Reuters
Morocco’s biggest telecom group aims to save an annual $33 million with new redundancy plans
Maroc Telecom, Morocco’s biggest telecom group, has asked for voluntary redundancies to cut its workforce by at least 11 per cent as the Vivendi subsidiary tries to boost margins, two company sources said on Wednesday.
Analysts said the plan, launched this month, may result in annual savings worth at least 300 million dirhams ($33 million) after costs to pay off the 1,500-2,000 staff Maroc Telecom is targeting out of a 13,700-strong workforce.
“The plan will affect mostly operations in Morocco and aims mainly to convince staff close to retirement age to leave,” said one of the two sources, both of whom spoke on condition of anonymity. Maroc Telecom was not available to comment.
Earlier this month, Vivendi’s French telecom unit SFR unveiled plans to make 500 million euros ($613 million) cost cuts in 2013 on top of the 450 million targeted for 2012 as it grapples with low-cost competition.
“Maroc Telecom is implementing a broader strategy by Vivendi to cut costs. The telecom market in Morocco is reaching maturity, so operating costs must be reduced to protect shareholders’ value,” a Casablanca-based analyst said.
“Wages are by far the biggest capex for Maroc Telecom and the redundancy plan should enable Maroc Telecom to keep its net margin at 40 per cent,” the analyst said.
Maroc Telecom, Vivendi’s second-most lucrative subsidiary after SFR, has seen revenue growth slow mostly because of growing competition in Morocco, its main source of income.
The company, which has subsidiaries in Burkina Faso, Gabon, Mali and Mauritania, has about 2,700 employees outside Morocco.
“There are concerns about revenues from Africa declining especially from Mali where the unrest has yet to show its impact on telecom operators active there,” a trader said.
Maroc Telecom’s net profit fell 15 per cent to 8.1 billion dirhams ($968 million) in 2011 after turnover shrank 2.5 per cent to 30.8 billion.