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Dixons Carphone’s boss says ‘customers are hanging on to their handsets longer’. Photograph: Westend61/Getty Images/Westend61
Dixons Carphone’s boss says ‘customers are hanging on to their handsets longer’. Photograph: Westend61/Getty Images/Westend61

Dixons Carphone reveals big losses at mobile phone shops

This article is more than 4 years old

Owner of Currys, PC World and Carphone Warehouse blames 22% profit fall on consumers delaying phone upgrades

Shares in Dixons Carphone, Britain’s biggest electrical and mobile phone retailer, slumped almost 20% as it reported a big fall in profits and warned of “significant” losses in its mobile phone business.

The group, which owns Currys, PC World and Carphone Warehouse, said it had been hit by a growing trend among consumers to delay upgrading their mobile phones.

Profits for the year to 27 April fell by 22%, to £298m, down from £382m the previous year. The new chief executive, Alex Baldock, who launched a turnaround strategy in December, warned that profits would fall further this year, to about £210m. Analysts had been expecting about £296m.

This is the second profits warning from the group since Baldock joined in April 2018. Dixons slashed its full-year dividend to 6.75p from 11.25p. Its shares tumbled almost 30% in early trading, to 91p, and later traded down 18% at 102p.

Baldock said the UK mobile market was changing rapidly and the group had to move faster to respond but that would mean “taking more pain in the coming year, when mobile will make a significant loss”.

He said: “Customers are hanging on to their handsets for longer, in some cases three to four years. Some say this is going to change with 5G but we are not going to be dependent on it.”

More customers are buying their handsets and sim cards separately, resulting in lower profits for Dixons, and when they do buy bundles they want more flexibility, Baldock said. In response, the company is preparing to launch its own 36-month credit-based bundle by next April.

He said Dixons had renegotiated all its network contracts, resulting in a £60m benefit to profits, and was offering customers a better choice, including packages with Virgin Media.

The group made a statutory loss before tax of £259m, compared with a profit of £289m the year before, reflecting charges of £557m, including a £383m writedown of its UK mobile business, Carphone Warehouse.

Carphone Warehouse, which now has 560 shops compared with 662 a year earlier, made a loss of £438m. The company does not expect a return to profit until 2022. Baldock did not rule out further store closures, although there are no current plans to do so.

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As part of its turnaround plan, the company is merging its mobile and electrical divisions. It has introduced 18 “gaming battlegrounds” in its stores, where customers can play video games, and is aiming for more than 80 by the end of its financial year. The group also plans to give more space to large-screen TVs and smart home technology.

Baldock said: “Stores need to be exciting places where customers go to experience technology. They should be palaces of discovery.”

As people buy fewer handsets every year, the UK mobile market as a whole has been declining since 2013 and is set for a 6.2% drop this year, and will not grow again until 2021, according to the market intelligence firm IDC.

The @DixonsCarphone group faces difficult challenges as it reveals losses driven by a declining phone business. The UK phone market has been down for the last five years and it won't return to growth until 2021, as @IDC forecast shows @CPWTweets https://t.co/nVmd32syXJ https://t.co/c600vuSWkQ pic.twitter.com/q9MN6qplwO

— Francisco Jeronimo (@fjeronimo) June 20, 2019

Richard Hunter, head of markets at the investment platform interactive investor, said: “In all, the ambitious five-year transformation plan carries many promises and targets but it is simply too early to gauge whether these are achievable.

“Of late, there has been an element of investors running out of patience with Dixons. Even before today’s mauling, the shares had given up 37% over the last year, as compared to a decline of 8% for the wider FTSE250 index.”

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