LONDON (Reuters) - Britain's Vodafone
The world's second largest mobile operator posted second quarter organic service revenue growth of 1.2 percent, an improvement on the 0.8 percent it saw in the first quarter and ahead of the 0.9 percent analysts were expecting.
Core earnings for the six months to end-September rose 1.9 percent to 5.79 billion pounds, beating expectations of 5.69 billion, as investment in its networks started to pay off.
"We have reached an important turning point for the group with a return to organic growth in service revenue and EBITDA (core earnings) in the first half of the financial year," Chief Executive Vittorio Colao said on Tuesday.
He said Europe was stabilizing, with seven out of 13 markets growing organic service revenue in the first half, and southern Europe in particular showing a strong rate of recovery.
A steady improvement in the economic climate in Europe has coincided with Vodafone being able to offer 4G services to 80 percent of its customers after heavy investment in its networks over the last two years.
But markets remained competitive, Colao said, and European service revenue still fell in the second quarter, although the trend was improving.
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Investors have refocused on Vodafone's performance in markets like Germany, Spain and Britain after talks between the company and cable operator Liberty Global
Vodafone's results on a reported level saw growth dampened by currency movements, and it said it would switch from reporting in sterling to euros for the 2017 financial year.
(Reporting by Paul Sandle; editing by Kate Holton)