Vodafone’s Mobile Phones Were the Future Once. Now What Happens?

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(Bloomberg) -- At Vodafone Group Plc headquarters in west London, a sign hangs near the office of Chief Executive Officer Nick Read, telling passers-by: “It’s OK to make mistakes.”

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Three-and-a-half years into his tenure as CEO, with activist investors and hedge funds on alert, 57-year-old Read deflects media reports of “pressure” and doesn’t actually admit to making any big mistakes himself. “My view is every FTSE CEO has pressure,” Read said in an interview with Bloomberg. “It just comes with the job.”

Read has worked at Vodafone for 21 of the company’s 38-year existence. Nevertheless, the middle-aged CEO of a middle-aged company says he wants to embrace tech-style risk, eschewing traditional telecoms caution in a bid to boost returns on capital.

Vodafone’s challenges are different, though, from those faced by Silicon Valley tech giants. Instead of pivoting to the metaverse, Read has been busy cutting costs, standardizing internal information technology systems and selling off units in New Zealand and Malta. He has also carved out and listed the group’s mobile masts operation, aiming to tap into high valuations for infrastructure and to pay down debt.

Vodafone was founded in 1984 and sees itself as a pioneer. Yet as it approaches its fifth decade, many of its stellar achievements are now reminders of a distant past. Its network carried the first cellular telephone call in the UK, on Jan. 1, 1985. The company then led the rollout of out text-message technology, and was quick to expand globally.

Its shares peaked during the dotcom boom, giving it a market capitalization of £214 billion in March 2000. Today they languish near 20-year lows, down 20% even since Read started as CEO in Oct. 2018.

Vodafone spent the last decade retrenching and is now squeezed between former state monopolies like Deutsche Telekom AG, newer, price-cutting entrants such as Iliad SA, Big Tech and regulators. In the UK, key rival EE, owned by BT Group Plc, is making a return on capital, while Vodafone may not be, according to regulator Ofcom.

Against that backdrop activist investors and hedge funds are now stirring, with some implying that the company could find better leadership.

The only regret Read will admit to is that he did not move faster to standardize technology. He doesn’t regret speeches since November in which he outlined ambitions to strike deals in the UK, Italy, Spain and Portugal. That surprised even company insiders, who worried their CEO might be weakening Vodafone’s negotiating position, according to a person familiar with the discussions.