* Q1 revenue misses forecasts with a 3% fall
* Dragged lower by a 12% decline in Global unit
* CEO says fibre build plan by rival Virgin Media O2 makes
sense
* Shares fall 6.5%
(Adds CEO comments, shares)
By Paul Sandle
LONDON, July 29 (Reuters) - Britain's BT said on
Thursday postponed overseas projects by the telecoms group's
multinational customers hurt first-quarter revenue, taking the
shine off better-than-expected earnings and the progress in
building its fibre network.
Chief Executive Philip Jansen said the quarter was overall
in line with the company's expectations, as a good performance
in Britain offset challenging conditions in its Global unit.
He said the large corporate space was "very challenging",
but satisfaction was the highest it had ever been. Major
companies faced the upheaval and expense of adapting to
homeworking in the first quarter last year during the pandemic,
and were deferring major spending on projects this year.
"No need to panic, we're very alert to it," he told
reporters on Thursday. "It needs to come back and we're hopeful
it will come back in the back half."
BT reported a better-than-expected 3% rise in adjusted core
earnings to 1.87 billion pounds ($2.61 billion) on revenue 3%
lower at 5.07 billion pounds for the end-June quarter.
Investors focused on the revenue miss rather than the
earnings beat, with BT's shares down 6.5% in early deals.
Jansen said conditions were expected to improve through the
year, including an inflection on revenue.
BT faces increased competition from Virgin Media O2, which
said on Thursday it would upgrade its network serving 15.5
million premises to full fibre, with completion in 2028.
The Liberty Global and Telefonica joint
venture said there was a potential opportunity to enter the
fixed wholesale market.
Jansen said Virgin Media O2's move made "complete sense".
"We've already got 5 million (premises) built, with 1
million connections; we'll have 25 million built by December
(20)26," he said. "The country needs two top quality companies
delivering the best technology."
BT is seeking a partner to invest in a chunk of its fibre
build and is considering a sale of a stake in BT Sport.
Jansen said there was no news on either, and reiterated he
would only do a deal if the terms were attractive.
He added that he was sure there would be a conclusion on BT
Sport by the next quarter if not before.
($1 = 0.7177 pounds)
(Reporting by Paul Sandle; editing by Kate Holton and Emelia
Sithole-Matarise)