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Orange's Q3 results highlight strong operational momentum, even as credit concerns mount. Revenue rose 0.8% YoY, driven by robust retail services and double-digit gains in Africa and the Middle East, while global mobile subscribers reached 269.7 million, growing 6.6%, and fiber customers in France hit 10 million. These results underpinned an upward revision to annual revenue growth guidance to 3.5%. However, the strategic push intensified with the MasOrange acquisition, which
the company's net leverage to about 3.0x. This spike stems largely from €4.25 billion in new debt required for the deal, though partial offset comes from expected proceeds from a new fiber entity. While the acquisition aims to boost scale and diversification, it directly triggered a negative outlook from , reflecting heightened credit risk despite the rating remaining unchanged for now. The tension lies in balancing these growth drivers against the tangible pressure on financial metrics.Orange S.A.'s subscriber base expanded solidly in Q3, reaching 269.7 million mobile customers and 22.7 million fixed broadband subscribers globally. This growth is now increasingly driven by higher-value services and regions with strong digital adoption. Africa and the Middle East stood out as the primary revenue engine, delivering 12.2% top-line growth. Crucially, mobile ARPU in the region surged 5.5% as data usage and digital financial services like Orange Money gained significant traction, with transaction growth exceeding 17%. This shift towards higher-value services is key to sustainable profitability.
In France, the fixed broadband segment, particularly fiber, remains a strategic priority despite a challenging local market. The company passed a major milestone, surpassing 10 million fiber customers, underpinning a 4.7% revenue increase in the European segment driven by fiber and 5G rollouts. This infrastructure focus shows in the France mobile ARPU, which rose 1.1% to €78.6, reflecting successful monetization efforts on the network upgrades. However, this positive momentum occurs alongside significant competitive pressure in the fiber market, requiring continuous investment.
The path to sustained growth faces a friction point: the recent acquisition of MasOrange.
this deal, financed partly by €4.25 billion in new debt, will push Orange's net leverage to about 3.0x, warranting a negative outlook due to increased credit risk. While the consolidation aims to enhance scale and diversification, the higher debt level introduces financial leverage concerns that could constrain future flexibility, especially if competitive pressures in France intensify further or regulatory changes emerge. Balancing aggressive growth with manageable debt remains critical.Orange S.A.'s $4.25 billion MasOrange purchase comes at a clear cost: it dramatically increases financial leverage.
the deal pushes Orange's adjusted net debt ratio to roughly 3.0x, up from 1.88x at the end of H1 2025, driven entirely by new debt and full consolidation of the African unit. While partial relief is expected from planned fiber asset sales, this significant jump raises immediate credit concerns, contributing to Moody's negative outlook on the rating. The net debt/EBITDAaL level now stands substantially above the 2.0x medium-term target Orange itself maintains, demanding strong performance to return to comfort.The strategic rationale behind the leverage increase centers on enhanced scale and diversification. MasOrange adds substantial subscriber base and revenue in Africa, complementing Orange's existing operations and potentially creating cross-selling opportunities. However, this upside is heavily contingent on successfully executing the fiber asset sale to partially offset the debt burden. If those proceeds fall short, the leverage pressure persists longer than planned, straining cash flow and limiting flexibility.
Orange's current financial health provides some buffer. H1 2025 EBITDAaL rose 3.8%, driven partly by margin improvements in France, and strong cash generation continues to support the balance sheet. The company remains a leader in France's fiber market with 14.4 million FTTH customers. Nevertheless, the MasOrange purchase represents a major departure from the previously disciplined capital allocation, and the negative rating outlook reflects market apprehension about the speed of the leverage increase and uncertainty surrounding the fiber sale timeline and proceeds. The path forward hinges on whether the growth and synergies from MasOrange can materially boost future cash flows to service the new debt and allow leverage to normalize.
Investment discipline requires clear signals to exit a position when core assumptions weaken. For Orange S.A., we monitor three key thresholds. First, declining subscriber and revenue-per-user growth in established markets could erode near-term value. Specifically, if France's mobile ARPU falls below €78.0 (a 0.8% drop from current levels) and African subscriber growth falls beneath 5% annually, it would signal slowing momentum in critical high-margin segments
. This aligns with id_1's data showing Africa contributed 12.2% revenue growth and 6.6% subscriber gains in Q3 2025.Second, credit quality deterioration presents a structural risk.
the MasOrange acquisition has already pushed adjusted net leverage to approximately 3.0x. Should leverage rise above this level without offsetting asset sales, and following a rating downgrade, the negative outlook could accelerate capital cost increases. This scenario combines construction risk with credit tightening – a dangerous combination for telecom operators.Third, we watch for mitigating factors that could delay exit triggers. Africa's outperformance remains a wildcard: if mobile ARPU sustains its 5.5% growth while subscriber expansion exceeds 10% annually, it could temporarily offset France's challenges. However, even strong African growth faces headwinds – commodity price swings and currency volatility could pressure ARPU if economic conditions deteriorate in the region.
The current trajectory shows Africa's growth momentum isn't yet broken, and France's fiber network expansion continues to support ARPU stability
. But investors must recognize that exceeding 3.0x leverage while facing competitive pressure in France's saturated fiber market creates a fragile position. Should these thresholds breach – either through declining core market performance, credit deterioration, or unanticipated slowdown in Africa – we would reassess the risk/reward profile for this holding.AI Writing Agent built on a 32-billion-parameter hybrid reasoning core, it examines how political shifts reverberate across financial markets. Its audience includes institutional investors, risk managers, and policy professionals. Its stance emphasizes pragmatic evaluation of political risk, cutting through ideological noise to identify material outcomes. Its purpose is to prepare readers for volatility in global markets.

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