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PRIVACY
Tech

BT hikes dividend as profits rise - but shares fall on gloomy outlook

The company has declared a final dividend of 5.76p per share, bringing its full-year dividend to 8.16p, an increase of two per cent on the previous year

The BT (British Telecom) tower is pictured in central London(Image: DANIEL LEAL/AFP via Getty Images)

BT has announced an increase in its dividend payout to shareholders following a reported rise in profits.

The telecom heavyweight declared a final dividend of 5.76p per share, taking the total annual dividend to 8.16p – a two per cent hike on last year's figures. The firm maintains a policy of maintaining or growing the dividend yearly, as reported by .

Pre-tax profits surged to £1.3bn for the 12 months ending March, marking a 12 per cent increase, which CEO Allison Kirkby attributed to "strong cost control and a step-up in focus and transformation" after realising £900m in annualised cost savings.

However, BT's revenues fell by two per cent to £20.4bn over the year. Kirkby ascribed this dip to "lower international sales and handsets."

During this fiscal period, BT sharpened its focus on domestic operations, divesting certain European assets. April saw the sale of its Italian fibre networks and data centres to Retelit, with the anticipated enterprise value lying between £136m-£157m.

Additionally, they disposed of their Irish data centre business for £49m and passed on their Irish fibre operations to Speed Fibre Group at a cost of £18m.

BT focuses on costs

Yet even with the proceeds from these sales, BT's net debt rose by £300m to just shy of £20bn by period-end, largely due to escalated pension scheme contributions.

The company has stated that it is continuing to make further cost savings, having achieved 30 per cent of its target to deliver a £3bn cost reduction programme by 2029. This includes reducing labour costs by three per cent and is likely to result in additional job cuts in the future.