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TELECOMS

Alcatel losses ‘worse than expected’

French telecommunications equipment maker Alcatel-Lucent said on Friday that it had suffered a worse-than-expected net loss in the third quarter of the year owing partly to an exceptional charge related to the cost of buying Lucent in 2006.

An Alcatel-Lucent statement said its net loss came to €146 million ($189 million), far above the loss of 108 million euros expected by analysts.

The figure included an after-tax accounting adjustment of €34 million related to the acquisition of Lucent by Alcatel in November 2006.

The tie-up between the two companies has been beset by problems and restructuring.

In the three months from July through September, the company also suffered an operating loss however, of €125 million, on sales that slipped by 2.8 percent on an annualised basis to €3.59 billion.

Analysts had forecast a much bigger drop in sales of 6.5 percent.

Company chief executive Ben Verwaayen was quoted as saying: Our third-quarter results are reflective of the significant transformation we are undertaking both in terms of scope and timing.

"In addition, our revenue growth and gross margin were impacted by overall carrier spending dynamics and product mix, especially in wireless, he added.

The CEO said that since the beginning of the year, Alcatel-Lucent had cut costs by €450 million, and was making progress with a plan to shed 5,500 jobs worldwide.

It has laid out a plan to find a total of €1.25 billion in savings by the end of next year.

The company now expects sales by the end of the year, and said its treasury was well stocked with a total of €4.7 billion at the end of September, a figure that was expected to remain positive at the end of the year.

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ELECTION

Albert Rivera resigns as Ciudadanos leader after Spain election drubbing and bows out of politics altogether

Just 18 months ago, Albert Rivera was being compared to France's Emmanuel Macron and Canada's Justin Trudeau, was feted as kingmaker in parliament and tipped to be a future prime minister.

Albert Rivera resigns as Ciudadanos leader after Spain election drubbing and bows out of politics altogether
His bared all for his first campaign poster in 2006 and resigned on Monday. Photo: Ciudadanos/ AFP

But on Monday, the leader of Spain's Ciudadanos, Albert  stepped down after the business-friendly party suffered a drubbing in a repeat general election. 

The party, which has been rocked by internal divisions over strategy, won just 10 seats in the 350-seat parliament in Sunday's polls which were marked by a surge in support for far-right party Vox, down from 57 seats in the previous ballot in April.   

“In coherence with who I am, I don't think it's surprising that I resign today. It's the responsible thing to do,” he said adding he was also stepping down as a member of parliament and abandoning politics.

“The time has come to serve other people, to serve my parents, to serve my daughter who I have spent less time with than I should have,” he added after meeting with his party's executive committee.

Acting Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez's Socialists won the most seats in Sunday's election but once again fell short of an absolute majority in parliament, prolonging months of deadlock.

Several top Ciudadanos figures resigned in the lead up to the election in protest over deals the party struck with upstart Vox to allow it to govern in several regions and cities along with the main opposition Popular Party.

Rivera, 39, had led Ciudadanos since he founded it in 2006 as a regional party in Catalonia which focused on fighting separatism and defending Spanish unity. 

He burst onto the Catalan political scene in a breath of fresh air, vowing to fight corruption and posing naked on campaign posters to “lay politics bare”. 

The party soared in the polls when it went national in 2014 on a market-friendly, anti-corruption platform which sought to wipe out the traditional left-right divide and it entered parliament the following year.

Rivera, a former water polo player who worked at a bank before entering politics, recently moved the party to the right in an attempt to make Ciudadanos the country's main conservative party, and attacked Sanchez after having failed to form a coalition with him in 2016.

Just 18 months ago, he was being compared to France's Emmanuel Macron and Canada's Justin Trudeau and was feted as kingmaker in parliament and quite possibly as a  future prime minister.

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