Press Release and Presentation of 3Q2005 Financial and VimpelCom Results

 

UNITED STATES

SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

Washington, D.C. 20549

 

FORM 6-K

 

Report of Foreign Issuer

Pursuant to Rule 13a-16 or 15d-16 of

the Securities Exchange Act of 1934

 

For the month of November 2005

 

Commission File Number 1-14522

 

Open Joint Stock Company “Vimpel-Communications”

(Translation of registrant’s name into English)

 

10 Ulitsa 8-Marta, Building 14, Moscow, Russian Federation 127083

(Address of principal executive offices)

 

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant files or will file annual reports under cover Form 20-F or Form 40-F.

 

Form 20-F  x    Form 40-F  ¨

 

Indicate by check mark if the registrant is submitting the Form 6-K in paper as permitted by Regulation S-T Rule 101(b)(1): ___.

 

Indicate by check mark if the registrant is submitting the Form 6-K in paper as permitted by Regulation S-T Rule 101(b)(7): ___.

 

Indicate by check mark whether by furnishing the information contained in this Form, the registrant is also thereby furnishing the information to the Commission pursuant to Rule 12g3-2(b) under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.

 

Yes  ¨    No  x

 

If “Yes” is marked, indicate below the file number assigned to the registrant in connection with Rule 12g3-2(b): 82-____________.

 


 

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.

 

        OPEN JOINT STOCK COMPANY
        ”VIMPEL-COMMUNICATIONS”
        (Registrant)

Date: November 17, 2005

       
            By:   /s/    ALEXANDER V. IZOSIMOV        
           

Name:

  Alexander V. Izosimov
           

Title:

  Chief Executive Officer and General Director


EXHIBIT INDEX

 

Exhibit
Number


       

Description of Exhibits


99.1       Press release titled “VimpelCom announces third quarter and nine months 2005 financial and operating results”.
99.2       Presentation of 3Q2005 Financial and Operating Results, which is posted on VimpelCom’s website at www.vimpelcom.com.


Exhibit 99.1

 

LOGO

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

 

VIMPELCOM ANNOUNCES THIRD QUARTER AND NINE MONTHS 2005

FINANCIAL AND OPERATING RESULTS

 


 

— 51% YEAR-ON-YEAR INCREASE IN TOTAL OPERATING REVENUES –

— 52% YEAR-ON-YEAR INCREASE IN OIBDA —

— 93% YEAR-ON-YEAR INCREASE IN NET INCOME —

— APPROXIMATELY 42.4 MILLION SUBSCRIBERS AS OF TODAY

INCLUDING 1.8 MILLION IN KAZAKHSTAN AND 0.2 MILLION IN UKRAINE—

 

Moscow and New York (November 17, 2005) - Open Joint Stock Company “Vimpel-Communications” (“VimpelCom” or the “Company”) (NYSE: VIP), a leading provider of wireless telecommunications services in Russia and Kazakhstan, with newly acquired operations in Ukraine, today announced its financial and operating results for the quarter and nine months ended September 30, 2005. In the third quarter of 2005, VimpelCom showed continued improvement in total operating revenues, OIBDA and net income supported by strong subscriber growth. VimpelCom’s condensed consolidated financial statements are attached.

 

Commenting on today’s announcement, Alexander Izosimov, Chief Executive Officer of VimpelCom, said, “As expected, our third quarter results were very strong. We showed good progress in our financial indicators with revenue, OIBDA and net income reaching new highs. We added approximately 4.9 million new subscribers which was the best quarterly result for the Company since the fourth quarter of 2004. At the same time, strong subscriber growth did not dilute our average revenue per user (ARPU) which stayed unchanged as compared with the previous quarter. Going forward, we will continue to focus on the Company’s financial performance, and, in terms of expansion, on the remaining unlicensed territories in the Russian Far East and the countries of the CIS.”

 

The principal results of operations with comments are presented in the following tables. All definitions are presented in Attachment A. The condensed consolidated financial statements of VimpelCom are presented in Attachment B. Reconciliation of each of OIBDA, OIBDA margin, ARPU and SAC to the most directly comparable U.S. GAAP financial measures appear in Attachment C.

 

As discussed in the Company’s 2004 Annual Report on Form 20-F and our subsequent quarterly earnings releases, the Company restated its historical financial statements for periods ending on and prior to September 30, 2004 to reflect guidance from the United States Securities and Exchange Commission contained in a letter to the accounting industry in February 2005 with respect to accounting for depreciation of leasehold improvements. In addition, starting with the first quarter of 2005 our earnings releases reflect changes made by the Company to the estimated useful life of its GSM Russian telecommunications licenses as well as a reclassification of revenues generated by the Company’s value added services. In its subscriber reporting, starting with the second quarter of 2005, the Company decided to combine its advance payment subscribers with its prepaid subscribers (see “Definitions”). The earlier reported financial statement

 

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VimpelCom Announces Third Quarter And Nine Month 2005 Financial And Operating Results

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information and subscriber information that is incorporated in this press release, including for the third quarter of 2004 and the nine months ending September 30, 2004, were recalculated accordingly.

 

Key Subscriber Statistics

 

    

As of

Sept. 30, 2005


   

As of

Sept. 30, 2004


   

Change

Y-on-Y

(%)


   

As of

June 30, 2005


   

Change

Q-on-Q
(%)


 

Russia

   38,401,100     19,869,100     93.3 %   33,700,400     13.9 %

% of prepaid a)

   96.6 %   94.6 %   —       96.4 %   —    

Moscow license area

   8,875,800     6,645,700     33.6 %   8,501,200     4.4 %

% of prepaid a)

   88.7 %   87.1 %   —       88.9 %   —    

Russian regions

   29,525,300     13,223,400     123.3 %   25,199,200     17.2 %

% of prepaid a)

   99.0 %   98.4 %   —       99.0 %   —    

Kazakhstan

   1,652,000     676,300     144.3 %   1,401,600     17.9 %

% of prepaid a)

   98.3 %   95.6 %   —       98.0 %   —    
    

 

 

 

 

Total

   40,053,100     20,545,400     94.9 %   35,102,000     14.1 %
    

 

 

 

 

% of prepaid a)

   96.7 %   94.6 %   —       96.5 %   —    

% of active subscribers b)

   84.4 %   n/a     —       87.2 %   —    

Churn (quarterly)

   8.8 %   7.2 %   —       6.7 %   —    

 

a) Including advance payment subscribers. Numbers for September 30, 2004 were recalculated in accordance with the Company’s practice as discussed above.

 

b) Active subscribers are defined as those who in the last three months made a chargeable transaction.

 

The Company reported another quarter of strong subscriber growth adding more than 4.9 million in the third quarter of 2005. It came primarily due to the continued rapid subscriber growth in the regions of Russia, which was supported by growth in Moscow and Kazakhstan.

 

Based on independent research, VimpelCom estimates its market share in Russia at 34.4% at the end of the third quarter of 2005, compared to an estimated 33.7% at the end of the third quarter of 2004. Based on the same research, VimpelCom’s subsidiary KaR-Tel estimates its market share in Kazakhstan at 35.6% at the end of the third quarter of 2005 as compared with 29.2% estimated at the end of the third quarter of 2004.

 

The Company’s quarterly churn rate in the third quarter of 2005 was approximately 8.8%, compared to the Company’s churn rate of 7.2% reported for the same period in 2004. The increase in churn in the third quarter of 2005 was expected as a reflection of the last New Year promotional campaign. These promotions usually deliver strong subscriber/SIM card additions with a higher than normal level of churners. The Company continues its efforts to control churn with particular attention on the high-end user segments. Churn management remains one of the Company’s priority tasks as the market approaches a more mature phase.

 

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VimpelCom Announces Third Quarter And Nine Month 2005 Financial And Operating Results

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Key Financial and Operating Indicators

 

    (Definitions as well as reconciliation of each of OIBDA, OIBDA margin, ARPU and SAC to its most directly comparable U.S. GAAP financial measures are presented below in the attachments)

 

    

Three

months

ended

Sept. 30,

2005


   

Three

months

ended

Sept. 30,

2004*)


   

Change

Y-on-Y

(%)


   

Nine

months

ended

Sept. 30,

2005


   

Nine

months

ended

Sept. 30,

2004*)


   

Change

Y-on-Y

(%)


 

Total operating revenues (US$,000)

   890,291     591,472     50.5 %   2,300,697     1,488,095     54.6 %

OIBDA (US$,000)

   449,957     295,663     52.2 %   1,151,618     742,382     55.1 %

OIBDA margin

   50.5 %   50.0 %   —       50.1 %   49.9 %   —    

Gross margin (US$,000)

   737,935     491,328     50.2 %   1,911,257     1,239,686     54.2 %

Gross margin percentage

   82.9 %   83.1 %   —       83.1 %   83.3 %   —    

Net income (US$,000)

   194,875     101,016     92.9 %   463,383     266,654     73.8 %

Net income per share (US$)

   3.82     2.51     52.2 %   9.07     6.64     36.6 %

Net income per ADS (US$)

   0.96     0.63 **)         2.27     1.66 **)      

ARPU (US$)

   7.8     10.6     -26.4 %   7.6     10.8     -29.6 %

MOU (min)

   109.3     99.4     10.0 %   99.5     96.3     3.3 %

SAC (US$)

   11.4     14.2     -19.7 %   12.8     14.8     -13.5 %

 

*) These numbers were restated in accordance with the Company’s newly adopted accounting practice as specified in VimpelCom’s 2004 Annual Form 20-F Report. These numbers also reflect changes made by the Company to the estimated useful life of its GSM Russian telecommunications licenses as well as revenues generated by the Company’s value added services.

 

**) On November 22, 2004, we changed the ratio of our ADSs traded on The New York Stock Exchange from four ADSs for three common shares to four ADSs for one common share. VimpelCom ADS holders as of record date at the close of business on November 19, 2004 received two additional ADSs for every ADS held. There were no changes to VimpelCom’s underlying common shares. All ADS information presented herein reflects the change in the ratio.

 

Significant improvements in VimpelCom’s financial and operating results in the third quarter of 2005, as compared with the third quarter of 2004, were achieved largely as a result of continued rapid subscriber growth combined with the effects of economies of scale, efficient cost control and lower acquisition costs per subscriber. All key financial indicators – total operating revenues, OIBDA and net income – showed robust growth. The third quarter OIBDA margin of 50.5% was strong, indicating continued healthy business development. A slight decline as compared with the 51.4% OIBDA margin reported for the second quarter of 2005 repeats a seasonal pattern connected with the rise in roaming costs in the third quarter, which included the height of the summer vacation period.

 

Although a comparison of SAC for a particular quarter with prior quarters does not necessarily represent a trend, the Company is pleased to report a low third quarter SAC of $11.4, decreasing from $13.3 in the second quarter of 2005.

 

Selling, general and administrative expenses (“SG&A”), as a percentage of total operating revenues, was 31.9% in the third quarter of 2005 which is less than 32.5% reported for the third quarter of 2004. SG&A increased as compared with the second quarter of 2005 primarily due to a substantial increase in the volumes of sales in the third quarter despite the decrease in SAC. In addition to this, revenue growth and business expansion in the third quarter of 2005 caused an increase in certain general and administrative expenses as compared with the second quarter of 2005. Specifically, there was an increase in the universal service fund (USF) expense in line with revenue growth and an increase in network maintenance costs connected with further network development. Accruals connected with stock based compensation programs

 

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VimpelCom Announces Third Quarter And Nine Month 2005 Financial And Operating Results

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as a result of substantial growth of the ADR price in the third quarter of 2005 also contributed to the increase in our general and administrative expenses.

 

VimpelCom’s total capital investments for the third quarter of 2005 were approximately $316.9 million, with $261.7 million spent for the purchase of long-lived assets and $55.2 million spent for the acquisition of a company in Sakhalin. Capital investments in the third quarter were lower than in the second quarter of 2005. However, we expect that our total capital investments for 2005 will be in line or slightly higher than our 2005 capital investment plan.

 

The Company’s MOU in the third quarter of 2005 was 109.3 minutes, an increase of approximately 10.0% compared to 99.4 minutes recorded in the third quarter of 2004. As compared with 99.2 minutes recorded for the second quarter of 2005, MOU increased by 10.2%. This sequential quarter increase was primarily due to summer-time seasonal effects and was enhanced by marketing activity aimed at increasing off-peak traffic.

 

ARPU for the third quarter of 2005 was approximately $7.8 which represents no change as compared with the second quarter of 2005 and is in line with normal seasonal trends. On a year-on-year basis, ARPU declined by 26.4% from the $10.6 reported for the third quarter of 2004. The downward year-on-year trend in ARPU is caused primarily by rapid regional expansion, which increases the proportion of lower ARPU subscribers in the Company’s customer base.

 

The Company’s management will discuss its third quarter 2005 results during a conference call and slide presentation on November 17, 2005 at 6:30 pm Moscow time (10:30 am ET in New York). The call and slide presentation may be accessed via webcast at the following URL address http://www.vimpelcom.com. The conference call replay and the slide presentation webcast will be available through November 24, 2005 and December 16, 2005, respectively. The slide presentation will also be available for download on VimpelCom’s website http://www.vimpelcom.com.

 

VimpelCom is a leading international provider of mobile telecommunications services in Russia and Kazakhstan, with newly acquired operations in Ukraine. The VimpelCom Group’s license portfolio covers approximately 200 million people. Geographically it covers 78 regions in Russia (with 136.5 million people, representing 94% of Russia’s population) as well as the entire territory of Kazakhstan and Ukraine. VimpelCom was the first Russian company to list its shares on the New York Stock Exchange (“NYSE”). VimpelCom’s ADSs are listed on the NYSE under the symbol “VIP”.

 

This press release contains “forward-looking statements”, as the phrase is defined in Section 27A of the Securities Act and Section 21E of the Exchange Act. These statements relate to trends in the Company’s financial and operational performance, as well as the Company’s strategic and development plans, capital investment plans and developments in the telecommunications market. These and other forward-looking statements are based on management’s best assessment of the Company’s strategic and financial position and of future market conditions and trends. These discussions involve risks and uncertainties. The actual outcome may differ materially from these statements as a result of unforeseen developments from competition, governmental regulation of the wireless telecommunications industry, general political uncertainties in Russia and the CIS and general economic developments in Russia and the CIS, the Company’s ability to continue to grow its overall subscriber base, the availability of attractive expansion opportunities in Russia and the CIS, continued volatility in the world economy, the availability of opportunities for capital investment and other factors. As a result of such risks and uncertainties, there can be no assurance that the effects of competition or current or future changes in the political, economic and social environment or current or future regulation of the Russian, Kazakh and Ukrainian telecommunications industries will not have a material adverse effect on the VimpelCom Group. Certain factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those discussed in any forward-looking statements include the risks described in the Company’s Annual Report on Form 20-F for the year ended December 31, 2004 and other public filings made by the Company with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission, which risk factors are incorporated herein by reference. VimpelCom disclaims any obligation to update developments of these risk factors or to announce publicly any revision to any of the forward-looking statements contained in this release, or to make corrections to reflect future events or developments.

 

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VimpelCom Announces Third Quarter And Nine Month 2005 Financial And Operating Results

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For more information, please contact:

       

Valery Goldin

      Ian Bailey/Michael Polyviou

VimpelCom (Moscow)

     

Financial Dynamics

Tel: 7(095) 974-5888

     

Tel: 1(212) 850 5600

Investor_Relations@vimpelcom.com

     

mpolyviou@fd-us.com

 

- Definitions and Tables attached-

 

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Attachment A: Definitions

 

Subscriber is an authorized user of cellular services, using one SIM card (GSM) with one or several selective numbers or one handset (DAMPS) with one selective number. The number of subscribers includes employees using cellular services and excludes guest roamers and users of test SIM cards (GSM) or handsets (DAMPS).

 

Prepaid subscribers are those subscribers who pay for their services in advance1).

 

Churn rate is defined as the total number of subscribers disconnected from our network within a given period of time expressed as a percentage of the midpoint of subscribers in our network at the beginning and end of that period. Contract subscribers are disconnected if they have not paid their bills for 2 months and prepaid subscribers are disconnected 6 months after their services have been blocked. We typically block a prepaid subscriber’s service in two cases: (1) their balance drops to $0 or below, and (2) an account shows no chargeable activity within 6 months. The Company retains the right to change its disconnect policy to reflect changes in business or regulatory environment.

 

OIBDA is a non-U.S. GAAP financial measure. OIBDA, previously referred to as EBITDA by the Company, is defined as operating income before depreciation, amortization and impairment loss. The Company believes that OIBDA provides useful information to investors because it is an indicator of the strength and performance of our business operations, including our ability to finance capital expenditures, acquisitions and other investments and our ability to incur and service debt. While depreciation, amortization and impairment loss (relating to our one-time write-down of AMPS/D-AMPS related assets in the Samara region of $7,354 thousand in the second quarter of 2004) are considered operating costs under U.S. GAAP, these expenses primarily represent the non-cash current period allocation of costs associated with long-lived assets acquired or constructed in prior periods. Our OIBDA calculations are commonly used as bases for some investors, analysts and credit rating agencies to evaluate and compare the periodic and future operating performance and value of companies within the wireless telecommunications industry. OIBDA should not be considered in isolation as an alternative to net income, operating income or any other measure of performance under U.S. GAAP. OIBDA does not include our need to replace our capital equipment over time. Reconciliation of OIBDA to operating income, the most directly comparable U.S. GAAP financial measure, is presented below in the tables section.

 

OIBDA margin is OIBDA expressed as a percentage of total operating revenues. Reconciliation of OIBDA margin to operating income as a percentage of total operating revenues, the most directly comparable U.S. GAAP financial measure, is presented below in the tables section.

 

Gross margin is defined as total operating revenues less service costs and cost of handsets and accessories sold.

 

Gross margin percentage is gross margin expressed as a percentage of total operating revenues.

 

Each ADS represents 0.25 of one share of common stock. This ratio was established effective November 22, 2004. Previously each ADS represented 0.75 of one share of common stock.

 

ARPU (Monthly Average Revenue per User), a non-U.S. GAAP financial measure, is calculated for each month in the relevant period by dividing the Company’s service revenue during that month, including roaming revenue, but excluding revenue from connection fees, sales of handsets and accessories and other non-service revenue, by the average number of the Company’s subscribers during the month. Reconciliation of ARPU to service revenues and connection fees, the most directly comparable U.S. GAAP financial measure, is presented below in the tables section. The Company believes that ARPU provides useful information to investors because it is an indicator of the performance of the Company’s business operations and assists management in budgeting. The Company also believes that ARPU provides management with useful information concerning usage and acceptance of the Company’s services. ARPU should not be viewed in isolation or an alternative to other figures reported under U.S. GAAP.

 

MOU (Monthly Average Minutes of Use per User) is calculated for each month of the relevant period by dividing the total number of minutes of usage for incoming and outgoing calls during that month (excluding guest roamers) by the average number of subscribers during the month.

 

SAC (Average Acquisition Cost Per User), a non-U.S. GAAP financial measure, is calculated as dealers’ commissions, advertising expenses and handset subsidies for the relevant period divided by the number of new subscribers added


1) This definition is broader than the one historically used by the Company as it includes advance payment subscribers previously presented in our operating statistics under the line “contract subscribers”.


during the relevant period. Reconciliation of SAC to selling, general and administrative expenses, the most directly comparable U.S. GAAP financial measure, is presented below in the tables section. The Company believes that SAC provides useful information to investors because it is an indicator of the performance of the Company’s business operations and assists management in budgeting. The Company also believes that SAC assists management in quantifying the incremental costs to acquire a new subscriber. SAC should not be viewed in isolation or as an alternative to other figures reported under U.S. GAAP.


Attachment B: VimpelCom unaudited condensed consolidated financial statements

 

Open Joint Stock Company “Vimpel-Communications”

Unaudited Condensed Consolidated Statements of Income

 

    

Three months ended

Sept. 30,


   

Nine months ended

Sept. 30,


 
     2005

    2004

    2005

    2004

 
     (In thousands of US dollars, except per share (ADS) amounts)  

Operating revenues:

                                

Service revenues and connection fees

   US$ 881,841     US$ 581,296     US$ 2,274,305     US$ 1,458,000  

Sales of handsets and accessories

     6,948       9,396       22,971       27,709  

Other revenues

     1,502       780       3,421       2,386  
    


 


 


 


Total operating revenues

     890,291       591,472       2,300,697       1,488,095  
    


 


 


 


Operating expenses:

                                

Service costs

     145,757       93,783       368,360       227,120  

Cost of handsets and accessories sold

     6,599       6,361       21,080       21,289  

Selling, general and administrative expenses

     283,856       192,513       750,141       489,063  

Depreciation

     118,000       74,455       307,727       199,158  

Amortization

     34,518       14,962       103,086       33,618  

Impairment of long-lived assets

     —         —         —         7,354  

Provision for doubtful accounts

     4,122       3,152       9,498       8,241  
    


 


 


 


Total operating expenses

     592,852       385,226       1,559,892       985,843  
    


 


 


 


Operating income

     297,439       206,246       740,805       502,252  

Other income and expenses:

                                

Interest income

     1,515       2,225       4,506       4,088  

Other income

     5,576       737       12,399       1,625  

Interest expense

     (35,815 )     (24,946 )     (107,413 )     (51,706 )

Net foreign exchange gain (loss)

     6       1,979       (170 )     4,511  

Other expenses

     (6,529 )     (1,307 )     (18,375 )     (2,608 )
    


 


 


 


Total other income and expenses

     (35,247 )     (21,312 )     (109,053 )     (44,090 )
    


 


 


 


Income before income taxes and minority interest

     262,192       184,934       631,752       458,162  

Income taxes expense

     66,738       53,498       167,577       133,128  

Minority interest in net earnings of subsidiaries

     579       30,420       792       58,380  
    


 


 


 


Net income

   US$ 194,875     US$ 101,016     US$ 463,383     US$ 266,654  
    


 


 


 


Net income per common share

   US$ 3.82     US$ 2.51     US$ 9.07     US$ 6.64  
    


 


 


 


Net income per ADS equivalent

   US$ 0.96     US$ 0.63     US$ 2.27     US$ 1.66  
    


 


 


 


Weighted average common shares outstanding (thousands)

     51,010       40,179       51,080       40,176  
    


 


 


 



Open Joint Stock Company “Vimpel-Communications”

Unaudited Condensed Consolidated Balance Sheets

 

     September 30,
2005


   December 31,
2004


     (In thousands of US dollars)

Assets

             

Current assets:

             

Cash and cash equivalents

   US$ 674,649    US$ 305,857

Trade accounts receivable

     143,163      119,566

Other current assets

     389,713      371,999
    

  

Total current assets

     1,207,525      797,422

Non-current assets

             

Property and equipment, net

     2,831,464      2,314,405

Telecommunication licenses and allocation of frequencies, net

     709,941      757,506

Other intangible assets, net

     580,935      580,799

Other assets

     456,924      330,109
    

  

Total non-current assets

     4,579,264      3,982,819

Total assets

   US$ 5,786,789    US$ 4,780,241
    

  

Liabilities and shareholders’ equity

             

Current liabilities:

             

Accounts payable

     354,797      345,187

Due to related parties

     3,783      7,290

Customer advances and deposits

     256,565      278,170

Deferred revenue

     1,445      1,893

Ruble denominated bonds payable, current portion

     105,267      —  

Bank loans, current portion

     219,831      115,111

Capital lease obligations, current portion

     3,454      2,851

Equipment financing obligations, current portion

     31,557      71,577

Accrued liabilities

     144,777      103,246
    

  

Total current liabilities

     1,121,476      925,325

Deferred income taxes

     303,884      296,967

Bank loans, less current portion

     1,543,731      1,240,199

Capital lease obligations, less current portion

     1,854      5,004

Ruble denominated bonds payable, less current portion

     —        108,113

Accrued liabilities

     9,318      6,837

Equipment financing obligations, less current portion

     31,591      38,283

Minority interest

     183,663      2,380

Shareholders’ equity

     2,591,272      2,157,133
    

  

Total liabilities and shareholders’ equity

   US$ 5,786,789    US$ 4,780,241
    

  


Unaudited Condensed Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows

 

    

Nine months ended

Sept. 30,


 
     2005

    2004

 
     (In thousands of US dollars)  

Net cash provided by operating activities

   US$ 927,648     US$ 551,496  

Proceeds from bank and other loans

     775,488       716,534  

Proceeds from bonds issue

     —         90,470  

Payments of fees in respect of debt issue

     (17,590 )     (10,791 )

Repayment of bank and other loans

     (350,692 )     (27,148 )

Repayment of rouble denominated bonds

     —         (94,214 )

Repayment of equipment financing obligations

     (68,155 )     (55,234 )

Purchase of treasury stocks

     (18,374 )     —    

Repayment of capital lease obligations

     —         (401 )
    


 


Net cash provided by financing activities

     320,677       619,216  

Purchase of property and equipment

     (775,647 )     (622,286 )

Purchase of SakhalinTelecomMobile, net of cash acquired US$6,835

     (48,382 )     —    

Purchase of Beeline-Samara stock

     —         (12,884 )

Purchase of Kar-Tel stock, net of cash acquired of US$6,543

     —         (345,427 )

Purchase of DTI stock, net of cash acquired of US$382

     —         (73,689 )

Purchase of minority interest in consolidated subsidiary

     (8,380 )     —    

Purchase of SakhalinTelecom Ltd.

     (5,040 )     —    

Sale of SakhalinTelecom Ltd.

     4,968       —    

Sale of Kar-Tel stock

     175,000       —    

Purchase of intangible assets

     (13,465 )     (6,541 )

Purchase of other assets

     (205,281 )     (77,741 )
    


 


Net cash used in investing activities

     (876,227 )     (1,138,568 )

Effect of exchange rate changes on cash

     (3,306 )     (711 )
    


 


Net increase in cash

     368,792       31,433  

Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of period

     305,857       157,611  
    


 


Cash and cash equivalents at end of period

   US$ 674,649     US$ 189,044  
    


 


Supplemental cash flow information

                

Non-cash activities:

                

Equipment acquired under financing and capital lease agreements

   US$ 12,628     US$ 4,517  

Accounts payable for equipment and other long-lived assets

     150,542       82,186  

Accrued debt and equity offering costs

     1,927       —    

Offset of the capital lease liability with accounts receivable

     2,547       1,619  

Operating activities financed by sale of treasury stock

     4,164       1,546  

Acquisitions:

                

Fair value of assets acquired

     42,461       484,287  

Difference between the amount paid and the fair value of net assets acquired

     21,586       174,771  

Cash paid for the capital stock

     (55,217 )     (426,041 )
    


 


Liabilities assumed

   US$ 8,830     US$ 233,017  
    


 



Attachment C. Reconciliation tables

 

Reconciliation of VimpelCom OIBDA to operating income (Unaudited)

(In thousands of US dollars)

 

     Three months ended

 
     September 30,
2005


    September 30,
2004


   

June 30,

2005


 

OIBDA

   449,957     295,663     395,554  

Depreciation

   (118,000 )   (74,455 )   (103,393 )

Amortization

   (34,518 )   (14,962 )   (34,939 )

Operating income

   297,439     206,246     257,222  

 

Reconciliation of VimpelCom OIBDA margin to

operating income as percentage of total operating revenues

(Unaudited)

 

     Three months ended

 
    

September 30,

2005


    September 30,
2004


    June 30,
2005


 

OIBDA margin

   50.5 %   50.0 %   51.4 %

Less:Depreciation as a percentage of total operating revenues

   (13.3 %)   (12.6 %)   (13.4 %)

Less:Amortization as a percentage of total operating revenues

   (3.9 %)   (2.5 %)   (4.5 %)

Operating income as a percentage of total operating revenues

   33.3 %   34.9 %   33.5 %

 

Reconciliation of SAC to selling, general and administrative expenses (Unaudited)

(In thousands of US dollars, except for SAC and subscriber amounts)

 

     Three months ended

 
     September 30,
2005


    September 30,
2004


    June 30,
2005


 

Selling, general and administrative expenses

   283,856     192,513     242,762  

Less: General and administrative expenses

   (190,745 )   (122,913 )   (155,613 )

Sales and marketing expenses, including

   93,111     69,600     87,149  

advertising & marketing expenses

   30,886     16,780     36,103  

dealers’ commission expense

   62,225     52,820     51,046  

New gross subscribers,’000

   8,159     4,894     6,572  

Subscriber Acquisition Cost (SAC) (US$)

   11.4     14.2     13.3  


Reconciliation of ARPU to service revenue and connection fees (Unaudited)

(In thousands of US dollars, except for ARPU and subscriber amounts)

 

     Three months ended

 
     September 30,
2005


    September 30,
2004


    June 30,
2005


 

Service revenue and connection fees

   881,841     581,296     760,723  

Less: Connection fees

   (325 )   (191 )   (132 )

Less: Revenue from rent of fiber-optic channels

   (520 )   (408 )   (269 )

Service revenue used to calculate ARPU

   880,996     580,697     760,322  

Average number of subscribers,’000

   37,709     18,184     32,652  

Average revenue per subscriber per month (US$)

   7.8     10.6     7.8  

 

Reconciliation of VimpelCom OIBDA to operating income (Unaudited)

(In thousands of US dollars)

 

     Nine months ended

 
     September 30, 2005

    September 30, 2004

 

OIBDA

   1,151,618     742,382  

Impairment loss

   0     (7,354 )

Depreciation

   (307,727 )   (199,158 )

Amortization

   (103,086 )   (33,618 )

Operating income

   740,805     502,252  


Reconciliation of VimpelCom OIBDA margin to

operating income as percentage of total operating revenues

(Unaudited)

 

     Nine months ended

 
     September 30, 2005

    September 30, 2004

 

OIBDA margin:

   50.1 %   49.9 %

Less:Impairment loss

   (0.0 %)   (0.5 %)

Less:Depreciation as a percentage of total operating revenues

   (13.4 %)   (13.4 %)

Less:Amortization as a percentage of total operating revenues

   (4.5 %)   (2.3 %)

Operating income as a percentage of total operating revenues

   32.2 %   33.7 %

 

Reconciliation of SAC to selling, general and administrative expenses (Unaudited)

(In thousands of US dollars, except for SAC and subscriber amounts)

 

     Nine months ended

 
     September 30, 2005

    September 30, 2004

 

Selling, general and administrative expenses

   750,141     489,063  

Less: General and administrative expenses

   (486,030 )   (313,025 )

Sales and marketing expenses, including

   264,111     176,038  

advertising & marketing expenses

   87,206     46,493  

dealers’ commission expense

   176,905     129,545  

New gross subscribers,’000

   20,587     11,861  

Subscriber Acquisition Cost (SAC) (US$)

   12.8     14.8  


Reconciliation of ARPU to service revenue and connection fees (Unaudited)

(In thousands of US dollars, except for ARPU and subscriber amounts)

 

     Nine months ended

 
     September 30, 2005

    September 30, 2004

 

Service revenue and connection fees

   2,274,305     1,458,000  

Less: Connection fees

   (617 )   (527 )

Less: Revenue from rent of fiber-optic channels

   (1,061 )   (1,261 )

Service revenue used to calculate ARPU

   2,272,627     1,456,212  

Average number of subscribers,’000

   33,048     15,042  

Average revenue per subscriber per month (US$)

   7.6     10.8  


Exhibit 99.2

 

LOGO

 

VimpelCom

Presentation of 3Q2005 Financial and Operating Results

November 17, 2005


LOGO

 

Disclaimer

This presentation contains “forward-looking statements”, as the phrase is defined in Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933 and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. These statements relate, in part, to the Company’s strategy and development plans, such as national and CIS growth, the Company’s subscriber growth, planned capital investments, cash growth and position, and the benefits to the Company of its acquisition of URS. The forward-looking statements are based on management’s best assessment of the Company’s strategic and financial position, and future market conditions and trends in Russia and the CIS. These discussions involve risks and uncertainties. The actual outcome may differ materially from these statements as a result of risks and uncertainties relating to developments from competition, governmental regulations of the wireless telecommunications industry, general political uncertainties in Russia and the CIS, general economic developments in Russia and the CIS, and/or litigation by third parties or our shareholders (including Telenor). The actual outcome may also differ materially if the VimpelCom Group (including URS) is unable to (i) comply with the terms of its licenses and frequencies, (ii) obtain sufficient funding and/or (iii) obtain all necessary corporate approvals relating to the business of VimpelCom and its subsidiaries, including URS (including approval of the budget, funding, specific transactions, and operational and other issues by VimpelCom and its subsidiaries, including URS), and other factors. There can be no assurance that these risks and uncertainties will not have a material adverse effect on the VimpelCom Group, that the VimpelCom Group will be able to meet its capital investment plans, that URS subscriber growth will meet expectations, that the transactions with Ericsson (which are subject to conditions precedent) will be consummated, that URS will become profitable, or that the Company will be successful in integrating URS into the VimpelCom Group. There can also be no assurance that there will not be challenges with respect to whether the shareholder meeting that approved the URS acquisition has complied with Russian law, whether corporate approvals obtained were sufficient to complete the transactions on the terms thereof and/or whether further corporate approvals were required. There can also be no assurance that the decision and results of the shareholder meeting, transactions concluded, and actions taken by VimpelCom or URS will not be challenged by third parties or our shareholders (including Telenor). If any such challenges are successful, including if they were to lead to the possible unwinding of the URS acquisition or other transactions or the payment of damages, such challenges could have a material adverse effect on the Company, its operations and its financial condition. Certain factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those discussed in any forward-looking statements include the risks described in the Company’s Annual Report on Form 20-F for the year ended December 31, 2004 and other public filings made by the Company with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission, which risk factors are incorporated herein by reference. VimpelCom disclaims any obligation to update developments of these risk factors or to announce publicly any revision to any of the forward-looking statements contained in this release, or to make corrections to reflect future events or developments.

2

 


LOGO

 

Welcome Remarks

Alexander Izosimov, Chief Executive Officer


LOGO

 

Strong Subscriber Growth

Subscribers in Russia, mln.

77.0%

67.2% 58.9% 51.2% 40.7%

111.74

97.60 85.56 74.35 59.04

3Q04 4Q04 1Q05 2Q05 3Q05

Subscribers in Russia Penetration

Source: VimpelCom, independent sources, competitors’ data

Subscribers in Kazakhstan, mln.

31.0%

25.3%

21.6% 18.3% 15.6%

4.65 3.77

3.21 2.72 2.31

3Q04 4Q04 1Q05 2Q05 3Q05

Subscribers in Kazakhstan Penetration

4

 


LOGO

 

VimpelCom’s Strategy

Extract value from existing operations

Increase loyalty, reduce churn

Improve network quality perception

Increase market share in business/Hi-value segment

Stimulate traffic usage and up-sell / cross-sell VAS

Win the regional growth game

Capture organic growth Utilize unified business model:

Brand, tariffs and products Network rollout & operations Customer Service IT, Billing and Reporting Organizational structure

Apply tailored strategy for each region

Expansion outside Russia

Develop the Kazakh and Ukrainian assets

Selective acquisitions and green field opportunities in the CIS

Industrial approach utilizing synergies with existing VimpelCom operations

Ensure cost efficiency

5

 


LOGO

 

VimpelCom 3Q05 Financial Highlights

Total Revenues, $ Million

50.5%

890.3 591.5

3Q04

 

3Q05

Net Income, $ Million

92.9%

194.9 101.0

3Q04

 

3Q05

OIBDA, $ Million

52.2%

295.7

 

450.0

3Q04

 

3Q05

OIBDA Margin

50.0%

 

50.5%

3Q04

 

3Q05

6

 

Source: VimpelCom


LOGO

 

Operating Highlights

42.4 million subscribers as of November 17, 2005, including 1.8 million in Kazakhstan and 0.2 million in Ukraine Stable ARPU

Expansion into Ukraine

Acquisition in Sakhalin and launch in Ingushetia Brand “Beeline” named as the most valuable Russian brand by Interbrand Group Highest quality Moscow network according to an independent survey

7

 


LOGO

 

Shareholder Structure

(as of October 14, 2005)

Common

 

% Preferred Total voting % shares shares shares

Telenor 15,337,854 29.9% — 15,337,854 26.6% Alfa 12,563,782 24.5% 6,426,600 18,990,382 32.9% Free Float 22,616,484 44.1% — 22,616,484 39.2% Treasury Stock 259,702 0.5% — 259,702 0.5% Other 503,200 1.0% — 503,200 0.9% Total 51,281,022 100% 6,426,600 57,707,622 100%

8

 


LOGO

 

Russia and CIS GSM Network Rollout

Spreads over 11 time zones

Central

Population: 21.0 mln.

Moscow

Population: 17.0 mln.

Northwest

Population: 14.0 mln.

Urals

Population: 18.3 mln.

Ukraine

Population: 47.6 mln. Launched: Nov. 2005

South

Population: 22.9 mln.

Volga

Population: 25.3 mln.

Kazakhstan

Population: 15.0 mln. Launched: Sept. 2004

In commercial operation

Other licensed regions

Siberia

Population: 15.3 mln.

Unlicensed territories

Far East

Population: 11.4 mln.

9


LOGO

 

Strong Growth in Russian Regions and Kazakhstan

Subscribers, (‘000)

31,177

1,652 1,013

2,365

2,327

4,245

6,073

6,243

7,259

26,601

1,402 732

1,926

2,076

3,609

4,785

5,554

6,518

22,630

1,131 585

1,532

1,850 3,087

3,892

4,882

5,672

19,106

859 484

1,102

1,510 2,642

3,415

4,244

4,851

13,900

676 387

479

1,090

2,084 2,512

3,104

3,566

3Q04

 

4Q04 1Q05 2Q05 3Q05

Central

 

Volga South Siberia Northwest Ural Far East Kazakhstan

10


LOGO

 

Market Share

Subscriber

 

Market Share in Russia Subscriber Market Share in Kazakhstan

40%

 

80%

35%

 

36% 35%

35%

 

35% 68%

66%

35%

 

62% 60% 62% 35% 35% 34% 34%

60%

19%

 

18% 18% 19% 19%

20%

 

40%

35%

 

37%* 36% 32% 29% 12% 12% 12% 20% 11% 11%

3%

 

3% 3% 3% 2%

0%

 

0%

3Q04

 

4Q04 1Q05 2Q05 3Q05 3Q04 4Q04 1Q05 2Q05 3Q05

MTS

 

VimpelCom MegaFon Others K’Cell KarTel Others

*) This number was recalculated based on recently Source: VimpelCom, independent sources, competitors’ data published data by the competitor

11


LOGO

 

Key Subscriber Statistics

(‘000)

 

30 Sept 05 30 Sept 04 YtY 30 Jun 05 QtQ

Russia

 

38,401 19,869 93% 33,700 14%

%

 

of prepaid * 97% 95% — 96% —

Moscow

 

8,876 6,646 34% 8,501 4%

%

 

of prepaid * 89% 87% — 89% —

Regions

 

29,525 13,223 123% 25,199 17%

%

 

of prepaid * 99% 98% — 99% —

Kazakhstan

 

1,652 676 144% 1,402 18%

%

 

of prepaid * 98% 96% — 98% —

Total

 

40,053 20,545 95% 35,102 14%

%

 

of prepaid * 97% 95% — 97% —% of active subs.** 84.4% n/a — 87.2% —

Churn

 

(quarterly) 8.8% 7.2% — 6.7% —

*)

 

Including advance payment subscribers ; the 30 Sept 04 data were recalculated

**) Active subscribers are defined as those who in the last three months made a chargeable transaction

12


LOGO

 

Key Financial Figures

($

 

mln) 3Q05 3Q04 YtY 2Q05 QtQ

Total

 

Revenues 890.3 591.5 50.5% 769.8 15.7%

Russia

 

842.2 580.7 45.0% 725.9 16.0% Kazakhstan 48.1 10.8 345.4% 43.9 9.6%

Gross

 

Margin 82.9% 83.1% — 83.4% —

OIBDA

 

450.0 295.7 52.2% 395.6 13.8%

OIBDA

 

Margin 50.5% 50.0% — 51.4% —

OIBDA

 

Russia 431.4 290.6 48. 5% 378.6 13.9% OIBDA Kazakhstan 18.5 5.0 270.0% 16.9 9.5%

Net

 

Income 194.9 101.0 93.0% 158.8 22.7%

Net

 

Income Margin 21.9% 17.1% — 20.6% —Russia 196.6 98.7 99.2% 156.5 25.6% Kazakhstan -1.7 2.3 -173.9% 2.4 -170.8%

SG&A

 

283.9 192.5 47.5% 242.8 16.9%

%

 

of total revenues 31.9% 32.5% — 31.5% —incl. sales and marketing expenses 93.1 69.6 33.8% 87.1 6.9%

D&A

 

* 152.5 89.4 70.6% 138.3 10.3%

%

 

of Total Revenues 17.1% 15.1% — 17.9% —

Capex

 

(excl. acquisitions) 261.7 346.5 -24.5% 406.2 -35.6%

*

 

Includes impairment of long-lived assets

13


LOGO

 

Operational Indicators

3Q05

 

3Q04 YtY 2Q05 QtQ

ARPU,

 

Blended ($) 7.8 10.6 -26.4% 7.8 0.0%

ARPU

 

Russia 7.7 10.6 -27.4% 7.6 1.3%

ARPU

 

Kazakhstan 10.5 16.3 -35.6% 11.7 -10.3%

MOU,

 

Blended (min) 109.3 99.4 10.0% 99.2 10.2%

MOU

 

Russia 111.6 99.8 11.8% 100.9 10.6%

MOU

 

Kazakhstan 53.5 71.8 -25.5% 58.1 -7.9%

SAC,

 

Blended ($) 11.4 14.2 -19.7% 13.3 -14.3%

SAC

 

Russia 11.5 14.1 -18.4% 13.4 -14.2%

SAC

 

Kazakhstan 10.0 25.2 -60.3% 10.6 -5.7%

14


LOGO

 

Strong Balance Sheet

Assets and Liabilities, $’mln

($

 

‘mln) 9/30/05 12/31/04 12/31/03

Cash

 

and Cash Equivalents 675 306 158 Total Assets 5,787 4,780 2,281 Total Debt 1,937 1,581 607

-

 

Short-term 360 190 215

-

 

Long-term 1,577 1,391 392

Shareholder’s

 

Equity 2,591 2,157 988

LTM

 

OIBDA* 1,436 1,027 613

-

 

LTM Depreciation and amortization * * 523 353 197

-

 

LTM Operating income 913 674 416

LTM

 

Interest 141 86 68

Debt/Equity

 

0.7 0.7 0.6 Debt/OIBDA * * * 1.3 1.5 1.0 OIBDA/Interest 10.2 12.0 9.0 Debt/Assets 0.3 0.3 0.3

* LTM OIBDA constitutes the sum of the lines: LTM Operating income and LTM Depreciation and amortization LTM stands for “last twelve months” to reporting date * * Includes Impairment of long-lived assets * * * In cases when OIBDA is part of financial ratios it is deemed to be calculated in accordance with the reconciliation tables herein

5,787 4,780

2,281

1,581

 

1,937

607

2003

 

2004 9M2005

Total

 

Debt Total Assets

15

 

Source: VimpelCom


LOGO

 

Net Operating Cash Flow vs CAPEX

Net Operating Cash Flow/Capex, $ mln

83.1%*

1,421.7

 

1,242.0 1,181.6 64.8%*

70.3%*

805.4 728.0

511.9

2003

 

2004 30.09.2005, LTM

Net

 

Operating Cash Flow Capex

*

 

Net operating cash flow as % of Capex

16


LOGO

 

URS Acquisition

Extraordinary General Meeting of shareholders (EGM) held on September 14, 2005 approved the acquisition of URS, a Ukrainian GSM operator

Last week VimpelCom consummated the acquisition of URS for the cash purchase price of $231.3 million

Telenor announced it is still opposed to the acquisition of URS

VimpelCom and URS entered into agreements with Ericsson to upgrade the network, improving the business case

17


LOGO

 

Development plan for Ukraine

Complete post-acquisition integration Establish control over operations Secure fast roll-out of the network Prepare for launch of the “Beeline” brand in 6-7 months Medium-term target: around 5 million subscribers

18


LOGO

 

Summary

Strong financial performance with Y-o-Y revenue growth of 50.5%, OIBDA growth of 52.2% and net income growth of 92.9%

Continued strong subscriber growth in the Russian regions and Kazakhstan

With the acquisition in Ukraine

VimpelCom’s license portfolio now covers 200 million people

Development opportunities in Russia and the CIS make VimpelCom a company with a great growth potential

19


LOGO

 

Questions And Answers

If you would like to ask a question, please press the star key followed by the digit one on your touch-tone telephone.

Due to time constraints, we ask that you limit yourselves to one question and one follow-up question.

If you are using a speakerphone, please make sure your mute button is turned off to allow your signal to reach the equipment.

Thank you for your interest in VimpelCom For more information visit www.vimpelcom.com or contact Investor_Relations@vimpelcom.com

20


LOGO

 

Reconciliation tables of non-U.S. GAAP measures to their most directly comparable U.S. GAAP financial measures


LOGO

 

Reconciliation of OIBDA and OIBDA Margin (Unaudited)

(Three

 

months ended) (Nine months ended)

($

 

‘000) Sep. 30, 2005 Sep. 30, 2004 Jun. 30, 2005 Sep.30, 2005 Sep.30, 2004

Reconciliation

 

of OIBDA to operating income

OIBDA

 

449,957 295,663 395,554 1,151,618 742,382

Impairment

 

loss — — — — (7,354)

Depreciation

 

(118,000) (74,455) (103,393) (307,727) (199,158)

Amortization

 

(34,518) (14,962) (34,939) (103,086) (33,618)

Operating

 

Income 297,439 206,246 257,222 740,805 502,252

Reconciliation of OIBDA margin to operating income as percentage of total operating revenues

OIBDA

 

margin 50.5% 50.0% 51.4% 50.1% 49.9%

Less:

 

Impairment loss — — — — (0.5%)

Less:

 

Depreciation as % of total operating revenues (13.3%) (12.6%) (13.4%) (13.4%) (13.4%)

Less:

 

Amortization as % of total operating revenues (3.9%) (2.5%) (4.5%) (4.5%) (2.3%)

Operating

 

income as % of total operating revenues 33.3% 34.9% 33.5% 32.2% 33.7%

22


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Reconciliation of OIBDA and OIBDA Margin (Unaudited)

(Three

 

months ended)

($

 

‘000) Sep. 30, 2005 Sep. 30, 2004 Jun. 30, 2005

Russia

 

Kazakhstan Russia Kazakhstan Russia Kazakhstan

Total

 

operating revenues 842,222 48,069 580,713 10,759 725,913 43,857

OIBDA

 

431,423 18,534 290,634 5,029 378,607 16,947

OIBDA

 

margin 51.2% 38.6% 50.0% 46.7% 52.2% 38.6%

Reconciliation of OIBDA to operating income

OIBDA

 

431,423 18, 534 290,634 5,029 378,607 16,947

Less:

 

Depreciation 112,964 5,036 73,672 783 98,789 4,604

Less:

 

Amortization 26,045 8,473 12,128 2,834 26,280 8,659

Operating

 

Income 292,414 5,025 204,834 1,412 253,538 3,684

23


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Reconciliation of SAC (Unaudited)

(Three months ended)

($

 

‘000) Sep. 30, 2005 Sep. 30, 2004 Jun. 30, 2005

Reconciliation

 

of SAC to selling, general and administrative expenses

Selling,

 

general and

administrative

 

expenses 283,856 192,513 242,762

Less:

 

General and admin. expenses 190,745 122,913 155,613

Sales

 

and marketing expenses, including 93,111 69,600 87,149

advertising

 

& marketing expenses 30,886 16,780 36,103

dealers’

 

commission expense 62,225 52,820 51,046

New

 

gross subs, ‘000 8,159 4,894 6,572

SAC

 

(US$) 11.4 14.2 13.3

24


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Reconciliation of ARPU (Unaudited)

(Three months ended)

($

 

‘000) Sep. 30, 2005 Sep. 30, 2004 Jun. 30, 2005

Reconciliation of ARPU to service revenue and connection fees

Service

 

revenue and connection fees US$ 881,841 US$ 581,296 US$ 760,723

Less:

 

Connection fees 325 191 132

Less:

 

Revenue from rent of fiber-optic channels 520 408 269

Service

 

revenue used to calculate ARPU 880,996 580,697 760,322

Average

 

number of subscribers, ‘000 37,709 18,184 32

ARPU

 

(US$) 7.8 10.6 7.8

25


LOGO

 

Reconciliation of SAC in Russia (Unaudited)

(Three months ended)

($

 

‘000) Sep. 30, 2005 Sep. 30, 2004 Jun. 30, 2005

Reconciliation of SAC to selling, general and administrative expenses

Selling,

 

general and administrative expenses 271,385 190,569 230,711

Less:

 

General and admin. expenses 182,262 122,027 147,333

Sales

 

and marketing expenses, including 89,123 68,542 83,378

advertising

 

& marketing expenses 29,453 16,533 33,290

dealers’

 

commission expense 59,670 52,009 50,088

New

 

gross subs, ‘000 7,761 4,853 6,217

SAC

 

(US$) 11.5 14.1 13.4

26


LOGO

 

Reconciliation of ARPU in Russia (Unaudited)

(Three months ended)

($ ‘000)

Sep. 30, 2005

Sep. 30, 2004

Jun. 30, 2005

Reconciliation of ARPU to service revenue and connection fees

Service

 

revenue and connection fees US$ 833,888 US$ 570,537 US$ 716,955

Less:

 

Connection fees 325 191 132

Less:

 

Revenue from rent of fiber-optic channels 520 408 269

Service

 

revenue used to calculate ARPU 833,043 569,938 71

Average

 

number of subscribers, ‘000 36,182 17,964 3

ARPU

 

(US$) 7.7 10.6

27


LOGO

 

Reconciliation of SAC in Kazakhstan (Unaudited)

(Three months ended)

($

 

‘000) Sep. 30, 2005 Sep. 30, 2004 Jun. 30, 2005

Reconciliation of SAC to selling, general and administrative expenses

Selling,

 

general and administrative expenses 12,471 1,944 12,051

Less:

 

General and admin. expenses 8,483 886 8,280

Sales

 

and marketing expenses, including 3,988 1,058 3,771

advertising

 

& marketing expenses 1,433 247 2,813

dealers’

 

commission expense 2,555 811 958

New

 

gross subs, ‘000 398 42 355

SAC

 

(US$) 10.0 25.2 10.6

28


LOGO

 

Reconciliation of APRU in Kazakhstan (Unaudited)

(Three

 

months ended)

($

 

‘000) Sep. 30, 2005 Sep. 30, 2004 Jun. 30, 2005

Reconciliation of ARPU to service revenue and connection fees

Service

 

revenue and connection fees US$ 48,282 US$ 10,759 US$ 44,002

Less:

 

Connection fees 0 0 0

Less:

 

Revenue from rent of fiber-optic channels 0 0 0

Service

 

revenue used to calculate ARPU 48,282 10,759 44,002

Average

 

number of subscribers, ‘000 1,527 661 1,257

ARPU

 

(US$) 10.5 16.3 11.7

29