SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
Form 6-K
Report of Foreign Private Issuer
Pursuant to Rule 13a-16 or 15d-16
of
the Securities Exchange Act 1934
Report on Form 6-K dated June 1, 2005
BT Group
plc
(Translation of registrant’s name
into English)
BT Centre
81 Newgate Street
London EC1A 7AJ
England
(Address of principal executive offices)
(Indicate by check mark whether the registrant files or will file annual reports under cover of Form 20-F or Form 40-F.)
Form 20-F Form 40-F
(Indicate by check mark whether the registrant by furnishing the information contained in this Form is also thereby furnishing the information to the Commission pursuant to Rule 12g3-2(b) under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.)
Yes No
This Report on Form 6-K is incorporated by reference into the registrant’s Annual Report on Form 20-F for the year ended March 31, 2005 (Commission file number 1-8819).
Enclosures: BT Group plc – Annual Review 2005 and Notice of Annual General Meeting 2005
SIGNATURES
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.
BT Group plc | ||
By: | /s/ Patricia Day | |
Name: | Patricia Day | |
Title: | Assistant Secretary |
Date: June 1, 2005
Growth through transformation
Annual Review and summary financial statement 2005
Growth through transformation
BT is one of the worlds leading providers of communications solutions serving customers in Europe, the Americas and Asia Pacific. Our principal activities include networked IT services, local, national and international telecommunications services, and higher-value broadband and internet products and services. In the UK, we serve over 20 million business and residential customers, as well as providing network services to other operators.
Highlights | |
| Group turnover of £18.6 billion |
| New wave turnover of £4.5 billion, up 32% |
| Profit before taxation, goodwill amortisation and exceptional items of £2.1 billion, up 4% |
| Earnings per share before goodwill amortisation and exceptional items of 18.1 pence, up 7% |
| Net debt reduced from £8.4 billion to £7.8 billion |
| Full year dividend of 10.4 pence, up 22% |
| Broadband end users of 4.9 million, up 123% |
In this Annual Review, references
to BT Group, BT, the group, the company, we or
our are
to BT Group plc (which includes the activities of British Telecommunications
plc)
and its subsidiaries, or any of them as the context may require.
Chairmans message
Our results for the 2005 financial year were strong. New wave revenues grew by 32% to £4.5 billion, and now represent nearly a quarter of our business. Earnings per share have more than doubled over the past three years and net debt is more than £20 billion lower than in 2001.
Earnings per share
in the 2005 financial year, before goodwill amortisation and exceptional items,
grew by 7% to 18.1 pence. While continuing to invest for the future, we generated
free cash flow of £2.3 billion, up 10%.
The
news on dividends is positive. We are recommending a full-year dividend of 10.4
pence per share, a pay out ratio of 57% of earnings
before goodwill amortisation and exceptional items, compared to 50% last year.
We continue with our progressive dividend policy. The dividend for the 2006
financial year will be at least 60% of underlying earnings: subject to the groups
overall financial position, we expect our pay out ratio to rise to around two-thirds
of
underlying earnings by the 2008 financial year.
We
continued with our share buy back programme in the 2005 financial year. This
is being funded from cash generated over and above that required for servicing
our debt.
We have reduced net debt to below £8 billion, a level with which we are
comfortable.
Business progress
In support of our
strategy for transformation and growth, your Board gave backing during the year
for a targeted series of acquisitions that will help to build our capabilities
as one of the
worlds foremost global networked IT services companies. These acquisitions
offered value for money, had a compelling strategic fit and brought capabilities
to strengthen BT globally. In addition, passing the five million mark for broadband
connections in the UK in early April was a key moment in the history of your
company.
Regulation
BT welcomed the Strategic
Review of Telecommunications by Ofcom. During the year we have worked to help
influence and shape their thinking and made a radical proposal for a new regulatory
landscape in the UK. We continued to argue strongly that structural separation
was not in shareholders or customers interests. We look forward to the published outcome. Our position remains that a strategic and flexible regulatory regime, together
with rapid deregulation wherever possible, is vital to meeting customers developing
needs and creating the conditions in which we, and others, can continue to invest
with confidence.
Board membership
There were a number
of changes to your Board during the 2005 financial year. I would like to welcome
Hanif Lalani as our new Group Finance Director. Ian Livingston, who had occupied
the finance role with distinction for three years, was appointed Chief Executive
BT Retail with effect from February 2005. It is a testament to the strength of
BTs management team generally that we were able to appoint people from
inside the company to such key roles. I would also like to thank Pierre Danon,
who left the Board in February, for his significant contribution as Chief Executive
of BT Retail for the last four years.
Wider responsibilities
It is increasingly
important that companies such as BT continue to be good corporate citizens, living
up to our responsibilities to the communities in which we operate and to the
environment.
Im proud to be able to report that, for the fourth year in a row, BT was
the highest placed telecommunications company in the Dow Jones Sustainability
Index. Our community
programmes focus on those issues where communications really can make the difference;
we have provided long-term support, for example, for a drama-based education
programme to
help develop young peoples communications skills, and for the work of the
childrens
charity ChildLine.
Like
so many other companies and individuals, we wanted to respond to the devastating
Asian tsunami in December 2004. We made a donation of £500,000 to the
Disasters Emergency Committee (DEC) and we provided a live call centre for the unprecedented number of calls coming into the DEC. Im
particularly proud of the fact that so many of our employees were involved in
fundraising activities and that 16 of our engineers travelled to the affected
area to help re-establish communications.
Outlook
The process of transformation
on which your company embarked in 2001 is accelerating. That process is increasingly
reflected in your companys results. We are well set for further success
in the
years ahead.
Id
like to thank shareholders for the loyalty theyve shown. Your continued
confidence coupled with the loyalty of our customers and suppliers and
the
imagination and commitment of our employees is fundamental to our transformation
for growth.
Sir Christopher Bland
Chairman
18 May 2005
BT Annual Review 2005 | 1 |
Chief Executives statement
Today, BT is a very different company from the one that I joined three years ago. As our customers needs have changed and continue to change, so we have found and continue to find new ways of meeting those needs, investing in innovative products and services which add value to our customers and to BT. That, after all, is what being a service company means.
In 2005, convergence is at the heart
of BTs strategy.
By
convergence, we mean the ability to bring together our capabilities and capacities
in new ways to make life better, simpler and cheaper for our customers. For our
business customers this means productivity improvements; for consumers its
about new, easier to use services. For customers of all kinds it means a more
joined-up communications experience.
So,
for example, we offer our major corporate customers around the world a unique
marriage of our networking experience and infrastructure with IT services. These
used
to be separate offerings, often supplied by different companies, but were
bringing them together in one place. This means that however much their operations
are dispersed around the globe, our customers can communicate and operate as
one,
anytime, anywhere, and at lower cost.
What were doing in the mobile market
is similarly about convergence we aim to offer customers a converged combination
of the best of fixed and the best of mobile. Ultimately, our
customers shouldnt have to worry about fixed or mobile when
what they really want
is freedom and flexibility. This means that we have to find ways of helping them
communicate, wherever they are, using whatever device they choose, at the right
price.
And
convergence is also what our twenty-first century network (21CN) programme is
all about. What our customers need to know is that the 21CN can support a range
of technologies and services that will enable them to do the things they want
to do faster, more seamlessly and more cost efficiently. And because this
new network will support a wide range of innovative services which are currently
run on
separate networks, it will be much more cost efficient for BT.
Global networked IT services
We have raised our global profile through targeted acquisitions, including Infonet and Radianz, and by increasing our holding in Albacom to 100%.
We
continued to play to our strengths in the networked IT services market. A few
years ago, our position in this market was aspirational; today, we are competing
with
the best and winning. The BT brand is now a powerful presence in the global
networked IT services market. Its
a brand
that stands for excellent
networking skills and a genuine commitment to finding innovative ways of delivering
what our customers want, end to end, leaving them free to do what theyre
good at: running their businesses.
Our
ICT (information and communications technology) revenues were £3 billion
in the year and the major contracts weve won indicate the confidence that
our customers are prepared to put in us. We now have a track record of meeting
the needs of public and private sector customers in, for example, the financial
services and government arenas.
Our
networked IT services order intake for the year was over £7 billion.
Broadband
Broadband
has been an enormous success story, not just for BT but for the UK as a whole,
which now has the highest levels of broadband access of any country in the G7
group of nations. We hit our five million broadband lines target a year early.
As
broadband access becomes a fact of life for most people in the UK, our focus
is shifting further towards the retail market where we have fantastic scope to
drive further growth.
BTs key strategic imperatives | |||||||||
BTs transformation for | |||||||||
growth is fuelled by our eight | |||||||||
strategic imperatives, five of which | Build on our | Deliver on | Create | Defend our | |||||
are focused on generating new | networked | broadband | convergent | traditional | |||||
revenues in exciting new markets, | IT services | mobility | business | ||||||
defending revenues in traditional | capability | solutions | vigorously | ||||||
markets and operating with | |||||||||
maximum efficiency. | |||||||||
2 | BT Annual Review 2005 |
Having got broadband, people now want to do more and more with it. We are increasing speeds by up to four times at no extra cost to our retail customers.
Convergent mobility services
The launch, in partnership with Vodafone, of our mobile virtual network operator in both the business and consumer markets is the key to building a mobility customer base and a path to mobile
convergence. We now have over 372,000 contract connections.
Our strategy is to build a foundation for the delivery of high-value, fixed/mobile convergent solutions, for consumers and businesses. An early example of this will be
Project Bluephone which will give customers the convenience of a mobile phone with the quality and cost advantage of fixed-line services.
Twenty-first century network
Our 21CN will help to make the UK one of the most advanced telecommunications countries in the world, transform our wholesale business and support the next generation of flexible, cost-efficient
services. At the end of April 2005, we announced the eight preferred suppliers who will help us to implement the 21CN.
The
capital expenditure involved is significant but the 21CN will lead to a radical
simplification of our networks making it easier to offer compelling propositions
to all our customers. The real challenge is to ensure that we invest in a way
that meets customers needs.
Traditional business
We are experiencing
major changes in our traditional markets as a result of regulation, growing competition
and significant shifts in our customers buying patterns, as they discover
the
possibilities of technologies such as instant messaging and voice over IP.
Fixed-voice telephone calls may no longer be the only way to measure the success of a communications company, but they remain fundamental to our business. We may have
lost some market share to competitors but we will continue to compete aggressively by offering new and better services, and improved customer value.
Cost efficiency
Taking a leadership
position on costs is critical. Earnings per share is a key measure, which means
that we have to continue to look at every cost line in the business and challenge
it. Weve
made excellent progress on improving our cost efficiency in the past few years and in the 2005 financial year, our cost efficiency programmes achieved savings of around £400 million, and we aim to deliver at least £300 million to
£400 million of savings in each of the next three years.
Relentless customer focus
Our 20 million customers are a wonderful asset and we have to continue to show how much we value every one of them.
A
key target for us was driving down customer dissatisfaction weve
reduced dissatisfaction levels by 23% on a compound annual basis over the past
three
years. There is still more to be done and we must continue this focus.
Our people
People bring strategies to life, people deliver world-class customer experiences, people make convergence happen.
Two
years ago, we introduced our new brand values trustworthy, helpful, inspiring,
straightforward, heart. Since then, BT people have embraced these values, and
turned the business inside out and upside down to deliver our strategy, finding
innovative ways to reinvent BT in our traditional markets at the same time as
establishing our BT brand in new markets, all the while driving down customer
dissatisfaction.
I am constantly amazed by their commitment and by what they have achieved.
Ben Verwaayen
Chief Executive
18 May
2005
The other three are | |||||||||
about keeping a rigorous | |||||||||
Drive for cost | focus on customers | Keep a | Transform our | Motivate our | |||||
leadership | needs and developing | relentless focus | network for | people and | |||||
the technology that | on customer | the twenty- | live the BT | ||||||
will meet those | satisfaction | first century | values | ||||||
changing needs. | |||||||||
BT Annual Review 2005 | 3 |
Growth through transformation
For BT in the twenty-first century, transformation is part of the job description.
While
we remain committed to our traditional portfolio of telecommunications services
such as voice calls and private circuits, we are equally focused on generating
new revenues in exciting and fast-growing new markets, particularly broadband,
networked IT services and mobility. This transformation is driven by a single,
overriding goal sustainable, profitable growth.
Achieving this goal is in the best interests of our shareholders, our customers, our people and the wider communities in which we operate.
Broadband
Its easy to forget how fast
the world can change. Blink and you might miss it. When, three years ago, we
said that we would have five million broadband connections by the summer of 2006,
no one
thought we had a chance. But now that weve delivered those five million
connections more than a year ahead of schedule, no one seems very surprised.
After all, its
been clear for some time that we were going to make it.
Broadband is a huge success story for BT, which is transforming itself from a narrowband to a broadband company at the same time as the UK is fast becoming a broadband nation.
In
the past few years, weve brought broadband to more than 4,400 exchanges, connected to almost 97% of the UKs
homes and businesses. That figure will reach 99.6% this summer, the highest availability
in any of the G7 group of countries.
A
few years ago, only the experts had any clear idea what broadband was all about.
Today, its one of the first must-have products of the twenty-first century
and one of the fastest growing consumer products of all time with a higher early
take-up rate than TVs, video recorders or mobile phones.
And the momentum continues to build. It took us about a year to reach our first million broadband connections; the fifth million took just four months.
Since
September 2004, weve been connecting a new customer to broadband every
ten seconds, 24/7.
Pushing the boundaries
Now that broadband has become a genuinely mass market product, the nature of the broadband debate has changed.
The focus is moving away from availability and towards the ways in which broadband can transform our lives at work and at home.
For
many people, broadband initially meant fast, always-on internet access and email an end to the worldwide wait. But now, theyre beginning to realise that
so much more is possible music and video downloads, video emails, education
services and so on.
Within a couple of years, every child in the UK will have the chance to learn via
340,000 + | |||
BT Business | |||
Broadband | |||
customers | |||
The focus is now moving away from | |||
availability and towards the ways in which | |||
higher-speed broadband services can | |||
transform our lives at work and home. | |||
Alison Ritchie Chief Broadband Officer |
|||
4 | BT Annual Review 2005 |
BT used to be essentially a narrowband company; today we are rapidly becoming a broadband company. | |||
broadband and up to 18 million of us will be shopping online.
But
as the demand for increasingly sophisticated broadband services grows, so must
technologys ability to cope with it. Thats why were continuing
to
push the boundaries of broadband technology.
We transformed our retail broadband offering by moving most of our broadband customers to a new super-fast standard speed of up to 2Mbit/s at no extra cost, beginning
February 2005. Customers now have access to speeds up to four times faster than before.
And
were not stopping there. Weve been testing speeds of up to 8Mbit/s and plan to launch high-speed wholesale products later this year. And weve
even been trialling something called ADSL2+ which may support speeds of more
than 20Mbit/s.
Something for everyone
For customers at home we have a family of broadband packages designed to meet a wide range of needs.
Key
packages include BT Broadband, which offers
rapid, always-on internet access, and BT Yahoo! Broadband which gives users access
to exciting content as well as a range of other benefits, including multiple
email addresses, protection against junk email, parental controls to prevent
children accessing unsuitable content and protection against computer viruses.
In
July 2004, BT Communicator with Yahoo! Messenger became the latest addition to
this family, enabling
customers to manage all their home communications phone calls, texts, emails and so on on
their PC.
And well also use broadband
to make new services, such as video on demand and interactive TV, available to
customers.
In the broadband economy
Broadband also has a key role to
play in the UK economy, enhancing competitiveness, driving up productivity, promoting
growth. Analysts estimate that the UK economy as a whole could be boosted to
the
tune of £7.5 billion a year by 2007 as a result of productivity gains made
possible by broadband.
And
whats true of national economies is true of local ones as well, many of
which are keenly aware of the possibilities. In February 2005, for example, Northern
Ireland became the first UK region outside London to have every one of its exchanges
upgraded to broadband by BT. Just a month later thanks to a partnership
between BT and the regional development agency, One Northeast all 181
exchanges in the region had been upgraded. And in April 2005, we won a contract
with the Scottish Executive to bring broadband to the UKs
remotest communities, by broadband-enabling 378 exchanges.
BT
Business Broadband is the leading service provider for small and medium businesses
in the UK, with over 340,000 customers as at 31 March 2005. At the end of the
2005 financial year, we were connecting around 250 business customers to BT
Business
Broadband every day. This is excellent business, particularly since more than
half of them also took value-added services from us such as the Internet Security
Pack and Internet Business Pack.
Broadband has the power to change the
way businesses operate and the way they communicate with customers and employees.
In November 2004, for example, we launched BT Business Broadband Voice, which
enables smaller businesses to use broadband connections for voice calls and cut
the costs associated with supporting multiple
business lines.
A broadband connection every 10 seconds, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week | ||||
99.6% | 5 million + connections | |||
broadband | ||||
coverage in | ||||
the UK by | ||||
summer 2005 | ||||
BT Annual Review 2005 | 5 |
The digital networked | ||
economy. Where | ||
business is done. | ||
Networked IT services
As communications
and information technology networks increasingly converge, corporations and other
large organisations are looking for strategic partners who can develop and run
their networks for them, leaving them to concentrate on their core business.
In recent years, our networking skills have enabled us to establish BT as one
of the worlds
foremost global networked IT services companies.
Where business is done
In the digital networked economy,
our networking skills and experience are proving critical and the revenues we
are generating in this market show how far we have come in a short time. In the
2005 financial year, our ICT (information and communications technology) revenues
were £3.0 billion, compared with £2.5 billion in the 2004 financial
year (see graph below).
And
if anyone wanted proof that BT really is transforming itself for growth, they
would only have to look at some of the recent contracts weve won.
Major contracts
Our most high-profile success
of
the year came in March 2005 when it was announced that BT will become Reuters supplier of network services around the world, under a contract expected to be
worth up to £1.5 billion over its eight and a half-year life. And just a month earlier, wed
announced a new deal with Barclays to provide enhanced communications infrastructure
services for their UK operations. Taking account of existing business, our relationship
with Barclays
|
|||||
In 2004/05, we signed networked | |||||
IT services contracts worth over | |||||
£7 billion | |||||
6 | BT Annual Review 2005 |
is now worth in excess of £500
million over the life of the contract, and confirms our growing strength and
credibility as a supplier to companies in the financial services market.
Other
big wins helped to confirm our European capabilities. For example, we signed
an outsourcing contract with French company, THALES Group the international
electronics and systems group serving the defence, aeronautics, security and services market to
provide fixed-voice and data network services in 42 countries.
In
the Asia Pacific region we were awarded a global network outsourcing contract
by South Korea-based CyberLogitec, a subsidiary of Hanjin Shipping, to
integrate the systems that it needs to run its operations in the US, Europe
and locally. Worth £18 million, this is one of the largest contracts
we have ever won in the region.
But
its not just major contracts that make for a healthy order book. We secured over 300 networked IT services contracts each worth between £1 million and
£5 million during the 2005 financial year.
Building global presence
Our customers for networked IT services
are increasingly operating globally and its vital that we should be able to meet their requirements around the world not
just in Europe where we own operations in many countries, but elsewhere as
well.
There
are a number of ways to do this. Strategic partners can help us reach parts
of the world where we dont operate and its certainly possible
to deliver a truly global service from any one location to any other, without
owning everything in between.
But we also believe that it makes excellent commercial sense to acquire operations outside the UK, where these offer the right kind of strategic fit at the right price.
In
February 2005, we completed the acquisition of Infonet, one of the worlds leading providers of international managed voice and data network services, for
£315 million, net of cash in the business. Infonet brings with it local
operations and/or distributors in some 70 countries and remote network access
in around 180 countries, significantly extending our global reach.
In
the same month, we acquired the 74%
that we didnt already own of Albacom, which provides data transmission,
voice and internet services to more than 170,000 customers in the Italian business
communications market.
And
in April 2005, we acquired Radianz the leading financial services extranet provider from Reuters for £107 million another
significant step forward in our transformation into a global provider of
networked IT services.
Infonet brings local operations | |||
and/or distributors in | |||
70 countries and remote | |||
network access in about 180 | |||
countries around the world | |||
Growth through transformation
Twenty-first century network
The
twenty-first century network (21CN) is at the heart of our transformation strategy,
underpinning broadband, networked IT services and convergent mobility services,
flexibly and cost effectively. It will lead to a radical simplification of our
networks, making it easier for us and the other telecommunications operators who interconnect
with our networks to offer compelling converged propositions for all our
customers.
The 21CN programme has three broad objectives: | |
| to enhance the service experience, flexibility and value we provide to all our customers; |
| to accelerate the delivery of innovative new products and services to market; and |
| to reduce costs radically. |
We began technical
trials during the 2005 financial year. For example, we conducted a trial
in which we moved voice traffic from the traditional public voice network
onto an internet protocol (IP) network. It may have gone largely unnoticed,
but 7 January 2005 may turn out to be a key date in the history of telecommunications,
because that was the day that saw
the first end-to-end IP voice call. In April 2005, we announced the eight preferred suppliers that we expect will help to build and implement the 21CN. The announcement was the culmination of two years of discussions with over 300 potential technology suppliers one of the largest procurement programmes ever undertaken in the communications industry. And in order to ensure that all other operators understand what the 21CN means for them and have a chance to input their ideas, weve launched a programme of industry consultation Consult21. |
Mobility
Mobility is about much
more than mobile phones and text messages. In a convergent world, individuals
and businesses want and need to communicate wherever they happen to be, using
whatever devices mobile and fixed-line phones, PCs, palmtops they
choose. True mobility is about connecting people to people, people to systems,
businesses to businesses and machines to machines, any time, any place, any
device.
Access to | |||
20,000 | |||
Wi-Fi hotspots | |||
globally | |||
8 | BT Annual Review 2005 |
True mobility is about | |||
connecting people to | |||
people, people to | |||
systems, businesses to | |||
businesses and machines | |||
to machines, any time, | |||
any place, any device. | |||
The right stuff
BT has the right brand, channels and network capabilities to really deliver in the fast-growing mobility market.
What
were aiming for is providing all our customers with a winning combination
of the quality, reliability, cost advantages and capacity associated with
fixed-line communications, AND the convenience, personalisation and independence
associated with mobile communications. In other words, the best of both
worlds.
During
the 2005 financial year, in partnership with Vodafone, we launched BT
Mobile
as a mobile virtual network operator (MVNO) a move that puts us well on the road to offering the worlds
first fully converged, fixed/mobile service. This really is a new way of
doing a new kind
of business.
And it can be a major growth area for us. In the 2005 financial year, revenue growth in the mobility market was 107%.
And
well shortly be launching Project Bluephone a converged mobile
service, enabling customers to use a single device that can switch seamlessly
between
fixed and mobile networks.
Mobility for businesses
We launched BT Mobile as an MVNO
in the business market in November 2004, offering a wide range of flexible mobile
services including mobile conferencing facilities.
Were
also a leading UK provider of wireless broadband (Wi-Fi).
BT
Openzone, our public Wi-Fi service, gives users a high-speed wireless broadband
connection
at thousands
of hotspots from which they can access the internet, send and receive
emails with attachments and connect to a corporate network. As at 31 March 2005,
our customers had access to more than 7,500 hotspots throughout the UK and more
than
20,000 around the world.
We are convinced that a partnership strategy is essential for success in this market and we are working hard through the Fixed Mobile Convergence Alliance, which is
developing open industry standards, and through the Wireless Broadband Alliance, which is driving the roaming arrangements that will help to make global mobility a reality.
Mobility for consumers
In January 2005, we launched the BT
Mobile MVNO in the consumer market, with
a package aimed at families, offering a range of benefits including up to five
additional handsets, free short calls to a designated home number and a single
consolidated mobile bill.
More than 372,000 BT Mobile connections | |||
BT was the official | |||
communications | |||
sponsor for Dame | |||
Ellen MacArthurs | |||
epic non-stop round | |||
the world victory | |||
BT Annual Review 2005 | 9 |
Traditional business
Transformation
may be a way of life, but that doesnt mean everything has to change. We will continue to provide
all our customers in our traditional markets with an excellent customer experience. Our values trustworthy, helpful, inspiring, straightforward, heart continue to define the way we do business around here. Our people continue to live
these values. And being a good corporate citizen is as important now as its
ever been.
Keep a relentless focus on improving customer satisfaction
Reducing customer dissatisfaction is a key objective for us. In the 2005 financial year, for the third year in a row, all lines of business reduced customer dissatisfaction levels. In total, we have
achieved a group-wide reduction of 23% on a compound annual basis over the past three years.
Transforming the traditional
Of course, transformation and tradition
are not mutually exclusive and theres nothing to say we shouldnt find new ways to do the things weve
always done.
In
July 2004, for example, we abolished the standard rate for telephone calls
for all our residential customers and switched them to BT Together Option
1, offering them better value for money and making it easier for them to
compare our prices with those of our competitors. We also introduced Call
Mobile, a discount package offering customers savings of up to 40% on all
fixed-to-mobile calls.
For
business customers, we cut the cost of fixed-to-mobile calls by between
25% and 30% and offered BT
Business Plan customers the option of a 30 pence cap on all such calls lasting
less than an hour. As at 31 March 2005, BT
Business Plan had over 440,000 locations up 67% on the 2004 financial
year.
Customer protection remains
vitally
important to us, which is why weve been helping to combat the menace of
rogue internet diallers. BT Modem Protection, for example, is a free service
designed to prevent a customers computer dialling high-cost, premium rate
or international numbers. At the end of March 2005, around one million customers
had signed up for one or more of our barring options.
Drive for cost leadership
We remain focused on financial discipline
and our cost efficiency programmes achieved savings of around £400 million in the 2005 financial year. This has enabled us to invest in growing our new
wave activities. We aim to deliver at least £300 million to £400
million of savings in each of the next three years.
We
cant starve ourselves to success, but reducing the costs of failure,
complexity and duplication and generally working smarter increases the
scope we have to invest for growth. And technology really can contribute
to the cause. At the end of the financial year, for example, we had a total
of 6.2 million online relationships with customers through our website
(bt.com) and almost two million customers
receiving e-bills.
Continuing to provide all our customers in our traditional markets with... | |||
We have reduced | |||
customer dissatisfaction | |||
by 23% on a compound | |||
annual basis over the past | |||
three years | |||
10 | BT Annual Review 2005 |
Our wider responsibilities
We are privileged to play a role in the wider communities of which we are a part and we recognise that an
innovative approach to managing social, ethical and environmental issues is good business in every sense.
Increasingly, we have to demonstrate
social and environmental responsibility when bidding for new business in the 2005 financial year, bids to the value of £2.2
billion required us to
demonstrate expertise in managing these issues.
We
commit a minimum of 0.5% of our UK pre-tax profits directly to activities
in support of society we provided over £9 million in the 2005 financial year.
In addition, BT operations provided a further £12 million in funding and
support in kind.
The
focus of our community programmes is on the big issues where better communications
can make a real difference. Thats why weve been sponsoring
a
drama-based education programme to date, more than two million children
have had the chance to enhance their communications skills and why were
supporting childrens charity ChildLine in its drive to ensure that every
childs call for help is answered.
And
were committed to minimising any adverse impact on the environment. During the year, we signed the worlds
largest green energy contract, which means that almost all our future UK
electricity needs will be met from environmentally-friendly sources, including
wind generation, solar, wave and hydroelectric schemes.
This
is expected to reduce our carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions by around 325,000 tonnes a year.
We
played a role in the response to the Asian tsunami of 26 December 2004.
We set up a live call centre to handle the response to the Disasters Emergency
Committees (DEC) appeal and ran the online donation facility.
Individual
employees were also involved in fundraising and 16 BT engineers travelled
to the affected area to help re-establish the telecommunications infrastructure.
We
also made an immediate donation of £500,000.
Digital
inclusion is a key public policy issue and we are working with the UK Government
and the voluntary sector to find effective ways of using communications
technology to tackle social exclusion. We are, for example, actively involved
in the EverybodyOnline programme established in partnership with charity campaign group Citizens Online which
aims to increase skills and access to communications technology in deprived
communities.
Our Age and Disability Action team promotes equal access to a wide range of products and services, including large-button phones, cordless and hands-free options and a
spoken text service.
almost 2 million customers now use e-billing |
Highest ranked telecommunications company in the Dow Jones Sustainability Index for the fourth year in a row |
||||
...an excellent customer experience | |||||
BT Annual Review 2005 | 11 |
Report of operations and financial review
Operating performance
The financial results for the 2005 financial year reflect the continuing strong growth in new wave services as we deliver value from transforming the business. Our global networked IT services
business is growing strongly and our global capabilities have been strengthened by the successful completion of the acquisitions of Albacom and Infonet. Subsequent to the year end we also completed the acquisition of Radianz.
Profit and loss account
Group turnover from new wave businesses
showed strong growth of 32% to £4.5 billion in the year driven by growth in global networked IT services, broadband and mobility. Turnover from our
traditional business declined by 7% to £14.0 billion, being impacted by regulatory intervention, competition and technological changes as we migrate customers to new wave services. Regulatory reductions in mobile termination rates are passed
on to BT customers resulting in lower charges but are profit neutral. Group turnover of £18.6 billion increased by 2% (excluding the impact of acquisitions and regulatory reductions to mobile termination rates). Group operating profit before
goodwill amortisation and exceptional items decreased by 1% to £2.9 billion. This mainly reflects the cost of supporting networked IT services contracts and investment in new wave activities. Net interest payable before exceptional items was
£0.8 billion for the year, an improvement of £0.1 billion, reflecting
the reduction in net debt. Earnings per share before goodwill amortisation and
exceptional items were 18.1 pence, an increase of 7%.
Lines of business
The following table sets out the group turnover and group operating profit (loss) for each of our lines of business.
Group turnover | Group operating | |||||||
profit (loss) | 1 | |||||||
2005 | 2004 | 2005 | 2004 | 2 | ||||
Years ended 31 March | £m | £m | £m | £m | ||||
BT Retail | 12,562 | 12,940 | 1,120 | 1,232 | ||||
BT Wholesale | 8,979 | 8,883 | 1,940 | 1,883 | ||||
BT Global Services | 6,381 | 5,782 | 7 | (105 | ) | |||
Other | 25 | 35 | (203 | ) | (121 | ) | ||
Intra-group | (9,324 | ) | (9,121 | ) | | | ||
Totals | 18,623 | 18,519 | 2,864 | 2,889 | ||||
1Before
goodwill amortisation and exceptional items 2Restated following the adoption of UITF17 and UITF38 (see note (c) on page 14) |
BT Retail
BT Retail is the UKs largest
communications service provider, by market share, to the residential and business
markets, supplying over 20 million customers with a wide range of communications products and services, including voice, data, internet and multimedia services, and offering a comprehensive range of managed and packaged communications solutions.
On
1 July 2004, we abolished the standard rate for residential customers and
switched all existing standard rate customers to BT Together Option 1,
offering them better value for money and making it easier for to them to
compare BTs prices with those of our competitors. We also introduced
a number of enhancements to our BT Business Plan, which had over 440,000
locations at the end of the 2005 financial
year.
In the 2005 financial year, we launched BT Mobile as an MVNO (mobile virtual network operator) in the business and consumer markets. This is a major step towards
building a mobility customer base and developing and delivering one converged customer experience.
BT
is the UKs leading service provider of broadband with 1.75 million
consumer and business broadband connections. We transformed our retail
broadband offering by transferring our broadband customers to a high speed
(up to 2Mbit/s) connection, beginning February 2005.
BT Business Broadband remained the leading ISP (internet service provider) for SMEs (typically companies with up to 500 employees) with over 340,000 customers.
BT Wholesale
BT Wholesale provides network services and solutions to over 600 communications companies including fixed and mobile network operators, ISPs and service providers. Interconnecting with over 180 other
operators, it also carries transit traffic between telecommunications operators. Its UK network consists of 684 local and 135 trunk processor units, 121 million kilometres of copper wire and over seven million kilometres of optical fibre. BT
Wholesale has the most extensive IP backbone network in the UK.
In
early April 2005, we provided our five millionth broadband connection,
more than one year ahead of target. 4,419 exchanges had been upgraded for
broadband at the end of the 2005 financial year, and almost 97% of the
UKs homes and businesses were connected to a broadband-enabled exchange.
BTs 21CN programme is at the heart of our transformation strategy, underpinning broadband, networked IT services and convergent mobility services. During the 2005
financial year, we took steps toward the 21CNs three broad objectives:
to enhance the service experience, flexibility and value we provide all our customers;
to accelerate the delivery of innovative new products and services; and to reduce
costs radically.
Technical fibre and voice trials began in the 2005 financial year.
On 28 April 2005, we announced the preferred suppliers that we expect will help build and implement the 21CN.
BT Global Services
BT Global Services is BTs managed
services and solutions provider. Its core target market is 10,000 multi-site
organisations including major companies with significant global requirements
and large organisations in target local markets. BT Global Services provides
global reach and a complete range of networked IT services.
Our extensive communications network and strong strategic partnerships enable us to serve customers in the key commercial centres of Europe, North America and the Asia
Pacific region.
The
acquisition of Infonet one of the worlds leading providers of international managed voice and data network services was a major step forward in
addressing the global networked IT services needs of our core customers, significantly extending our global reach. We also acquired the 74% that we did not already own of Albacom, which provides data transmission, voice and internet services in the
Italian business communications market. In April 2005, we also completed the acquisition of Radianz the
leading financial services extranet provider.
Our
most high-profile success of the year in the global market was winning
the contract to become Reuters supplier of network services. The contract is expected to
be worth up to £1.5 billion over its lifetime.
In
April 2005, we won an extension to July 2012 of a contract to deliver essential
telecommunications services to the Ministry of Defence and the UKs armed forces.
The total value of the contract is more than £2.7 billion.
Research and development and IT support
Our IT division, BT Exact, offers
the services of IT professionals with knowledge of leading-edge network design
and IT systems and application development. In the 2005 financial year, we
invested £257 million in research and development.
Balance sheet
The group balance sheet continued
to strengthen during the year and provides confidence to our customers and
suppliers. Net debt was reduced by a further £0.6 billion to £7.8 billion and
is now £20 billion lower than in 2001. Fixed assets totalled £16.7 billion, of which £15.9
billion were tangible fixed assets,
12 | BT Annual Review 2005 |
principally the UK fixed network. The return on capital employed, before goodwill amortisation and exceptional items on the average capital employed, was 16%.
Cash flow
Cash inflow from operating activities
was £5.9 billion. Capital expenditure of £3.1 billion increased by 14%, reflecting the rising investment in our network transformation. Free cash
flow of £2.3 billion was generated, an increase of 10%.
Dividend
The Board recommends a final dividend
of 6.5 pence per share to shareholders, amounting to £551 million, taking the full year dividend to 10.4 pence per share, an increase of 22% on the
previous year. This years dividend pay out ratio is 57% of earnings before
goodwill amortisation and exceptional items compared to 50% last year.
We
continue with our progressive dividend policy. The dividend for the 2006
financial year will be at least 60% of underlying earnings: subject to
the groups
overall financial position, we expect our pay out ratio to rise to around two-thirds
of underlying earnings by the 2008 financial year.
Customer satisfaction
Driving up customer satisfaction is at the heart of our strategy. In the 2005 financial year, for the third year in a row, all lines of business reduced dissatisfaction levels. In the past three
years, we have achieved a group wide reduction of 23% on a compound annual basis.
Our people
As at 31 March 2005, we employed 102,100 people throughout the world.
Our core people engagement initiative is the my customer programme which aims to enable BT people to deliver an excellent customer experience through teamwork. More than 3,000 issues have now been resolved.
For
the 2005 financial year, we allocated £11 million to provide free
shares to our employees under the BT Employee Share Investment Plan (employees
outside the UK receive a cash payment equivalent to the value of the shares).
The amount allocated was linked to the achievement of corporate targets
determined by the Board.
Corporate social responsibility
Our aim is to manage social, ethical
and environmental issues in ways that grow shareholder value and help BT and
our customers to be more sustainable. In the 2005 financial year, BT was ranked
as the top telecommunications company in the Dow Jones Sustainability Index
for the fourth year running. We commit a minimum of 0.5% of our UK pre-tax
profits directly to activities which support society. Our contribution in the
2005 financial year was
over £9 million. In addition, we made charitable donations of £2
million.
More
details of our social and environmental performance are available at www.bt.com/betterworld
Statement of business practice
BTs policy is to achieve best
practice in our standards of business integrity in all our operations, in line
with our published statement of business practice The Way We Work,
which is available at www.btplc.com/society/values
Going concern
The companys financial statements
for the year ended 31 March 2005 have been prepared on a going concern basis
as, after making appropriate enquiries, the directors have a reasonable expectation
that the group has adequate resources to continue in operational existence
for the foreseeable future.
Adoption of International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS)
BT continues to report under UK Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (UK GAAP) for the 2005 financial year, but, as required by EU regulations, will present financial information in accordance
with IFRS for the 2006 financial year.
Whilst
some of the changes required by IFRS will impact BTs reported profits and net assets, this has no impact on the cash flows generated by the business or the
cash resources available for investment or distribution to shareholders. Furthermore, the adoption of IFRS does not affect BTs
strategy or underlying business performance.
The
main areas of change relate to pensions, share-based payments, intangible assets,
leases and financial instruments. We estimate the unaudited pro forma impact
of adopting IFRS on the 2005 financial year reported UK GAAP results will be
negligible on the underlying profit before tax and underlying earnings per share.
However, due to the inherent volatilities introduced by IFRS, no such statement
can be made
in respect of future years. This estimate excludes the fair value effects on
financial instruments which we are not required to apply until 1 April
2005.
BT Annual Review 2005 | 13 |
Summary financial statement
Summary group profit and loss account
for the year ended 31 March
2005
Before goodwill | Goodwil | |||||||
amortisation | amortisation | |||||||
and exceptional | and exceptional | |||||||
items | items | (a) | Total | Total | (b) | |||
2005 | 2005 | 2005 | 2004 | (c) | ||||
£m | £m | £m | £m | |||||
Group turnover | 18,623 | | 18,623 | 18,519 | ||||
Group operating profit (loss) | 2,864 | (75 | ) | 2,789 | 2,870 | |||
Groups share of operating loss | ||||||||
of associates and joint ventures | | (25 | ) | (25 | ) | (34 | ) | |
Total operating profit (loss) | 2,864 | (100 | ) | 2,764 | 2,836 | |||
Profit on sale of fixed asset investments | ||||||||
and group undertakings | | 358 | 358 | 36 | ||||
Profit on sale of property fixed assets | 22 | | 22 | 14 | ||||
Net interest payable | (801 | ) | | (801 | ) | (941 | ) | |
Profit before taxation | 2,085 | 258 | 2,343 | 1,945 | ||||
Tax | (539 | ) | 16 | (523 | ) | (539 | ) | |
Profit after taxation | 1,546 | 274 | 1,820 | 1,406 | ||||
Minority interests | 1 | | 1 | 8 | ||||
Profit for the financial year | 1,547 | 274 | 1,821 | 1,414 | ||||
Dividends | (883 | ) | (732 | ) | ||||
Retained profit | 938 | 682 | ||||||
Earnings per share | 21.4 | p | 16.4 | p | ||||
Dividends per share | 10.4 | p | 8.5 | p | ||||
Earnings per share before goodwill | ||||||||
amortisation and exceptional items | 18.1 | p | 16.9 | p | ||||
(a) Includes goodwill
amortisation of £16 million, an exceptional property rationalisation
charge of £59 million in relation to the groups provincial
office portfolio, our share of a write down of Albacom SpAs
assets, prior to Albacom becoming a subsidiary, of £25 million
and a profit of £358 million mainly from the sale of the groups
investments in Intelsat, Eutelsat and StarHub. This resulted in a
net credit of £258 million to profit before taxation. |
This summary financial statement
was
approved by the Board on 18 May 2005
and was signed on its behalf by:
Sir Christopher Bland
Chairman
Ben Verwaayen
Chief Executive
Hanif Lalani
Group Finance
Director
Group turnover | Net interest payable | Earnings per share | Fixed
assets This is mainly exchange and network equipment, property and similar items which we own and use to run our business, goodwill and investments. |
Current
assets Principally, amounts which we have billed our customers but not yet received and short term investments. |
Creditors:
amounts falling due within one year Principally, amounts due to suppliers and loans due for repayment within one year. |
||
Turnover from products | Interest paid on | Our profit for the | |||||
and services sold to | borrowings less | financial year divided | |||||
customers by BT. | interest received | by the average number | |||||
on short term | of shares in issue during | ||||||
investments. | the period. | ||||||
14 | BT Annual Review 2005 |
Summary group balance sheet |
at 31 March 2005 |
2005 | 2004 | (c) | ||
£m | £m | |||
Fixed assets | 16,654 | 16,015 | ||
Current assets | 10,296 | 10,550 | ||
Creditors: amounts falling due within one year | (12,461 | ) | (8,523 | ) |
Net current (liabilities) assets | (2,165 | ) | 2,027 | |
Total assets less current liabilities | 14,489 | 18,042 | ||
Creditors: amounts falling due after one year | 8,091 | 12,426 | ||
Provisions for liabilities and charges | 2,497 | 2,504 | ||
Minority interests | 50 | 46 | ||
Capital and reserves (d) | 3,851 | 3,066 | ||
14,489 | 18,042 | |||
(d) BT Group plc, the company, had capital and reserves at 31 March 2005 of £9.5 billion. |
Summary group cash flow statement |
for the year ended 31 March 2005 |
2005 | 2004 | |||
£m | £m | |||
Net cash inflow from operating activities (e) | 5,898 | 5,389 | ||
Dividends from associates and joint ventures | 2 | 3 | ||
Returns on investments and servicing of finance (f) | (878 | ) | (527 | ) |
Taxation paid | (332 | ) | (317 | ) |
Capital expenditure and financial investment | (2,408 | ) | (2,477 | ) |
Free cash flow | 2,282 | 2,071 | ||
Acquisitions and disposals | (418 | ) | (60 | ) |
Equity dividends paid | (784 | ) | (645 | ) |
Cash inflow before management of liquid resources and financing | 1,080 | 1,366 | ||
Management of liquid resources | 587 | 1,123 | ||
Financing | (1,485 | ) | (2,445 | ) |
Increase in cash in the year | 182 | 44 | ||
Decrease in net debt in the year resulting from cash flows | 887 | 1,222 | ||
(e) Net of deficiency and special pension contributions of £6 million (2004 £742 million). |
(f) 2004 includes receipt of funds from restructuring the currency swap portfolio of £420 million. |
Important note
This summary financial statement
does not contain sufficient information to allow for as full an understanding
of the results of the group and state of affairs of the company or the group
and of
their policies and arrangements concerning directors remuneration as would be provided by the BT Group plc Annual Report and Form 20-F (Annual Report). Also, for the companys disclosure on any significant ways in which the
companys corporate governance practices differ from those followed by US
companies under NYSE listing standards, please see the corporate governance section
of the Annual Report. Shareholders who would like more detailed information may
obtain a copy of the full Annual Report for 2005 and/or future years, free of
charge, by calling our Shareholder Helpline on Freefone 0808 100 4141 (+44 121
433 4404 from outside the UK) or can view it online at www.bt.com/annualreport
Forward-looking
statements
Please see the cautionary statement regarding forward-looking statements in the 2005 Annual Report, available as set out in the paragraph above.
Creditors: amounts | Provisions for | Net cash inflow from | Capital expenditure | Free cash flow | Financing | ||
falling due after | liabilities and charges | operating activities | and financial | Cash receipts less | Cash receipts less | ||
one year | Amounts set aside for | Cash receipts less | investment | payments from the | payments arising | ||
Money borrowed on | liabilities that are not | payments from the | Cash receipts less | groups activities | from loan advances | ||
a long term basis to | yet certain. | groups operating | payments from the | before corporate | or repayments | ||
fund our operations. | activities. | purchase and sale | transactions, | (not interest) and | |||
of fixed assets. | dividend payments | the issue of shares. | |||||
and financing. | |||||||
BT Annual Review 2005 | 15 |
Summary report on directors remuneration
Introduction This is a summary of the full Report on directors remuneration in the Annual Report and Form 20-F 2005, a copy of which is available on request or at www.bt.com/annualreport. The full report will be voted on at the 2005 Annual General Meeting. |
|
Remuneration
Committee The Remuneration Committee sets the remuneration policy and individual packages for the Chairman, executive directors, members of the Operating Committee (OC) and other senior executives reporting to the Chief Executive. It also approves changes in the companys long-term incentive plans, recommends to the Board those plans which require shareholder approval and oversees their operation. |
|
Remuneration
policy for executives BTs executive remuneration policy is to reward employees competitively, taking into account individual, line of business and company performance, market comparisons and the competitive pressures in the information and communications technology industry. The policy for executive pay, in general terms, is for base salaries to be positioned around the mid-market, with total direct compensation (basic salary, annual bonus and the value of any long-term incentives) to be at the upper quartile only for sustained and excellent performance. |
|
Main
components of remuneration Executive benefits packages comprise a mix of basic salary and performance-related remuneration, as follows: |
|
Basic
salary This is reviewed annually. Basic salaries remained unchanged during the 2004 and 2005 financial years with the exception of increases agreed for Andy Green and Ian Livingston on 1 January 2005 to align their packages with their revised responsibilities in a highly competitive market. |
|
Performance-related remuneration | |
| Annual bonus the annual bonus plan is designed to reward the achievement of results against set objectives. Targets in respect of corporate performance, set at the beginning of the financial year 2004/05 for each objective, were based on earnings per share, free cash flow and customer satisfaction. One-third of any total bonus is payable in the form of deferred shares under the Deferred Bonus Plan. The shares are held in trust for three years and act both as an incentive and a retention measure. |
| Long-term incentives the BT Equity Incentive Portfolio, comprising share options, incentive shares and retention shares, is designed to ensure that equity participation plays an important part in overall remuneration. In the financial year 2004/05, a combination of performance-linked share options and incentive shares replaced the grant of share options. | |
| Awards vest and options become exercisable only if a predetermined performance target has been achieved. | |
| The performance measure is total shareholder return (TSR) compared with a group of companies from the European Telecom Sector, replacing the FTSE 100 as the comparator group. | |
| BTs TSR at the end of the three-year measurement period must be in the upper quartile for all of the awards to vest or options to become exercisable. At median, 30% of options would be exercisable and 25% of shares under award would vest. Below that point all of the share awards and options would lapse. |
Pension arrangements
Pensions are based on salary
alone bonuses, other benefits and long-term
incentives are excluded. Executive
directors and most other senior executives who joined the company prior to
1 April 2001 receive their pensions under defined benefit arrangements. Those
with
longer BT service are entitled to pension benefits of two-thirds of final salary
payable at normal retirement age. Those with shorter BT service are entitled
to pension benefits of one-thirtieth of salary for each year of
service.
Retirement
provision for executive directors and other senior executives who joined BT
on or after 1 April 2001 is generally made on a defined contribution basis
the company agrees to pay a fixed percentage (typically around 30%) of the executives
salary each year towards the provision of retirement benefits.
Other benefits
Other benefits include some or all of: company car, fuel or driver, personal telecommunications facilities and home security, medical and dental cover, special life cover, professional subscriptions
and tax planning and financial counselling.
Service agreements
The policy is for the Chairman and
executive directors to have service agreements providing for one years notice by the company. If BT terminates the Chairmans contract before it expires
at the end of the 2007 AGM he is entitled to payment of salary for 12 months from termination or until the 2007 AGM if that is shorter. Ben Verwaayen is entitled to £700,000 on termination by BT. Andy Green, Hanif Lalani, Ian
Livingston and Paul Reynolds are entitled to salary and benefits until the earlier of 12 months from notice of BTs
termination of the contract or the director obtaining full-time employment.
See
the tables on next page for details of directors emoluments
and interests
in shares.
16 | BT Annual Review 2005 |
Directors remuneration
The emoluments of the directors for the year ended 31 March 2005 and the benefits received under the long-term incentive plans were, in summary, as follows:
Total | Total | |||
2005 | 2004 | |||
£000 | £000 | |||
Salaries (includes amounts in note (2) below) | 3,237 | 3,150 | ||
Performance-related and special bonus | 1,449 | 2,074 | ||
Deferred bonus in shares | 600 | 1,037 | ||
Other benefits | 419 | 467 | ||
5,705 | 6,728 | |||
Payments to non-executive directors | 391 | 337 | ||
Total emoluments | 6,096 | 7,065 | ||
Gain on the exercise of share options | | | ||
Value of shares vested under the executive share plans | 2,132 | 412 | ||
Retirement benefits are accruing to three directors under defined contribution arrangements and to three directors and one former director under a defined benefit scheme. |
Pensions Sir Christopher Bland is not a member of any of the companys pension schemes but the company matches his contributions, up to 10% of the earnings cap, to a personal pension plan. B Verwaayen and I Livingston are not members of any of the companys pension schemes but the company has agreed to pay an amount equal to 30% of salary towards pension provision. The aggregate value of contributions paid, or treated as paid, to defined contribution schemes in the 2005 financial year was £61,200. A Green, H Lalani and P Reynolds are members of the BT Pension Scheme. Additional days of pensionable service are being purchased for A Green, H Lalani and P Reynolds to bring their pensionable service at age 60 up to 40 years. |
||
Annual | Benefits | |||||||||||||
Basic salary | cash | excluding | Total | Total | ||||||||||
and fees | bonus | pension | Sub-total | Other(2) | 2005 | 2004 | ||||||||
£000 | £000 | £000 | £000 | £000 | £000 | £000 | ||||||||
Sir Christopher Bland | 500 | | 32 | 532 | | 532 | 532 | |||||||
B Verwaayen(1) (2) | 700 | 448 | 237 | 1,385 | 127 | 1,512 | 1,968 | |||||||
A Green(1) | 444 | 204 | 36 | 684 | | 684 | 791 | |||||||
H Lalani(1) | 64 | 136 | 7 | 207 | | 207 | | |||||||
I Livingston(1) (2) | 469 | 198 | 29 | 696 | 120 | 816 | 913 | |||||||
Dr P Reynolds(1) | 400 | 213 | 40 | 653 | | 653 | 737 | |||||||
Sir Anthony Greener | 115 | | | 115 | | 115 | 96 | |||||||
M van den Bergh | 55 | | | 55 | | 55 | 44 | |||||||
C Brendish | 50 | | | 50 | | 50 | 39 | |||||||
L R Hughes | 21 | | | 21 | | 21 | 40 | |||||||
Baroness Jay | 50 | | | 50 | | 50 | 39 | |||||||
J F Nelson | 50 | | | 50 | | 50 | 39 | |||||||
C G Symon | 50 | | | 50 | | 50 | 40 | |||||||
P Danon | 413 | 250 | 38 | 701 | | 701 | 750 | |||||||
3,381 | 1,449 | 419 | 5,249 | 247 | 5,496 | 6,028 | ||||||||
Notes |
||
Summary of directors interests
in shares and share plans
as at 31 March 2005
Number of | Incentive | |||||||
shares | and | Deferred | ||||||
Beneficial | under | retention | bonus | |||||
shareholdings | (a) | option | (b) | shares | (c) | awards | (d) | |
Sir Christopher Bland | 674,183 | 314,244 | 299,753 | | ||||
B Verwaayen | 902,001 | 3,656,458 | 252,798 | 781,024 | ||||
A Green | 120,002 | 1,545,032 | 153,484 | 230,154 | ||||
H Lalani | 5,733 | 655,197 | 72,224 | 66,720 | ||||
I Livingston | 313,054 | 1,637,155 | 469,517 | 180,258 | ||||
Dr P Reynolds | 67,768 | 1,453,319 | 144,456 | 208,593 | ||||
Sir Anthony Greener | 60,007 | | | | ||||
M van den Bergh | 7,540 | | | | ||||
C Brendish | 23,920 | | | | ||||
L R Hughes | 6,800 | | | | ||||
Baroness Jay | 5,572 | | | | ||||
J F Nelson | 50,000 | | | | ||||
C G Symon | 10,069 | | | | ||||
2,246,649 | 9,261,405 | 1,392,232 | 1,466,749 | |||||
Executive directors are also able to participate in BTs all-employee share investment plan. |
Notes (a) Beneficial shareholdings include shares held in the directors own name or by close family members. (b) Options granted under the Global Share Option Plan are normally exercisable in full between the third and tenth anniversaries of their date of grant only if a corporate performance target has been met. Option prices range between 187p and 318p. (c) Retention shares are used as a recruitment and retention tool. They are held in trust for up to three years and are transferred to participants, if they are still employed by the company. (d) Awards of shares are directly linked to the value of annual bonuses. The shares are held in trust for three years and are transferred to participants, if they are still employed by the company. |
||
BT Annual Review 2005 | 17 |
Summary directors report
Principal activities
BT is one of the worlds leading
providers of communications solutions serving customers in Europe, the Americas
and Asia Pacific. Its principal activities include networked IT services, local,
national and international telecommunications services, and higher-value broadband
and internet products and services. In the UK, we serve over 20 million business
and residential customers with around 29 million exchange lines, as well as
providing
network services to other licensed operators. BT consists principally of three
lines of business: BT Retail, BT Wholesale and BT Global Services. Details
of our businesses and performance, including a number of post-balance sheet
events, are given
on pages 12 and 13 of this Annual Review.
Dividends
An interim dividend of 3.9 pence per share (2004: 3.2p) was paid on 7 February 2005. The directors recommend a final dividend of 6.5 pence per share (2004: 5.3p) to be paid on 5 September 2005 to
shareholders on the register at the close of business on 5 August 2005. This makes a total dividend for the year of 10.4 pence per share (2004: 8.5p), an increase of 22%.
Directors
Details of the current members of the Board are shown below. All served throughout the financial year, with the exception of Hanif Lalani, who was appointed on 7 February 2005.
Pierre Danon served as a director until 28 February 2005.
Ben Verwaayen, Paul Reynolds, Carl Symon and Baroness Jay retire from the Board by rotation at the Annual General Meeting. Being eligible, they offer themselves for
re-election. Hanif Lalani, having been appointed by the Board, will retire and will be proposed for election.
The
contracts of Ben Verwaayen, Paul Reynolds and Hanif Lalani are terminable on
12 months notice by the company and six months notice
by the director.
The
letters of appointment of Carl Symon and Baroness Jay were extended for
a second term of three years from 14 January 2005 and are terminable by
either party on three
months notice.
Annual General Meeting
The Notice of the Annual General Meeting to be held at 10.30 am at the Harrogate International Centre, Harrogate on 13 July 2005 is contained in a circular, which is sent to shareholders with this
Review.
Key to membership of | Sir Christopher Bland | Ben Verwaayen | Dr Paul Reynolds | Andy Green | Ian Livingston | Hanif Lalani | |||||||
Board committees | Chairman | Chief Executive | Chief Executive, | Chief Executive, | Chief Executive, | Group Finance Director | |||||||
A | Operating | Appointed to the
Board as Chairman on 1 May 2001. Chairman of the BBC from 1996 to 2001.
Appointed a non-executive director of LWT Holdings in 1982 and chairman
from 1983 to 1994, when LWT was acquired by the Granada Group. A former
chairman of an NHS hospital trust. Aged 66. Other appointments: senior adviser at Warburg Pincus and chairman of the Royal Shakespeare Company. D* E* F |
A Dutch national,
appointed to the Board on 14 January 2002 and Chief Executive on 1 February
2002. Formerly vice chairman of the management board of Lucent Technologies
in the USA from October 1999. Aged 53. Other appointments: non-executive director of UPS. A* |
BT
Wholesale Appointed to the Board on 19 November 2001. Held a number of senior positions in BT, including Director of Multimedia and Managing Director of Networks and Information Services. Aged 48. Other appointments: non-executive director of E-Access (a Japanese corporation). A |
BT
Global Services Appointed to the Board on 19 November 2001. Held a number of senior positions in BT, including Chief Executive of BT Openworld and Group Director of Strategy and Development. Aged 49. A |
BT
Retail Appointed Chief Executive, BT Retail on 7 February 2005. A Chartered Accountant, he was Group Finance Director from April 2002. Formerly group finance director of Dixons Group and a director of Freeserve from its inception. Aged 40. Other appointments: non-executive director of Hilton Group. A |
Appointed to the
Board as Group Finance Director on 7 February 2005. A Chartered Management
Accountant, he was formerly Chief Financial Officer for BT Wholesale.
Joined BT in 1983 and held a number of positions including Chief Executive
BT Northern Ireland and Chairman OCEAN Communications (BTs subsidiary
in the Republic of Ireland). Awarded the OBE in 2003 for services to
business in Northern Ireland. Aged 43. A F |
||||||
B | Audit | ||||||||||||
C | Remuneration | ||||||||||||
D | Nominating | ||||||||||||
E | Community Support | ||||||||||||
F | Pension Scheme Performance Review Group | ||||||||||||
* | Chairs committee | ||||||||||||
18 | BT Annual Review 2005 |
Corporate governance
It is BTs policy to achieve for all our operations best practice in our standards of business integrity. The directors consider that BT has, throughout the year, complied with the provisions set out in section 1 of the 2003 Combined Code on Corporate Governance.
Board, directors and board committees
The Board is currently made up of
the part-time Chairman, the Chief Executive, four other executive directors
and seven independent non-executive directors. It is BTs policy that
the Board will comprise a majority of independent non-executive directors.
The roles of the Chairman and the Chief Executive are separate. The non-executive
directors provide a strong, independent element on the Board. Sir Anthony Greener,
the Deputy Chairman, is
the senior independent director. Non-executive directors are appointed initially
for three years at the end of which the appointment may be continued by mutual
agreement. The Chairman and the non-executive directors meet regularly without
the executive directors. The Chairman ensures the views of shareholders are
known to and appropriately considered by the Board.
The
Boards principal focus is the overall strategic direction, development
and control of the group. A formal statement of its role is available on the companys
website. Historically, the Board has met every month, except August. For the
2006 financial year, and going forward, the Board will meet at least nine times
each year.
During
summer 2004 the Board carried out a further evaluation of its performance.
A number of actions were agreed as a result. As part of this process, the
Chairman has one-to-one sessions with the directors; the Deputy Chairman,
Sir Anthony Greener, meets all directors individually to review the Chairmans
performance.
To
meet best corporate governance practice, Audit, Remuneration and Nominating
Committees have long been an established part of BTs system of governance.
Each committee has written terms of reference, which are available on
the companys website. The Audit and Remuneration Committees are made
up entirely of independent non-executive directors. The Board considers
that several of the Audit
Committees members have recent and relevant financial experience. The Audit
Committee reviews the companys
published financial results, the Annual Report and Form 20-F and other published
information for statutory and regulatory compliance and reports its views to
the Board. It recommends the appointment, reappointment and remuneration of the
companys
external auditors. The Board has policies determining what non-audit services
the companys external auditors can provide in order to safeguard their
independence and objectivity.
The Nominating Committee
ensures an appropriate balance of experience and abilities on the Board, using
this evaluation to review the size and composition of the Board and to recommend
any proposed changes to the Board.
The Chief Executive,
Ben Verwaayen, chairs the Operating Committee, which meets weekly.
Internal control
and risk management
The Board is responsible for the groups
systems of internal control and risk management and for reviewing the effectiveness
of those systems. Such systems are designed to manage, rather than eliminate,
the risk of failure to achieve business objectives; any system can provide only
reasonable and not absolute assurance against material misstatement or loss.
BT has processes for
identifying, evaluating and managing the significant risks faced by the group.
These processes have been in place for the whole of the 2005 financial year and
have continued up to the date on which this document was approved.
Non-executive directors | ||||||||||||
Sir Anthony Greener | Louis R Hughes | Maarten van den Bergh | John Nelson | The Rt. Hon. Baroness | Carl G Symon | Clayton Brendish | ||||||
Deputy Chairman Appointed to the Board on 1 October 2000. He is Deputy Chairman and senior independent director. Chairman of the Audit and Remuneration Committees. Formerly chairman of Diageo. Aged 64. Other appointments: chairman of the Qualifications and Curriculum Authority. B* C* D |
A US national, appointed to the Board on 1 January 2000. Non-executive chairman of Maxager Technology Inc. (USA). Previously president and chief operating officer of Lockheed Martin Corporation and executive vice president of General Motors. Aged 56. Other appointments: from 09/04 to 06/05 leading the US Government civil reconstruction effort in Afghanistan. Non-executive director of AB Electrolux (Sweden), Sulzer AG and ABB Ltd (both Switzerland). B C |
A Dutch national, appointed to the Board on 1 September 2000. Retired in 2000 as president of the Royal Dutch Petroleum Company and vice chairman of its committee of managing directors. Aged 63. Other appointments: chairman of Lloyds TSB Group; non-executive director of Royal Dutch Petroleum Company and British Airways and a member of the supervisory board of Akzo-Nobel. B C D F* |
A Chartered
Accountant, appointed to the Board on 14 January 2002. Retired as chairman
of Credit Suisse First Boston Europe (CSFB) on 31 January 2002. Prior to
joining CSFB in January 1999, he was vice chairman of Lazard Brothers from
1990. Aged 57. Other appointments: deputy chairman of Kingfisher and a non-executive director of Hammerson, of which he will become chairman in September 2005. B D F |
Jay of Paddington PC Appointed to the Board on 14 January 2002. Formerly Lord Privy Seal, Leader of the House of Lords and Minister for Women, and Minister of State at the Department of Health. Aged 65. Other appointments: non-executive director of Independent News & Media and a member of its International Advisory Board; chairman of the Overseas Development Institute and member of the Committee on Standards in Public Life. C E |
A US
national, appointed to the Board on 14 January 2002. Formerly chairman and
chief executive officer of IBM UK. Aged 59. Other appointments: non-executive director of Rolls-Royce and Rexam; chairman of a number of private companies. B C |
Appointed to the Board on 1 September 2002. Retired in 2001 as executive deputy chairman of CMG. Aged 58. Other appointments: non-executive director and external chairman of Meteorological Office Board; non-executive chairman of Close Beacon Investment Fund and Echo Research Ltd; non-executive director of Elexon and Herald Investment Trust; trustee of Economist Newspapers and Foundation for Liver Research. B E |
BT Annual Review 2005 | 19 |
Information for shareholders
Share price | |
| Shareline for the daily 9.00 am share price and recorded news about BT, call: Lo-call 0845 701 0707 (UK callers only). Calls charged as a local call from anywhere in the UK*. |
| Share price line for
real-time buying and selling prices for BT shares, call: 0906 822 2334
(UK callers only). This service is provided by Teleshare, which is not
part of
BT. Calls are charged at 60p per minute (including VAT)*. * Different rates may apply to calls from non-BT networks. |
Dividends for the year ended 31 March 2005 | |
| Interim dividend of 3.9 pence per share paid on 7 February 2005. |
| Final dividend proposed of 6.5 pence per share payable on 5 September 2005. |
Calendar of key dates | ||
Financial year end | 31 March 2005 | |
Annual General Meeting | 13 July 2005 | |
Results announcements for the year ended 31 March 2006 | ||
First quarter | 28 July 2005 | |
Second quarter and half year | 10 November 2005 | * |
Third quarter and nine months | February 2006 | * |
Fourth quarter and full year | May 2006 | * |
2006 report and accounts published | June 2006 | * |
Dividends for the financial year ended 31 March 2005 | ||
Interim | ||
3.9 pence per share paid | 7 February 2005 | |
Final | ||
Record date | 5 August 2005 | |
6.5 pence per share (proposed payable) | 5 September 2005 | |
* Dates are based on present expectations |
Have your dividends paid directly to | |||
your bank or building society account | |||
Its easy, secure, reduces our costs and you still | |||
receive your tax information. Just call our | |||
Shareholder Helpline on Freefone 0808 100 4141* | |||
or go to www.bt.com/signup and follow the | |||
on-screen instructions. | |||
* | Corporate, overseas and joint shareholders, and shareholders with | ||
more than 1,500 shares will need to ask for the appropriate form | |||
to complete, or use the online service |
20 | BT Annual Review 2005 |
Online communication
More shareholders now receive all of their BT shareholder communications online, and are discovering the convenience of using the internet and email to find out about their shareholdings and about BT.
ShareholderPlus
Choose to receive all your BT shareholder
communications online at www.bt.com/signup and you will qualify for
ShareholderPlus, an exclusive range of shareholder offers on products and services
from BT and partner companies. You can view the current offers at www.bt.com/shareholderoffers
Shareview When you sign up for ShareholderPlus you are automatically registered for Shareview, provided in association with Lloyds TSB Registrars. This online service enables you to: |
|
| update address and/or bank details online |
| view dividend information including tax details |
| buy or sell BT shares online at www.shareview.co.uk/dealing (or telephone 0870 850 0852) |
| build and manage a full share portfolio |
| appoint a proxy to represent you at company meetings. |
Registration is free
Just go to www.bt.com/signup and
follow the on-screen instructions, or call the Shareholder Helpline (see Contact
BT).
You will need your unique eight-character shareholder account number (printed
below your name on the accompanying Admission Card/Proxy Card and also on your
share certificate(s)).
Email alerts
To receive monthly email alerts about
BT and new shareholder offers, click on email alerts at www.bt.com/sharesandperformance and
select your area(s) of interest.
About BT
www.bt.com/aboutbt has a wealth
of constantly updated information about BT, and www.bt.com/sharesandperformance has
information of particular interest to our shareholders.
Contact BT
You can contact us by telephone, email or post.
Telephone
Shareholder Helpline for general
enquiries call:
Freefone 0808 100 4141 (+44
121 433 4404 from outside the
UK)
Email
Send an email to Kevan Dale at:
kevan@lloydstsb-registrars.co.uk
Post
Please write (including a
daytime telephone number) to:
Lloyds TSB Registrars
(2450)
The Causeway
Worthing
West Sussex
BN99 6DA
Other publications
BT produces a series of reports on
its financial, business, social and environmental performance. Most of these
can be found on our website at www.bt.com/aboutbt. Contact the Shareholder
Helpline for printed copies, where available.
Special needs
An audio cassette version of the Annual Review (including extracts from the 2005 Notice of Annual General Meeting) has been produced for shareholders with special needs. To obtain a copy of this cassette, please
contact the Shareholder Helpline.
ShareGift
The Orr Mackintosh Foundation operates
a charity donation scheme for shareholders with small parcels of shares which
may be uneconomic to sell. Details of the scheme are available from ShareGift
at www.sharegift.org or by telephone on 020 7337 0501. Details can also
be obtained from the Shareholder Helpline.
Unclaimed Assets Register
BT subscribes to this search facility
for financial assets that have become separated from their owners. The register
donates a proportion of its public search fees to charity via ShareGift. Further
information can
be found at www.uar.co.uk or telephone 0870 241 1713.
Capital gains tax
The rights issue in June 2001 adjusted the value of your BT shares for capital gains tax (CGT) purposes. An explanatory leaflet is available from the Shareholder Helpline.
The demerger of O2 in November 2001 adjusted the value of your BT shares for CGT purposes. For CGT calculations the base cost of the BT Group shares and O2 shares is calculated by
multiplying the acquisition cost of the BT shareholding by 77.544% for the BT Group shares, and 22.456% for the O2 shares. This is in accordance with the confirmed opening prices for BT Group and O2 shares following the demerger.
Sign up for ShareholderPlus | Other publications | |||
for an exclusive range of online | BT produces a series of reports | |||
shareholder offers. | on its financial, business, social and | |||
environmental performance. Most of these | ||||
can be found on our website. Contact the | ||||
Shareholder Helpline for printed copies, | ||||
where available. | ||||
Consumer services | |||
Further information on consumer services | |||
featured in this Annual Review is available | |||
as follows: | |||
| BT Broadband Call 0800 800 060 | ||
or visit www.bt.com/getbroadband | |||
| BT Together Call 0800 800 150 | ||
or visit www.bt.com/together | |||
| BT Mobile Call 0800 032 211 | ||
or visit www.bt.com/btmobile | |||
| BT Communicator with Yahoo! Messenger | ||
Call 0800 800 150 | |||
or visit www.bt.com/btcommunicator | |||
| Internet Security Pack | ||
Call 0800 800 150 | |||
or visit www.bt.com/premiumrates | |||
Information
on the services we offer is regularly enclosed with BT phone bills. |
|||
Dear Shareholder
I have pleasure in sending you the
Notice of this years Annual General Meeting for BT shareholders, which
will be held in Harrogate on Wednesday 13 July 2005.
To give as
many shareholders as possible the opportunity to attend the AGM, we hold the
meeting in a different city in the UK each year. We were in Cardiff last year,
and expect to be in London next year. We also broadcast my speech and the speech
of our Chief Executive, Ben Verwaayen, live over the internet (see page 6 of
this Notice).
Of the directors
proposed for re-election this year, two are independent non-executive directors,
Carl Symon and Baroness Margaret Jay. I am pleased to provide confirmation
to shareholders that, following formal performance evaluation, we continue
to regard Carl Symon and Margaret Jay as effective non-executive directors.
They make a valuable contribution to the Board and have demonstrated a high
level of commitment to the role.
Even if you
are not able to come to the meeting in person, your vote is still important.
I would urge you, regardless of the number of shares you own, to vote. You
may vote by completing and returning the enclosed proxy card. Alternatively,
you may cast your vote online, by telephone or by fax.
If you intend
coming to this years meeting, please either return the enclosed AGM Intention
to Attend card or indicate your intention to attend over the internet or by
phone.
I look forward to seeing you in Harrogate.
Yours sincerely
Sir Christopher Bland
Chairman
18 May 2005
Your vote is important. | ||
If you are not coming to | ||
the meeting you can cast | ||
your vote online, by | ||
telephone or by fax. | ||
Notice of Meeting
The 2005 Annual General Meeting of BT Group plc will be held at the Harrogate International Centre, Kings Road, Harrogate HG1 5LA on Wednesday 13 July 2005 at 10.30 am to consider the following:
Ordinary business
Resolution 1
That the accounts and reports
of the directors and the auditors for the year ended 31 March 2005 be received.
Legislation requires the directors
to present to the meeting these accounts and reports contained in the Companys
Annual Report.
Resolution 2
That the directors remuneration
report for the year ended 31 March 2005 be approved.
The directors have to ask shareholders
to vote on this report on directors remuneration. It is summarised
in the Annual Review, which accompanies this Notice. The full report, in
the Annual Report, is on the Companys website at www.bt.com/annualreport or
is sent to shareholders if requested.
Resolution 3
That the final dividend of 6.5
pence per share recommended by the directors be declared payable on 5 September
2005 to holders of ordinary shares registered at the close of business on
5 August 2005.
The final dividend declared cannot
exceed the amount recommended by the directors.
Resolutions 4-7:
re-election of directors
Under the Companys articles
of association (articles), in compliance with the Combined Code
on Corporate Governance, all directors have to retire every three years at
an Annual General Meeting. As a result, four directors must retire at this
years Annual General Meeting and are proposed by the Board for re-election.
Resolution
4 That Ben Verwaayen be re-elected as a director. Ben Verwaayen was appointed to the Board on 14 January 2002 and became Chief Executive on 1 February 2002. He chairs the Operating Committee. |
Ben Verwaayen was formerly vice chairman of the management board of Lucent Technologies in the USA from October 1999. He joined Lucent in September 1997 as executive vice president international and became chief operating officer the following month. Prior to joining Lucent, Ben Verwaayen worked for KPN in the Netherlands for nine years as president and managing director of its telecoms subsidiary, PTT Telecom. From 1975 to 1988, he worked for ITT in Europe. He is a non-executive director of UPS. A Dutch national, he is aged 53. |
Resolution 5
That Dr Paul Reynolds be re-elected
as a director.
Paul Reynolds was appointed to the
Board on 19 November 2001. He is a member of the Operating Committee. In
April 2000, he was appointed as Chief Executive of BT Wholesale. He joined
BT from the Companys predecessor corporation, which he joined in 1983,
and has held a number of roles, including Director of the Office of the Chairman,
Director of Multimedia and, from 1999, Managing Director of Networks and
Information Services. He is a non-executive director of E-Access (a Japanese
corporation). Aged 48.
Resolution
6 That Carl Symon be re-elected as a director. Carl Symon was appointed to the Board on 14 January 2002. He is a member of the Audit and Remuneration Committees. He retired from IBM in May 2001 after a 32-year career, during which he held senior executive positions in the USA, Canada, Latin America, Asia and Europe, including chairman and chief executive officer of IBM UK. |
Carl Symon is chairman of a number of private companies, and a non-executive director of Rolls-Royce and Rexam. A US national, he is aged 59. |
Resolution
7 That Baroness Jay of Paddington be re-elected as a director. Baroness (Margaret) Jay was appointed to the Board on 14 January 2002. She is a member of the Remuneration and Community Support Committees. She was formerly Lord Privy Seal, Leader of the House of Lords and Minister for Women. Previously, she was Minister of State at the Department of Health. |
Baroness Jay has held non-executive positions with Scottish Power, Carlton Television and LBC. She has been a member of the Central Research and Development Committee for the NHS, was a founding director of the National AIDS Trust, a governor of South Bank University and a member of the Meteorological Office Council. She is currently chairman of the Overseas Development Institute, a non-executive director of Independent News & Media and a member of its International Advisory Board, and a member of the Committee on Standards in Public Life. Aged 65. |
Resolution 8: election
of director
The articles require any director
appointed by the Board to retire at the Annual General Meeting following
appointment.
That Hanif Lalani be elected as
a director.
Hanif Lalani was appointed to the
Board on 7 February 2005 as Group Finance Director. He is a member of the
Operating Committee and the Pension Scheme Performance Review Group. He was
formerly Chief Finance Officer for BT Wholesale. Since joining BT in 1983
he has held a number of positions, including Chief Executive of BT Northern
Ireland, and Managing Director BT Regions. Hanif Lalani was also Chairman
of OCEAN Communications (BTs subsidiary in the Republic of Ireland).
He was awarded the OBE in January 2003 for services to business in Northern
Ireland. He is a Chartered Management Accountant. Aged 43.
Resolution 9
That PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP
be reappointed auditors of the Company, to hold office until the conclusion
of the next general meeting at which accounts are laid before the Company.
The resolution proposes the reappointment
of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP as the Companys auditors.
Resolution 10
That the directors be authorised
to decide the auditors remuneration.
This resolution follows standard practice.
If passed, the directors will decide how much the auditors should be paid.
Notice of BT Annual General Meeting 2005 3
Special business
The following resolution will
be proposed as an ordinary resolution.
Resolution
11 That the authority and power conferred on the directors in relation to the Section 80 Amount by Article 74 of the Companys articles of association be renewed until 12 October 2006 and for that period the Section 80 Amount shall be £140 million. The articles give a general authority to the directors to allot unissued shares, which is subject to renewal by shareholders. |
|
The directors will be able to issue new shares up to a nominal value of £140 million (the Section 80 Amount), which is equal to approximately 33% of the issued share capital (excluding treasury shares) of the Company as at the date of this Notice. See the notes to Resolution 13 for more information on treasury shares. | |
The following two resolutions will be proposed as special resolutions. | |
Resolution
12 That the authority and power conferred on the directors by Article 74 of the Companys articles of association be: |
|
| extended to any sale of shares which the Company may hold as treasury shares; and |
| renewed until 12 October 2006; |
and
for that period the Section 89 Amount shall be £21 million. This resolution renews the authority given to directors to allot equity securities without the requirement to offer these shares to existing shareholders first: |
|
| for cash, up to an amount representing approximately 5% of the issued share capital (including treasury shares) as at the date of this Notice; or |
| in connection with a rights issue defined in summary as an offer of equity securities to shareholders in proportion to the number of shares they hold, which is open for a period decided by the Board, subject to any limits or restrictions that the Board thinks are necessary or appropriate. |
There are no current plans to allot shares except in connection with the Companys employee share plans. | |
References to allot in this note include the sale of treasury shares. | |
The authorities sought by Resolutions 11 and 12 will last for 15 months until 12 October 2006, although the directors intend to seek renewal of these powers at each Annual General Meeting. This will ensure that the directors continue to have the flexibility to act in the best interests of shareholders, when opportunities arise, by allotting shares. |
Resolution
13 That the Company be generally and unconditionally authorised to make market purchases (within the meaning of Section 163(3) of the Companies Act 1985) of shares of 5p each in the Company, subject to the following conditions: |
|
(a) | the maximum number of shares which may be purchased is 850 million shares; |
(b) | the minimum price which may be paid for each share is 5p; |
(c) | the maximum price which may be paid for each share is an amount equal to 105% of the average of the middle market quotations of a share as derived from the London Stock Exchange Daily Official List for the five business days immediately preceding the day on which the share is contracted to be purchased; and |
(d) | this authority will expire at the close of the Annual General Meeting of the Company held in 2006, or if earlier, 12 October 2006 (except in relation to the purchase of shares, the contract for which was concluded before the expiry of this authority and which might be executed wholly or partly after that expiry). |
The
directors would like the Company to continue to have the flexibility
to buy its own shares. This resolution renews the Companys authority
to buy its own shares in similar terms to previous years authorities.
It would be limited to 850 million ordinary shares, representing 10%
of the issued share capital (excluding treasury shares) at the date
of this Notice. The directors would continue to exercise this authority
only after considering the effects on earnings per share and the benefits
for shareholders generally. |
|
Shares purchased by the Company out of distributable profits may be held as treasury shares, which may then be cancelled, sold for cash or used to meet the Companys obligations under its employee share plans. | |
During the 2005 financial year, 101 million shares were purchased (1.2% of the share capital) for a total consideration of £195 million, at an average price of £1.92 per share. As at 18 May 2005, 11 million treasury shares had been transferred to meet the Companys obligations under its employee share plans and as at that date the Company still held 134 million treasury shares which is equal to 1.6% of the issued share capital (excluding treasury shares) in issue as at that date. | |
The Companys current intention is to hold any shares purchased as treasury shares but it retains the flexibility to cancel them or sell them for cash if it considers this to be in the best interests of the Company. | |
The authority sought by this resolution will run until 12 October 2006, although the directors intend to seek renewal of this power at each Annual General Meeting. | |
As at 18 May 2005, there were options outstanding over 468 million shares (of which options over 262 million shares were in respect of options granted under the savings related share option plans), representing 5.5% of the Companys issued share capital (excluding treasury shares). If the authority given by this resolution were to be fully used, these would represent 6.1% of the Companys issued share capital (excluding treasury shares). There are no warrants outstanding. |
4 Notice of BT Annual General Meeting 2005
The following two resolutions will be proposed as ordinary resolutions.
Resolution
14 That the directors be authorised to amend the rules of: |
|
| the BT Group Retention Share Plan; and |
| the BT Group Deferred Bonus Plan |
to
enable awards to be satisfied using treasury shares. The directors would like the flexibility to use treasury shares to satisfy awards made under its share plans. Share plans previously approved by shareholders for use with newly issued shares do not require further shareholder approval to use treasury shares. Therefore, the Company is asking shareholders to approve amendments to share plans for which it can currently use only shares purchased in the market to satisfy awards. |
|
The BT Group Retention Share Plan was approved by shareholders in 2000 for use with existing shares. The BT Group Deferred Bonus Plan was established by the directors in 1998 and did not require shareholder approval under the UK Listing Rules. |
Resolution 15
That British Telecommunications
plc, a wholly owned subsidiary of the Company, be authorised to make donations
to EU (European Union) political organisations, not exceeding £100,000
in total, during the period beginning with the date of the 2005 Annual General
Meeting and ending at the conclusion of the day on which the 2006 Annual
General Meeting is held.
The Companys continuing
policy is that no company in the group shall make contributions in cash
or kind to any political party. Arrangements are in place to implement
this policy. However, the definition of political donations used in the
Companies Act 1985 is very much broader than the sense in which these
words are ordinarily used. It covers activities such as making MPs and
others in the political world aware of key industry issues and matters
affecting the Company, which make an important contribution to their
understanding of BT. These activities are carried out on an even-handed
basis related broadly to the major UK political parties electoral
strength. The authority we are requesting in this resolution is not designed
to change the above policy. It will, however, ensure that the group acts
within the provisions of the Companies Act 1985 requiring companies to
obtain shareholder authority before they can make donations to EU political
organisations (which includes UK political parties) as defined in the
Act. During the 2005 financial year the Companys wholly-owned subsidiary,
British Telecommunications plc, spent £22,309.
Only shareholders on the Register of Members at 6.00 pm on 11 July 2005 are entitled to attend and vote. A shareholder entitled to attend and vote is entitled to appoint a proxy or proxies to vote on his or her behalf. A proxy need not be a shareholder of the Company. On a poll, the number of shares held by each shareholder at 6.00 pm on 11 July 2005 will decide the number votes that the shareholder may cast.
By order of the Board
Larry Stone
Secretary
81 Newgate Street
London
EC1A 7AJ
18 May
2005
Documents | ||
The following documentation, which is available for inspection during business hours at the registered office of the Company on any weekday (public holidays excluded), will also be available for inspection at the place of the Annual General Meeting from 9.30 am on the day of the meeting until the conclusion of the meeting: | ||
(a) | the register of interests of directors (and their families) in the share capital of the Company; | |
(b) | copies of all service contracts and contracts of appointment between the directors and the Company; | |
(c) | printed copies of this Notice and the documentation made available to shareholders using electronic communication, including the Annual Report and Form 20-F 2005 and the Annual Review 2005; and | |
(d) | the rules of the BT Group Retention Share Plan and the BT Group Deferred Bonus Plan showing the amendments proposed in Resolution 14. |
Your directors believe that the proposals | |||
in Resolutions 1 to 15 are in the best | |||
interests of both the Company and its | |||
shareholders and unanimously | |||
recommend that you vote in favour of all | |||
these resolutions. The directors intend to | |||
do so in respect of their own beneficial | |||
holdings. | |||
Notice of BT Annual General Meeting 2005 5 |
AGM information
You have the right
to attend, speak and vote at the Annual General Meeting if you are on the
BT Group share register at 6.00 pm on 11 July 2005.
If
you are not attending the meeting, you may appoint someone else as your proxy to
attend the meeting and/or vote on your behalf, by post, fax, over the internet
or by telephone. The number of shares you hold as at the above register deadline
will decide how many votes you or your proxy will have if there is a poll.
For more information about appointing a proxy, please read the explanatory
notes on the Proxy Card enclosed with this Notice.
Time and Place
of meeting
Time 10.30 am on 13 July 2005.
Doors open at 9.30 am to the shareholder helpdesk, for questions and queries,
and to the reception area.
Place Harrogate International
Centre, Kings Road, Harrogate, HG1 5LA. A map and travel instructions
are included on page 7 of this Notice.
If you are coming
to the meeting
You can register your intention to
attend over the internet (see note 3 on the Proxy Card), or by calling the
telephone number given for appointing proxies (see note 4 on the Proxy Card).
You can also sign the enclosed AGM Intention to Attend Card (if you did not
receive this Notice electronically) and return it. No stamp is required if
posting within the UK, even if you use an envelope.
Admission Card/
Proxy Card
Please bring your Admission Card/
Proxy Card as it will speed your admission, and keep it until the meeting
ends. You may also find it helpful to bring with you this Notice and the Annual
Review 2005, in order to refer to them at the meeting.
Joint shareholders
All joint shareholders may attend
and speak at the meeting. However, only the first shareholder listed on the
BT Group share register is entitled to vote.
Questions
Before voting on each resolution,
shareholders will have the opportunity to ask questions. If you wish to ask a
question, please make your way to a question point where someone will help you.
If you are not
coming to the meeting
Webcast
The speeches by the Chairman, Sir Christopher
Bland, and the Chief Executive, Ben Verwaayen, will be broadcast live on the
internet at www.bt.com/btagm2005. Questions and voting on the business
of the meeting will not be broadcast. If you intend to view the webcast, you
should visit this site before the meeting to check that you will be able to
view it on your computer, and also whether you need any additional software.
Watch the webcast | ||
live on the internet at | ||
www.bt.com/btagm2005 | ||
6 Notice of BT Annual General Meeting 2005 |
AGM venue
Venue arrangements
Admission
For security reasons and to speed
up admission, it would be helpful if you did not bring suitcases, large bags,
a camera, laptop computer or tape recorder. You may otherwise be required
to deposit them in a secure property store for collection after the meeting.
Smoking
Smoking will not be permitted in
the auditorium.
Mobile phones
Please ensure mobile phones or pagers
are switched off during the meeting.
Refreshments
Tea and coffee will be available
in the reception area before the meeting. Light refreshments will be served after
the meeting.
Shareholders
with disabilities The following facilities will be available: |
|
| sound amplification; |
| induction loop; |
| sign language interpretation; |
| Palantype speech-to-text transcription; and |
| wheelchair facilities. |
Anyone accompanying a shareholder in need of assistance will be admitted to the meeting. |
How to get there
The Harrogate International
Centre (HIC) is located at Kings Road, Harrogate HG1 5LA.
If you travel
by train
There are regular train services
to Harrogate via York and Leeds. For further information please contact National
Rail Enquiries on 08457 48 49 50 or visit www.thetrainline.com. Harrogate
railway station is 10 minutes walk away, and a courtesy bus service
will be operating between the station and the venue.
If you travel
by bus or coach
For details of public transport in
the Harrogate District, including Harrogate/Leeds routes, please contact
Harrogate & District Travel on (01423) 56 60 61 or visit www.harrogateanddistrict.co.uk
For details of National Express coach services please contact National Express on 08705 808080 or visit www.gobycoach.com
If you travel
by car
Directions for approaching the HIC
From London | Via M1, A1(M), Wetherby, Spofforth, Knaresborough Road, York Place, West Park, Parliament Street, Kings Road | |
From the North | Via A1, A61 signposted Ripon, A61 signposted Harrogate, left at Swallow St. George Hotel, Kings Road | |
From the East | M621, A1(M) Wetherby, Spofforth, Knaresborough Road, York Place, West Park, Parliament Street, Kings Road | |
From the West | Via M56, M62, Junction 29 M1 (North), A1(M) (North), Wetherby, Spofforth, Knaresborough Road, York Place, West Park, Parliament Street, Kings Road |
Car parking
There are 450 car parking spaces
at the HIC. A charge will be made for parking your car.
Shareholder information
Report
and accounts The Company publishes two reports annually: |
|
| the Annual Report and Form 20-F (Annual Report) the Companys full report and accounts; and |
| the Annual Review a shorter report, including a summary financial statement, designed to meet the needs of our private shareholders. |
You will be sent only the Annual Review unless you notify us that you wish to receive the Annual Report. | |
The Annual Report for 2005 is also available on our website at www.bt.com/annualreport. Alternatively, you can request a printed copy of the Annual Report for 2005 and/or future years, free of charge, by calling the Shareholder Helpline or contacting Lloyds TSB Registrars (see Enquiries below). | |
Enquiries Lloyds TSB Registrars maintain the Companys share register and, separately, the register of BT Group EasyShare participants. They also provide a telephone helpline service. |
|
If you have any enquiries about the AGM, or about your BT Group shareholding, please contact Lloyds TSB Registrars: |
By telephone to the Shareholder Helpline | ||
Freefone: | 0808 100 4141 | |
Fax: | 01903 833371 | |
Textphone: | Freefone 0800 169 6907 | |
Email: | to Kevan Dale at kevan@lloydstsb-registrars.co.uk | |
From outside the UK | ||
Tel: | +44 121 433 4404 | |
Fax: | +44 1903 833371 | |
Textphone: | +44 121 415 7028 |
Or in writing, remembering to include
a daytime telephone number, to:
Lloyds TSB Registrars (2450)
The Causeway
Worthing
West Sussex
BN99 6DA
Data Protection Statement
The Company (references to Company
include BT Group plc and British Telecommunications plc) collects and processes
information provided by you, or on your behalf, which relates to you as an
individual shareholder or as a participant in EasyShare or other scheme or
plan. This information (which is your personal data) includes your name and
contact details, the votes you cast and the Reference Number attributed to
you by the Company. The Company may process your personal data for the purposes
of compiling and updating the Company records, fulfilling its legal obligations,
processing the shareholder rights you exercise, and contacting you with shareholder
information and related communications. The Company may engage a third party
to do this (for example Lloyds TSB Registrars) who may process your personal
data on the Companys behalf.
BT Group plc
Registered office: 81 Newgate Street,
London EC1A 7AJ
Registered in England and Wales No. 4190816
Produced by BT Group
Designed by Pauffley Ltd, London
Typeset by St Ives Burrups
Printed in England by Howitt Ltd
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sustainably managed forests
www.bt.com
PHME 47823