Vivendi Profit Rises 12% on Cost Cutting
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Vivendi Universal said Tuesday that second-quarter net income rose 12% as it cut costs in the music and video game units.
Net income rose to 758 million euros ($932 million), or 66 cents a share, from 678 million euros, or 59 cents, a year earlier, Vivendi said. The Paris-based company said it would beat its forecast for 2005 earnings, excluding some costs, of at least 1.8 billion euros.
All five of Vivendi’s units, including pay-TV company Canal Plus and Vivendi Universal Games, “remain profitable in the second half,” Chief Executive Jean-Bernard Levy said.
Vivendi’s wireless unit SFR added clients in the expanding French mobile-phone market, while the music and game units cut costs by eliminating jobs.
Vivendi already has reported that sales in the quarter rose 8%, helped by new albums from artists including rapper 50 Cent, more mobile-phone clients and players of the World of Warcraft online computer game.
Vivendi is focusing on music, mobile-phone services and games after Chairman Jean-Rene Fourtou sold assets valued at 22 billion euros to cut debt and restore the company to profitability.
Fourtou replaced Jean-Marie Messier as chief executive in 2002. Fourtou passed the CEO job to Levy in April.
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