- Vodafone Spain posts $267 million EBITDA in Q1, up 2.7% year-on-year, driven by significant cost reductions.
- Operational focus shifts following Liberty Global’s acquisition, as Vodafone trims headcount and streamlines operations.
What happened: Profit rise follows Liberty takeover and job cuts
Vodafone Spain recorded a 2.7% rise in EBITDA to $267 million in the April–June quarter, largely attributed to cost-cutting measures implemented ahead of its acquisition by Liberty Global. Revenue, however, dipped 3.4% year-on-year to $955 million. According to Liberty Global’s Q2 earnings update, the uplift in profit was a result of job reductions, operational streamlining, and reduced commercial expenditure.
The Spanish unit, which was sold to Zegona Communications and then merged with Liberty Global, had already laid off around 1,000 employees earlier this year as part of a strategic restructuring. This leaner cost base is now helping the operator maintain profitability in a highly competitive market. The Liberty-led team is taking direct control of operations following the finalisation of the $5.4 billion deal in May 2024.
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Why this is important
Vodafone Spain’s financial performance reflects broader trends in the European telecom sector, where legacy operators face intense price pressure and customer churn. The pivot toward leaner cost structures mirrors similar moves by other operators like Orange Spain and MásMóvil, both of which are undergoing consolidation or mergers to stay competitive.
The Liberty Global takeover signals a strategic shift, with the parent company expected to drive operational efficiency across the newly acquired asset. Liberty has a track record of consolidating regional players, and its entry into Spain marks a potential reshaping of the market landscape. For Vodafone Group, the sale reflects a deliberate retreat from underperforming European markets, allowing it to focus on more profitable regions like the UK and Germany.
Zegona, which now controls the brand through its licensing deal with Vodafone Group, has hinted at further commercial changes ahead. This could reshape customer offerings and infrastructure investment strategies in Spain. Industry watchers should monitor how Liberty manages overlapping networks and whether it can sustain margin growth without triggering service quality issues.