profitable for Vodafone, but there have historically been three problems with it. The first is the above-mentioned incompatibility with the GSM 900/1800 MHZ standard used by Vodafone's other networks, and the consequent difficulty of offering roaming between Vodafone's U.S. and other networks. The other two stem from the fact that Vodafone does not have management control over Verizon Wireless. Vodafone is thus unable to use the Vodafone brand for its U.S. operations, and (perhaps more importantly) has no control of dividend policy at Verizon Wireless and is therefore entirely at the mercy of Verizon management with respect to cash flow from Verizon Wireless.
Perhaps as a consequence of these reasons, Vodafone made a bid for the entirety of AT&T Wireless when that company was for sale in 2004. Had this bid been successful, Vodafone would presumably have sold its stake in Verizon Wireless, and then rebranded the resultant business as Vodafone. However, Cingular Wireless (a joint venture of SBC Communications (now AT&T) and BellSouth) ultimately outbid Vodafone and took control of AT&T Wireless, and Vodafone's relationship with Verizon has continued.
Early in 2006 Verizon re-iterated their desire to buy-out the remaining 45% of Stock of Verizon Wireless from Vodafone Group.<ref>[6]</ref>. Vodafone has also repeatedly indicated that it would be willing to buy out Verizon's stake.
[edit] Latin America
On 15 November 2005, Vodafone Group announced a group-wide co-operation agreement with America Movil of Mexico. The agreement involves co-operation on international services and roaming. The services include Voice and GPRS Roaming services, Preferred Roaming and Virtual Home Environment. Included in the agreement are the 13 networks owned and controlled by America Movil (except Tracfone in the United States), and the various operating companies of Vodafone and its Partner Networks.
1 Vodafone Group Plc. Key Performance Indicator press release for the quarter to 30 June 2005, 25 July 2005.
[edit] Financial results
From its 31 March 2006 year end onwards Vodafone will report its results in accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS). It has issued results amended to IFRS standards for its 31 March 2004 and 31 March 2005 year ends for information purposes, and these are shown in the first table below.
Vodafone has some large minority stakes, in particular in Verizon Wireless in the United States and SFR in France, which are not included in its consolidated turnover. In order to provide additional information on the overall scale and growth trends of its business it publishes "proportionate turnover" figures and these are included in the tables below. For example, if a business in which it owns a 45% stake has turnover of £10 billion, that equals £4.5 billion of proportionate turnover for Vodafone. Proportionate turnover is not an official accounting measure and Vodafone's proportionate turnover should be compared with other companies' statutory turnover.
Vodafone also produces proportionate customer number figures on a similar basis, eg. if an operator in which it has a 30% stake has 10 million customers that equals 3 million proportionate Vodafone customers. This is a common practice in the mobile telecommunications industry.
| Year ended 31 March | Turnover £m | Profit before tax £m | Profit for the year £m | Basic eps (pence) | Proportionate customers (m) | Proportionate turnover £m |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2006* | 29,350 | (14,835) | (21,821) | (35.01) | 170.6 | 48,455 |
| 2005 | 34,073 | 7,951 | 6,518 | 9.68 | 154.8 | 43,602 |
| 2004 | 32,492 | 9,013 | 6,112 | 8.70 | 133.4 | 39,446 |
*Losses for year to 31 March 2006 reflect write downs of assets, principally in relation to the Mannesmann acquisition. Proportionate turnover includes £7,100 million from discontinued operations.
The following table shows Vodafone's results under UK generally accepted accounting principles (UK GAAP). By the end of its key acquisition drive, which ran from 1999 to 2002, Vodafone had more than £100 billion of goodwill on its balance sheet. As UK GAAP requires goodwill to be written off against the profit and loss account Vodafone has shown large statutory losses since then. However this write off of goodwill is purely an accounting adjustment and does not affect Vodafone's cash position or its ability to pay dividends. Despite the reported losses it is in reality a highly profitable company, and this is reflected in the fact that it has often been ranked among the top twenty companies in the world by market capitalisation. Vodafone's accounts for the years shown in the table below include a great number of material one off transactions, and apart from noting the rapid expansion of the group in the years covered, no conclusions about underlying trends should be drawn from the figures without examining the accounts in more detail.
| Year ended 31 March | Turnover £m | Profit/(loss) before tax £m | Profit/(loss) for the year £m | Basic eps (pence) | Amortisation of goodwill £m | Proportionate customers (m) | Proportionate turnover £m + |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2005 | 34,133 | (4,702) | (7,540) | (11.39) | 14,700 | 154.8 | 43,602 |
| 2004 | 33,559 | (5,047) | (9,015) | (13.24) | 15,207 | 133.4 | 39,446 |
| 2003 | 30,375 | (6,208) | (9,819) | (14.41) | 14,056 | 119.7 | 33,926 |
| 2002 | 22,845 | (13,539) | (16,155) | (23.77) | 13,470 | 101.1 | 29,799 |
| 2001 | 15,004 | (8,095) | (9,763) | (16.09) | 9,585 | 83.0 | 22,230 |
| 2000 | 7,873 | 1,349 | 487 | 1.80 | 1,712 | 39.1 | 12,569 |
| 1999 | 3,360 | 935 | 637 | 4.12 | 8 | 25.4 | 9,185 |
1 Vodafone Group Plc. Key Performance Indicator press release for the quarter to 30 June 2005, 25 July 2005.
[edit] Corporate sponsorship
- SL Benfica Portuguese football team, 2002-2005
- Clare Gaelic Athletic Association, Ireland (formerly sponsored by Eircell)
- Daily Express Life Savers Awards
- David Beckham A two-year deal that was signed in 2002, later extended by another 12 months then ended in July 2005
- DTM (the German touring car series)
- England cricket team
- Vodafone Oaks and Vodafone Derby horse races at Epsom.
- Manchester United football until the end of 2005/6 soccer season, which ends Vodafone's four-year shirt deal, two years earlier than planned.
- AFC Newbury (The football club from Newbury, where Vodafone was founded.)
- Ferrari Formula One constructor (until 2006), associate sponsorship only
- McLaren Formula One constructor (from 2007), primary sponsor
- UEFA Champions League from the 2006/7 season
- New Zealand Warriors Rugby League team (until 2007)
- Brisbane Lions Football Club, Australian Rules football team, major sponsor from 2007
- Port Adelaide Football Club Australian rules football team (since 1997)
- Vodafone Arena Rosenholm multisport arena in Karlskrona, Sweden (since 2005)
- Vodafone Arena Multi purpose venue. Arena in Melbourne Park, Melbourne, Australia
- West Coast Eagles, Elite sponsor, Australian rules football team (since March 2006)
- Triple 8 Race Engineering, V8 Supercars team, primary sponsor(starting 2007)
[edit] Products
[edit] USB 3G modems
Huawei makes USB 3G datacard modems for Vodafone (Vodafone Mobile Connect USB Modem).
Using this USB card, customers are able to access 3G broadband services, regardless of their choice of computer (tablet PC, PDA...). Even the software installs itself (self installing) from the modem, so that absolutely no kwnoledge of technology is required to get online in moments.
It offer download speeds of around 1.4 Mbps and upload speeds of upto 384 Kbps, across Vodafone´s growing 3G broadband footprint. When outside of 3G broadband coverage, customers will automatically be able to access the web using Vodafone´s existing GPRS services.
[edit] References
<references/>
- ECB dials up £12m deal. BBC Sport (11. December, 2000).
- Ferrari extend sponsorship deal. BBC Sport (16. December, 2004).
- Man Utd rings up £36m shirt deal. BBC News (1. December, 2003).
[edit] External links
| Image:Flag of Ireland.svg | Irish mobile phone companies |
|---|---|
| 3 Ireland | O2 Ireland | Vodafone Ireland | Meteor Mobile |
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Categories: Companies listed on the London Stock Exchange | Companies listed on the New York Stock Exchange | Companies listed on the Frankfurt Stock Exchange | Mobile phone companies of the United Kingdom | Vodafone | Mobile phone companies | Telecommunication companies of the United Kingdom | Companies based in Berkshire | Companies established in 1983

