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6-K 1 bceform6-kx06302024.htm 6-K Document


UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549
FORM 6-K
REPORT OF FOREIGN PRIVATE ISSUER

Pursuant to Rule 13a-16 or 15d-16 under
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934

For the month of: August 2024 Commission File Number: 1-8481
BCE Inc.
(Translation of Registrant’s name into English)

1, Carrefour Alexander-Graham-Bell, Verdun, Québec, Canada H3E 3B3,
(514) 870-8777
(Address of principal executive offices)

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

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

Only the BCE Inc. Management’s Discussion and Analysis for the quarter ended June 30, 2024 furnished with this Form 6-K as Exhibit 99.1, the BCE Inc. unaudited consolidated interim financial statements for the quarter ended June 30, 2024 furnished with this Form 6-K as Exhibit 99.2, the Bell Canada Unaudited Selected Summary Financial Information for the quarter ended June 30, 2024 furnished with this Form 6-K as Exhibit 99.5, and the Exhibit to 2024 Second Quarter Financial Statements – Earnings Coverage furnished with this Form 6-K as Exhibit 99.6 are incorporated by reference in the registration statements filed by BCE Inc. with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Form F-3 (Registration Statement No. 333-12130) and Form S-8 (Registration Statement Nos. 333-12780 and 333-12802) and the joint registration statement filed by BCE Inc. and Bell Canada with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Form F-10 (Registration Statement Nos. 333-279247 and 333-279247-01). Except for the foregoing, no other document or portion of document furnished with this Form 6-K is incorporated by reference in BCE Inc.’s registration statements. Notwithstanding any reference to BCE Inc.’s Web site on the World Wide Web in the documents attached hereto, the information contained in BCE Inc.’s site or any other site on the World Wide Web referred to in BCE Inc.’s site is not a part of this Form 6-K and, therefore, is not furnished to the Securities and Exchange Commission.
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SIGNATURE

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.


BCE Inc.
 
By: (signed) Curtis Millen
  Curtis Millen
Executive Vice-President and Chief Financial Officer  
Date: August 1, 2024
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EXHIBIT INDEX

99.1     BCE Inc. 2024 Second Quarter Management’s Discussion and Analysis
99.2     BCE Inc. 2024 Second Quarter Financial Statements
99.3     CEO/CFO Certifications
99.4     News Release
99.5     Bell Canada Unaudited Selected Summary Financial Information
99.6     Exhibit to 2024 Second Quarter Financial Statements – Earnings Coverage
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EX-99.1 2 a2024-q2xmda.htm BCE INC. 2024 SECOND QUARTER MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS Document

Exhibit 99.1

Management's discussion and analysis

Table of contents
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Management’s discussion and analysis
In this management’s discussion and analysis (MD&A), we, us, our, BCE and the company mean, as the context may require, either BCE Inc. or, collectively, BCE Inc., Bell Canada, their subsidiaries, joint arrangements and associates. Bell means, as the context may require, either Bell Canada or, collectively, Bell Canada, its subsidiaries, joint arrangements and associates.
All amounts in this MD&A are in millions of Canadian dollars, except where noted. Please refer to section 8, Non-GAAP financial measures, other financial measures and key performance indicators (KPIs) for a list of defined non-GAAP financial measures, other financial measures and KPIs.
Please refer to BCE’s unaudited consolidated financial statements for the second quarter of 2024 (Q2 2024 Financial Statements) when reading this MD&A. We also encourage you to read BCE’s MD&A for the year ended December 31, 2023 dated March 7, 2024 (BCE 2023 Annual MD&A) as updated in BCE's MD&A for the first quarter of 2024 dated May 1, 2024 (BCE 2024 First Quarter MD&A). In preparing this MD&A, we have taken into account information available to us up to July 31, 2024, the date of this MD&A, unless otherwise stated.
You will find additional information relating to BCE, including BCE’s annual information form for the year ended December 31, 2023 dated March 7, 2024 and recent financial reports, including the BCE 2023 Annual MD&A and the BCE 2024 First Quarter MD&A, on BCE’s website at BCE.ca, on SEDAR+ at sedarplus.ca and on EDGAR at sec.gov.
Documents and other information contained in BCE’s website or in any other site referred to in BCE’s website or in this MD&A are not part of this MD&A and are not incorporated by reference herein.
This MD&A comments on our business operations, performance, financial position and other matters for the three months (Q2) and six months (YTD) ended June 30, 2024 and 2023.
Caution regarding forward-looking statements
This MD&A and, in particular, but without limitation, section 1.2, Key corporate and business developments, section 3.1, Bell CTS, the section and sub-sections entitled Assumptions and section 4.7, Liquidity, contain forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements include, without limitation, statements relating to the proposed disposition of Northwestel Inc. (Northwestel), the intended use by Bell Canada of the proceeds from the proposed disposition and the planned continuation of a Bell Canada partnership with Northwestel beyond transaction close, the intended use of the net proceeds of Bell Canada’s May 2024 public offering, the expected timing of the opening of 167 Best Buy Express retail stores across Canada, BCE’s network deployment plans and related planned capital expenditures, the sources of liquidity we expect to use to meet our 2024 cash requirements, BCE’s business outlook, objectives, plans and strategic priorities, and other statements that do not refer to historical facts. A statement we make is forward-looking when it uses what we know and expect today to make a statement about the future. Forward-looking statements are typically identified by the words assumption, goal, guidance, objective, outlook, project, strategy, target, commitment and other similar expressions or future or conditional verbs such as aim, anticipate, believe, could, expect, intend, may, plan, seek, should, strive and will. All such forward-looking statements are made pursuant to the safe harbour provisions of applicable Canadian securities laws and of the United States (U.S.) Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995.
Unless otherwise indicated by us, forward-looking statements in this MD&A describe our expectations as at July 31, 2024 and, accordingly, are subject to change after that date. Except as may be required by applicable securities laws, we do not undertake any obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise.
Forward-looking statements, by their very nature, are subject to inherent risks and uncertainties and are based on several assumptions, both general and specific, which give rise to the possibility that actual results or events could differ materially from our expectations expressed in, or implied by, such forward-looking statements and that our business outlook, objectives, plans and strategic priorities may not be achieved. These statements are not guarantees of future performance or events, and we caution you against relying on any of these forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements are presented in this MD&A for the purpose of assisting investors and others in understanding our objectives, strategic priorities and business outlook as well as our anticipated operating environment. Readers are cautioned, however, that such information may not be appropriate for other purposes.
We have made certain economic, market, operational and other assumptions in preparing the forward-looking statements contained in this MD&A and, in particular, but without limitation, the forward-looking statements contained in the previously mentioned sections of this MD&A. These assumptions include, without limitation, the assumptions described in the section and sub-sections of this MD&A entitled Assumptions, which section and sub-sections are incorporated by reference in this cautionary statement. Subject to various factors, we believe that our assumptions were reasonable at July 31, 2024. If our assumptions turn out to be inaccurate, our actual results could be materially different from what we expect.

4 BCE Inc.     2024 SECOND QUARTER SHAREHOLDER REPORT


Important risk factors that could cause actual results or events to differ materially from those expressed in, or implied by, the previously-mentioned forward-looking statements and other forward-looking statements contained in this MD&A, include, but are not limited to: the negative effect of adverse economic conditions, including a potential recession, elevated inflation, high interest rates and financial and capital market volatility, and the resulting negative impact on business and customer spending and the demand for our products and services; the negative effect of adverse conditions associated with geopolitical events; regulatory initiatives, proceedings and decisions, government consultations and government positions that negatively affect us and influence our business including, without limitation, concerning mandatory access to networks, spectrum auctions, the imposition of consumer-related codes of conduct, approval of acquisitions, broadcast and spectrum licensing, foreign ownership requirements, privacy and cybersecurity obligations and control of copyright piracy; the inability to implement enhanced compliance frameworks and to comply with legal and regulatory obligations; unfavourable resolution of legal proceedings; the intensity of competitive activity and the failure to effectively respond to evolving competitive dynamics; the level of technological substitution and the presence of alternative service providers contributing to disruptions and disintermediation in each of our business segments; changing customer behaviour and the expansion of cloud-based, over-the-top (OTT) and other alternative solutions; advertising market pressures from economic conditions, fragmentation and non-traditional/global digital services; rising content costs and challenges in our ability to acquire or develop key content; high Canadian Internet and smartphone penetration; the failure to evolve and transform our networks, systems and operations using next-generation technologies while lowering our cost structure, including the failure to transition from a traditional telecommunications company to a tech services and digital media company and meet customer expectations of product and service experience; the inability to drive a positive customer experience; the inability to protect our physical and non-physical assets from events such as information security attacks, unauthorized access or entry, fire and natural disasters; the failure to implement an effective data governance framework; the failure to attract, develop and retain a diverse and talented team capable of furthering our strategic imperatives and high-tech transformation; the potential deterioration in employee morale and engagement resulting from staff reductions, cost reductions or reorganizations and the de-prioritization of transformation initiatives due to staff reductions, cost reductions or reorganizations; the failure to adequately manage health and safety concerns; labour disruptions and shortages; the risk that we may need to incur significant capital expenditures to provide additional capacity and reduce network congestion; service interruptions or outages due to network failures or slowdowns; events affecting the functionality of, and our ability to protect, test, maintain, replace and upgrade, our networks, information technology (IT) systems, equipment and other facilities; the failure by other telecommunications carriers on which we rely to provide services to complete planned and sufficient testing, maintenance, replacement or upgrade of their networks, equipment and other facilities, which could disrupt our operations including through network or other infrastructure failures; the complexity of our operations and IT systems and the failure to implement or maintain highly effective processes and IT systems; in-orbit and other operational risks to which the satellites used to provide our satellite television (TV) services are subject; the inability to access adequate sources of capital and generate sufficient cash flows from operating activities to meet our cash requirements, fund capital expenditures and provide for planned growth; uncertainty as to whether dividends will be declared or the dividend on common shares will be increased by BCE’s board of directors; the failure to reduce costs and adequately assess investment priorities, as well as unexpected increases in costs; the inability to manage various credit, liquidity and market risks; the failure to evolve practices to effectively monitor and control fraudulent activities; new or higher taxes due to new tax laws or changes thereto or in the interpretation thereof, and the inability to predict the outcome of government audits; the impact on our financial statements and estimates from a number of factors; pension obligation volatility and increased contributions to post-employment benefit plans; our dependence on third-party suppliers, outsourcers and consultants to provide an uninterrupted supply of the products and services we need; the failure of our vendor selection, governance and oversight processes, including our management of supplier risk in the areas of security, data governance and responsible procurement; the quality of our products and services and the extent to which they may be subject to defects or fail to comply with applicable government regulations and standards; reputational risks and the inability to meaningfully integrate environmental, social and governance (ESG) considerations into our business strategy and operations; the failure to take appropriate actions to adapt to current and emerging environmental impacts, including climate change; pandemics, epidemics and other health risks, including health concerns about radio frequency emissions from wireless communications devices and equipment; the inability to adequately manage social issues; the failure to develop and implement sufficient corporate governance practices; the adverse impact of various internal and external factors on our ability to achieve our ESG targets including, without limitation, those related to greenhouse gas emissions reduction and diversity, equity, inclusion and belonging; and the completion of the proposed disposition of Northwestel is subject to closing conditions, including the purchaser securing financing, the completion of confirmatory due diligence, and the receipt of the Competition Bureau’s approval and, as such, there can be no assurances that the proposed disposition will ultimately be consummated or that it will be consummated on the terms and conditions currently contemplated.
We caution that the foregoing list of risk factors is not exhaustive and other factors could also materially adversely affect us. Please see section 9, Business risks of the BCE 2023 Annual MD&A for a more complete description of the above-mentioned and other risks, which section, and the other sections of the BCE 2023 Annual MD&A referred to therein, are incorporated by reference in this cautionary statement. Please also see section 6, Regulatory environment in the BCE 2024 First Quarter MD&A and in this MD&A for an update to the regulatory initiatives and proceedings described in the BCE 2023 Annual MD&A, which sections 6 are incorporated by reference in this cautionary statement. Any of those risks could cause actual results or events to differ materially from our expectations expressed in, or implied by, the forward-looking statements set out in this MD&A. Except for the updates set out in section 6, Regulatory environment of the BCE 2024 First Quarter MD&A and in this MD&A, the risks described in the BCE 2023 Annual MD&A remain substantially unchanged.
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Additional risks and uncertainties not currently known to us or that we currently deem to be immaterial may also have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition, liquidity, financial results or reputation. We regularly consider potential acquisitions, dispositions, mergers, business combinations, investments, monetizations, joint ventures and other transactions, some of which may be significant. Except as otherwise indicated by us, forward-looking statements do not reflect the potential impact of any such transactions or of special items that may be announced or that may occur after July 31, 2024. The financial impact of these transactions and special items can be complex and depends on facts particular to each of them. We therefore cannot describe the expected impact in a meaningful way, or in the same way we present known risks affecting our business.
6 BCE Inc.     2024 SECOND QUARTER SHAREHOLDER REPORT


1 Overview

1.1 Financial highlights
BCE Q2 2024 selected quarterly information
Operating revenues Net earnings
Adjusted EBITDA(1)
$6,005 $604 $2,697
million million million
(1.0%) vs. Q2 2023
52.1% vs. Q2 2023
2.0% vs. Q2 2023
Net earnings attributable to common shareholders
Adjusted net earnings(1)
Cash flows from operating activities
Free cash flow(1)
$537 $712 $2,137 $1,097
million million million million
63.2% vs. Q2 2023
(1.4%) vs. Q2 2023
(9.6%) vs. Q2 2023
8.0% vs. Q2 2023

BCE customer connections(7)
Total mobile phones(3)
Retail high-speed Internet(4)(5)(6)
Retail internet protocol television (IPTV)(2)(6)
Retail residential network access services (NAS) lines(6)
+3.1% +4.2% +5.6% (8.4%)
10.3 million subscribers
at June 30, 2024
4.5 million subscribers
at June 30, 2024
2.1 million subscribers
at June 30, 2024
1.9 million subscribers
at June 30, 2024





















(1)Adjusted EBITDA is a total of segments measure, and adjusted net earnings and free cash flow are non-GAAP financial measures. See section 8.3, Total of segments measures and section 8.1, Non-GAAP financial measures in this MD&A for more information on these measures.
(2)In Q2 2024, we increased our retail IPTV subscriber base by 40,997 to align the deactivation policy for our Fibe TV streaming services to our traditional Fibe TV service.
(3)In Q1 2024, we adjusted our mobile phone postpaid subscriber base to remove very low to non-revenue generating business market subscribers of 105,802.
(4)In Q1 2024, we removed 11,645 turbo hubs subscribers from our retail high-speed Internet subscriber base as we are no longer actively marketing this product in our wireless-to-the-home footprint.
(5)In Q1 2024, our retail high-speed Internet subscriber base increased by 3,850 business subscribers as a result of a small acquisition.
(6)In Q2 2023, our retail high-speed Internet, retail IPTV and retail residential NAS lines subscriber bases increased by 35,080, 243 and 7,458 subscribers, respectively, as a result of small acquisitions.
(7)As of Q1 2024, we are no longer reporting retail satellite TV subscribers as this no longer represents a significant proportion of our revenues. As a result, satellite TV subscribers have been removed from our retail TV subscriber base, and we now report exclusively retail IPTV subscribers.
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BCE income statements - selected information
  Q2 2024 Q2 2023 $ change % change YTD 2024 YTD 2023 $ change % change
Operating revenues
Service 5,308 5,303 0.1  % 10,500 10,525 (25) (0.2  %)
Product 697 763 (66) (8.7  %) 1,516 1,595 (79) (5.0  %)
Total operating revenues 6,005 6,066 (61) (1.0  %) 12,016 12,120 (104) (0.9  %)
Operating costs (3,308) (3,421) 113  3.3  % (6,754) (6,937) 183  2.6  %
Adjusted EBITDA 2,697 2,645 52  2.0  % 5,262 5,183 79  1.5  %
Adjusted EBITDA margin(1)
44.9  % 43.6  % 1.3 pts 43.8  % 42.8  % 1.0 pts
Net earnings attributable to:
Common shareholders 537 329 208  63.2  % 939 1,054 (115) (10.9  %)
Preferred shareholders 46 46 —  —  93 92 1.1  %
Non-controlling interest 21 22 (1) (4.5  %) 29 39 (10) (25.6  %)
Net earnings 604 397 207  52.1  % 1,061 1,185 (124) (10.5  %)
Adjusted net earnings 712 722 (10) (1.4  %) 1,366 1,494 (128) (8.6  %)
Net earnings per common share (EPS) 0.59 0.37 0.22 59.5  % 1.03 1.16 (0.13) (11.2  %)
Adjusted EPS(2)
0.78 0.79 (0.01) (1.3  %) 1.50 1.64 (0.14) (8.5  %)
(1)Adjusted EBITDA margin is defined as adjusted EBITDA divided by operating revenues. Refer to section 8.6, KPIs in this MD&A for more information on this measure.
(2)Adjusted EPS is a non-GAAP ratio. Refer to section 8.2, Non-GAAP ratios in this MD&A for more information on this measure.
BCE statements of cash flows – selected information
  Q2 2024 Q2 2023 $ change % change YTD 2024 YTD 2023 $ change % change
Cash flows from operating activities 2,137  2,365  (228) (9.6  %) 3,269  3,612  (343) (9.5  %)
Capital expenditures (978) (1,307) 329  25.2  % (1,980) (2,393) 413  17.3  %
Free cash flow 1,097  1,016  81  8.0  % 1,182  1,101  81  7.4  %
Q2 2024 financial highlights
BCE operating revenues decreased by 1.0% in Q2 2024, compared to the same period last year. This year-over-year decrease was driven by lower product revenues of 8.7%, resulting from lower consumer electronic sales at The Source (Bell) Electronics Inc. (The Source) due to retail store closures related to the transaction with Best Buy Canada, as well as reduced mobile phones contracted sales and lower wireline equipment sales to large enterprise customers following the supply chain recovery in 2023. Service revenue growth of 0.1% reflected higher wireless service revenues despite sustained competitive pricing pressures, along with growth in Internet and business solutions services revenues, the contribution from acquisitions made in the past year, higher revenues from the Formula 1 Canadian Grand Prix 2024 (Formula 1), and increased media advertising revenues, despite continued traditional broadcast TV and radio advertising market softness. The service revenue growth was partly offset by ongoing erosion in legacy voice, data and satellite TV revenues, as well as lower Bell Media subscriber revenues.
Net earnings and net earnings attributable to common shareholders in the second quarter of 2024 increased by $207 million and $208 million, respectively, compared to the same period last year, mainly due to lower other expense, lower severance, acquisition and other costs, higher adjusted EBITDA and lower income taxes, partly offset by higher interest expense, higher impairment of assets and higher depreciation and amortization.
BCE's adjusted EBITDA grew by 2.0% in Q2 2024, compared to the same period last year, attributable to growth in our Bell Communication and Technology Services (Bell CTS) and Bell Media segments, reflecting disciplined subscriber acquisition combined with various cost reduction initiatives including workforce reductions and other operating efficiencies, as well as lower cost of goods sold, partly offset by decreased operating revenues. This drove a corresponding adjusted EBITDA margin of 44.9% in Q2 2024, up 1.3 pts over the same period last year, due to lower operating costs, along with a reduced proportion of low-margin product sales in our total revenue base.
BCE's EPS of $0.59 in Q2 2024 increased by $0.22 compared to the same period last year.
In the second quarter of 2024, adjusted net earnings, which excludes the impact of severance, acquisition and other costs, net mark-to-market gains (losses) on derivatives used to economically hedge equity settled share-based compensation plans, net equity gains (losses) on investments in associates and joint ventures, net gains (losses) on investments, early debt redemption costs and impairment of assets, net of tax and NCI, was $712 million, or $0.78 per common share, compared to $722 million, or $0.79 per common share, for the same period last year.
8 BCE Inc.     2024 SECOND QUARTER SHAREHOLDER REPORT


Cash flows from operating activities in the second quarter of 2024 decreased by $228 million, compared to the same period last year, mainly due to higher interest paid, higher severance and other costs paid and lower cash from working capital due in part to timing of supplier payments, partly offset by lower income taxes paid and higher adjusted EBITDA.
Free cash flow in Q2 2024 increased by $81 million, compared to the same period last year, due to lower capital expenditures, partly offset by lower cash flows from operating activities, excluding cash from acquisition and other costs paid.

1.2 Key corporate and business developments
This section contains forward-looking statements, including relating to the proposed disposition of Northwestel, the intended use by Bell Canada of the proceeds from the proposed disposition and the planned continuation of a Bell Canada partnership with Northwestel beyond transaction close, the intended use of the net proceeds of Bell Canada’s May 2024 public offering and the expected timing of the opening of 167 Best Buy Express retail stores across Canada. Refer to the section Caution regarding forward-looking statements at the beginning of this MD&A.
Disposition of Northwestel
On June 10, 2024, Bell Canada entered into an agreement with Sixty North Unity, a consortium of Indigenous communities from the Yukon, the Northwest Territories and Nunavut, for the sale of Northwestel, the largest telecommunications service provider in Canada’s North, for up to $1 billion, subject to adjustments. The transaction reinforces Bell Canada’s commitment to the North by empowering local communities with control over their investment decision-making, while continuing to serve the North as the leading wireless services provider in the region. Bell Canada plans to maintain a strategic partnership with Northwestel beyond the transaction close through ongoing operational support, and as Northwestel’s largest customer. Closing of the transaction is subject to certain closing conditions, including securing financing by Sixty North Unity, the completion of confirmatory due diligence, and receipt of the Competition Bureau's approval and, as such, there can be no assurances that the transaction will ultimately be consummated. Bell Canada intends to use the proceeds from the transaction to pay down debt.
Public debt offering
On May 24, 2024, Bell Canada completed a public offering in Canada of $1.5 billion of medium-term notes (MTN) debentures in two series pursuant to its MTN program. The $400 million Series M-61 MTN debentures, which were issued pursuant to a re-opening of an existing series of MTN debentures, will mature on August 11, 2053 and carry an annual interest rate of 5.60%. The $1.1 billion Series M-63 MTN debentures will mature on August 24, 2034 and carry an annual interest rate of 5.15%. The MTN Debentures are fully and unconditionally guaranteed by BCE Inc. The net proceeds of the offering are intended to be used to fund the repayment of Bell Canada MTN Debenture debt maturing in the first quarter of 2025 and general corporate purposes.
Launch of retail partnership with Best Buy Canada
As part of Bell’s strategic partnership with Best Buy Canada to introduce 167 small-format consumer technology retail stores across Canada, the first 24 Best Buy Express stores opened in locations across British Columbia, Alberta, Ontario and Québec. This marks the beginning of a phased rollout over the next several months, with all stores expected to open by the end of 2024, following completion of renovations. Best Buy Express stores will offer a selection of consumer technology from Best Buy with over 100,000 products available through its fulfillment network, and exclusive telecommunications services from Bell, Virgin Plus and Lucky Mobile.
BCE ranked as one of Canada’s Best 50 Corporate Citizens
In June 2024, BCE was once again named to the Canada’s Best 50 Corporate Citizens list compiled by Corporate Knights, a sustainable-economy media and research company, ranking 19th overall. The annual ranking is based on a set of 25 ESG indicators that compares Canadian companies with a gross revenue of at least $1 billion, amongst other criteria(1). This is the third consecutive year BCE has made the list. Our sustainable investments and revenue, diversity and equity initiatives and pension fund quality contributed to BCE being named the top corporate citizen in the Canadian telecommunications sector in this year’s ranking. It also reflects our recognition as one of Canada’s Greenest Employers(2) by Canada’s Top Employers, an editorial competition organized by Mediacorp Canada Inc., a publisher of employment periodicals, in light of our ongoing environmental leadership.

(1)Eligible companies include: Canadian-headquartered privately held companies and Canadian Crown corporations with at least $1 billion annual revenue, Canadian-listed companies with more than $1 billion annual revenue, companies included in S&P / TSX Renewable Energy and Clean Technology Index (all revenues), top 10 largest Canadian cooperative organizations by revenue, top 10 credit unions by assets under management and those with at least 100,000 members and all 2023 Best 50 companies. All companies are scored on up to 25 key performance indicators covering resource management, employee management, financial management, sustainable revenue and sustainable investment and supplier performance in comparison to their peer group, with 50% of each company’s score assigned to sustainable revenue and sustainable investment.
(2)Winners were announced in April 2024 and were selected and evaluated in terms of: the unique environmental initiatives and programs they have developed; the extent to which they have been successful in reducing the organization’s own environmental footprint; the degree to which their employees are involved in these programs and whether they contribute any unique skills; and the extent to which these initiatives have become linked to the employer’s public identity, attracting new employees and clients to the organization.
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1.3 Assumptions
As at the date of this MD&A, our forward-looking statements set out in the BCE 2023 Annual MD&A, as updated or supplemented in the BCE 2024 First Quarter MD&A and in this MD&A, are based on certain assumptions including, without limitation, the following assumptions, as well as the various assumptions referred to under the sub-sections entitled Assumptions set out in section 3, Business segment analysis of this MD&A.
Assumptions about the Canadian economy
We have made certain assumptions concerning the Canadian economy. In particular, we have assumed:
•Modest economic growth, given the Bank of Canada’s most recent estimated growth in Canadian gross domestic product of 1.2% in 2024, representing a decrease from the earlier estimate of 1.5%
•Easing consumer price index (CPI) inflation as monetary policy works to reduce inflationary pressures
•Easing labour market conditions
•Growth in consumer spending as lower interest rates ease debt payments
•Business investment growth underpinned by easing financial conditions and the overall growth of the economy
•Interest rates expected to remain at or near current levels
•Population growth resulting from immigration
•Canadian dollar expected to remain near current levels. Further movements may be impacted by the degree of strength of the U.S. dollar, interest rates and changes in commodity prices.
Market assumptions
•A higher level of wireline and wireless competition in consumer, business and wholesale markets
•Higher, but slowing, wireless industry penetration
•A shrinking data and voice connectivity market as business customers migrate to lower-priced telecommunications solutions or alternative OTT competitors
•The Canadian traditional broadcast TV and radio advertising market is experiencing a slowdown consistent with trends in the global advertising market, with improvement expected in the medium term, although visibility to the specific timing and pace remains limited
•Declines in broadcasting distribution undertaking (BDU) subscribers driven by increasing competition from the continued rollout of subscription video on demand (SVOD) streaming services together with further scaling of OTT aggregators
Assumptions underlying expected continuing contribution holiday in 2024 in the majority of our pension plans
•At the relevant time, our defined benefit (DB) pension plans will remain in funded positions with going concern surpluses and maintain solvency ratios that exceed the minimum legal requirements for a contribution holiday to be taken for applicable DB and defined contribution (DC) components
•No significant declines in our DB pension plans’ financial position due to declines in investment returns or interest rates
•No material experience losses from other events such as through litigation or changes in laws, regulations or actuarial standards




10 BCE Inc.     2024 SECOND QUARTER SHAREHOLDER REPORT


2 Consolidated financial analysis
This section provides detailed information and analysis about BCE’s performance in Q2 and YTD 2024 compared with Q2 and YTD 2023. It focuses on BCE’s consolidated operating results and provides financial information for our Bell CTS and Bell Media business segments. For further discussion and analysis of our business segments, refer to section 3, Business segment analysis.
2.1 BCE consolidated income statements
  Q2 2024 Q2 2023 $ change % change YTD 2024 YTD 2023 $ change % change
Operating revenues
Service 5,308 5,303 0.1  % 10,500 10,525 (25) (0.2  %)
Product 697 763 (66) (8.7  %) 1,516 1,595 (79) (5.0  %)
Total operating revenues 6,005 6,066 (61) (1.0  %) 12,016 12,120 (104) (0.9  %)
Operating costs (3,308) (3,421) 113  3.3  % (6,754) (6,937) 183  2.6  %
Adjusted EBITDA 2,697 2,645 52  2.0  % 5,262 5,183 79  1.5  %
Adjusted EBITDA margin 44.9  % 43.6  % 1.3 pts 43.8  % 42.8  % 1.0 pts
Severance, acquisition and other costs (22) (100) 78  78.0  % (251) (149) (102) (68.5  %)
Depreciation (945) (936) (9) (1.0  %) (1,891) (1,854) (37) (2.0  %)
Amortization (325) (296) (29) (9.8  %) (641) (579) (62) (10.7  %)
Finance costs
Interest expense (426) (359) (67) (18.7  %) (842) (703) (139) (19.8  %)
Net return on post-employment benefit plans 17 27 (10) (37.0  %) 33 54 (21) (38.9  %)
Impairment of assets (60) (60) n.m. (73) (34) (39) n.m.
Other expense (101) (311) 210  67.5  % (139) (190) 51  26.8  %
Income taxes (231) (273) 42  15.4  % (397) (543) 146  26.9  %
Net earnings 604 397 207  52.1  % 1,061 1,185 (124) (10.5  %)
Net earnings attributable to:
Common shareholders 537 329 208  63.2  % 939 1,054 (115) (10.9  %)
Preferred shareholders 46 46 —  —  93 92 1.1  %
Non-controlling interest 21 22 (1) (4.5  %) 29 39 (10) (25.6  %)
Net earnings 604 397 207  52.1  % 1,061 1,185 (124) (10.5  %)
Adjusted net earnings 712 722 (10) (1.4  %) 1,366 1,494 (128) (8.6  %)
EPS 0.59 0.37 0.22  59.5  % 1.03 1.16 (0.13) (11.2  %)
Adjusted EPS 0.78 0.79 (0.01) (1.3  %) 1.50 1.64 (0.14) (8.5  %)
n.m.: not meaningful
11



2.2 Customer connections
BCE net activations (losses)
  Q2 2024 Q2 2023 % change YTD 2024 YTD 2023 % change
Mobile phone net subscriber activations (losses) 131,043  125,539  4.4  % 156,251  152,174  2.7  %
Postpaid 78,500  111,282  (29.5  %) 123,747  154,571  (19.9  %)
Prepaid 52,543  14,257  n.m. 32,504  (2,397) n.m.
Mobile connected devices net subscriber activations 87,917  79,537  10.5  % 154,323  150,279  2.7  %
Retail high-speed Internet net subscriber activations 23,841  24,934  (4.4  %) 54,919  52,208  5.2  %
Retail IPTV net subscriber (losses) activations (1,313) 11,506  n.m. 12,861  22,405  (42.6  %)
Retail residential NAS lines net losses (53,250) (49,608) (7.3  %) (97,161) (96,489) (0.7  %)
Total services net activations 188,238  191,908  (1.9  %) 281,193  280,577  0.2  %
n.m.: not meaningful

Total BCE customer connections
  Q2 2024 Q2 2023 % change
Mobile phone subscribers(2)
10,337,495  10,028,031  3.1  %
Postpaid(2)
9,440,775  9,151,229  3.2  %
Prepaid 896,720  876,802  2.3  %
Mobile connected devices subscribers 2,886,871  2,589,520  11.5  %
Retail high-speed Internet subscribers(3)(4)(5)
4,520,553  4,338,511  4.2  %
Retail IPTV subscribers(1)(5)
2,124,200  2,010,829  5.6  %
Retail residential NAS lines(5)
1,924,456  2,101,740  (8.4  %)
Total services subscribers(6)
21,793,575  21,068,631  3.4  %
(1)In Q2 2024, we increased our retail IPTV subscriber base by 40,997 to align the deactivation policy for our Fibe TV streaming services to our traditional Fibe TV service.
(2)In Q1 2024, we adjusted our mobile phone postpaid subscriber base to remove very low to non-revenue generating business market subscribers of 105,802.
(3)In Q1 2024, we removed 11,645 turbo hubs subscribers from our retail high-speed Internet subscriber base as we are no longer actively marketing this product in our wireless-to-the-home footprint.
(4)In Q1 2024, our retail high-speed Internet subscriber base increased by 3,850 business subscribers as a result of a small acquisition.
(5)In Q2 2023, our retail high-speed Internet, retail IPTV and retail residential NAS lines subscriber bases increased by 35,080, 243 and 7,458 subscribers, respectively, as a result of small acquisitions.
(6)As of Q1 2024, we are no longer reporting retail satellite TV subscribers as this no longer represents a significant proportion of our revenues. As a result, satellite TV subscribers have been removed from our retail TV subscriber base, and we now report exclusively retail IPTV subscribers.
BCE added 188,238 net retail subscriber activations in Q2 2024, down 1.9% compared to the same period last year. The net retail subscriber activations in Q2 2024 consisted of:
•131,043 mobile phone net subscriber activations, along with 87,917 mobile connected device net subscriber activations
•23,841 retail high-speed Internet net subscriber activations
•1,313 retail IPTV net subscriber losses
•53,250 retail residential NAS lines net losses

In the first half of the year, BCE added 281,193 net retail subscriber activations, up 0.2% compared to the same period in 2023. The net retail subscriber activations in the first half of 2024 consisted of:
•156,251 mobile phone net subscriber activations, along with 154,323 mobile connected device net subscriber activations
•54,919 retail high-speed Internet net subscriber activations
•12,861 retail IPTV net subscriber activations
•97,161 retail residential NAS lines net losses

At June 30, 2024, BCE's retail subscriber connections totalled 21,793,575, up 3.4% year over year, and consisted of:
•10,337,495 mobile phone subscribers, up 3.1% year over year, and 2,886,871 mobile connected device subscribers, up 11.5% year over year
•4,520,553 retail high-speed Internet subscribers, 4.2% higher year over year
•2,124,200 retail IPTV subscribers, up 5.6% year over year
•1,924,456 retail residential NAS lines, down 8.4% year over year



12 BCE Inc.     2024 SECOND QUARTER SHAREHOLDER REPORT



2.3 Operating revenues
BCE BCE
Revenues Revenues
(in $ millions) (in $ millions)
image14.jpg
image3.jpg
  Q2 2024 Q2 2023 $ change % change YTD 2024 YTD 2023 $ change % change
Bell CTS 5,283  5,354  (71) (1.3  %) 10,658  10,721  (63) (0.6  %)
Bell Media 812  805  0.9  % 1,537  1,585  (48) (3.0  %)
Inter-segment eliminations (90) (93) 3.2  % (179) (186) 3.8  %
Total BCE operating revenues 6,005  6,066  (61) (1.0  %) 12,016  12,120  (104) (0.9  %)
BCE
BCE operating revenues decreased by 1.0% in Q2 2024, compared to Q2 2023, driven by lower product revenues, partly offset by higher service revenues. During the first six months of the year, BCE operating revenues declined by 0.9% year over year, driven by lower product and service revenues. Product revenues of $697 million in Q2 2024 and $1,516 million in the first half of the year, decreased by 8.7% and 5.0%, respectively, over the same periods last year. Service revenues of $5,308 million in Q2 2024 increased by 0.1% year-over-year, while service revenues in the first half of the year of $10,500 million declined by 0.2%.
The year-over-year decrease in Q2 2024 operating revenues reflected a decline in our Bell CTS segment, partly offset by an increase in our Bell Media segment, whereas the decline in the first six months of the year was attributable to a decrease in both our Bell CTS and Bell Media segments. Bell CTS operating revenues in the quarter declined by 1.3% year over year, due to lower product revenues of 8.7% resulting from The Source retail store closures, and decreased service revenues of 0.1%, from ongoing erosion in wireline voice revenues, moderated by continued growth in wireless and wireline data revenues. The year-to-date decline in Bell CTS operating revenues of 0.6%, was due to lower product revenues of 5.0%, partly offset by service revenues growth of 0.2% from higher wireless and wireline data revenues, moderated by continued wireline voice revenue erosion. Bell Media operating revenues increased by 0.9% in Q2 2024, compared to Q2 2023, from higher advertising and Formula 1 revenues, partly offset by lower subscriber revenues. Bell Media operating revenues during the first half of the year, decreased by 3.0% year over year, due to lower subscriber revenues, reflecting the benefit last year from a retroactive BDU revenue adjustment, partly offset by higher advertising and Formula 1 revenues.

13



2.4 Operating costs
BCE BCE
Operating cost profile Operating cost profile
Q2 2023 Q2 2024
image15.jpg
image5.jpg
BCE BCE
Operating cost profile Operating cost profile
YTD 2023 YTD 2024
image.jpg
image6.jpg
  Q2 2024 Q2 2023 $ change % change YTD 2024 YTD 2023 $ change % change
Bell CTS (2,804) (2,923) 119  4.1  % (5,731) (5,884) 153  2.6  %
Bell Media (594) (591) (3) (0.5  %) (1,202) (1,239) 37  3.0  %
Inter-segment eliminations 90  93  (3) (3.2  %) 179  186  (7) (3.8  %)
Total BCE operating costs (3,308) (3,421) 113  3.3  % (6,754) (6,937) 183  2.6  %
(1)Cost of revenues includes costs of wireless devices and other equipment sold, network and content costs, and payments to other carriers.
(2)Labour costs (net of capitalized costs) include wages, salaries and related taxes and benefits, post-employment benefit plans service cost, and other labour costs, including contractor and outsourcing costs.
(3)Other operating costs include marketing, advertising and sales commission costs, bad debt expense, taxes other than income taxes, IT costs, professional service fees and rent.
BCE
BCE operating costs decreased by 3.3% in Q2 2024, compared to Q2 2023, from lower expenses in Bell CTS of 4.1%, partly offset by an increase in Bell Media of 0.5%. In the first half of the year, BCE operating costs decreased by 2.6% year over year, driven by lower costs in both Bell CTS and Bell Media of 2.6% and 3.0%, respectively.

14 BCE Inc.     2024 SECOND QUARTER SHAREHOLDER REPORT



2.5 Net earnings
BCE BCE
Net earnings Net earnings
(in $ millions) (in $ millions)
image1.jpg
image2.jpg
Net earnings in the second quarter of 2024 increased by $207 million, compared to the same period last year, mainly due to lower other expense, lower severance, acquisition and other costs, higher adjusted EBITDA and lower income taxes, partly offset by higher interest expense, higher impairment of assets and higher depreciation and amortization.
Net earnings on a year-to-date basis in 2024 decreased by $124 million, compared to the same period last year, mainly due to higher interest expense, higher severance, acquisition and other costs, higher depreciation and amortization and higher impairment of assets, partly offset by lower income taxes, higher adjusted EBITDA and lower other expense.




























15



2.6 Adjusted EBITDA
BCE BCE
Adjusted EBITDA Adjusted EBITDA
(in $ millions ) (in $ millions )
image7.jpg
image8.jpg

  Q2 2024 Q2 2023 $ change % change YTD 2024 YTD 2023 $ change % change
Bell CTS 2,479  2,431  48  2.0  % 4,927  4,837  90  1.9  %
Adjusted EBITDA margin 46.9  % 45.4  % 1.5 pts 46.2  % 45.1  % 1.1 pts
Bell Media 218  214  1.9  % 335  346  (11) (3.2  %)
Adjusted EBITDA margin 26.8  % 26.6  % 0.2 pts 21.8  % 21.8  %
Total BCE adjusted EBITDA 2,697  2,645  52  2.0  % 5,262  5,183  79  1.5  %
Adjusted EBITDA margin 44.9  % 43.6  % 1.3 pts 43.8  % 42.8  % 1.0 pts
BCE
BCE’s adjusted EBITDA grew by 2.0% in Q2 2024, compared to Q2 2023, due to growth in Bell CTS of 2.0% and Bell Media of 1.9%. The increase in the first half of the year of 1.5% year over year was driven by growth in Bell CTS of 1.9%, partly offset by a decline in Bell Media of 3.2%. The year-over-year increase in BCE's adjusted EBITDA in Q2 2024 and year to date was driven by lower operating costs, partly offset by reduced operating revenues. Adjusted EBITDA margin of 44.9% in Q2 2024 and 43.8% year to date, increased by 1.3 pts and 1.0 pts, respectively, over the same periods last year, due to lower operating costs, driven by cost reduction initiatives, mainly associated with workforce reductions and other operating efficiencies, along with a reduced proportion of low-margin product sales in our total revenue base.








16 BCE Inc. 2024 SECOND QUARTER SHAREHOLDER REPORT Severance, acquisition and other costs of $22 million in the second quarter of 2024 and $251 million on a year-to-date basis included:



2.7 Severance, acquisition and other costs
2024
•Severance costs recovery of $4 million in Q2 2024
•Severance costs of $230 million on a year-to-date basis related to involuntary and voluntary employee terminations, including the estimated costs of the previously announced workforce reductions incurred up to June 30, 2024
•Acquisition and other costs of $26 million in Q2 2024 and $21 million on a year-to-date basis
2023
Severance, acquisition and other costs of $100 million in the second quarter of 2023 and $149 million on a year-to-date basis included:
•Severance costs of $80 million in Q2 2023 and $109 million on a year-to-date basis related to involuntary and voluntary employee terminations
•Acquisition and other costs of $20 million in Q2 2023 and $40 million on a year-to-date basis

2.8 Depreciation and amortization
Depreciation
Depreciation in the second quarter and on a year-to-date basis in 2024 increased by $9 million and $37 million, respectively, compared to the same periods in 2023, mainly due to a higher asset base as we continued to invest in our broadband and wireless networks.
Amortization
Amortization in the second quarter and on a year-to-date basis in 2024 increased by $29 million and $62 million, respectively, compared to the same periods in 2023, mainly due to a higher asset base.

2.9 Finance costs
Interest expense
Interest expense in the second quarter and on a year-to-date basis in 2024 increased by $67 million and $139 million, respectively, compared to the same periods in 2023, mainly due to higher average debt balances and higher interest rates.
Net return on post-employment benefit plans
Net return on our post-employment benefit plans is based on market conditions that existed at the beginning of the year as well as the net post-employment benefit plan asset (liability). On January 1, 2024, the discount rate was 4.6% compared to 5.3% on January 1, 2023.
In the second quarter and on a year-to-date basis in 2024, net return on post-employment benefit decreased by $10 million and $21 million, respectively, compared to the same periods last year, as a result of a lower discount rate in 2024 and a lower net asset position.
The impacts of changes in market conditions during the year are recognized in Other comprehensive income (loss) (OCI).

2.10 Impairment of assets
Impairment charges for the second quarter and on a year-to-date basis in 2024 increased by $60 million and $39 million, respectively, compared to the same periods last year, and relate mainly to right-of-use assets for certain office spaces we ceased using as part of our real estate optimization strategy as a result of our hybrid work policy.



17


2.11 Other expense
2024
Other expense of $101 million in the second quarter of 2024 included losses on our equity investments in associates and joint ventures which included a loss on BCE's share of an obligation to repurchase at fair value the minority interest in one of BCE's joint ventures, net mark-to-market losses on derivatives used to economically hedge equity settled share-based compensation plans and losses on retirements and disposals of property, plant and equipment and intangible assets, partly offset by interest income.
Other expense of $139 million on a year-to-date basis in 2024 included net mark-to-market losses on derivatives used to economically hedge equity settled share-based compensation plans, losses on our equity investments in associates and joint ventures which included a loss on BCE's share of an obligation to repurchase at fair value the minority interest in one of BCE's joint ventures and losses on retirements and disposals of property, plant and equipment and intangible assets, partly offset by interest income and income on operations from our equity investments.
2023
Other expense of $311 million in the second quarter of 2023 included losses on our equity investments in associates and joint ventures which included a loss on BCE's share of an obligation to repurchase at fair value the minority interest in one of BCE's joint ventures, losses on retirements and disposals of property, plant and equipment and intangible assets, partly offset by gains on our investments as a result of the sale of our 63% ownership in certain production studios.
Other expense of $190 million on a year-to-date basis in 2023 included losses on our equity investments in associates and joint ventures which included a loss on BCE's share of an obligation to repurchase at fair value the minority interest in one of BCE's joint ventures, partly offset by gains on our investments as a result of the sale of our 63% ownership in certain production studios, gains on retirements and disposals of property, plant and equipment and intangible assets related to the sale of land as part of our real estate optimization strategy, higher interest income, income on operations from our equity investments and net mark-to-market gains on derivatives used to economically hedge equity settled share-based compensation plans.

2.12 Income taxes
Income taxes in the second quarter and on a year-to-date basis in 2024 decreased by $42 million and $146 million, respectively, compared to the same periods last year, mainly due to a higher value of favourable tax adjustments and lower taxable income.

2.13 Net earnings attributable to common shareholders and EPS
Net earnings attributable to common shareholders in the second quarter of 2024 of $537 million, increased by $208 million, compared to the same period last year, mainly due to lower other expense, lower severance, acquisition and other costs, higher adjusted EBITDA and lower income taxes, partly offset by higher interest expense, higher impairment of assets and higher depreciation and amortization.
Net earnings attributable to common shareholders on a year-to-date basis in 2024 of $939 million, decreased by $115 million, compared to the same period last year, mainly due to higher interest expense, higher severance, acquisition and other costs, higher depreciation and amortization and higher impairment of assets, partly offset by lower income taxes, higher adjusted EBITDA and lower other expense.
BCE’s EPS of $0.59 in Q2 2024 increased by $0.22 compared to the same period last year. BCE's EPS of $1.03 on a year-to-date basis in 2024 decreased by $0.13 compared to the same period last year.
In the second quarter of 2024, adjusted net earnings, which excludes the impact of severance, acquisition and other costs, net mark-to-market gains (losses) on derivatives used to economically hedge equity settled share-based compensation plans, net equity gains (losses) on investments in associates and joint ventures, net gains (losses) on investments, early debt redemption costs and impairment of assets, net of tax and NCI, was $712 million, or $0.78 per common share, compared to $722 million, or $0.79 per common share, for the same period last year. Adjusted net earnings in the first half of 2024 was $1,366 million, or $1.50 per common share, compared to $1,494 million, or $1.64 per common share, for the first six months of 2023.
18 BCE Inc.     2024 SECOND QUARTER SHAREHOLDER REPORT


3 Business segment analysis

3.1 Bell CTS
This section contains forward-looking statements, including relating to BCE’s strategic and network deployment plans. Refer to the section Caution regarding forward-looking statements at the beginning of this MD&A.
Key business developments
Acquisition of tech services companies Stratejm and CloudKettle
On June 24, 2024, Bell acquired CloudKettle Inc. (CloudKettle), a Halifax-based professional services provider. On July 2, 2024, Bell acquired Stratejm Inc. (Stratejm), a Mississauga-based cybersecurity provider, for cash consideration of $78 million. These two acquisitions add professional and managed services expertise in cybersecurity and Salesforce digital workflow automation to Bell's existing capabilities and are expected to advance Bell's strategy to be the leader in supporting medium and large organizations' digital transformations and automation through cloud services. Combined with Bell's pure fibre and Fifth Generation (5G) networks, enterprises are expected to benefit from an artificial intelligence (AI)-powered end-to-end customer experience. These acquisitions complement Bell’s 2023 acquisition of FX Innovation, a provider of end-to-end multi-cloud services, IT workflow automation solutions and cloud consulting services.
Expansion of partnership with ServiceNow
On July 18, 2024, Bell announced an expanded multi-year strategic partnership with ServiceNow, an AI platform for business transformation, to accelerate Bell’s transformation to meet the growing customer demand for tech services and digital media. The partnership makes Bell one of ServiceNow’s largest communications customers with a first-of-its-kind collaboration in Canada. Bell will expand its use of the ServiceNow platform, supporting its own digital transformation while continuing to offer ServiceNow implementation expertise to support the digital transformation of its Bell Business Markets customers. FX Innovation, a provider of cloud-managed services and an Elite ServiceNow implementation partner, and acquired by Bell in 2023, will implement the Now Platform throughout Bell’s ecosystem. Bell will use automation, purpose-built telecommunications solutions, and AI-driven insights to provide both technicians and customers with a more efficient experience, enhancing customer service.
Deployment of 3800 MHz wireless spectrum
On May 29, 2024, Bell Mobility Inc. (Bell Mobility) announced the deployment of 3800 megahertz (MHz) spectrum in select areas of Toronto and Kitchener-Waterloo, offering customers the country's fastest mobile technology on Canada's fastest 5G+ wireless network(1). With the finalization of the acquisition of 939 licences of 3800 MHz spectrum on May 29, 2024, Bell Mobility secured the most 5G+ spectrum nationwide (combining the 3500 MHz and 3800 MHz spectrum bands), adding high-capacity airwaves critical to the advancement of 5G. Bell Mobility’s 5G+ is expected to be even faster and more responsive, allowing for a superior mobile experience with peak theoretical download speeds of up to 4 gigabits per second in select areas.
Partnership with Mila to drive AI innovation in the telecommunications sector
On June 13, 2024, Bell announced a new partnership with Mila, a Montréal-based research institute in AI, to develop AI solutions driven by a shared vision to enhance customer experience, optimize business operations and cultivate a vibrant AI ecosystem within Québec and across Canada. In line with Bell's investments in AI, this partnership reinforces Bell's transformation as a technology services leader, harnessing Mila's groundbreaking research to drive transformative improvements across Bell's operations. This announcement builds on the 18-month collaborative project Mila and Bell entered into earlier this year to apply deep learning neural network algorithms to Bell's environment.
Launch of Business Wi-Fi App
On July 24, 2024, Bell announced the launch of its new Bell Business Wi-Fi App, designed to provide small businesses in Ontario and Québec with an enhanced Wi-Fi experience that combines improved security, customizable guest Wi-Fi, employee and customer data insights, and simplified network management.











(1)Based on a third party score (Global Wireless Solutions OneScore) calculated using Bell wireless 5G and 5G+ network testing in Canada against other national wireless networks from April 2023 to June 2024.
19


Financial performance analysis
Q2 2024 performance highlights
Bell CTS Bell CTS
Revenues Adjusted EBITDA
(in $ millions) (in $ millions)
(% adjusted EBITDA margin)
image9.jpg
image10.jpg
Bell CTS Bell CTS
Revenues Adjusted EBITDA
(in $ millions) (in $ millions)
(% adjusted EBITDA margin)
image4.jpg
image16.jpg
20 BCE Inc.     2024 SECOND QUARTER SHAREHOLDER REPORT


Total mobile phone subscriber growth(2)
Mobile phone postpaid net subscriber activations in Q2 2024
Mobile phone prepaid net subscriber activations in Q2 2024
Mobile phone postpaid churn in Q2 2024(3)
Mobile phone blended average revenue per user (ARPU)(2)(4)
per month
+3.1% 78,500 52,543 1.18% (1.9%)
Q2 2024 vs. Q2 2023
Decreased (29.5%) vs. Q2 2023
vs. net activations of 14,257 in Q2 2023
Increased 0.24 pts vs. Q2 2023
Q2 2024:
Q2 2023:
            $58.04
$59.16

Retail high-speed Internet subscriber growth(5)(6)(7)
Retail high-speed Internet net subscriber activations in Q2 2024
Retail IPTV subscriber growth(1)(7)
+4.2% 23,841 +5.6%
Q2 2024 vs. Q2 2023
Decreased (4.4%) vs. Q2 2023
Q2 2024 vs. Q2 2023
Retail IPTV net subscriber losses in Q2 2024
Retail residential NAS lines subscriber decline(7)
(1,313) (8.4%)
vs. net activations of 11,506 in Q2 2023
Q2 2024 vs. Q2 2023

(1)In Q2 2024, we increased our retail IPTV subscriber base by 40,997 to align the deactivation policy for our Fibe TV streaming services to our traditional Fibe TV service.
(2)In Q1 2024, we adjusted our mobile phone postpaid subscriber base to remove very low to non-revenue generating business market subscribers of 105,802.
(3)Mobile phone churn is defined as the rate at which existing mobile phone subscribers cancel their services. Refer to section 8.6, KPIs in this MD&A for more information on this measure.
(4)Mobile phone blended ARPU is defined as Bell CTS wireless external services revenues divided by the average mobile phone subscriber base for the specified period, expressed as a dollar unit per month.
(5)In Q1 2024, we removed 11,645 turbo hubs subscribers from our retail high-speed Internet subscriber base as we are no longer actively marketing this product in our wireless-to-the-home footprint.
(6)In Q1 2024, our retail high-speed Internet subscriber base increased by 3,850 business subscribers as a result of a small acquisition.
(7)In Q2 2023, our retail high-speed Internet, retail IPTV and retail residential NAS lines subscriber bases increased by 35,080, 243 and 7,458 subscribers, respectively, as a result of small acquisitions.

Bell CTS results
Revenues
  Q2 2024 Q2 2023 $ change % change YTD 2024 YTD 2023 $ change % change
Wireless 1,788  1,766  22  1.2  % 3,562  3,489  73  2.1  %
Wireline data 2,034  2,021  13  0.6  % 4,046  4,022  24  0.6  %
Wireline voice 677  722  (45) (6.2  %) 1,360  1,448  (88) (6.1  %)
Other wireline services 79  75  5.3  % 160  153  4.6  %
External service revenues 4,578  4,584  (6) (0.1  %) 9,128  9,112  16  0.2  %
Inter-segment service revenues 14.3  % 14  14  —  — 
Operating service revenues 4,586  4,591  (5) (0.1  %) 9,142  9,126  16  0.2  %
Wireless 568  626  (58) (9.3  %) 1,252  1,252  —  — 
Wireline 129  137  (8) (5.8  %) 264  343  (79) (23.0  %)
External/Operating product revenues 697  763  (66) (8.7  %) 1,516  1,595  (79) (5.0  %)
Total external revenues 5,275  5,347  (72) (1.3  %) 10,644  10,707  (63) (0.6  %)
Total operating revenues 5,283  5,354  (71) (1.3  %) 10,658  10,721  (63) (0.6  %)
Bell CTS operating revenues decreased by 1.3% in Q2 2024, compared to Q2 2023, due to lower product revenues and lower service revenues, reflecting continued erosion in wireline voice revenues, partly offset by higher wireless and wireline data revenues. In the first half of the year, revenue decreased by 0.6% year over year, driven by lower product revenues, moderated by growth in service revenues, resulting from higher wireless and wireline data revenues, partly offset by ongoing erosion in wireline voice revenues.



21


Bell CTS operating service revenues decreased by 0.1% in Q2 2024, compared to Q2 2023, but increased by 0.2% in the first six months of the year, compared to the same period in 2023.
•Wireless revenues grew by 1.2% in Q2 2024 and by 2.1% in the first six months of the year, compared to the same periods last year, driven by:
•Continued growth in our mobile phone and connected device subscriber bases coupled with the flow-through of rate increases
These factors were partly offset by:
•Greater year-over-year competitive pricing pressures on rate plans
•Lower data overages driven by increased customer adoption of monthly plans with higher data thresholds, including unlimited plans
•Wireline data revenues grew by 0.6% in both Q2 2024 and the first half of the year, compared to the same periods last year, mainly driven by:
•Higher retail Internet and IPTV subscriber bases, along with the flow-through of residential rate increases
•The contribution from the acquisition of FX Innovation in June 2023 and other small acquisitions made over the past year
•Higher business solutions services sales to enterprise customers
These factors were partly offset by:
•Greater acquisition, retention and bundle discounts on residential services
•Ongoing erosion in our satellite TV subscriber base, and legacy data declines
•Wireline voice revenues declined by 6.2% in Q2 2024 and by 6.1% in the first half of the year, compared to the same periods last year, primarily due to:
•Continued retail residential NAS lines erosion, combined with business voice declines, driven by technological substitution to wireless and Internet-based services
These factors were partly offset by:
•Flow-through of residential rate increases
Bell CTS operating product revenues decreased by 8.7% in Q2 2024 and by 5.0% in the first six months of the year, compared to the same periods the last year.
•Wireless operating product revenues decreased by 9.3% in Q2 2024, compared to the same period last year, due to lower consumer electronic sales at The Source as a result of retail store closures related to the transaction with Best Buy Canada. The decline also reflected lower wireless product revenues from reduced contracted sales volumes, partly offset by a greater sales mix of premium mobile phones. In the first half of the year, wireless operating product revenues remained stable year over year, as the decline in consumer electronic sales at The Source and lower contracted wireless product sales volumes, were offset by the greater sales mix of premium mobile phones.
•Wireline operating product revenues declined by 5.8% in Q2 2024 and by 23.0% in the first six months of the year, compared to the same periods last year, attributable to exceptionally strong equipment sales in 2023 to large enterprise customers, mainly due to the recovery from global supply chain disruptions experienced in 2022, partly offset by higher land mobile radio systems sales to the government sector

Operating costs and adjusted EBITDA
  Q2 2024 Q2 2023 $ change % change YTD 2024 YTD 2023 $ change % change
Operating costs (2,804) (2,923) 119  4.1  % (5,731) (5,884) 153  2.6  %
Adjusted EBITDA 2,479 2,431 48  2.0  % 4,927 4,837 90  1.9  %
Adjusted EBITDA margin 46.9  % 45.4  % 1.5 pts 46.2  % 45.1  % 1.1 pts
Bell CTS operating costs decreased by 4.1% in Q2 2024 and by 2.6% in the first half of the year, compared to the same periods in 2023, due to:
•Cost reduction initiatives, mainly attributable to workforce reductions and other operating efficiencies
•Lower cost of goods sold associated with the decline in product revenues
•Savings from lower call volumes to our customer service centres
These factors were partly offset by:
•Greater costs from the acquisitions of FX Innovation in June 2023, along with other small acquisitions made during the past year
•Higher bad debt expense
•Increased costs related to the growth in business solutions services revenue

Bell CTS adjusted EBITDA increased by 2.0% in Q2 2024 and by 1.9% in the first half of the year, compared to the same periods in 2023, driven by lower operating costs, moderated by a decline in operating revenues. Adjusted EBITDA margin of 46.9% in Q2 2024, and 46.2% in the first half of the year, increased by 1.5 pts and 1.1 pts, respectively, over the same periods
22 BCE Inc.     2024 SECOND QUARTER SHAREHOLDER REPORT


in 2023, due to lower operating expenses, reflecting the favourable impact of various cost reduction initiatives and other operating efficiencies, coupled with a lower proportion of low-margin product sales in our total revenue base.


Bell CTS operating metrics
Wireless
  Q2 2024 Q2 2023 Change % change YTD 2024 YTD 2023 Change % change
Mobile phones
Blended ARPU(1) ($/month)
58.04 59.16 (1.12) (1.9  %) 58.09 58.66 (0.57) (1.0  %)
Gross subscriber activations 575,334 502,940 72,394 14.4  % 1,082,773 908,475 174,298 19.2  %
Postpaid 389,213 347,746 41,467 11.9  % 756,087 620,355 135,732 21.9  %
Prepaid 186,121 155,194 30,927 19.9  % 326,686 288,120 38,566 13.4  %
Net subscriber activations (losses) 131,043 125,539 5,504 4.4  % 156,251 152,174 4,077 2.7  %
Postpaid 78,500 111,282 (32,782) (29.5  %) 123,747 154,571 (30,824) (19.9  %)
Prepaid 52,543 14,257 38,286 n.m. 32,504 (2,397) 34,901 n.m.
Blended churn % (average per month) 1.47  % 1.27  % (0.20) pts 1.53  % 1.28  % (0.25) pts
Postpaid 1.18  % 0.94  % (0.24) pts 1.20  % 0.92  % (0.28) pts
Prepaid 4.60  % 4.68  % 0.08 pts 5.16  % 4.98  % (0.18) pts
Subscribers(1)
10,337,495 10,028,031 309,464 3.1  % 10,337,495 10,028,031 309,464 3.1  %
Postpaid(1)
9,440,775 9,151,229 289,546 3.2  % 9,440,775 9,151,229 289,546 3.2  %
Prepaid 896,720 876,802 19,918 2.3  % 896,720 876,802 19,918 2.3  %
Mobile connected devices
Net subscriber activations 87,917 79,537 8,380 10.5  % 154,323 150,279 4,044 2.7  %
Subscribers 2,886,871 2,589,520 297,351 11.5  % 2,886,871 2,589,520 297,351 11.5  %
n.m.: not meaningful
(1)In Q1 2024, we adjusted our mobile phone postpaid subscriber base to remove very low to non-revenue generating business market subscribers of 105,802.
Mobile phone blended ARPU of $58.04 in Q2 2024 and $58.09 in the first half of the year decreased by 1.9% and 1.0%, respectively, compared to the same periods last year, driven by:
•Greater year-over-year competitive pricing pressures on rate plans
•Lower data overages due to greater customer adoption of monthly plans with higher data thresholds, including unlimited plans
These factors were partly offset by:
•Flow-through of rate increases
•The impact from the Q1 2024 adjustment to our mobile phone postpaid subscriber base to remove very low to non-revenue generating business market subscribers of 105,802
Mobile phone gross subscriber activations grew by 14.4% in Q2 2024 and by 19.2% year to date, compared to the same periods last year, due to both higher postpaid and prepaid gross subscriber activations.
•Mobile phone postpaid gross subscriber activations increased year over year by 11.9% in Q2 2024 and by 21.9% in the first six months of the year, driven by effective promotions focused on growing higher-valued mobile phone subscribers, as well as reflecting the impact from population growth, and continued 5G and multi-product bundling momentum
•Mobile phone prepaid gross subscriber activations increased year over year by 19.9% in Q2 2024 and by 13.4% in the first half of the year, driven by expanded retail distribution and effective Lucky Mobile promotions
Mobile phone net subscriber activations increased by 4.4% in Q2 2024 and by 2.7% in the first half of the year, compared to the same periods last year, due to greater prepaid net subscriber activations, partly offset by lower postpaid net subscriber activations.
•Mobile phone postpaid net subscriber activations decreased year over year by 29.5% in the second quarter and by 19.9% in the first six months of the year, due to greater subscriber deactivations, partly offset by higher gross activations
•Mobile phone prepaid net subscriber activations increased year over year by 38,286 in Q2 2024, due to higher gross activations and fewer subscriber deactivations. In the first half of the year, mobile phone prepaid net subscriber activations increased by 34,901 year over year, due to higher gross activations, partly offset by greater subscriber deactivations.
23


Mobile phone blended churn of 1.47% in Q2 2024 and 1.53% year to date, increased by 0.20 pts and 0.25 pts, respectively, compared to the same periods in 2023.
•Mobile phone postpaid churn of 1.18% in the quarter and 1.20% in the first half of the year, increased by 0.24 pts and 0.28 pts, respectively, compared to the same periods last year, due to higher subscriber deactivations driven by greater overall competitive market activity and promotional offer intensity as we continue to focus our retention offers on higher-valued mobile phone subscribers
•Mobile phone prepaid churn of 4.60% decreased by 0.08 pts this quarter, compared to Q2 2023, due to lower subscriber deactivations driven by successful retention offers on Lucky Mobile, partly offset by greater overall market activity. Conversely, in the first six months of the year, mobile phone prepaid churn of 5.16% increased by 0.18 pts year over year, due to higher subscriber deactivations attributable to more attractive promotional offers and availability of mobile 5G service on postpaid discount brands, partly offset by successful retention offers on Lucky Mobile.

Mobile phone subscribers at June 30, 2024 totalled 10,337,495, an increase of 3.1%, from 10,028,031 subscribers reported at the end of Q2 2023. This consisted of 9,440,775 postpaid subscribers, an increase of 3.2% from 9,151,229 subscribers reported at the end of Q2 2023, and 896,720 prepaid subscribers, an increase of 2.3% from 876,802 subscribers reported at the end of Q2 2023.
Mobile connected device net subscriber activations increased by 10.5% in Q2 2024 and by 2.7% year to date, compared to the same periods last year, due to higher Internet of Things (IoT) net activations including greater connected cars subscriptions, partly offset by greater net losses from data devices.
Mobile connected device subscribers at June 30, 2024 totalled 2,886,871, up 11.5% from 2,589,520 subscribers reported at the end of Q2 2023.
Wireline data
Retail high-speed Internet
  Q2 2024 Q2 2023 Change % change YTD 2024 YTD 2023 Change % change
Retail net subscriber activations 23,841  24,934  (1,093) (4.4  %) 54,919  52,208  2,711  5.2  %
Retail subscribers(1)(2)(3)
4,520,553  4,338,511  182,042  4.2  % 4,520,553  4,338,511  182,042  4.2  %
(1)In Q1 2024, we removed 11,645 turbo hubs subscribers from our retail high-speed Internet subscriber base as we are no longer actively marketing this product in our wireless-to-the-home footprint.
(2)In Q1 2024, our retail high-speed Internet subscriber base increased by 3,850 business subscribers as a result of a small acquisition.
(3)In Q2 2023, our retail high-speed Internet subscriber base increased by 35,080 as a result of small acquisitions.
Retail high-speed Internet net subscriber activations decreased by 4.4% in Q2 2024, compared to the same period last year, mainly due to lower net activations in our small business market, moderated by modest growth in our residential market, mainly due to higher gross activations in our fibre-to-the-premise (FTTP) footprint and the success of our bundled service offerings with mobile services, partly offset by less new FTTP footprint expansion and greater subscriber deactivations due to aggressive promotional offers by competitors. In the first six months of the year, net activations increased by 5.2%, compared to the same period last year, as the higher year-over-year residential gross activations more than offset the unfavourable factors described above.
Retail high-speed Internet subscribers totalled 4,520,553 at June 30, 2024, up 4.2% from 4,338,511 subscribers reported at the end of Q2 2023.
Retail IPTV
  Q2 2024 Q2 2023 Change % change YTD 2024 YTD 2023 Change % change
Retail IPTV net subscriber (losses) activations (1,313) 11,506  (12,819) n.m. 12,861  22,405  (9,544) (42.6  %)
Retail IPTV subscribers(1)(2)
2,124,200  2,010,829  113,371  5.6  % 2,124,200  2,010,829  113,371  5.6  %
n.m.: not meaningful
(1)In Q2 2024, we increased our retail IPTV subscriber base by 40,997 to align the deactivation policy for our Fibe TV streaming services to our traditional Fibe TV service.
(2)In Q2 2023, our retail IPTV subscriber base increased by 243 as a result of small acquisitions.

Retail IPTV net subscriber activations decreased by 12,819 in Q2 2024 and by 9,544 in the first six months of the year, compared to the same periods in 2023, driven by lower gross activations from our Fibe TV streaming services due to rate increases in the quarter for new subscribers, along with reduced promotional offers, greater competitive intensity and higher substitution with OTT services.
Retail IPTV subscribers at June 30, 2024 totalled 2,124,200, up 5.6% from 2,010,829 subscribers reported at the end of Q2 2023. In Q2 2024, we increased our retail IPTV subscriber base by 40,997 to align the deactivation policy for our Fibe TV streaming services to our traditional Fibe TV service.

24 BCE Inc.     2024 SECOND QUARTER SHAREHOLDER REPORT


Wireline voice
  Q2 2024 Q2 2023 Change % change YTD 2024 YTD 2023 Change % change
Retail residential NAS lines net losses (53,250) (49,608) (3,642) (7.3  %) (97,161) (96,489) (672) (0.7  %)
Retail residential NAS lines(1)
1,924,456  2,101,740  (177,284) (8.4  %) 1,924,456  2,101,740  (177,284) (8.4  %)
(1)In Q2 2023, our retail residential NAS lines subscriber base increased by 7,458 subscribers as a result of small acquisitions.
Retail residential NAS lines net losses declined by 7.3% in the quarter and by 0.7% in the first half of the year, compared to the same periods in 2023, due to the unfavourable impact of continued substitution to wireless and Internet-based technologies. In the first six months of the year, retail residential NAS lines net losses were favourably impacted by lower year-over-year competitive intensity in Q1 2024, resulting in lower deactivations.
Retail residential NAS lines of 1,924,456 at June 30, 2024, declined by 8.4% from 2,101,740 lines reported at the end of Q2 2023. The Q2 2024 rate of erosion of 8.4% has deteriorated over the 4.8% experienced in Q2 2023, mainly due to the impact of the acquisition of Distributel Communications Limited in Q4 2022, along with small acquisitions made in Q2 2023.
Assumptions
As at the date of this MD&A, our forward-looking statements set out in the BCE 2023 Annual MD&A, as updated or supplemented in the BCE 2024 First Quarter MD&A and in this MD&A, are based on certain assumptions including, without limitation, the following assumptions, the assumptions referred to in the Bell Media business segment discussion set out in section 3.2, Bell Media, of this MD&A, as well as the economic, market and other assumptions referred to in section 1.3, Assumptions of this MD&A.
•Increase our market share of national operators’ wireless mobile phone net additions
•Increased competitive intensity and promotional activity across all regions and market segments
•Ongoing expansion and deployment of 5G and 5G+ wireless networks, offering competitive coverage and quality
•Continued diversification of our distribution strategy with a focus on expanding direct-to-consumer (DTC) and online transactions
•In the BCE 2023 Annual MD&A, we disclosed our assumption of moderating growth in mobile phone blended ARPU. We are now assuming declining mobile phone blended ARPU, due to a higher-than-anticipated level of competitive pricing pressure which intensified progressively in the first quarter of 2024, that has carried over from the seasonally more intense Q4 2023 selling period.
•Continuing business customer adoption of advanced 5G, 5G+ and IoT solutions
•Improving wireless handset device availability in addition to stable device pricing and margins
•Further deployment of direct fibre to more homes and businesses within our wireline footprint, but at a slower pace than during any of 2020 to 2023
•Continued growth in retail Internet and IPTV subscribers
•Increasing wireless and Internet-based technological substitution
•Continued focus on the consumer household and bundled service offers for mobility and Internet customers
•Continued large business customer migration to IP-based systems
•Ongoing competitive repricing pressures in our business and wholesale markets
•Continued competitive intensity in our small and medium-sized business markets as cable operators and other telecommunications competitors continue to intensify their focus on business customers
•Traditional high-margin product categories challenged by large global cloud and OTT providers of business voice and data solutions expanding into Canada with on-demand services
•Increasing customer adoption of OTT services resulting in downsizing of TV packages
•Growing consumption of OTT TV services and on-demand video streaming, as well as the proliferation of devices, such as tablets, that consume large quantities of bandwidth, will require ongoing capital investment
•Realization of cost savings related to operating efficiencies enabled by our direct fibre footprint, changes in consumer behaviour and product innovation, digital adoption, product and service enhancements, expanding self-serve capabilities, new call centre and digital investments, other improvements to the customer service experience, management workforce reductions including attrition and retirements, and lower contracted rates from our suppliers
•No adverse material financial, operational or competitive consequences of changes in or implementation of regulations affecting our communication and technology services business

25



3.2 Bell Media
Key business developments
Acquisition of OUTFRONT Media’s Canadian out-of-home media business
On June 7, 2024, Bell Media completed the previously announced acquisition of the Canadian out-of-home (OOH) media business of OUTFRONT Media Inc., OUTEDGE Media Canada (OUTEDGE), for cash consideration of $429 million ($418 million net of cash acquired). The acquisition of OUTEDGE is expected to support Bell Media’s digital media strategy and to deliver multi-channel marketing solutions across Canada. Pursuant to a consent agreement negotiated with the Competition Bureau, Bell Media must dispose of 669 advertising displays in Québec and Ontario. The results of OUTEDGE are included in our Bell Media segment.
Bell Media Becomes Strategic Canadian Partner of TikTok’s Pulse Premiere
On June 6, 2024, Bell Media announced it joined onto a strategic partnership that brings TikTok’s Pulse Premiere to Canada. Pulse Premiere is an advertising solution that gives advertisers' brands the control and predictability to choose where their ads are placed, adjacent to select publisher partner content on the For You feed. The new partnership allows ads to be featured adjacent to Bell Media’s TikTok content.
Partnership with Dotdash Meredith to Expand Premium Digital Advertising in Canada
Bell Media was selected to become the new Canadian sales partner of Dotdash Meredith, America’s largest digital publisher, expanding premium digital advertising in Canada. This partnership leverages Dotdash Meredith’s premium digital inventory from more than 40 renowned media brands as well as Bell Media’s sales team and advertising expertise to expand the reach and effectiveness of digital ad campaigns across the country.
Launch of Bell Ads for Business, a Self-Serve Digital Advertising Buying Platform
On June 6, 2024, Bell Media announced the launch of Bell Ads for Business, a new advertising platform that allows businesses across Canada to utilize Bell’s premium Canadian data, and target intended audiences, while accessing digital inventory across the open internet and Bell Media digital properties. Powered by Bell First Party Data, Bell Ads for Business allows local advertisers to take advantage of the unique capabilities of the Bell demand-side platform (DSP) through an easy-to-use self-serve platform.
New FAST Channel platform partners
On June 6, 2024, Bell Media announced the addition of new platform partners for its 10 free ad-supported streaming television (FAST) channels which launched in April 2024 on LG Channels. Bell Media’s 10 FAST channels will launch this year on Plex and The Roku Channel, and as previously announced, Samsung TV Plus. The launch of additional FAST channel partners expands advertising opportunities for Bell Media clients, allowing advertisers to reach a wider Canadian audience and effectively engage their desired target demographics.




















26 BCE Inc.     2024 SECOND QUARTER SHAREHOLDER REPORT


Financial performance analysis
Q2 2024 performance highlights
Bell Media Bell Media
Revenues Adjusted EBITDA
(in $ millions) (in $ millions)
image17.jpg
image11.jpg
Bell Media Bell Media
Revenues Adjusted EBITDA
(in $ millions) (in $ millions)
image12.jpg
image13.jpg







27


Bell Media results
Revenues
Q2 2024 Q2 2023 $ change % change YTD 2024 YTD 2023 $ change % change
External revenues 730  719  11  1.5  % 1,372  1,413  (41) (2.9  %)
Inter-segment revenues 82  86  (4) (4.7  %) 165  172  (7) (4.1  %)
Bell Media operating revenues 812  805  0.9  % 1,537  1,585  (48) (3.0  %)
Bell Media operating revenues increased by 0.9% in Q2 2024, compared to the same period last year, driven by higher advertising and other revenues, partly offset by lower subscriber revenues. In the first half of the year, operating revenues decreased by 3.0%, compared to the same period last year, due to lower subscriber revenues, partly offset by higher advertising and other revenues. Operating revenues benefited from the continued growth of digital revenues(1) of 23% in the quarter and 28% in the first six months of the year, compared to the same periods last year.
•Advertising revenues increased by 1.9% in Q2 2024 and by 1.8% year to date, compared to the same periods last year, due to continued growth in digital advertising revenues mainly resulting from increased bookings from Bell Media's strategic audience management (SAM) TV media sales tool, higher OOH revenues from the acquisition of OUTEDGE in June 2024 and growth in advertising revenues from sports specialty TV, including the benefit from the broadcast of the UEFA EURO 2024 and the CONMEBOL Copa América 2024. The growth in advertising revenues was moderated by continued lower demand for traditional broadcast TV and radio advertising, as a result of ongoing unfavourable economic conditions, coupled with content delays driven by the Writers Guild of America (WGA) and the Screen Actors Guild and American Federation of Television and Radio Artists (SAG-AFTRA) strikes in 2023.
•Subscriber revenues declined by 4.7% in Q2 2024 and by 9.4% in the first six months of the year, compared to the same periods last year, due to lower year-over-year BDU subscribers, partly offset by growth in Crave and sports streaming DTC subscribers. In the first half of the year, subscriber revenues were also unfavourably impacted by the benefit last year from a retroactive adjustment related to a contract with a Canadian TV distributor.
•Other revenues increased in Q2 2024 and in the first half of the year, compared to the same periods last year, mainly due to higher year-over-year revenues from Formula 1 and higher program sales
Operating costs and adjusted EBITDA
Q2 2024 Q2 2023 $ change % change YTD 2024 YTD 2023 $ change % change
Operating costs (594) (591) (3) (0.5%) (1,202) (1,239) 37  3.0%
Adjusted EBITDA 218 214 1.9% 335 346 (11) (3.2%)
Adjusted EBITDA margin 26.8  % 26.6  % 0.2  pts 21.8  % 21.8  % — 
Bell Media operating costs increased by 0.5% in Q2 2024, compared to the same period last year, due to:
•Higher costs associated with the revenue growth from Formula 1
•Greater costs due to the acquisition of OUTEDGE
•Higher content costs from the broadcast of UEFA EURO 2024 and CONMEBOL Copa América 2024

These factors were partly offset by:
•Restructuring initiatives undertaken over the past year as a result of the unfavourable economic and broadcasting regulatory environments
•Lower costs driven by content delays due to the WGA and SAG-AFTRA strikes in 2023
In the first six months of the year, operating costs declined by 3.0% year over year, reflecting lower costs driven by content delays due to the WGA and SAG-AFTRA strikes in 2023, restructuring initiatives undertaken over the past year as a result of the unfavourable economic and broadcasting regulatory environments along with the cessation of the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) Part II broadcasting licence fee, partly offset by the higher operating costs discussed above.
Bell Media adjusted EBITDA grew by 1.9% in Q2 2024, compared to Q2 2023, due to higher operating revenues, partly offset by greater operating costs. Conversely, year-to-date adjusted EBITDA decreased by 3.2% year over year, due to lower operating revenues, partly offset by decreased operating costs.



(1)Digital revenues are comprised of advertising revenue from digital platforms including websites, mobile apps, connected TV apps and OOH digital assets/platforms, as well as advertising procured through Bell digital buying platforms and subscription revenue from DTC services and video on demand services.


Assumptions
28 BCE Inc. 2024 SECOND QUARTER SHAREHOLDER REPORT As at the date of this MD&A, our forward-looking statements set out in the BCE 2023 Annual MD&A, as updated or supplemented in the BCE 2024 First Quarter MD&A and in this MD&A, are based on certain assumptions including, without limitation, the following assumptions, the assumptions referred to in the Bell CTS business segment discussion set out in section 3.1, Bell CTS, of this MD&A, as well as the economic, market and other assumptions referred to in section 1.3, Assumptions, of this MD&A.
•Overall digital revenue expected to reflect continued scaling of our SAM TV and demand-side platform buying platforms, expansion of Addressable TV, as well as DTC subscriber growth, contributing towards the advancement of our digital-first media strategy
•Leveraging of first-party data to improve targeting, advertisement delivery including personalized viewing experience and attribution
•Continued escalation of media costs to secure quality content
•Continued scaling of Crave through optimized content offering, user experience improvements and expanded distribution
•Continued support in original French content with a focus on digital platforms such as Crave, Noovo.ca and iHeartRadio Canada, to better serve our French-language customers through a personalized digital experience
•Ability to successfully acquire and produce highly-rated and differentiated content
•Building and maintaining strategic supply arrangements for content across all screens and platforms
•No adverse material financial, operational or competitive consequences of changes in or implementation of regulations affecting our media business













29


4 Financial and capital management
This section tells you how we manage our cash and capital resources to carry out our strategy and deliver financial results. It provides an analysis of our financial condition, cash flows and liquidity on a consolidated basis.
4.1 Net debt
June 30, 2024 December 31, 2023 $ change % change
Long-term debt 32,918  31,135  1,783  5.7  %
Debt due within one year 6,587  5,042  1,545  30.6  %
50% of preferred shares(1)
1,780  1,834  (54) (2.9  %)
Cash (1,398) (547) (851) n.m.
Cash equivalents (250) (225) (25) (11.1  %)
Short-term investments (750) (1,000) 250  25.0  %
Net debt(2)
38,887  36,239  2,648  7.3  %
n.m.: not meaningful
(1)50% of outstanding preferred shares of $3,559 million and $3,667 million at June 30, 2024 and December 31, 2023, respectively, are classified as debt consistent with the treatment by some credit rating agencies.
(2)Net debt is a non-GAAP financial measure. See section 8.1, Non-GAAP financial measures in this MD&A for more information on this measure.
The increase of $1,545 million in debt due within one year and the increase of $1,783 million in long-term debt were due to:
•the issuance by Bell Canada of Series US-9 Notes, with a total principal amount of $700 million in U.S. dollars ($942 million in Canadian dollars)
•the issuance by Bell Canada of Series US-10 Notes, with a total principal amount of $750 million in U.S. dollars ($1,009 million in Canadian dollars)
•the issuance by Bell Canada of Series M-61 MTN debentures, with a total principal amount of $400 million
•the issuance by Bell Canada of Series M-63 MTN debentures, with a total principal amount of $1,100 million
•an increase in notes payable (net of repayments) of $1,383 million
•an increase in outstanding loans of $324 million under the Bell Mobility uncommitted trade loan agreement
•a net increase of $143 million due to higher lease liabilities and other debt
Partly offset by:
•the repayment at maturity of Series M-44 MTN debentures, with a total principal amount of $1,000 million
•the repayment at maturity of Series US-3 Notes, with a total principal amount of $600 million in U.S. dollars ($748 million in Canadian dollars)
•the repayment at maturity of Series 10 Notes, with a total principal amount of $225 million
The increase in cash of $851 million, the increase in cash equivalents of $25 million and the decrease in short-term investments of $250 million were mainly due to:
•$3,808 million of issuance of long-term debt
•$3,269 million of cash flows from operating activities
•$1,383 million increase in notes payable (net of repayments)

Partly offset by:
•$2,638 million repayment of long-term debt
•$1,980 million of capital expenditures
•$1,793 million of dividends paid on BCE common shares
•$518 million for spectrum licences
•$517 million for business acquisitions
•$144 million paid for the purchase on the open market of BCE common shares for the settlement of share-based payments
•$91 million of dividends paid on BCE preferred shares
•$76 million paid for the repurchase of BCE preferred shares


30 BCE Inc.     2024 SECOND QUARTER SHAREHOLDER REPORT



4.2 Outstanding share data
Common shares outstanding Number of shares
Outstanding, January 1, 2024 912,274,545 
Shares issued under deferred share plan 8,558 
Outstanding, June 30, 2024
912,283,103 


Stock options outstanding Number of options Weighted average
exercise price ($)
Outstanding, January 1, 2024 7,484,561  61 
Forfeited or expired (930,211) 59 
Outstanding and exercisable, June 30, 2024 6,554,350  61 

4.3 Cash flows
Q2 2024 Q2 2023 $ change % change YTD 2024 YTD 2023 $ change % change
Cash flows from operating activities 2,137  2,365  (228) (9.6  %) 3,269  3,612  (343) (9.5  %)
Capital expenditures (978) (1,307) 329  25.2  % (1,980) (2,393) 413  17.3  %
Cash dividends paid on preferred shares (45) (46) 2.2  % (91) (101) 10  9.9  %
Cash dividends paid by subsidiaries to non-controlling interest (28) (1) (27) n.m. (42) (22) (20) (90.9  %)
Acquisition and other costs paid 11  n.m. 26  21  n.m.
Free cash flow 1,097  1,016  81  8.0  % 1,182  1,101  81  7.4  %
Business acquisitions (435) (196) (239) n.m. (517) (221) (296) n.m.
Business dispositions —  208  (208) (100.0  %) —  208  (208) (100.0  %)
Acquisition and other costs paid (11) (5) (6) n.m. (26) (5) (21) n.m.
(Decrease) increase in short-term investments (50) —  (50) n.m. 250  —  250  n.m.
Spectrum licences (414) (145) (269) n.m. (518) (156) (362) n.m.
Other investing activities (11) (16) 31.3  % (21) 15  (36) n.m.
Increase (decrease) in notes payable 404  (101) 505  n.m. 1,383  (184) 1,567  n.m.
Decrease in securitized receivables —  (500) 500  100.0  % —  —  —  — 
Issue of long-term debt 1,617  1,199  418  34.9  % 3,808  2,703  1,105  40.9  %
Repayment of long-term debt (525) (346) (179) (51.7  %) (2,638) (645) (1,993) n.m.
Repurchase of a financial liability —  —  —  —  —  (149) 149  100.0  %
Issue of common shares —  (8) (100.0  %) —  18  (18) (100.0  %)
Purchase of shares for settlement of share-based payments (40) (42) 4.8  % (144) (135) (9) (6.7  %)
Repurchase of preferred shares (38) (32) (6) (18.8  %) (76) (63) (13) (20.6  %)
Cash dividends paid on common shares (910) (882) (28) (3.2  %) (1,793) (1,721) (72) (4.2  %)
Other financing activities (7) 11  n.m. (14) (15) 6.7  %
Net increase (decrease) in cash 609  (201) 810  n.m. 851  351  500  n.m.
Net increase in cash equivalents 79  360  (281) (78.1  %) 25  400  (375) (93.8  %)
n.m.: not meaningful

Cash flows from operating activities and free cash flow
Cash flows from operating activities in the second quarter of 2024 decreased by $228 million, compared to the same period last year, mainly due to higher interest paid, higher severance and other costs paid and lower cash from working capital due in part to timing of supplier payments, partly offset by lower income taxes paid and higher adjusted EBITDA.
31


Cash flows from operating activities in the first half of 2024 decreased by $343 million, compared to the same period last year, mainly due to higher interest paid, higher income taxes paid, higher severance and other costs paid and lower cash from working capital, partly offset by higher adjusted EBITDA.
Free cash flow in both the second quarter and first half of 2024 increased by $81 million, compared to the same periods last year, due to lower capital expenditures, partly offset by lower cash flows from operating activities, excluding cash from acquisition and other costs paid.

Capital expenditures
Q2 2024 Q2 2023 $ change % change YTD 2024 YTD 2023 $ change % change
Bell CTS 945 1,271 326  25.6  % 1,920 2,323 403  17.3  %
Capital intensity(1)
17.9  % 23.7  % 5.8  pts 18.0  % 21.7  % 3.7  pts
Bell Media 33 36 8.3  % 60 70 10  14.3  %
Capital intensity 4.1  % 4.5  % 0.4  pts 3.9  % 4.4  % 0.5  pts
BCE 978 1,307 329  25.2  % 1,980 2,393 413  17.3  %
Capital intensity 16.3  % 21.5  % 5.2  pts 16.5  % 19.7  % 3.2  pts
(1)Capital intensity is defined as capital expenditures divided by operating revenues.
BCE capital expenditures of $978 million in Q2 2024 and $1,980 million year to date, declined by $329 million and $413 million, respectively, compared to the same periods last year. This corresponded to a capital intensity ratio of 16.3% in Q2 2024 and 16.5% year to date, down 5.2 pts and 3.2 pts, respectively, over the same periods in 2023. The year-over-year declines reflected:
•Lower capital expenditures in Bell CTS of $326 million in Q2 2024 and $403 million in the first half of the year, consistent with a planned reduction in capital spending, mainly reflecting a slowdown in our FTTP rollout
•Reduced capital expenditures in Bell Media of $3 million in Q2 2024 and $10 million in the first half of the year, mainly due to greater spending in Q2 2023 on Addressable TV. Additionally, the year-to-date decline also reflected higher spending in Q1 2023 on studio expansions, partly offset by higher investments to support digital growth.
Business acquisitions
On June 7, 2024, Bell Media completed the previously announced acquisition of OUTFRONT Media Inc.’s Canadian OOH media business, OUTEDGE, for cash consideration of $429 million ($418 million net of cash acquired). The acquisition of OUTEDGE is expected to support Bell Media’s digital media strategy and to deliver multi-channel marketing solutions across Canada. Pursuant to a consent agreement negotiated with the Competition Bureau, Bell Media must dispose of 669 advertising displays in Québec and Ontario.
On June 1, 2023, Bell acquired FX Innovation, a Montréal-based provider of cloud-focused managed and professional services and workflow automation solutions for business clients, for cash consideration of $157 million, of which $12 million is payable within two years and an estimated $6 million of additional cash consideration contingent on the achievement of certain performance objectives. This contingent consideration is expected to be settled by 2027 and the maximum amount payable is $7 million. The acquisition of FX Innovation aims to position Bell as a technology services leader for our enterprise customers.

Business dispositions
On May 3, 2023, we completed the previously announced sale of our 63% ownership in certain production studios, which were included in our Bell Media segment, for net cash proceeds of $211 million.

Spectrum licences
On November 30, 2023, Bell Mobility secured the right to acquire 939 licences of 3800 MHz spectrum across Canada for $518 million. On January 17, 2024, Bell made a first payment of $104 million to Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada (ISED). The remaining balance of $414 million was paid on May 29, 2024, at which time Bell acquired the 3800 MHz spectrum licences.
On May 19, 2023, after approval from ISED, Bell Mobility obtained the right to use, through subordination, certain of Xplore Inc.'s 3500 MHz spectrum licences in Québec, for $145 million.



32 BCE Inc. 2024 SECOND QUARTER SHAREHOLDER REPORT In the second quarter of 2024, we issued debt, net of repayments. This included:


Debt instruments
2024
•$1,617 million issuance of long-term debt comprised of the issuance of Series M-61 MTN debentures with a total principal amount of $400 million, the issuance of Series M-63 MTN debentures with a total principal amount of $1,100 million, the increase of $81 million in outstanding loans under the Bell Mobility uncommitted trade loan agreement and the issuance of other debt of $40 million, partly offset by $4 million of discounts on our debt issuances
•$404 million issuance (net of repayments) of notes payable
Partly offset by:
•$525 million repayment of long-term debt comprised of the repayment of Series 10 Notes with a total principal amount of $225 million and net payments of leases and other debt of $300 million
In the first half of 2024, we issued debt, net of repayments. This included:
•$3,808 million issuance of long-term debt comprised of the issuance of Series US-9 Notes with a total principal amount of $700 million in U.S. dollars ($942 million in Canadian dollars), the issuance of Series US-10 Notes with a total principal amount of $750 million in U.S. dollars ($1,009 million in Canadian dollars), the issuance of Series M-61 MTN debentures with a total principal amount of $400 million, the issuance of Series M-63 MTN debentures with a total principal amount of $1,100 million, the increase of $324 million in outstanding loans under the Bell Mobility uncommitted trade loan agreement and the issuance of other debt of $40 million, partly offset by $7 million of discounts on our debt issuances
•$1,383 million issuance (net of repayments) of notes payable
Partly offset by:
•$2,638 million repayment of long-term debt comprised of the repayment of Series M-44 MTN debentures with a total principal amount of $1,000 million, the repayment of Series US-3 Notes with a total principal amount of $600 million in U.S. dollars ($748 million in Canadian dollars), the repayment of Series 10 Notes with a total principal amount of $225 million and net payments of leases and other debt of $665 million
2023
In the second quarter of 2023, we issued debt, net of repayments. This included:
•$1,199 million issuance of long-term debt comprised of the issuance of Series US-8 Notes with a total principal amount of $850 million in U.S. dollars ($1,138 million in Canadian dollars) and other debt of $62 million, partly offset by $1 million of discounts on our debt issuances
Partly offset by:
•$500 million decrease in securitized receivables
•$346 million repayment of long-term debt comprised of net payments of leases and other debt
•$101 million repayment (net of issuances) of notes payable
In the first half of 2023, we issued debt, net of repayments. This included:
•$2,703 million issuance of long-term debt comprised of the issuance of Series M-58 MTN debentures with a total principal amount of $1,050 million and series M-59 MTN debentures with a total principal amount of $450 million, the issuance of Series US-8 Notes, with a total principal amount of $850 million in U.S. dollars ($1,138 million in Canadian dollars) and the issuance of other debt of $70 million, partly offset by $5 million of discounts on our debt issuances
Partly offset by:
•$645 million repayment of long-term debt comprised of net payments of leases and other debt
•$184 million repayment (net of issuances) of notes payable

Consolidation of MLSE ownership under BCE (repurchase of a financial liability)
In January 2023, BCE repurchased the 9% interest held by the BCE Master Trust Fund (Master Trust Fund), a trust fund that holds pension fund investments serving the pension obligations of the BCE group pension plan participants, in Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment Ltd. (MLSE) for a cash consideration of $149 million, as a result of BCE’s obligation to repurchase the Master Trust Fund’s interest in MLSE at that price.
Issuance of common shares
The issuance of common shares in the second quarter and on a year-to-date basis in 2024 decreased by $8 million and $18 million, respectively, compared to the same periods in 2023, due to no stock options having been exercised in Q2 2024 and in the first half of 2024.


33


Repurchase of preferred shares
2024
For the three and six months ended June 30, 2024, BCE repurchased and canceled 2,187,900 and 4,301,488 First Preferred Shares under its normal course issuer bid for a total cost of $38 million and $76 million, respectively.
2023
For the three and six months ended June 30, 2023, BCE repurchased and canceled 1,848,950 and 3,560,950 First Preferred Shares under its normal course issuer bid for a total cost of $32 million and $63 million, respectively.
Cash dividends paid on common shares
In the second quarter of 2024, cash dividends paid on common shares increased by $28 million compared to Q2 2023, due to a higher dividend paid in Q2 2024 of $0.9975 per common share compared to $0.9675 per common share in Q2 2023.
In the first half of 2024, cash dividends paid on common shares increased by $72 million compared to 2023, due to a higher dividend paid in the first half of 2024 of $1.9650 per common share compared to $1.8875 per common share for the same period last year.

4.4 Post-employment benefit plans
For the three months ended June 30, 2024, we recorded an increase in our post-employment benefit plans and a gain, before taxes, in OCI of $152 million, due to an increase in the discount rate of 5.0% at June 30, 2024, compared to 4.9% at March 31, 2024, partly offset by a lower-than-expected return on plan assets and an increase in the effect of the asset limit.
For the six months ended June 30, 2024, we recorded an increase in our post-employment benefit plans and a gain, before taxes, in OCI of $581 million, due to an increase in the discount rate of 5.0% at June 30, 2024, compared to 4.6% at December 31, 2023, partly offset by a lower-than-expected return on plan assets and an increase in the effect of the asset limit.
For the three months ended June 30, 2023, we recorded a decrease in our post-employment benefit plans and a loss, before taxes, in OCI of $187 million, due in part to a lower-than-expected return on plan assets, partly offset by a decrease in the effect of the asset limit. The discount rate remained unchanged at 5.0% compared to March 31, 2023.
For the six months ended June 30, 2023, we recorded a decrease in our post-employment benefit plans and a loss, before taxes, in OCI of $361 million, due to a decrease in the discount rate of 5.0% at June 30, 2023, compared to 5.3% at December 31, 2022, partly offset by a higher-than-expected return on plan assets and a decrease in the effect of the asset limit.

4.5 Financial risk management
Fair value
The following table provides the fair value details of certain financial instruments measured at amortized cost in the consolidated statements of financial position (statements of financial position).
  June 30, 2024 December 31, 2023
Classification Fair value methodology Carrying value Fair value Carrying value Fair value
Debt securities
and other debt
Debt due within one year and long-term debt Quoted market price of debt 31,504  29,828  29,049  28,225 

34 BCE Inc.     2024 SECOND QUARTER SHAREHOLDER REPORT


The following table provides the fair value details of financial instruments measured at fair value in the statements of financial position.
Classification Fair value
Carrying value of asset (liability) Quoted prices in active markets for identical assets (level 1)
Observable market data (level 2)(1)
Non-observable market inputs (level 3)(2)
June 30, 2024        
Publicly-traded and privately-held investments(3)
Other non-current assets 599  19  —  580 
Derivative financial instruments Other current assets, trade payables and other liabilities, other non-current assets and liabilities (331) —  (331) — 
Other Trade payables and other liabilities and other non-current assets 148  —  220  (72)
December 31, 2023        
Publicly-traded and privately-held investments(3)
Other non-current assets 587  10  —  577 
Derivative financial instruments Other current assets, trade payables and other liabilities, other non-current assets and liabilities (488) —  (488) — 
Other Other non-current assets and liabilities 147  —  216  (69)
(1)Observable market data such as equity prices, interest rates, swap rate curves and foreign currency exchange rates.
(2)Non-observable market inputs such as discounted cash flows and revenue and earnings multiples. For certain privately-held investments and other financial liabilities, changes in our valuation assumptions may result in a significant increase (decrease) in the fair value of our level 3 financial instruments.
(3)Unrealized gains and losses are recorded in Other comprehensive income (loss) in the statements of comprehensive income and are reclassified from Accumulated other comprehensive loss to the Deficit in the statements of financial position when realized.

Market risk
Currency exposures
In 2024, we entered into cross currency interest rate swaps with a notional amount of $700 million in U.S. dollars ($942 million in Canadian dollars) to hedge the U.S. currency exposure of our US-9 Notes maturing in 2034. The fair value of the cross currency interest rate swaps at June 30, 2024 was a net liability of $5 million recognized in Other current assets and Other non-current liabilities in the statements of financial position.
In 2024, we entered into cross currency interest rate swaps with a notional amount of $750 million in U.S. dollars ($1,009 million in Canadian dollars) to hedge the U.S. currency exposure of our US-10 Notes maturing in 2054. In connection with these swaps, cross currency basis rate swaps outstanding at December 31, 2023 with a notional amount of $644 million were settled. The fair value of the cross currency interest rate swaps at June 30, 2024 was a net liability of $7 million recognized in Other current assets, Other non-current assets, and Other non-current liabilities in the statements of financial position.
In 2024, we entered into cross currency interest rate swaps with a notional amount of $240 million in U.S. dollars ($324 million in Canadian dollars) to hedge the U.S. currency exposure of outstanding loans maturing in 2026 under our Bell Mobility uncommitted trade loan agreement. The fair value of the cross currency interest rate swaps at June 30, 2024 was a net asset of $4 million recognized in Other current assets and Other non-current assets in the statements of financial position.
A 10% depreciation (appreciation) in the value of the Canadian dollar relative to the U.S. dollar would result in a gain of $12 million (loss of $44 million) recognized in net earnings at June 30, 2024 and a gain of $130 million (loss of $119 million) recognized in Other comprehensive income (loss) at June 30, 2024, with all other variables held constant.
35


The following table provides further details on our outstanding foreign currency forward contracts and options at June 30, 2024.
Type of hedge Buy
currency
Amount to receive Sell
currency
Amount
to pay
Maturity Hedged item
Cash flow (1)
USD 1,174  CAD 1,607  2024 Loans
Cash flow USD 1,180  CAD 1,601  2024 Commercial paper
Cash flow USD 359  CAD 459  2024 Anticipated purchases
Cash flow PHP 1,470  CAD 35  2024  Anticipated purchases
Cash flow USD 608  CAD 793  2025  Anticipated purchases
Cash flow PHP 3,193  CAD 75  2025  Anticipated purchases
Cash flow USD 280  CAD 377  2026  Anticipated purchases
Economic USD 90  CAD 118  2024  Anticipated purchases
Economic - call options USD 124  CAD 151  2024 Anticipated purchases
Economic - call options CAD 112  USD 78  2024 Anticipated purchases
Economic - put options USD 335  CAD 437  2024 Anticipated purchases
Economic USD 120  CAD 158  2025 Anticipated purchases
Economic CAD 137  USD 100  2025 Anticipated purchases
Economic - options (2)
USD 60  CAD 78  2025 Anticipated purchases
Economic - call options USD 270  CAD 345  2025 Anticipated purchases
Economic - put options USD 360  CAD 466  2025 Anticipated purchases
Economic USD 100  CAD 136  2026 Anticipated purchases
(1)Forward contracts to hedge loans secured by receivables under our securitization program.
(2)Foreign currency options with a leverage provision and a profit cap limitation.
Interest rate exposures
In 2024, we entered into forward starting interest rate swaps, effective from 2026, with a notional amount of $336 million to hedge the fair value of our US-10 Notes maturing in 2054. The fair value of the interest rate swaps at June 30, 2024 was an asset of $2 million recognized in Other non-current assets in the statements of financial position.
In 2024, we sold interest rate swaptions, expiring in 2024, with a notional amount of $300 million to hedge economically the fair value of our M-17 MTN debentures maturing in 2035. The fair value of the interest rate swaptions at June 30, 2024 was a liability of $3 million recognized in Trade payables and other liabilities in the statements of financial position.
In 2024, we sold interest rate swaptions, expiring in 2024, with a notional amount of $750 million for $3 million to hedge economically the fair value of our M-53 MTN debentures maturing in 2027. The fair value of the interest rate swaptions at June 30, 2024 was a liability of $3 million recognized in Trade payables and other liabilities in the statements of financial position.
In 2024, we sold interest rate floors, maturing in 2029, with a notional amount of $350 million and purchased interest rate options, expiring in 2026, with a notional amount of $440 million to hedge economically the interest cost of our M-62 MTN debentures maturing in 2029. The fair value of the interest rate floors and interest rate options is a net asset of $5 million recognized in Other current assets, Other non-current assets, Trade payables and other liabilities and Other non-current liabilities in the statements of financial position.
A 1% increase (decrease) in interest rates would result in a loss of $28 million (gain of $8 million) recognized in net earnings for the six months ended June 30, 2024, with all other variables held constant.
Equity price exposures
We use equity forward contracts on BCE’s common shares to hedge economically the cash flow exposure related to the settlement of equity settled share-based compensation plans. The fair value of our equity forward contracts at June 30, 2024 and December 31, 2023 was a net liability of $266 million and $162 million, respectively, recognized in Other current assets, Trade payables and other liabilities and Other non-current liabilities in the statements of financial position. A loss of $23 million and $113 million for the three and six months ended June 30, 2024, respectively, relating to these equity forward contracts is recognized in Other expense in the income statements.
A 5% increase (decrease) in the market price of BCE’s common shares would result in a gain (loss) of $24 million recognized in net earnings at June 30, 2024, with all other variables held constant.
36 BCE Inc.     2024 SECOND QUARTER SHAREHOLDER REPORT



4.6 Credit ratings
BCE's and Bell Canada's key credit ratings remain unchanged from those described in the 2023 Annual MD&A.
On March 11, 2024 and March 21, 2024, respectively, S&P Global Ratings Canada, a business unit of S&P Global Canada Corp., and Moody’s Canada Inc. revised their outlook on BCE and Bell Canada to negative from stable principally as a result of ongoing debt leverage above their respective thresholds for the current ratings. However, both also affirmed all of BCE’s and Bell Canada’s existing ratings. On March 28, 2024, DBRS Limited confirmed BCE's and Bell Canada’s ratings and stable trend.

4.7 Liquidity
This section contains forward-looking statements, including relating to the sources of liquidity we expect to use to meet our 2024 cash requirements. Refer to the section Caution regarding forward-looking statements at the beginning of this MD&A.
Available liquidity
Total available liquidity(1) at June 30, 2024 was $5.0 billion, comprised of $1,398 million in cash, $250 million in cash equivalents, $750 million in short-term investments, $687 million available under our securitized receivables program and $1.9 billion available under our $3.5 billion committed revolving and expansion credit facilities (given $1,592 million of commercial paper outstanding).
Total available liquidity at December 31, 2023 was $5.8 billion, comprised of $547 million in cash, $225 million in cash equivalents, $1,000 million in short-term investments, $700 million available under our securitized receivables program and $3.3 billion available under our $3.5 billion committed revolving and expansion credit facilities (given $197 million of commercial paper outstanding).
In Q2 2024, Bell Canada extended the term of its $2.5 billion committed revolving credit facility from May 2028 to May 2029 and the term of its $1 billion committed expansion credit facility from May 2026 to May 2027.
We expect that our cash, cash equivalents, short-term investments, amounts available under our securitized receivables program, cash flows from operations and possible capital markets financings will permit us to meet our cash requirements in 2024 for capital expenditures, post-employment benefit plans funding, dividend payments, the payment of contractual obligations, maturing debt, ongoing operations and other cash requirements.
Should our 2024 cash requirements exceed our cash, cash equivalents, short-term investments, cash generated from our operations, and funds raised under capital markets financings and our securitized receivables program, we would expect to cover such a shortfall by drawing under committed credit facilities that are currently in place or through new facilities to the extent available.
We continuously monitor our operations, capital markets and the Canadian economy with the objective of maintaining adequate liquidity.












(1)Available liquidity is a non-GAAP financial measure. Refer to section 8.1, Non-GAAP financial measures in this MD&A for more information on this measure.
37


5 Quarterly financial information
BCE’s Q2 2024 Financial Statements were prepared in accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS), as issued by the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB), under International Accounting Standard (IAS) 34, Interim Financial Reporting and were approved by BCE’s board of directors on July 31, 2024.
The following table, which was also prepared in accordance with IFRS, shows selected consolidated financial data of BCE for the eight most recent completed quarters.
2024 2023 2022
Q2 Q1 Q4 Q3 Q2 Q1 Q4 Q3
Operating revenues
Service 5,308  5,192  5,348  5,281  5,303  5,222  5,353  5,193 
Product 697  819  1,125  799  763  832  1,086  831 
Total operating revenues 6,005  6,011  6,473  6,080  6,066  6,054  6,439  6,024 
Adjusted EBITDA 2,697  2,565  2,567  2,667  2,645  2,538  2,437  2,588 
Severance, acquisition and other costs (22) (229) (41) (10) (100) (49) (19) (22)
Depreciation (945) (946) (954) (937) (936) (918) (922) (914)
Amortization (325) (316) (299) (295) (296) (283) (270) (267)
Net earnings 604  457  435  707  397  788  567  771 
Net earnings attributable to common shareholders 537  402  382  640  329  725  528  715 
EPS - basic and diluted 0.59  0.44  0.42  0.70  0.37  0.79  0.58  0.78 
Weighted average number of common shares outstanding – basic (millions) 912.3  912.3  912.3  912.3  912.2  912.1  912.0  911.9 
38 BCE Inc.     2024 SECOND QUARTER SHAREHOLDER REPORT


6 Regulatory environment
The following is an update to the regulatory initiatives and proceedings described in the BCE 2023 Annual MD&A under section 3.3, Principal business risks and section 8, Regulatory environment, as updated in the BCE 2024 First Quarter MD&A.
Telecommunications Act
Review of wholesale fibre-to-the-node high-speed access service rates
On July 22, 2024, the Federal Court of Appeal issued a decision rejecting TekSavvy Solutions Inc.’s (Teksavvy) appeal of Decision 2021-182 pursuant to which the CRTC had, in May 2021, mostly reinstated wholesale Internet rates prevailing prior to August 2019.
Review of wholesale high-speed access service framework
On March 28, 2024, Bell Canada, jointly with Competitive Network Operators of Canada (CNOC), Cogeco Communications Inc., Bragg Communications Inc. (Eastlink) and Teksavvy, asked the CRTC to change the procedures for final submissions in the TNC 2023‑56 proceeding. The parties proposed that the CRTC call for final submissions on the question of whether Bell Canada, Rogers Communications Canada Inc. (Rogers) and Telus Communications Inc. (Telus) would be eligible to obtain access to aggregated wholesale FTTP. The request asked the CRTC to issue a final ruling on that single issue before aggregated wholesale FTTP access service became available on an interim basis on May 7, 2024. On May 3, 2024, the CRTC issued a letter denying the request for a procedural change and declining to issue a final ruling on that single issue on an expedited basis.
On April 8, 2024, Bell Canada filed a Notice of Appeal to the Federal Court of Appeal of Telecom Decision CRTC 2023-358 issued on November 6, 2023. However, on May 28, 2024, Bell Canada applied for a court order requesting that the appeal be held in abeyance until the CRTC issues its final decision. Bell Canada was supported in that motion by all the other parties participating in the appeal (i.e., Vidéotron Ltd., CNOC, Teksavvy and Telus). As such, on June 5, 2024, the Federal Court of Appeal issued an order holding the appeal in abeyance until the earlier of September 30, 2024 or until the CRTC issues its final decision.
Bill C-69, An Act to implement certain provisions of the budget tabled in Parliament on April 16, 2024
On June 20, 2024, Bill C-69, An Act to implement certain provisions of the budget tabled in Parliament on April 16, 2024 (Bill C-69) received royal assent. Bill C-69 includes amendments to the Telecommunications Act directing the CRTC to implement certain specific measures related to the arrangements between telecommunications providers and their customers, including prohibiting charging certain extra fees to switch carriers or modify service arrangements. The amendments require the CRTC to specify the type of fees to which the amendments will apply and the rules around how the amendments will be implemented. On July 23, 2024, the CRTC issued three sets of requests for information (RFIs) to certain Canadian telecommunications providers on their current practices related to the subject matter of the amendments. Responses to the RFIs are due August 23, 2024. The timing and outcome of any further CRTC process regarding these amendments to the Telecommunications Act are currently unknown. At this time, it is unclear what impact, if any, these legislative changes could have on our business and financial results.
Broadcasting Act
Broadcast Notice of Consultation CRTC 2023-138
On May 12, 2023, the CRTC issued Broadcasting Notice of Consultation CRTC 2023-138, The Path Forward – Working towards a modernized regulatory framework regarding the contributions to support Canadian and Indigenous content. This Notice represents the first of three steps to develop an updated regulatory framework for broadcasting undertakings, including online undertakings. A key part of this new framework is to establish the conditions under which online services would be required to make financial contributions, including initial base contributions, to support the creation and discoverability of Canadian and Indigenous content. It will also determine who the recipients of the initial base contributions will be. The CRTC held a three-week hearing beginning on November 20, 2023 to focus on these issues. On June 4, 2024, the CRTC released its decision, requiring foreign streamers to contribute 5% of their Canadian broadcasting revenue as of September 2024 to certain funds set out by the CRTC. However, Canadian streamers affiliated with a licensed broadcaster (for example, Bell Media’s linear Crave service available through cable companies) have been exempted from this requirement until the CRTC reviews the existing regulatory obligations of traditional media properties. Foreign streamers, specifically Amazon.com.ca ULC, Apple Canada Inc., the Motion Picture Association-Canada (which represents Netflix Studios, LLC, Paramount Pictures Corporation, Sony Pictures Entertainment Inc., Universal City Studios LLC, Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures, and Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc.) and Spotify AB, have each sought leave to appeal and/or judicial review of the CRTC’s decision. Each company has challenged various different aspects of the decision, including, in some cases, the reasonableness of the CRTC exempting Canadian streamers affiliated with licensed broadcasters but not exempting foreign streamers.
39


While the CRTC has not yet initiated its public consultations for Steps 2 and 3, these subsequent proceedings will focus on the overall framework for both traditional and online undertakings, with a focus on how to support the creation of Canadian and Indigenous content beyond financial contribution requirements, as well as diversity, inclusion and discoverability issues. In Step 3, the CRTC intends to finalize each undertaking’s or ownership group’s contribution requirements, presumably as part of our group licence renewal. The timing and outcome of all of these proceedings is unknown. Therefore, the impact that these regulatory changes could have on our business and financial results is unclear at this time.
Other
Bill C-18, the Online News Act
On June 22, 2023, Bill C-18, An Act respecting online communications platforms that make news content available to persons in Canada (the Online News Act), received royal assent. The Online News Act requires digital news intermediaries, such as Google and Meta (until the latter elected to block all news links and thus is no longer subject to the Online News Act), that share news content produced by other news outlets to negotiate commercial arrangements with those news outlets, compensating them for the news content shared on digital platforms. The legislation entitles Bell Media’s general news services, such as CTV and Noovo, to compensation. Further details regarding the compensation framework have been set out in regulations that were released on December 15, 2023 (the Regulations). These Regulations clarify that the Online News Act applies to search engines and social media sites that provide access to news content in Canada, provided these platforms earn at least $1 billion in annual global revenue and reach at least 20 million Canadians on a monthly basis. However, the Regulations also allow Google to apply to be exempt from parts of the Online News Act if it commits to pay $100 million annually (growing each year by inflation) to a new organization to be set up to collect this amount from Google and then distribute it to all eligible news outlets. On June 7, 2024, Google submitted an application for exemption to the CRTC. On June 27, 2024, the CRTC launched a proceeding to review Google’s application for exemption under Online News Notice of Consultation CRTC 2024-143, with the record of the proceeding scheduled to close by mid-August 2024. Of the $100 million to be paid by Google if it becomes exempt, under the Regulations news outlets that are also private broadcasters, such as CTV and Noovo, cannot receive more than 30% of the overall compensation available (with other news outlets, such as those associated with newspapers and public broadcasters, receiving the rest). Given the above, the amount of compensation that Bell Media may receive from Google is unclear, as is the timing of such compensation. The full impact that the legislative changes could have on our business and financial results is unknown at this time. Finally, the CRTC must still establish its processes to administer the Online News Act. In this regard, on March 13, 2024, the CRTC issued Online News Notice of Consultation CRTC 2024-55 seeking public comments on its proposed mandatory bargaining process which would apply between news outlets and digital news intermediaries that are captured by the Online News Act if a digital news intermediary has not received an exemption from the CRTC as a result of reaching an agreement with news outlets. The period to submit comments ended on April 12, 2024 and we are awaiting a decision from the CRTC.
40 BCE Inc.     2024 SECOND QUARTER SHAREHOLDER REPORT


7 Accounting policies
BCE’s Q2 2024 Financial Statements were prepared in accordance with IFRS, as issued by the IASB, under IAS 34 - Interim Financial Reporting and were approved by BCE’s board of directors on July 31, 2024. These financial statements were prepared using the same basis of presentation, accounting policies and methods of computation as outlined in Note 2, Material accounting policies in BCE’s consolidated financial statements for the year ended December 31, 2023. BCE's Q2 2024 Financial Statements do not include all of the notes required in the annual financial statements.

Future changes to accounting standards
The following accounting standard and amendments to accounting standards issued by the IASB have not yet been adopted by BCE.
Standard Description Impact Effective date
IFRS 18 – Presentation and Disclosure in Financial Statements
Sets out requirements and guidance on presentation and disclosure in financial statements, including:
•presentation in the income statements of income and expenses within defined categories - operating, investing, financing, income taxes and discontinued operations
•presentation in the income statements of new defined subtotals - operating profit and profit before financing and income taxes
•disclosure of explanations of management-defined performance measures that are related to the income statements
•enhanced guidance on aggregation and disaggregation of information and whether to provide information in the financial statements or in the notes
•disclosure of specified expenses by nature
IFRS 18 replaces IAS 1 - Presentation of Financial Statements but carries forward many of the requirements from IAS 1 unchanged.
We are currently assessing the impact of this standard. Annual reporting periods beginning on or after January 1, 2027. Early application is permitted.
Amendments to the Classification and Measurement of Financial Instruments – Amendments to IFRS 9 and IFRS 7
In particular, the amendments clarify:
•the classification of financial assets with ESG and similar features
•the derecognition date for financial liabilities and introduce an accounting policy option for financial liabilities settled using an electronic payment system if certain conditions are met
The amendments also require additional disclosures for financial instruments with contractual terms that reference a contingent event and equity instruments classified at fair value through other comprehensive income.
We are currently assessing the impact of these amendments. Annual reporting periods beginning on or after January 1, 2026. Early application is permitted.






41


8 Non-GAAP financial measures, other financial measures and key performance indicators (KPIs)
BCE uses various financial measures to assess its business performance. Certain of these measures are calculated in accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS or GAAP) while certain other measures do not have a standardized meaning under GAAP. We believe that our GAAP financial measures, read together with adjusted non-GAAP and other financial measures, provide readers with a better understanding of how management assesses BCE’s performance.

National Instrument 52-112, Non-GAAP and Other Financial Measures Disclosure (NI 52-112), prescribes disclosure requirements that apply to the following specified financial measures:
•Non-GAAP financial measures;
•Non-GAAP ratios;
•Total of segments measures;
•Capital management measures; and
•Supplementary financial measures.

This section provides a description and classification of the specified financial measures contemplated by NI 52-112 that we use to explain our financial results except that, for supplementary financial measures, an explanation of such measures is provided where they are first referred to if the supplementary financial measures’ labelling is not sufficiently descriptive.

8.1 Non-GAAP financial measures
A non-GAAP financial measure is a financial measure used to depict our historical or expected future financial performance, financial position or cash flow and, with respect to its composition, either excludes an amount that is included in, or includes an amount that is excluded from, the composition of the most directly comparable financial measure disclosed in BCE’s consolidated primary financial statements. We believe that non-GAAP financial measures are reflective of our on-going operating results and provide readers with an understanding of management’s perspective on and analysis of our performance.
Below are descriptions of the non-GAAP financial measures that we use to explain our results as well as reconciliations to the most directly comparable IFRS financial measures.
Adjusted net earnings
The term adjusted net earnings does not have any standardized meaning under IFRS. Therefore, it is unlikely to be comparable to similar measures presented by other issuers.
We define adjusted net earnings as net earnings attributable to common shareholders before severance, acquisition and other costs, net mark-to-market losses (gains) on derivatives used to economically hedge equity settled share-based compensation plans, net equity losses (gains) on investments in associates and joint ventures, net losses (gains) on investments, early debt redemption costs, impairment of assets and discontinued operations, net of tax and NCI.
We use adjusted net earnings and we believe that certain investors and analysts use this measure, among other ones, to assess the performance of our businesses without the effects of severance, acquisition and other costs, net mark-to-market losses (gains) on derivatives used to economically hedge equity settled share-based compensation plans, net equity losses (gains) on investments in associates and joint ventures, net losses (gains) on investments, early debt redemption costs, impairment of assets and discontinued operations, net of tax and NCI. We exclude these items because they affect the comparability of our financial results and could potentially distort the analysis of trends in business performance. Excluding these items does not imply they are non-recurring.
The most directly comparable IFRS financial measure is net earnings attributable to common shareholders.
42 BCE Inc.     2024 SECOND QUARTER SHAREHOLDER REPORT


The following table is a reconciliation of net earnings attributable to common shareholders to adjusted net earnings on a consolidated basis.
Q2 2024 Q2 2023 YTD 2024 YTD 2023
Net earnings attributable to common shareholders 537  329  939  1,054 
Reconciling items:
    Severance, acquisition and other costs 22  100  251  149 
    Net mark-to-market losses (gains) on derivatives used to economically
hedge equity settled share-based compensation plans
23  (1) 113  (19)
    Net equity losses on investments in associates and joint ventures 93  377  93  377 
    Net losses (gains) on investments (79) (79)
    Early debt redemption costs —  — 
    Impairment of assets 60  —  73  34 
    Income taxes for the above reconciling items (25) (5) (110) (23)
    NCI for the above reconciling items —  —  (1) — 
Adjusted net earnings 712  722  1,366  1,494 
Available liquidity
The term available liquidity does not have any standardized meaning under IFRS. Therefore, it is unlikely to be comparable to similar measures presented by other issuers.
We define available liquidity as cash, cash equivalents, short-term investments and amounts available under our securitized receivables program and our committed bank credit facilities, excluding credit facilities that are available exclusively for a pre-determined purpose.
We consider available liquidity to be an important indicator of the financial strength and performance of our businesses because it shows the funds available to meet our cash requirements, including for, but not limited to, capital expenditures, post-employment benefit plans funding, dividend payments, the payment of contractual obligations, maturing debt, on going operations, the acquisition of spectrum, and other cash requirements. We believe that certain investors and analysts use available liquidity to evaluate the financial strength and performance of our businesses. The most directly comparable IFRS financial measure is cash.
The following table is a reconciliation of cash to available liquidity on a consolidated basis.
June 30, 2024 December 31, 2023
Cash 1,398  547 
Cash equivalents 250  225 
Short-term investments 750  1,000 
Amounts available under our securitized receivables program(1)
687  700 
Amounts available under our committed bank credit facilities(2)
1,908  3,303 
Available liquidity 4,993  5,775 
(1)At June 30, 2024 and December 31, 2023, respectively, $687 million and $700 million were available under our securitized receivables program, under which we borrowed $1,168 million in U.S. dollars ($1,599 million in Canadian dollars) and $1,200 million in U.S. dollars ($1,588 million in Canadian dollars) as at June 30, 2024 and December 31, 2023, respectively. Loans secured by receivables are included in Debt due within one year in our consolidated financial statements.
(2)At June 30, 2024 and December 31, 2023, respectively, $1,908 million and $3,303 million were available under our committed bank credit facilities, given outstanding commercial paper of $1,163 million in U.S. dollars ($1,592 million in Canadian dollars) and $149 million in U.S. dollars ($197 million in Canadian dollars) as at June 30, 2024 and December 31, 2023, respectively. Commercial paper outstanding is included in Debt due within one year in our consolidated financial statements.






43


Free cash flow and excess free cash flow
The terms free cash flow and excess free cash flow do not have any standardized meaning under IFRS. Therefore, they are unlikely to be comparable to similar measures presented by other issuers.
We define free cash flow as cash flows from operating activities, excluding cash from discontinued operations, acquisition and other costs paid (which include significant litigation costs) and voluntary pension funding, less capital expenditures, preferred share dividends and dividends paid by subsidiaries to NCI. We exclude cash from discontinued operations, acquisition and other costs paid and voluntary pension funding because they affect the comparability of our financial results and could potentially distort the analysis of trends in business performance. Excluding these items does not imply they are non-recurring.
We define excess free cash flow as free cash flow less dividends paid on common shares.
We consider free cash flow and excess free cash flow to be important indicators of the financial strength and performance of our businesses. Free cash flow shows how much cash is available to pay dividends on common shares, repay debt and reinvest in our company. Excess free cash flow shows how much cash is available to repay debt and reinvest in our company, after the payment of dividends on common shares. We believe that certain investors and analysts use free cash flow and excess free cash flow to value a business and its underlying assets and to evaluate the financial strength and performance of our businesses. The most directly comparable IFRS financial measure is cash flows from operating activities.
The following table is a reconciliation of cash flows from operating activities to free cash flow and excess free cash flow on a consolidated basis.
Q2 2024 Q2 2023 YTD 2024 YTD 2023
Cash flows from operating activities 2,137  2,365  3,269  3,612 
Capital expenditures (978) (1,307) (1,980) (2,393)
Cash dividends paid on preferred shares (45) (46) (91) (101)
Cash dividends paid by subsidiaries to NCI (28) (1) (42) (22)
Acquisition and other costs paid 11 26
Free cash flow 1,097  1,016  1,182  1,101 
Dividends paid on common shares (910) (882) (1,793) (1,721)
Excess free cash flow 187  134  (611) (620)
Net debt
The term net debt does not have any standardized meaning under IFRS. Therefore, it is unlikely to be comparable to similar measures presented by other issuers.
We define net debt as debt due within one year plus long-term debt and 50% of preferred shares, less cash, cash equivalents and short-term investments, as shown in BCE’s consolidated statements of financial position. We include 50% of outstanding preferred shares in our net debt as it is consistent with the treatment by certain credit rating agencies.
We consider net debt to be an important indicator of the company’s financial leverage because it represents the amount of debt that is not covered by available cash, cash equivalents and short-term investments. We believe that certain investors and analysts use net debt to determine a company’s financial leverage.
Net debt is calculated using several asset and liability categories from the statements of financial position. The most directly comparable IFRS financial measure is long-term debt. The following table is a reconciliation of long-term debt to net debt on a consolidated basis.
June 30, 2024 December 31, 2023
Long-term debt 32,918  31,135 
Debt due within one year 6,587  5,042 
50% of preferred shares 1,780  1,834 
Cash (1,398) (547)
Cash equivalents (250) (225)
Short-term investments (750) (1,000)
Net debt 38,887  36,239 
44 BCE Inc.     2024 SECOND QUARTER SHAREHOLDER REPORT


8.2 Non-GAAP ratios
A non-GAAP ratio is a financial measure disclosed in the form of a ratio, fraction, percentage or similar representation and that has a non-GAAP financial measure as one or more of its components.
Adjusted EPS
The term adjusted EPS does not have any standardized meaning under IFRS. Therefore, it is unlikely to be comparable to similar measures presented by other issuers.
We define adjusted EPS as adjusted net earnings per BCE common share. Adjusted net earnings is a non-GAAP financial measure. For further details on adjusted net earnings, see section 8.1, Non-GAAP financial measures.
We use adjusted EPS, and we believe that certain investors and analysts use this measure, among other ones, to assess the performance of our businesses without the effects of severance, acquisition and other costs, net mark-to-market losses (gains) on derivatives used to economically hedge equity settled share-based compensation plans, net equity losses (gains) on investments in associates and joint ventures, net losses (gains) on investments, early debt redemption costs, impairment of assets and discontinued operations, net of tax and NCI. We exclude these items because they affect the comparability of our financial results and could potentially distort the analysis of trends in business performance. Excluding these items does not imply they are non-recurring.
Dividend payout ratio
The term dividend payout ratio does not have any standardized meaning under IFRS. Therefore, it is unlikely to be comparable to similar measures presented by other issuers.
We define dividend payout ratio as dividends paid on common shares divided by free cash flow. Free cash flow is a non-GAAP financial measure. For further details on free cash flow, see section 8.1, Non-GAAP financial measures.
We consider dividend payout ratio to be an important indicator of the financial strength and performance of our businesses because it shows the sustainability of the company’s dividend payments.


















45


8.3 Total of segments measures
A total of segments measure is a financial measure that is a subtotal or total of 2 or more reportable segments and is disclosed within the Notes to BCE’s consolidated primary financial statements.
Adjusted EBITDA
We define adjusted EBITDA as operating revenues less operating costs as shown in BCE’s consolidated income statements.
The most directly comparable IFRS financial measure is net earnings. The following tables provide a reconciliation of net earnings to adjusted EBITDA on a consolidated basis.
YTD 2024 Q2 2024 Q1 2024
Net earnings 1,061  604  457 
Severance, acquisition and other costs   251    22  229 
Depreciation   1,891    945  946 
Amortization   641    325  316 
Finance costs
Interest expense   842    426  416 
Net return on post-employment benefit plans   (33)   (17) (16)
Impairment of assets   73    60  13 
Other expense   139    101  38 
Income taxes 397  231  166 
Adjusted EBITDA 5,262  2,697  2,565 
Q4 2023 Q3 2023 YTD 2023 Q2 2023 Q1 2023
Net earnings 435  707  1,185  397  788 
Severance, acquisition and other costs   41    10    149    100  49 
Depreciation 954  937    1,854    936  918 
Amortization 299  295    579    296  283 
Finance costs
Interest expense 399  373    703    359  344 
Net return on post-employment benefit plans (27) (27)   (54)   (27) (27)
Impairment of assets 109  —    34    —  34 
Other expense (income) 147  129    190    311  (121)
Income taxes 210  243  543  273  270 
Adjusted EBITDA 2,567  2,667  5,183  2,645  2,538 
Q4 2022 Q3 2022
Net earnings 567  771 
Severance, acquisition and other costs 19  22 
Depreciation 922  914 
Amortization 270  267 
Finance costs
Interest expense 319  298 
Net return on post-employment benefit plans (13) (13)
Impairment of assets 150  21 
Other (income) expense (19) 130 
Income taxes 222  178 
Adjusted EBITDA 2,437  2,588 
46 BCE Inc.     2024 SECOND QUARTER SHAREHOLDER REPORT


8.4 Capital management measures
A capital management measure is a financial measure that is intended to enable a reader to evaluate our objectives, policies and processes for managing our capital and is disclosed within the Notes to BCE’s consolidated financial statements.
The financial reporting framework used to prepare the financial statements requires disclosure that helps readers assess the company’s capital management objectives, policies, and processes, as set out in IFRS in IAS 1 – Presentation of Financial Statements. BCE has its own methods for managing capital and liquidity, and IFRS does not prescribe any particular calculation method.
Net debt leverage ratio
The net debt leverage ratio represents net debt divided by adjusted EBITDA. Net debt used in the calculation of the net debt leverage ratio is a non-GAAP financial measure. For further details on net debt, see section 8.1, Non-GAAP financial measures. For the purposes of calculating our net debt leverage ratio, adjusted EBITDA is twelve-month trailing adjusted EBITDA.
We use, and believe that certain investors and analysts use, the net debt leverage ratio as a measure of financial leverage.
8.5 Supplementary financial measures
A supplementary financial measure is a financial measure that is not reported in BCE’s consolidated financial statements, and is, or is intended to be, reported periodically to represent historical or expected future financial performance, financial position, or cash flows.
An explanation of such measures is provided where they are first referred to in this MD&A if the supplementary financial measures’ labelling is not sufficiently descriptive.
8.6 KPIs
In addition to the non-GAAP financial measures and other financial measures described previously, we use the following KPIs to measure the success of our strategic imperatives. These KPIs are not accounting measures and may not be comparable to similar measures presented by other issuers.
KPI Definition
Adjusted EBITDA margin Adjusted EBITDA margin is defined as adjusted EBITDA divided by operating revenues.
ARPU
ARPU is defined as Bell CTS wireless external services revenues divided by the average mobile phone subscriber base for the specified period, expressed as a dollar unit per month.
Capital intensity
Capital intensity is defined as capital expenditures divided by operating revenues.
Churn Mobile phone churn is the rate at which existing mobile phone subscribers cancel their services. It is a measure of our ability to retain our customers. Mobile phone churn is calculated by dividing the number of mobile phone deactivations during a given period by the average number of mobile phone subscribers in the base for the specified period and is expressed as a percentage per month.
Subscriber unit(1)
Mobile phone subscriber unit is comprised of a recurring revenue generating portable unit (e.g. smartphones and feature phones) on an active service plan, that has access to our wireless networks and includes voice, text and/or data connectivity. We report mobile phone subscriber units in two categories: postpaid and prepaid. Prepaid mobile phone subscriber units are considered active for a period of 90 days following the expiry of the subscriber’s prepaid balance.

Mobile connected device subscriber unit is comprised of a recurring revenue generating portable unit (e.g. tablets, wearables, mobile Internet devices and IoT) on an active service plan, that has access to our wireless networks and is intended for limited or no cellular voice capability.

Wireline subscriber unit consists of an active revenue-generating unit with access to our services, including retail Internet, IPTV, and/or residential NAS. A subscriber is included in our subscriber base when the service has been installed and is operational at the customer premise and a billing relationship has been established.

• Retail Internet and IPTV subscribers have access to stand-alone services, and are primarily represented by a dwelling unit or a business location

• Retail residential NAS subscribers are based on a line count and are represented by a unique telephone number

(1)As of Q1 2024, we are no longer reporting retail satellite TV subscribers as this no longer represents a significant proportion of our revenues. As a result, satellite TV subscribers have been removed from our retail TV subscriber base, and we now report exclusively retail IPTV subscribers.
47


9 Controls and procedures
Changes in internal control over financial reporting
No changes were made in our internal control over financial reporting during the quarter ended June 30, 2024 that have materially affected, or are reasonably likely to materially affect, our internal control over financial reporting.





























48 BCE Inc.     2024 SECOND QUARTER SHAREHOLDER REPORT
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Exhibit 99.2
Consolidated financial statements
Table of contents























49



Consolidated income statements
For the period ended June 30
(in millions of Canadian dollars, except share amounts) (unaudited)
Three months Six months
Note 2024 2023 2024 2023
Operating revenues 3 6,005  6,066  12,016  12,120 
Operating costs 3, 5 (3,308) (3,421) (6,754) (6,937)
Severance, acquisition and other costs 6 (22) (100) (251) (149)
Depreciation (945) (936) (1,891) (1,854)
Amortization (325) (296) (641) (579)
Finance costs
Interest expense (426) (359) (842) (703)
Net return on post-employment benefit plans 12 17  27  33  54 
Impairment of assets 7 (60) —  (73) (34)
Other expense 8 (101) (311) (139) (190)
Income taxes (231) (273) (397) (543)
Net earnings 604  397  1,061  1,185 
Net earnings attributable to:
Common shareholders 537  329  939  1,054 
Preferred shareholders 46  46  93  92 
Non-controlling interest 21  22  29  39 
Net earnings 604  397  1,061  1,185 
Net earnings per common share - basic and diluted 9 0.59  0.37 1.03  1.16
Weighted average number of common shares outstanding
- basic (millions)
912.3  912.2  912.3  912.2 


50 BCE Inc. 2024 SECOND QUARTER SHAREHOLDER REPORT



Consolidated statements of comprehensive income
For the period ended June 30
(in millions of Canadian dollars) (unaudited)
Three months Six months
Note 2024 2023 2024 2023
Net earnings 604  397  1,061  1,185 
Other comprehensive income (loss), net of income taxes
Items that will be subsequently reclassified to net earnings
Net change in value of derivatives designated as cash flow hedges, net of income taxes of $30 million and $29 million for the three months ended June 30, 2024 and 2023, respectively, and
    $2 million and $8 million for the six months ended June 30, 2024 and 2023, respectively
(82) (80) (4) (22)
Items that will not be reclassified to net earnings
Actuarial gains (losses) on post-employment benefit plans, net of income taxes of ($41) million and $51 million for the three months ended June 30, 2024 and 2023, respectively, and
    ($156) million and $98 million for the six months ended June 30, 2024 and 2023, respectively(1)
12 111  (136) 425  (263)
Net change in value of publicly-traded and privately-held investments, net of income taxes of nil for the three months ended June 30, 2024 and 2023, and nil and ($3) million for the six months ended June 30, 2024 and 2023, respectively
12  (1) 16 
Net change in value of derivatives designated as cash flow hedges, net of income taxes of ($2) million and $8 million for the three months ended June 30, 2024 and 2023, respectively, and
    ($8) million and $6 million for the six months ended June 30, 2024 and 2023, respectively
(23) 22  (17)
Other comprehensive income (loss) 47  (240) 446  (286)
Total comprehensive income 651  157  1,507  899 
Total comprehensive income attributable to:
   Common shareholders 583  92  1,383  771 
   Preferred shareholders 46  46  93  92 
Non-controlling interest 22  19  31  36 
Total comprehensive income 651  157  1,507  899 
(1)The discount rate used to value our post-employment benefit obligations at June 30, 2024 was 5.0% compared to 4.9% at March 31, 2024 and 4.6% at December 31, 2023. The discount rate used to value our post-employment benefit obligations at June 30, 2023 and March 31, 2023 was 5.0% compared to 5.3% at December 31, 2022.

51



Consolidated statements of financial position
(in millions of Canadian dollars) (unaudited) Note June 30, 2024 December 31, 2023
ASSETS
Current assets
Cash 1,398  547 
Cash equivalents 250  225 
Short-term investments 750  1,000 
Trade and other receivables 3,909  4,031 
Inventory 410  465 
Contract assets 418  443 
Contract costs 683  633 
Prepaid expenses 405  230 
Other current assets 274  264 
Assets held for sale 85  60 
Total current assets 8,582  7,898 
Non-current assets
Contract assets 261  292 
Contract costs 804  779 
Property, plant and equipment 30,060  30,352 
Intangible assets 10 17,628  16,609 
Deferred tax assets 121  96 
Investments in associates and joint ventures 322  323 
Post-employment benefit assets 12 3,405  2,935 
Other non-current assets 1,706  1,714 
Goodwill 4 11,358  10,942 
Total non-current assets 65,665  64,042 
Total assets 74,247  71,940 
LIABILITIES
Current liabilities
Trade payables and other liabilities 4,342  4,729 
Contract liabilities 749  811 
Interest payable 397  332 
Dividends payable 937  910 
Current tax liabilities 75  268 
Debt due within one year 11  6,587  5,042 
Liabilities held for sale 35  15 
Total current liabilities 13,122  12,107 
Non-current liabilities
Contract liabilities 297  277 
Long-term debt 11  32,918  31,135 
Deferred tax liabilities 5,271  4,869 
Post-employment benefit obligations 12 1,202  1,278 
Other non-current liabilities 1,427  1,717 
Total non-current liabilities 41,115  39,276 
Total liabilities 54,237  51,383 
EQUITY
Equity attributable to BCE shareholders
Preferred shares 14 3,559  3,667 
Common shares 20,860  20,859 
Contributed surplus 14 1,263  1,258 
Accumulated other comprehensive loss (15) (42)
Deficit (5,974) (5,513)
Total equity attributable to BCE shareholders 19,693  20,229 
Non-controlling interest 317  328 
Total equity 20,010  20,557 
Total liabilities and equity 74,247  71,940 
52 BCE Inc. 2024 SECOND QUARTER SHAREHOLDER REPORT



Consolidated statements of changes in equity
Attributable to BCE shareholders
For the period ended June 30, 2024 (in millions of Canadian dollars) (unaudited) Note Preferred shares Common shares Contri-buted surplus Accum-ulated other compre-hensive (loss) income Deficit Total Non-controlling interest Total equity
Balance at December 31, 2023 3,667  20,859  1,258  (42) (5,513) 20,229  328  20,557 
Net earnings —  —  —  —  1,032  1,032  29  1,061 
Other comprehensive income —  —  —  19  425  444  446 
Total comprehensive income —  —  —  19  1,457  1,476  31  1,507 
Other share-based compensation —  (27) —  (5) (31) —  (31)
Repurchase of preferred shares 14  (108) —  32  —  —  (76) —  (76)
Dividends declared on BCE common
    and preferred shares
—  —  —  —  (1,913) (1,913) —  (1,913)
Dividends declared by subsidiaries
    to non-controlling interest
—  —  —  —  —  —  (42) (42)
Settlement of cash flow hedges
    transferred to the cost basis of hedged
    items
—  —  —  —  — 
Balance at June 30, 2024 3,559  20,860  1,263  (15) (5,974) 19,693  317  20,010 

Attributable to BCE shareholders
For the period ended June 30, 2023 (in millions of Canadian dollars) (unaudited) Preferred shares Common shares Contri-buted surplus Accum-ulated other compre-hensive loss Deficit Total Non-controlling interest Total equity
Balance at December 31, 2022 3,870  20,840  1,172  (55) (3,649) 22,178  337  22,515 
Net earnings —  —  —  —  1,146  1,146  39  1,185 
Other comprehensive loss —  —  —  (20) (263) (283) (3) (286)
Total comprehensive (loss) income —  —  —  (20) 883  863  36  899 
Common shares issued under employee
     stock option plan
—  19  (1) —  —  18  —  18 
Other share-based compensation —  —  —  (12) (5) —  (5)
Repurchase of preferred shares (89) —  26  —  —  (63) —  (63)
Dividends declared on BCE common and
    preferred shares
—  —  —  —  (1,857) (1,857) —  (1,857)
Dividends declared by subsidiaries to
    non-controlling interest
—  —  —  —  —  —  (22) (22)
Settlement of cash flow hedges
    transferred to the cost basis of hedged
    items
—  —  —  (13) —  (13) —  (13)
Disposition of production studios —  —  —  —  —  —  (23) (23)
Other —  —  —  (17) 17  —  —  — 
Balance at June 30, 2023 3,781  20,859  1,204  (105) (4,618) 21,121  328  21,449 
53



Consolidated statements of cash flows
For the period ended June 30
(in millions of Canadian dollars) (unaudited)
Three months Six months
Note 2024 2023 2024 2023
Cash flows from operating activities
Net earnings 604  397  1,061  1,185 
Adjustments to reconcile net earnings to cash flows from operating
      activities
Severance, acquisition and other costs 6 22  100  251  149 
Depreciation and amortization 1,270  1,232  2,532  2,433 
Post-employment benefit plans cost 12 31  21  75  52 
Net interest expense 401  346  785  676 
Impairment of assets 7 60  —  73  34 
Losses (gains) on investments 8 (79) (79)
Net equity losses from investments in associates and joint ventures 8 93  377  93  377 
Income taxes 231  273  397  543 
Contributions to post-employment benefit plans (10) (13) (28) (28)
Payments under other post-employment benefit plans (15) (17) (31) (32)
Severance and other costs paid (98) (39) (144) (64)
Interest paid (387) (270) (835) (709)
Income taxes paid (net of refunds) (131) (200) (466) (364)
Acquisition and other costs paid (11) (5) (26) (5)
Change in contract assets 28  33  56  78 
Change in wireless device financing plan receivables 50  24  107  65 
Net change in operating assets and liabilities (3) 185  (639) (699)
Cash flows from operating activities 2,137  2,365  3,269  3,612 
Cash flows used in investing activities
Capital expenditures (978) (1,307) (1,980) (2,393)
(Decrease) increase in short-term investments (50) —  250  — 
Business acquisitions 4 (435) (196) (517) (221)
Business dispositions —  208  —  208 
Spectrum licences 10 (414) (145) (518) (156)
Other investing activities (11) (16) (21) 15 
Cash flows used in investing activities (1,888) (1,456) (2,786) (2,547)
Cash flows from (used in) financing activities
Increase (decrease) in notes payable 404  (101) 1,383  (184)
Decrease in securitized receivables —  (500) —  — 
Issue of long-term debt 11 1,617  1,199  3,808  2,703 
Repayment of long-term debt (525) (346) (2,638) (645)
Repurchase of a financial liability —  —  —  (149)
Issue of common shares —  —  18 
Purchase of shares for settlement of share-based payments (40) (42) (144) (135)
Repurchase of preferred shares 14 (38) (32) (76) (63)
Cash dividends paid on common shares (910) (882) (1,793) (1,721)
Cash dividends paid on preferred shares (45) (46) (91) (101)
Cash dividends paid by subsidiaries to non-controlling interest (28) (1) (42) (22)
Other financing activities (7) (14) (15)
Cash flows from (used in) financing activities 439  (750) 393  (314)
Net increase (decrease) in cash 609  (201) 851  351 
Cash at beginning of period 789  651  547  99 
Cash at end of period 1,398  450  1,398  450 
Net increase in cash equivalents 79  360  25  400 
Cash equivalents at beginning of period 171  90  225  50 
Cash equivalents at end of period 250  450  250  450 
54 BCE Inc. 2024 SECOND QUARTER SHAREHOLDER REPORT We, us, our, BCE and the company mean, as the context may require, either BCE Inc. or, collectively, BCE Inc., Bell Canada, their subsidiaries, joint arrangements and associates.



Notes to consolidated financial statements
These consolidated interim financial statements (financial statements) should be read in conjunction with BCE’s 2023 annual consolidated financial statements, approved by BCE’s board of directors on March 7, 2024.
These notes are unaudited.
Note 1     Corporate information
BCE is incorporated and domiciled in Canada. BCE’s head office is located at 1, Carrefour Alexander-Graham-Bell, Verdun, Québec, Canada. BCE is a communications company providing wireless, wireline, Internet and television (TV) services to residential, business and wholesale customers in Canada. Our Bell Media segment provides conventional TV, specialty TV, pay TV, streaming services, digital media services, radio broadcasting services and out-of-home advertising services to customers in Canada.
Note 2     Basis of presentation and material accounting policies
These financial statements were prepared in accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS), as issued by the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB), under International Accounting Standard (IAS) 34 - Interim Financial Reporting and were approved by BCE’s board of directors on July 31, 2024. These financial statements were prepared using the same basis of presentation, accounting policies and methods of computation as outlined in Note 2, Material accounting policies in our consolidated financial statements for the year ended December 31, 2023.
These financial statements do not include all of the notes required in annual financial statements.
All amounts are in millions of Canadian dollars, except where noted.
Future changes to accounting standards
The following accounting standard and amendments to accounting standards issued by the IASB have not yet been adopted by BCE.
Standard Description Impact Effective date
IFRS 18 – Presentation and Disclosure in Financial Statements
Sets out requirements and guidance on presentation and disclosure in financial statements, including:
•presentation in the income statements of income and expenses within defined categories - operating, investing, financing, income taxes and discontinued operations
•presentation in the income statements of new defined subtotals - operating profit and profit before financing and income taxes
•disclosure of explanations of management-defined performance measures that are related to the income statements
•enhanced guidance on aggregation and disaggregation of information and whether to provide information in the financial statements or in the notes
•disclosure of specified expenses by nature
IFRS 18 replaces IAS 1 - Presentation of Financial Statements but carries forward many of the requirements from IAS 1 unchanged.
We are currently assessing the impact of this standard. Annual reporting periods beginning on or after January 1, 2027. Early application is permitted.
Amendments to the Classification and Measurement of Financial Instruments – Amendments to IFRS 9 and IFRS 7
In particular, the amendments clarify:
•the classification of financial assets with environmental, social and corporate governance (ESG) and similar features
•the derecognition date for financial liabilities and introduce an accounting policy option for financial liabilities settled using an electronic payment system if certain conditions are met
The amendments also require additional disclosures for financial instruments with contractual terms that reference a contingent event and equity instruments classified at fair value through other comprehensive income.
We are currently assessing the impact of these amendments. Annual reporting periods beginning on or after January 1, 2026. Early application is permitted.




55



Note 3     Segmented information
Our results are reported in two segments: Bell Communication and Technology Services (Bell CTS) and Bell Media. Our segments reflect how we manage our business and how we classify our operations for planning and measuring performance.
The following tables present financial information by segment for the three month periods ended June 30, 2024 and 2023.
For the three month period ended June 30, 2024 Note Bell
CTS
Bell
Media
Intersegment
eliminations
BCE
Operating revenues
     External service revenues 4,578  730  —  5,308 
     Inter-segment service revenues 82  (90) — 
Operating service revenues 4,586  812  (90) 5,308 
External/Operating product revenues 697  —  —  697 
    Total external revenues 5,275  730  —  6,005 
    Total inter-segment revenues 82  (90) — 
Total operating revenues 5,283  812  (90) 6,005 
Operating costs 5 (2,804) (594) 90  (3,308)
Adjusted EBITDA (1)
2,479  218  —  2,697 
Severance, acquisition and other costs 6 (22)
Depreciation and amortization (1,270)
Finance costs
   Interest expense (426)
   Net return on post-employment benefit plans 12 17 
Impairment of assets 7 (60)
Other expense 8 (101)
Income taxes (231)
Net earnings 604 
(1)The chief operating decision maker uses primarily one measure of profit to make decisions and assess performance, being operating revenues less operating costs.
For the three month period ended June 30, 2023 Note Bell
CTS
Bell
Media
Intersegment
eliminations
BCE
Operating revenues
External service revenues 4,584  719  —  5,303 
Inter-segment service revenues 86  (93) — 
Operating service revenues 4,591  805  (93) 5,303 
External/Operating product revenues 763  —  —  763 
Total external revenues 5,347  719  —  6,066 
Total inter-segment revenues 86  (93) — 
Total operating revenues 5,354  805  (93) 6,066 
Operating costs 5 (2,923) (591) 93  (3,421)
Adjusted EBITDA (1)
2,431  214  —  2,645 
Severance, acquisition and other costs 6 (100)
Depreciation and amortization (1,232)
Finance costs
Interest expense (359)
Net return on post-employment benefit plans 12 27 
Impairment of assets 7 — 
Other expense 8 (311)
Income taxes (273)
Net earnings 397 
(1)The chief operating decision maker uses primarily one measure of profit to make decisions and assess performance, being operating revenues less operating costs.

56 BCE Inc. 2024 SECOND QUARTER SHAREHOLDER REPORT The following tables present financial information by segment for the six month periods ended June 30, 2024 and 2023.



For the six month period ended June 30, 2024 Note Bell
CTS
Bell
Media
Intersegment
eliminations
BCE
Operating revenues
     External service revenues 9,128  1,372  —  10,500 
     Inter-segment service revenues 14  165  (179) — 
Operating service revenues 9,142  1,537  (179) 10,500 
External/Operating product revenues 1,516  —  —  1,516 
    Total external revenues 10,644  1,372  —  12,016 
    Total inter-segment revenues 14  165  (179) — 
Total operating revenues 10,658  1,537  (179) 12,016 
Operating costs 5 (5,731) (1,202) 179  (6,754)
Adjusted EBITDA (1)
4,927  335  —  5,262 
Severance, acquisition and other costs 6 (251)
Depreciation and amortization (2,532)
Finance costs
   Interest expense (842)
   Net return on post-employment benefit plans 12 33 
Impairment of assets 7 (73)
Other expense 8 (139)
Income taxes (397)
Net earnings 1,061 
(1)The chief operating decision maker uses primarily one measure of profit to make decisions and assess performance, being operating revenues less operating costs.
For the six month period ended June 30, 2023 Note Bell
CTS
Bell
Media
Intersegment
eliminations
BCE
Operating revenues
External service revenues 9,112  1,413  —  10,525 
Inter-segment service revenues 14  172  (186) — 
Operating service revenues 9,126  1,585  (186) 10,525 
External/Operating product revenues 1,595  —  —  1,595 
Total external revenues 10,707  1,413  —  12,120 
Total inter-segment revenues 14  172  (186) — 
Total operating revenues 10,721  1,585  (186) 12,120 
Operating costs 5 (5,884) (1,239) 186  (6,937)
Adjusted EBITDA (1)
4,837  346  —  5,183 
Severance, acquisition and other costs 6 (149)
Depreciation and amortization (2,433)
Finance costs
Interest expense (703)
Net return on post-employment benefit plans 12 54 
Impairment of assets 7 (34)
Other expense 8 (190)
Income taxes (543)
Net earnings 1,185 
(1)The chief operating decision maker uses primarily one measure of profit to make decisions and assess performance, being operating revenues less operating costs.



57



Revenues by services and products
Three months Six months
For the period ended June 30 2024 2023 2024 2023
Services(1)
Wireless 1,788  1,766  3,562  3,489 
Wireline data 2,034  2,021  4,046  4,022 
Wireline voice 677  722  1,360  1,448 
Media 730  719  1,372  1,413 
Other wireline services 79  75  160  153 
Total services 5,308  5,303  10,500  10,525 
Products(2)
Wireless 568  626  1,252  1,252 
Wireline 129  137  264  343 
Total products 697  763  1,516  1,595 
Total operating revenues 6,005  6,066  12,016  12,120 
(1)Our service revenues are generally recognized over time.
(2)Our product revenues are generally recognized at a point in time.





















58 BCE Inc.



Note 4     Business acquisitions and disposition
Acquisition of OUTFRONT Media’s Canadian out-of-home media business
2024 SECOND QUARTER SHAREHOLDER REPORT On June 7, 2024, Bell Media completed the previously announced acquisition of OUTFRONT Media Inc.’s Canadian out-of-home media business, OUTEDGE Media Canada (OUTEDGE), for cash consideration of $429 million ($418 million net of cash acquired). The acquisition of OUTEDGE is expected to support Bell Media’s digital media strategy and to deliver multi-channel marketing solutions across Canada. Pursuant to a consent agreement negotiated with the Competition Bureau, Bell Media must dispose of 669 advertising displays in Québec and Ontario. The results of OUTEDGE are included in our Bell Media segment.
The allocation of the purchase price includes provisional estimates, in particular for finite-life intangible assets.
The following table summarizes the fair value of the consideration paid and the fair value assigned to each major class of assets and liabilities.
2024
Cash consideration paid 429 
Total cost to be allocated 429 
Trade and other receivables 39 
Other non-cash working capital
Assets held for sale 12 
Property, plant and equipment 162 
Finite-life intangible assets 62 
Other non-current assets 16 
Trade payables and other liabilities (12)
Contract liabilities (1)
Debt due within one year (20)
Liabilities held for sale (9)
Long-term debt (86)
Deferred tax liabilities (75)
Other non-current liabilities (7)
88 
Cash and cash equivalents 11 
Fair value of net assets acquired 99 
Goodwill (1)
330 
(1)Goodwill arises principally from expected synergies and future growth and is not deductible for tax purposes. Goodwill was allocated to our Bell Media group of cash-generating units (CGUs).
Operating revenues of $8 million from OUTEDGE are included in the consolidated income statements (income statements) for the six months ended June 30, 2024. BCE’s operating revenues for the six months ended June 30, 2024 would have been $12,064 million had the acquisition of OUTEDGE occurred on January 1, 2024. The transaction did not have a significant impact on our net earnings for the six months ended June 30, 2024 and the impact on our net earnings would not have been significant had the acquisition occurred on January 1, 2024.
Disposition of Northwestel
On June 10, 2024, Bell Canada entered into an agreement with Sixty North Unity, a consortium of Indigenous communities from the Yukon, the Northwest Territories and Nunavut, to dispose of Northwestel Inc. (Northwestel), the largest telecommunications provider in Canada’s North, for up to $1 billion, subject to adjustments. Closing of the transaction is subject to certain closing conditions, including securing financing by Sixty North Unity, the completion of confirmatory due diligence, and receipt of the Competition Bureau's approval and, as such, there can be no assurances that the transaction will ultimately be consummated. The results of Northwestel are included in our Bell CTS segment.
Acquisition of Stratejm
Subsequent to quarter end, on July 2, 2024, Bell Canada acquired Stratejm Inc. (Stratejm) for cash consideration of $78 million. Additional cash consideration of up to $20 million is payable within three years, contingent on the achievement of certain performance objectives. Stratejm leverages artificial intelligence through end-to-end Security-as-a-Service solutions, real-time threat detection and response, and streamlining incident management processes. The results of Stratejm will be included in our Bell CTS segment. The fair values of Stratejm’s assets and liabilities have not yet been determined.
59



Note 5     Operating costs
Three months Six months
For the period ended June 30 Note 2024 2023 2024 2023
Labour costs
Wages, salaries and related taxes and benefits (1,040) (1,116) (2,122) (2,218)
Post-employment benefit plans service cost (net of capitalized
   amounts)
12 (48) (48) (108) (106)
Other labour costs (1)
(248) (265) (494) (524)
Less:
Capitalized labour 296  324  587  627 
Total labour costs (1,040) (1,105) (2,137) (2,221)
Cost of revenues (2)
(1,808) (1,836) (3,683) (3,790)
Other operating costs (3)
(460) (480) (934) (926)
Total operating costs (3,308) (3,421) (6,754) (6,937)
(1)Other labour costs include contractor and outsourcing costs.
(2)Cost of revenues includes costs of wireless devices and other equipment sold, network and content costs, and payments to other carriers.
(3)Other operating costs include marketing, advertising and sales commission costs, bad debt expense, taxes other than income taxes, information technology costs, professional service fees and rent.
Note 6     Severance, acquisition and other costs
Three months Six months
For the period ended June 30 2024 2023 2024 2023
Severance (80) (230) (109)
Acquisition and other (26) (20) (21) (40)
Total severance, acquisition and other costs (22) (100) (251) (149)
Severance costs
Severance costs consist of charges related to involuntary and voluntary employee terminations, including the estimated costs of the previously announced workforce reductions incurred up to June 30, 2024.
Acquisition and other costs
Acquisition and other costs consist of transaction costs, such as legal and financial advisory fees, related to completed or potential acquisitions, employee severance costs related to the purchase of a business, the costs to integrate acquired companies into our operations, costs relating to litigation and regulatory decisions, when they are significant, and other costs.
Note 7     Impairment of assets
2024
Impairment charges for the three and six months ended June 30, 2024 of $60 million and $73 million, respectively, relate mainly to right-of-use assets for certain office spaces we ceased using as part of our real estate optimization strategy as a result of our hybrid work policy.
2023
Impairment charges for the six months ended June 30, 2023 of $34 million relate mainly to right-of-use assets for certain office spaces we ceased using as part of our real estate optimization strategy as a result of our hybrid work policy.

60 BCE Inc. 2024 SECOND QUARTER SHAREHOLDER REPORT In Q1 2023, we sold land for total proceeds of $54 million and recorded a gain of $53 million as part of our real estate optimization strategy.



Note 8     Other expense
Three months Six months
For the period ended June 30 2024 2023 2024 2023
Net mark-to-market (losses) gains on derivatives used to economically hedge
   equity settled share-based compensation plans
(23) (113) 19 
(Losses) gains on retirements and disposals of property, plant and equipment and
   intangible assets
(19) (19) (26) 28 
Equity (losses) income from investments in associates and joint ventures
Loss on investment (93) (377) (93) (377)
Operations 21  26 
(Losses) gains on investments (2) 79  (8) 79 
Interest income 25  13  57  27 
Early debt redemption costs —  (1) —  (1)
Other (15) 23 
Total other expense (101) (311) (139) (190)
Gains on disposals of property, plant and equipment
Equity (losses) income from investments in associates and joint ventures
We recorded a loss on investment of $93 million for the three and six months ended June 30, 2024, related to equity losses on our share of an obligation to repurchase at fair value the minority interest in one of BCE's joint ventures. The obligation is marked to market each reporting period and the gain or loss on investment is recorded as equity income or losses from investments in associates and joint ventures.
We recorded a loss on investment of $377 million for the three and six months ended June 30, 2023, related to equity losses on our share of an obligation to repurchase at fair value the minority interest in one of BCE's joint ventures. The obligation is marked to market each reporting period and the gain or loss on investment is recorded as equity income or losses from investments in associates and joint ventures.
Gains on investments
In Q2 2023, we completed the sale of our 63% ownership in certain production studios. We recorded net cash proceeds of $211 million and a gain on investment of $79 million.
Note 9     Earnings per share
The following table shows the components used in the calculation of basic and diluted net earnings per common share for earnings attributable to common shareholders.
Three months Six months
For the period ended June 30 2024 2023 2024 2023
Net earnings attributable to common shareholders - basic 537  329  939  1,054 
Dividends declared per common share (in dollars) 0.9975 0.9675 1.9950 1.9350
Weighted average number of common shares outstanding (in millions)
Weighted average number of common shares outstanding - basic 912.3  912.2  912.3  912.2 
Assumed exercise of stock options (1)
—  0.3  —  0.3 
Weighted average number of common shares outstanding
   - diluted (in millions)
912.3  912.5  912.3  912.5 
(1)The calculation of the assumed exercise of stock options includes the effect of the average unrecognized future compensation cost of dilutive options. It excludes options for which the exercise price is higher than the average market value of a BCE common share. The number of excluded options was 6,554,350 for the second quarter of 2024 and for the first half of 2024, compared to 3,157,969 for the second quarter of 2023 and for the first half of 2023.
        61



Note 10 Acquisition of spectrum licences
On November 30, 2023, Bell Mobility secured the right to acquire 939 licences of 3800 MHz spectrum across Canada for $518 million. On January 17, 2024, Bell made a first payment of $104 million to Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada (ISED). The remaining balance of $414 million was paid on May 29, 2024, at which time Bell acquired the 3800 MHz spectrum licences.
Note 11 Debt
On May 24, 2024, Bell Canada issued, under its 1997 trust indenture, 5.60% Series M-61 medium-term note (MTN) debentures, with a principal amount of $400 million, which mature on August 11, 2053. The Series M-61 debentures were issued pursuant to a re-opening of an existing series of MTN debentures. Additionally, on the same date, Bell Canada issued, under its 1997 trust indenture, 5.15% Series M-63 MTN debentures, with a principal amount of $1.1 billion, which mature on August 24, 2034.
On February 15, 2024, Bell Canada issued, under its 2016 trust indenture, 5.200% Series US-9 Notes, with a principal amount of $700 million in U.S. dollars ($942 million in Canadian dollars), which mature on February 15, 2034. The Series US-9 Notes have been hedged for foreign currency fluctuations through cross currency interest rate swaps. Additionally, on the same date, Bell Canada issued, under its 2016 trust indenture, 5.550% Series US-10 Notes, with a principal amount of $750 million in U.S. dollars ($1,009 million in Canadian dollars), which mature on February 15, 2054. The Series US-10 Notes have been hedged for foreign currency fluctuations with cross currency interest rate swaps and in addition, $336 million in Canadian dollars have been hedged for changes in fair value with interest rate swaps. See Note 13, Financial assets and liabilities, for additional details.
The Series M-61 and M-63 MTN debentures and the Series US-9 and US-10 Notes are fully and unconditionally guaranteed by BCE.
In Q1 2024, Bell Canada reclassified its 2.75% Series M-49 MTN debentures with a total principal amount of $600 million and its 3.35% Series M-47 MTN debentures with a total principal amount of $1,500 million, which mature on January 29, 2025 and March 12, 2025, respectively, from long-term debt to debt due within one year.
In Q2 2024, Bell Canada extended the term of its $2.5 billion committed revolving credit facility from May 2028 to May 2029 and the term of its $1 billion committed expansion credit facility from May 2026 to May 2027.
Note 12 Post-employment benefit plans
Post-employment benefit plans cost
We provide pension and other benefits for most of our employees. These include defined benefit (DB) pension plans, defined contribution (DC) pension plans and other post-employment benefits (OPEBs).
Components of post-employment benefit plans service cost
Three months Six months
For the period ended June 30 2024 2023 2024 2023
DB pension (33) (32) (66) (64)
DC pension (31) (29) (74) (68)
OPEBs (1) —  (1) — 
Less:
Capitalized benefit plans cost 17  13  33  26 
Total post-employment benefit plans service cost (48) (48) (108) (106)




62 BCE Inc. 2024 SECOND QUARTER SHAREHOLDER REPORT



Components of post-employment benefit plans financing income
Three months Six months
For the period ended June 30 2024 2023 2024 2023
DB pension 25  37  49  74 
OPEBs (8) (10) (16) (20)
Total net return on post-employment benefit plans 17  27  33  54 
Note 13 Financial assets and liabilities
Fair value
The following table provides the fair value details of certain financial instruments measured at amortized cost in the consolidated statements of financial position (statements of financial position).
  June 30, 2024 December 31, 2023
Classification Fair value methodology Carrying value Fair value Carrying value Fair value
Debt securities
and other debt
Debt due within one year and long-term debt Quoted market price of debt 31,504  29,828  29,049  28,225 
The following table provides the fair value details of financial instruments measured at fair value in the statements of financial position.
Fair value
  Classification Carrying value of asset (liability) Quoted prices in active markets for identical assets (level 1)
Observable market data (level 2)(1)
Non-observable market inputs (level 3)(2)
June 30, 2024        
Publicly-traded and privately-held investments (3)
Other non-current assets 599  19  —  580 
Derivative financial instruments Other current assets, trade payables and other liabilities, other non-current assets and liabilities (331) —  (331) — 
Other Trade payables and other liabilities and other non-current assets 148  —  220  (72)
December 31, 2023        
Publicly-traded and privately-held investments (3)
Other non-current assets 587  10  —  577 
Derivative financial instruments Other current assets, trade payables and other liabilities, other non-current assets and liabilities (488) —  (488) — 
Other Other non-current assets and liabilities 147  —  216  (69)
(1)Observable market data such as equity prices, interest rates, swap rate curves and foreign currency exchange rates.
(2)Non-observable market inputs such as discounted cash flows and revenue and earnings multiples. For certain privately-held investments and other financial liabilities, changes in our valuation assumptions may result in a significant increase (decrease) in the fair value of our level 3 financial instruments.
(3)Unrealized gains and losses are recorded in Other comprehensive income (loss) in the statements of comprehensive income and are reclassified from Accumulated other comprehensive loss to the Deficit in the statements of financial position when realized.
Market risk
Currency exposures
In 2024, we entered into cross currency interest rate swaps with a notional amount of $700 million in U.S. dollars ($942 million in Canadian dollars) to hedge the U.S. currency exposure of our US-9 Notes maturing in 2034. The fair value of the cross currency interest rate swaps at June 30, 2024 was a net liability of $5 million recognized in Other current assets and Other non-current liabilities in the statements of financial position.
63



See Note 11, Debt, for additional details.
In 2024, we entered into cross currency interest rate swaps with a notional amount of $750 million in U.S. dollars ($1,009 million in Canadian dollars) to hedge the U.S. currency exposure of our US-10 Notes maturing in 2054. In connection with these swaps, cross currency basis rate swaps outstanding at December 31, 2023 with a notional amount of $644 million were settled. The fair value of the cross currency interest rate swaps at June 30, 2024 was a net liability of $7 million recognized in Other current assets, Other non-current assets, and Other non-current liabilities in the statements of financial position. See Note 11, Debt, for additional details.
In 2024, we entered into cross currency interest rate swaps with a notional amount of $240 million in U.S. dollars ($324 million in Canadian dollars) to hedge the U.S. currency exposure of outstanding loans maturing in 2026 under our Bell Mobility uncommitted trade loan agreement. The fair value of the cross currency interest rate swaps at June 30, 2024 was a net asset of $4 million recognized in Other current assets and Other non-current assets in the statements of financial position.
A 10% depreciation (appreciation) in the value of the Canadian dollar relative to the U.S. dollar would result in a gain of $12 million (loss of $44 million) recognized in net earnings at June 30, 2024 and a gain of $130 million (loss of $119 million) recognized in Other comprehensive income (loss) at June 30, 2024, with all other variables held constant.
The following table provides further details on our outstanding foreign currency forward contracts and options at June 30, 2024.
Type of hedge Buy
currency
Amount to receive Sell
currency
Amount
to pay
Maturity Hedged item
Cash flow (1)
USD 1,174  CAD 1,607  2024 Loans
Cash flow USD 1,180  CAD 1,601  2024 Commercial paper
Cash flow USD 359  CAD 459  2024 Anticipated purchases
Cash flow PHP 1,470  CAD 35  2024 Anticipated purchases
Cash flow USD 608  CAD 793  2025 Anticipated purchases
Cash flow PHP 3,193  CAD 75  2025 Anticipated purchases
Cash flow USD 280  CAD 377  2026 Anticipated purchases
Economic USD 90  CAD 118  2024 Anticipated purchases
Economic - call options USD 124  CAD 151  2024 Anticipated purchases
Economic - call options CAD 112  USD 78  2024 Anticipated purchases
Economic - put options USD 335  CAD 437  2024 Anticipated purchases
Economic USD 120  CAD 158  2025  Anticipated purchases
Economic CAD 137  USD 100  2025  Anticipated purchases
Economic - options (2)
USD 60  CAD 78  2025  Anticipated purchases
Economic - call options USD 270  CAD 345  2025  Anticipated purchases
Economic - put options USD 360  CAD 466  2025  Anticipated purchases
Economic USD 100  CAD 136  2026  Anticipated purchases
(1) Forward contracts to hedge loans secured by receivables under our securitization program.
(2) Foreign currency options with a leverage provision and a profit cap limitation.
Interest rate exposures
In 2024, we entered into forward starting interest rate swaps, effective from 2026, with a notional amount of $336 million to hedge the fair value of our US-10 Notes maturing in 2054. The fair value of the interest rate swaps at June 30, 2024 was an asset of $2 million recognized in Other non-current assets in the statements of financial position. See Note 11, Debt, for additional details.
In 2024, we sold interest rate swaptions, expiring in 2024, with a notional amount of $300 million to hedge economically the fair value of our M-17 MTN debentures maturing in 2035. The fair value of the interest rate swaptions at June 30, 2024 was a liability of $3 million recognized in Trade payables and other liabilities in the statements of financial position.
In 2024, we sold interest rate swaptions, expiring in 2024, with a notional amount of $750 million for $3 million to hedge economically the fair value of our M-53 MTN debentures maturing in 2027. The fair value of the interest rate swaptions at June 30, 2024 was a liability of $3 million recognized in Trade payables and other liabilities in the statements of financial position.
In 2024, we sold interest rate floors, maturing in 2029, with a notional amount of $350 million and purchased interest rate options, expiring in 2026, with a notional amount of $440 million to hedge economically the interest cost of our M-62 MTN debentures maturing in 2029. The fair value of the interest rate floors and interest rate options is a net asset of $5 million
64 BCE Inc. 2024 SECOND QUARTER SHAREHOLDER REPORT recognized in Other current assets, Other non-current assets, Trade payables and other liabilities and Other non-current liabilities in the statements of financial position.



A 1% increase (decrease) in interest rates would result in a loss of $28 million (gain of $8 million) recognized in net earnings for the six months ended June 30, 2024, with all other variables held constant.
Equity price exposures
We use equity forward contracts on BCE’s common shares to hedge economically the cash flow exposure related to the settlement of equity settled share-based compensation plans. The fair value of our equity forward contracts at June 30, 2024 and December 31, 2023 was a net liability of $266 million and $162 million, respectively, recognized in Other current assets, Trade payables and other liabilities and Other non-current liabilities in the statements of financial position. A loss of $23 million and $113 million for the three and six months ended June 30, 2024, respectively, relating to these equity forward contracts is recognized in Other expense in the income statements.
A 5% increase (decrease) in the market price of BCE’s common shares would result in a gain (loss) of $24 million recognized in net earnings at June 30, 2024, with all other variables held constant.
Note 14 Share capital
Normal course issuer Bid for BCE First Preferred Shares
For the three and six months ended June 30, 2024, BCE repurchased and canceled 2,187,900 and 4,301,488 First Preferred Shares with a stated capital of $55 million and $108 million for a total cost of $38 million and $76 million, respectively. The remaining $17 million and $32 million were recorded to contributed surplus for the three and six months ended June 30, 2024, respectively.
Note 15 Share-based payments
The following share-based payment amounts are included in the income statements as operating costs.
Three months Six months
For the period ended June 30 2024 2023 2024 2023
Restricted share units (RSUs) and performance share units (PSUs) (10) (10) (35) (44)
Employee savings plan and deferred share units (8) (8) (17) (17)
Total share-based payments (18) (18) (52) (61)
The following tables summarize the change in outstanding RSUs/PSUs and stock options for the period ended June 30, 2024.
RSUs/PSUs
Number of
RSUs/PSUs
Outstanding, January 1, 2024 3,412,812 
Granted 1,130,718 
Dividends credited 134,118 
Settled (1,269,886)
Forfeited (35,204)
Outstanding, June 30, 2024 3,372,558 
Stock options
Number of options Weighted average exercise price ($)
Outstanding, January 1, 2024 7,484,561  61 
Forfeited or expired (930,211) 59 
Outstanding and exercisable, June 30, 2024 6,554,350  61 
65
EX-99.3 4 a2024-q2xceoandceocertific.htm CEO /CFO CERTIFICATIONS Document


Exhibit 99.3
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Form 52-109F2 – Certification of Interim Filings - Full Certificate
I, Mirko Bibic, President and Chief Executive Officer of BCE Inc., certify the following:

1. Review: I have reviewed the interim financial report and interim MD&A (together, the “interim filings”) of BCE Inc. (the “issuer”) for the interim period ended June 30, 2024.

2. No misrepresentations: Based on my knowledge, having exercised reasonable diligence, the interim filings do not contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact required to be stated or that is necessary to make a statement not misleading in light of the circumstances under which it was made, with respect to the period covered by the interim filings.

3. Fair presentation: Based on my knowledge, having exercised reasonable diligence, the interim financial report together with the other financial information included in the interim filings fairly present in all material respects the financial condition, financial performance and cash flows of the issuer, as of the date of and for the periods presented in the interim filings.

4. Responsibility: The issuer’s other certifying officer(s) and I are responsible for establishing and maintaining disclosure controls and procedures (DC&P) and internal control over financial reporting (ICFR), as those terms are defined in National Instrument 52-109 Certification of Disclosure in Issuers’ Annual and Interim Filings, for the issuer.

5. Design: Subject to the limitations, if any, described in paragraphs 5.2 and 5.3, the issuer’s other certifying officer(s) and I have, as at the end of the period covered by the interim filings
A.designed DC&P, or caused it to be designed under our supervision, to provide reasonable assurance that
I.material information relating to the issuer is made known to us by others, particularly during the period in which the interim filings are being prepared; and
II.information required to be disclosed by the issuer in its annual filings, interim filings or other reports filed or submitted by it under securities legislation is recorded, processed, summarized and reported within the time periods specified in securities legislation; and
B.designed ICFR, or caused it to be designed under our supervision, to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with the issuer’s GAAP.



5.1 Control framework: The control framework the issuer’s other certifying officer(s) and I used to design the issuer’s ICFR is the Internal Control-Integrated Framework (2013) issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission (COSO).

5.2 N/A

5.3 N/A

6. Reporting changes in ICFR: The issuer has disclosed in its interim MD&A any change in the issuer’s ICFR that occurred during the period beginning on April 1, 2024 and ended on June 30, 2024 that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, the issuer’s ICFR.

Date: August 1, 2024


(signed) Mirko Bibic
Mirko Bibic
President and Chief Executive Officer































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Form 52-109F2 – Certification of Interim Filings - Full Certificate
I, Curtis Millen, Executive Vice-President and Chief Financial Officer of BCE Inc., certify the following:

1. Review: I have reviewed the interim financial report and interim MD&A (together, the “interim filings”) of BCE Inc. (the “issuer”) for the interim period ended June 30, 2024.

2. No misrepresentations: Based on my knowledge, having exercised reasonable diligence, the interim filings do not contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact required to be stated or that is necessary to make a statement not misleading in light of the circumstances under which it was made, with respect to the period covered by the interim filings.

3. Fair presentation: Based on my knowledge, having exercised reasonable diligence, the interim financial report together with the other financial information included in the interim filings fairly present in all material respects the financial condition, financial performance and cash flows of the issuer, as of the date of and for the periods presented in the interim filings.

4. Responsibility: The issuer’s other certifying officer(s) and I are responsible for establishing and maintaining disclosure controls and procedures (DC&P) and internal control over financial reporting (ICFR), as those terms are defined in National Instrument 52-109 Certification of Disclosure in Issuers’ Annual and Interim Filings, for the issuer.

5. Design: Subject to the limitations, if any, described in paragraphs 5.2 and 5.3, the issuer’s other certifying officer(s) and I have, as at the end of the period covered by the interim filings
A.designed DC&P, or caused it to be designed under our supervision, to provide reasonable assurance that
I.material information relating to the issuer is made known to us by others, particularly during the period in which the interim filings are being prepared; and
II.information required to be disclosed by the issuer in its annual filings, interim filings or other reports filed or submitted by it under securities legislation is recorded, processed, summarized and reported within the time periods specified in securities legislation; and
B.designed ICFR, or caused it to be designed under our supervision, to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with the issuer’s GAAP.




5.1 Control framework: The control framework the issuer’s other certifying officer(s) and I used to design the issuer’s ICFR is the Internal Control-Integrated Framework (2013) issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission (COSO).

5.2 N/A

5.3 N/A

6. Reporting changes in ICFR: The issuer has disclosed in its interim MD&A any change in the issuer’s ICFR that occurred during the period beginning on April 1, 2024 and ended on June 30, 2024 that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, the issuer’s ICFR.

Date: August 1, 2024


(signed) Curtis Millen
Curtis Millen
Executive Vice-President and Chief Financial Officer


EX-99.4 5 a2024-q2xnewsrelease.htm NEWS RELEASE Document

Exhibit 99.4
imagea.jpg

This news release contains forward-looking statements. For a description of the related risk factors and assumptions, please see the section entitled “Caution Regarding Forward-Looking Statements” later in this news release. The information contained in this news release is unaudited.

BCE reports second quarter 2024 results

•Consolidated adjusted EBITDA1 growth of 2.0% in Q2, delivering 1.3 percentage-point increase in adjusted EBITDA margin2 to 44.9% on 3.3% lower operating costs
•Net earnings of $604 million, up 52.1%, with net earnings attributable to common shareholders of $537 million, up 63.2% or $0.59 per common share; adjusted net earnings1 of $712 million yielded adjusted EPS1 of $0.78, down 1.3%
•Free cash flow1 increased 8.0% to $1,097 million; cash flows from operating activities down 9.6% to $2,137 million
•131,043 total mobile phone net activations3, up 4.4%, including highest quarterly prepaid net activations in almost two years of 52,543, up 269%; 87,917 mobile connected device net activations, up 10.5%
•Canada’s fastest 5G+ network4 now even faster with deployment of 3800 MHz spectrum in select areas of GTA, enabling speeds of up to 4 Gbps
•23,841 total retail Internet net subscriber activations3 – second best Q2 result since 2007 – drove 3% Internet revenue growth and 23% higher mobility and Internet service bundle sales
•Bell Media digital revenue5 up 23% as digital platforms and advertising technology drove strong growth; first quarter of total media revenue and adjusted EBITDA growth since Q2 2022
•Reconfirming all 2024 financial guidance targets

MONTRÉAL, August 1, 2024 – BCE Inc. (TSX, NYSE: BCE) today reported results for the second quarter (Q2) of 2024.

“Bell’s Q2 results reflect the Bell team’s disciplined execution and continued ability to navigate an evolving marketplace,” said Mirko Bibic, President and CEO of BCE and Bell Canada.

“The superiority and speeds of our fibre network are continuing to drive new Internet subscriber growth, with our highest Q2 consumer retail Internet net additions in 17 years and an 18% year-over-year increase in households subscribing to Internet and mobility service bundles where we have fibre. In the highly-competitive wireless environment, we’re striking the right balance between subscriber growth and profitability, and our promotional discipline is delivering new subscribers focused on higher-value connections. Total postpaid and prepaid mobile phone net additions were up 4.4% in Q2 to 131,043 and we see potential for continued growth given Canada’s population expansion.

1



We’re also making strides in our transformation from a telco to a tech services and digital media leader. Our expanding capabilities in cloud services, security and managed automation drove strong business solutions services revenue growth of 22% this quarter, and we’re seeing momentum in 5G and IoT B2B solutions with mobile connected device net activations up 10.5% over 2023. On the Bell Media front, our advanced advertising solutions for clients drove a 35% increase in digital advertising revenue.

With additional transformational investments and transactions this quarter, including the acquisitions of Stratejm and CloudKettle, the expansion of our strategic collaboration with ServiceNow, investments in AI throughout our business, and the announcement of our intent to sell Northwestel to Sixty North Unity, a consortium of Indigenous communities from the Yukon, Northwest Territories and Nunavut, we have a clear strategic vision and path forward for continued execution excellence heading into the back half of the year.”
________________
1 Adjusted EBITDA is a total of segments measure, adjusted net earnings and free cash flow are non-GAAP financial measures and adjusted EPS is a non-GAAP ratio. Refer to the Non-GAAP and Other Financial Measures section in this news release for more information on these measures.
2 Adjusted EBITDA margin is defined as adjusted EBITDA divided by operating revenues. Refer to the Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) section in this news release for more information on adjusted EBITDA margin.
3 Refer to the Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) section in this news release for more information on subscriber (or customer) units.
4 Based on a third-party score (Global Wireless Solutions OneScore) calculated using Bell wireless 5G and 5G+ network testing in Canada against other national wireless networks from April 2023 to June 2024.
5 Digital revenues are comprised of advertising revenue from digital platforms including web sites, mobile apps, connected TV apps and out-of-home (OOH) digital assets/platforms, as well as advertising procured through Bell digital buying platforms and subscription revenue from direct-to-consumer services and video-on-demand services.

KEY BUSINESS DEVELOPMENTS

Advancing economic reconciliation through a transformative partnership
•Bell entered into an agreement with Sixty North Unity, a consortium of Indigenous communities from the Yukon, the Northwest Territories and Nunavut, for the sale of Northwestel, for up to $1 billion, subject to adjustments. The transaction will advance economic reconciliation through Indigenous ownership of telecommunications infrastructure in the North. Closing of the transaction is subject to certain closing conditions, including securing financing by Sixty North Unity, the completion of confirmatory due diligence, and receipt of the Competition Bureau’s approval, and, as such, there can be no assurances that the proposed transaction will ultimately be consummated.

5G+ leadership and the fastest Internet speeds
•Bell deployed 3800 MHz spectrum in select areas of Toronto and Kitchener-Waterloo making Canada's fastest 5G+ network even faster.
•For the second year in a row, Bell was named fastest Internet and fastest Wi-Fi in the Ookla Q1-Q2 2024 Speedtest Awards report6, maintaining its position as Canada’s most awarded Internet service provider7.

Driving growth through acquisitions
•Bell Media completed the previously announced acquisition of OUTFRONT Media Inc.’s Canadian out-of-home (OOH) media business, OUTEDGE Media Canada, to support Bell Media’s digital media strategy and deliver multi-channel marketing solutions across Canada.
•Bell announced the acquisition of Canadian tech services companies Stratejm and CloudKettle Inc., enhancing in-house expertise in managed cybersecurity and Salesforce
2



digital workflow services, and strengthening end-to-end AI-powered support for enterprise customers.

Innovative partnerships to deliver for our customers
•Bell expanded its multi-year strategic agreement with ServiceNow to develop new capabilities within its telecommunications service experience for businesses while accelerating Bell’s own digital transformation from a telco to a tech services and digital media leader. Bell is one of ServiceNow’s largest communications customers with a first-of-its-kind collaboration in Canada.
•Bell announced a three-year partnership with world-leading AI research institute, Mila, to develop AI solutions and cultivate a vibrant AI ecosystem within Québec and across Canada.

Delivering the most compelling content
•At Upfront and Futur 2024, Bell Media announced its 2024-2025 slate of original content, including 36 new English and French original programs with 62 previously announced titles, for a total of 98, with additional programs set to be announced in the coming months.
•Bell Media announced new FAST channel platform partners, Plex and The Roku Channel, which will soon air Bell Media’s 10 FAST channels.
•An average of 1.48 million people tuned in to watch the Formula 1 Canadian Grand Prix 2024 on TSN, RDS, CTV and Noovo, marking it as the highest F1 audience on record.
•A total of 18.7 million people tuned in for coverage of the CONMEBOL Copa América 2024 and UEFA EURO 2024 across TSN, RDS and CTV.

Advanced advertising solutions
•Bell Media announced the launch of Bell Ads for Business, an advertising platform that allows businesses across Canada to take advantage of the unique and easy-to-use capabilities of the Bell demand-side platform and target intended audiences.
•Bell Media becomes the strategic Canadian partner of TikTok Pulse Premiere in Canada, an advertising solution that gives advertisers the control and predictability to choose where their ads are placed, adjacent to select publisher content on the For You feed, including adjacency for Bell Media TikTok content.
•Bell Media is the exclusive Canadian sales partner of Dotdash Meredith, America’s largest digital publisher, expanding premium digital advertising in Canada.

Championing the customer experience
•Bell and Best Buy Canada opened the first 24 Best Buy Express stores in locations across British Columbia, Alberta, Ontario and Québec.
•Bell introduced the Bell Business Wi-Fi App for customers, delivering a next-level Wi-Fi experience for small businesses in Ontario and Québec.

Bell for Better
•Bell’s ESG objectives, sustainable investments and diversity and equity initiatives helped Bell become the top-rated telecommunications company and ranked 19th overall on the Corporate Knights Best 50 Corporate Citizens8 list for 2024.
•Scarborough Health Network (SHN) opened the new Bell Seniors’ Mental Health Clinic on June 20 as part of SHN’s Community Mental Health Centre that was entirely funded by donors – including a $1 million commitment from Bell that was initiated in 2020 and will be gifted in full by 2025.
3



________________
6 Based on analysis by Ookla, a web testing and network diagnostics company, of Speedtest Intelligence data of fixed and Wi-Fi nationally aggregated Speed Score results for Q1-Q2 2023 and Q1-Q2 2024. Ookla compared 21,155,301 user-initiated tests that are taken on various Speedtest applications connected to a fixed network, including tests taken on mobile phones over a Wi-Fi connection.
7 Most awarded Internet based on Bell competitive analysis. Bell awards include Ookla Q1-Q2 2024 Speedtest Awards
and BrandSpark Most Trusted ISP. BrandSpark is a research and consulting firm. Winners were determined by a national survey of 25,161 Canadian shoppers who gave their top-of-mind, unaided answers to which brands they trust most and why in categories they have recently shopped.
8 According to Corporate Knights Inc. The annual ranking was released on June 26, 2024 and is based on a set of 25 ESG indicators that compares Canadian-headquartered privately held companies and Canadian Crown corporations with at least $1 billion annual revenue, Canadian listed companies with more than $1 billion annual revenue, companies included in S&P / TSX Renewable Entergy and Clean Technology Index (all revenues), top 10 largest Canadian cooperative organizations by revenue, top 10 credit unions by assets under management and those with at least 100,000 members and all 2023 Best 50 companies. All companies are scored on up to 25 key performance indicators covering resource management, employee management, sustainable revenue and sustainable investment and supplier performance in comparison to their peer group, with 50% of each company’s score assigned to sustainable revenue and sustainable investment.

BCE RESULTS

Financial Highlights

($ millions except per share amounts) (unaudited) Q2 2024 Q2 2023 % change
BCE
Operating revenues 6,005 6,066 (1.0%)
Net earnings 604 397 52.1%
Net earnings attributable to common shareholders 537 329 63.2%
Adjusted net earnings 712 722 (1.4%)
Adjusted EBITDA 2,697 2,645 2.0%
Net earnings per common share (EPS) 0.59 0.37 59.5%
Adjusted EPS 0.78 0.79 (1.3%)
Cash flows from operating activities 2,137 2,365 (9.6%)
Capital expenditures (978) (1,307) 25.2%
Free cash flow 1,097 1,016 8.0%

“BCE’s Q2 financial results demonstrate our focused execution, agility and effective cost management in a highly competitive marketplace,” said Curtis Millen, Chief Financial Officer of BCE and Bell Canada.

“Adjusted EBITDA grew 2.0%, with a 3.3% reduction in operating costs this quarter, demonstrating our disciplined focus on driving costs out of the business. We also saw a return to positive service revenue growth in Q2, which is a direct reflection of the superiority of fibre and our premium brand wireless strategy, continued strength in enterprise business solutions with revenue up 22% over last year, and our pivot to digital media at scale. In fact, Bell Media digital revenue was up 23%, contributing to our first quarter of total media revenue and adjusted EBITDA growth since Q2 2022.

With a continued focus on profitable, margin-accretive subscriber growth, cost efficiency initiatives, and our agility in navigating competitive pressures, we remain confident in our ability to deliver on our financial guidance targets for 2024.”

•BCE operating revenues were $6,005 million in Q2, down 1.0% compared to Q2 2023, due to an 8.7% decrease in product revenue to $697 million. Service revenue was essentially stable, up 0.1% to $5,308 million, as growth at Bell Media was mostly offset by a year-over-year decline at Bell Communication and Technology Services (Bell CTS).
4



•Net earnings increased 52.1% to $604 million and net earnings attributable to common shareholders totalled $537 million, or $0.59 per share, up 63.2% and 59.5% respectively. The year-over-year increases were due to lower other expense, reflecting a higher non-cash loss recorded in Q2 2023 on BCE’s share of an obligation to repurchase at fair value the minority interest in one of its joint venture equity investments, lower severance, acquisition and other costs, higher adjusted EBITDA and lower income taxes. These factors were partly offset by higher interest expense, higher asset impairment charges related mainly to right-of-use assets for certain office spaces we ceased using as part of our real estate optimization strategy, and increased depreciation and amortization expense. Adjusted net earnings were down 1.4% to $712 million, resulting in a 1.3% decrease in adjusted EPS to $0.78.
•Adjusted EBITDA grew 2.0% to $2,697 million, reflecting increases of 2.0% at Bell CTS and 1.9% at Bell Media. BCE’s consolidated adjusted EBITDA margin increased 1.3 percentage points to 44.9% from 43.6% in Q2 2023. This result was driven by a 3.3% reduction in operating costs reflecting workforce restructuring initiatives undertaken over the past year, lower cost of goods sold from decreased sales of low-margin products in the quarter, as well as technology and automation-enabled operating efficiencies across the organization.
•BCE capital expenditures were $978 million, down 25.2% from $1,307 million last year, corresponding to a capital intensity9 of 16.3%, compared to 21.5% in Q2 2023. The year-over-year decrease is consistent with a planned reduction in capital spending and slowdown in our pure fibre build.
•BCE cash flows from operating activities were $2,137 million, down 9.6% from Q2 2023, mainly due to higher interest paid, higher severance and other costs paid, and lower cash from working capital due in part to timing of supplier payments, partly offset by decreased cash taxes due mainly to the timing of tax instalment payments and higher adjusted EBITDA.
•Free cash flow increased 8.0% to $1,097 million from $1,016 million in Q2 2023, driven by lower capital expenditures, despite decreased cash flows from operating activities excluding acquisition and other costs paid.
______________________
9 Capital intensity is defined as capital expenditures divided by operating revenues. Refer to the Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) section in this news release for more information on capital intensity.

OPERATING RESULTS BY SEGMENT

Bell Communication and Technology Services10 (Bell CTS)
•Total Bell CTS operating revenues in Q2 2024 decreased 1.3% to $5,283 million compared to Q2 2023, due mainly to lower product revenue as service revenue was essentially stable.
•Product revenue decreased 8.7% to $697 million, due to a reduction in consumer electronics revenue from The Source attributable mainly to store closures as part of our strategic distribution partnership with Best Buy Canada as well as reduced store traffic, lower mobile device contracted sales transaction volumes given a greater sales mix of bring-your-own device customer activations, and lower telecom data equipment sales to large business customers, reflecting the normalization of sales volumes compared to exceptionally strong growth in Q2 2023 from the recovery in global supply chain disruptions.
•Service revenue was down 0.1% to $4,586 million, reflecting ongoing declines in legacy voice, data and satellite TV services, greater acquisition, retention and bundle discounts on residential home services compared to Q2 last year, and lower mobile phone blended average revenue per user (ARPU)11. These factors were mostly offset by ongoing expansion of our mobile phone, mobile connected device and retail Internet and IPTV subscriber bases, increased sales of business solutions services to large enterprise customers, as well as the financial contribution from acquisitions made over the past year including FX Innovation.
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•Bell CTS adjusted EBITDA grew 2.0% to $2,479 million, yielding a 1.5 percentage-point margin increase to 46.9% from 45.4% in Q2 2023. This was driven by a 4.1% reduction in operating costs reflecting workforce reduction initiatives undertaken over the past year, lower cost of goods sold from decreased sales of low-margin products in the quarter, as well as technology and automation-enabled operating efficiencies across the organization.
•Bell added 131,043 total net new postpaid and prepaid mobile phone subscribers12, 4.4% higher than 125,539 in Q2 2023.
•Postpaid mobile phone net subscriber activations totaled 78,500, down 29.5% from 111,282 in Q2 2023; Q2 2023 being our best result in 18 years. The decrease was due to higher mobile phone postpaid customer churn12, which increased to 1.18% from 0.94% in Q2 2023, reflecting greater competitive market activity and promotional offer intensity compared to last year. This was partly offset by 11.9% higher gross subscriber activations, driven by population growth, continued 5G and multi-product bundling momentum and targeted promotions.
•Bell’s prepaid mobile phone net subscriber activations were 52,543, up from 14,257 in Q2 2023. The year-over-year increase was the result of 19.9% growth in gross activations, driven by expanded retail distribution and effective Lucky Mobile marketing initiatives, as well as a lower customer churn rate which improved 8 basis points to 4.60%.
•Bell’s mobile phone customer base totalled 10,337,495 at the end of Q2 2024, a 3.1% increase over last year, comprised of 9,440,775 postpaid subscribers, up 3.2%, and 896,720 prepaid customers, up 2.3%.
•Mobile phone blended ARPU was down 1.9% to $58.04 from $59.16 in Q2 2023, reflecting sustained competitive pressures on base rate plan pricing, which have intensified over the past year, and lower overage revenue from customers subscribing to unlimited and larger capacity data plans.
•Mobile connected device net activations increased 10.5% to 87,917 from 79,537 in Q2 2023, driven by strong demand for Bell IoT services, including business solutions and connected car subscriptions. At the end of Q2 2024, mobile connected device subscribers12 totalled 2,886,871, an increase of 11.5% over last year.
•Bell added 23,841 total new net retail Internet subscribers12, representing our second-best Q2 result since 2007 after Q2 2023, reflecting continued strong demand for Bell’s fibre services and bundled offerings with mobile service. However, this result was down 4.4% from 24,934 in Q2 2023, due to less new fibre footprint expansion compared to last year, lower small business customer demand and higher customer deactivations attributable to aggressive promotional offers by competitors offering cable, fixed wireless and satellite Internet services. Retail Internet subscribers totalled 4,520,553 at the end of Q213, a 4.2% increase from last year.
•Bell’s retail IPTV customer base decreased by 1,313 net subscribers, compared to a net gain of 11,506 in Q2 2023. The year-over-year decrease was due mainly to lower gross activations on our Fibe TV streaming service. Bell served 2,124,200 retail IPTV subscribers13 at the end of Q2, a 5.6% increase over last year. In Q2 2024, we increased our retail IPTV subscriber base by 40,997 to align the deactivation policy for our Fibe TV streaming service to that of our standalone Fibe TV service.
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•Retail residential NAS12 net losses were 53,250 compared to 49,608 in Q2 2023. The higher year-over-year net losses reflect ongoing substitution to wireless and Internet-based services. Bell’s retail residential NAS customer base13 totalled 1,924,456 at the end of Q2 2024, down 8.4% from last year.
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10 As of Q1 2024, we are no longer reporting retail satellite TV subscribers as this no longer represents a significant proportion of our revenues. As a result, satellite TV subscribers have been removed from our retail TV subscriber base, and we now report exclusively retail IPTV subscribers.
11 ARPU is defined as Bell CTS wireless external services revenues, divided by the average mobile phone subscriber base for the specified period, expressed as a dollar unit per month. Refer to the Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) section in this news release for more information on blended ARPU. In Q1 2024, we adjusted our mobile phone postpaid subscriber base to remove very low to non-revenue generating business market subscribers of 105,802.
12 Refer to the Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) section in this news release for more information on churn and subscriber (or customer) units.
13 In Q2 2023, Bell’s retail high-speed Internet, retail IPTV and retail residential NAS lines subscriber bases increased by 35,080, 243 and 7,458 subscribers respectively, as a result of small acquisitions. In Q1 2024, Bell’s retail high-speed Internet subscriber base increased by 3,850 business subscribers as a result of a small acquisition. In addition, in Q1 2024, we removed 11,645 turbo hub subscribers from our retail high-speed Internet subscriber base as we are no longer actively marketing this product in our wireless-to-the-home footprint.

Bell Media
•Bell Media operating revenue was up 0.9% to $812 million in Q2 2024 compared to Q2 2023. This was driven by 1.9% higher advertising revenue, reflecting stronger year-over-year TV sports specialty performance, higher digital advertising revenue and the financial contribution from the acquisition of OUTEDGE Media Canada completed on June 7, 2024. Formula 1 Canadian Grand Prix growth and higher international sales of Bell Media content also contributed to higher total media revenue this quarter.
•Total digital revenues grew 23%, the result of strong growth in digital advertising that was fuelled by Bell Media’s programmatic advertising marketplace as well as continued Crave and sports direct-to-consumer streaming subscriber growth. The increase in digital advertising revenue reflects growing customer usage of our expanded strategic audience management (SAM) TV sales tool, which drove a significant increase in advertising bookings this quarter, as well as growth in ad-supported subscription tiers on Crave and Addressable TV. Crave direct-to-consumer streaming subscribers grew 21%, while sports direct-to-consumer streaming subscribers more than doubled over last year, benefitting from premium, live sports content including UEFA EURO 2024 and CONMEBOL Copa América 2024.
•Adjusted EBITDA in Q2 2024 was up 1.9% to $218 million compared to Q2 2023, delivering a 0.2 percentage-point increase in margin to 26.8% on the flow-through of higher operating revenue. Operating costs were essentially stable compared to last year, increasing by 0.5%, as higher content costs were mostly offset by restructuring initiatives undertaken over the past year.
•CTV remained Canada's most-watched English-language conventional network for a 23rd consecutive year, leading in primetime with total viewers and in all key demographics for the 2023/2024 season to date.
•Bell Media was ranked number one in full-day viewership for all French-language entertainment specialty and pay channels. Noovo had the largest full-day growth in Q2 2024 among A25-54 (+8% YoY audience) for French-language conventional TV.

COMMON SHARE DIVIDEND
BCE’s Board of Directors has declared a quarterly dividend of $0.9975 per common share, payable on October 15, 2024 to shareholders of record at the close of business on September 16, 2024.



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OUTLOOK FOR 2024
BCE confirmed its financial guidance targets for 2024, as provided on February 8, 2024, as follows:

2023 Results 2024 Guidance
Revenue growth 2.1% 0% to 4%
Adjusted EBITDA growth 2.1% 1.5% to 4.5%
Capital intensity 18.6% Below 16.5%
Adjusted EPS growth (4.2%) (7%) to (2%)
Free cash flow growth 2.5% (11%) to (3%)
Annualized common dividend per share $3.87 $3.99

Directly as a result of federal government policies, we plan a significant reduction in 2024 capital expenditures that will lead to a slowdown in our pure fibre build and lower spending in highly-regulated businesses. We expect increased interest expense, higher depreciation and amortization expense, and lower gains on sale of real estate to drive lower adjusted EPS in 2024. For 2024, we also expect higher severance payments related to workforce restructuring initiatives, higher interest paid and lower cash from working capital to drive lower free cash flow.

Please see the section entitled “Caution Regarding Forward-Looking Statements” later in this news release for a description of the principal assumptions on which BCE’s 2024 financial guidance targets are based, as well as the principal related risk factors.

CALL WITH FINANCIAL ANALYSTS
BCE will hold a conference call with the financial community to discuss Q2 2024 results on Thursday, August 1 at 8:00 am eastern. Media are welcome to participate on a listen-only basis. To participate, please dial toll-free 1-844-933-2401 or 647-724-5455. A replay will be available until midnight on September 1, 2024 by dialing 1-877-454-9859 or 647-483-1416 and entering passcode 4867347#. A live audio webcast of the conference call will be available on BCE's website at BCE Q2-2024 conference call.

NON-GAAP AND OTHER FINANCIAL MEASURES
BCE uses various financial measures to assess its business performance. Certain of these measures are calculated in accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS or GAAP) while certain other measures do not have a standardized meaning under GAAP. We believe that our GAAP financial measures, read together with adjusted non-GAAP and other financial measures, provide readers with a better understanding of how management assesses BCE's performance.

National Instrument 52-112, Non-GAAP and Other Financial Measures Disclosure (NI 52-112), prescribes disclosure requirements that apply to the following specified financial measures:

•Non-GAAP financial measures;
•Non-GAAP ratios;
•Total of segments measures;
•Capital management measures; and
•Supplementary financial measures.

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This section provides a description and classification of the specified financial measures contemplated by NI 52-112 that we use in this news release to explain our financial results except that, for supplementary financial measures, an explanation of such measures is provided where they are first referred to in this news release if the supplementary financial measures' labelling is not sufficiently descriptive.

Non-GAAP Financial Measures
A non-GAAP financial measure is a financial measure used to depict our historical or expected future financial performance, financial position or cash flow and, with respect to its composition, either excludes an amount that is included in, or includes an amount that is excluded from, the composition of the most directly comparable financial measure disclosed in BCE's consolidated primary financial statements. We believe that non-GAAP financial measures are reflective of our on-going operating results and provide readers with an understanding of management's perspective on and analysis of our performance.

Below are descriptions of the non-GAAP financial measures that we use in this news release to explain our results as well as reconciliations to the most directly comparable IFRS financial measures.

Adjusted net earnings – Adjusted net earnings is a non-GAAP financial measure and it does not have any standardized meaning under IFRS. Therefore, it is unlikely to be comparable to similar measures presented by other issuers.

We define adjusted net earnings as net earnings attributable to common shareholders before severance, acquisition and other costs, net mark-to-market losses (gains) on derivatives used to economically hedge equity settled share-based compensation plans, net equity losses (gains) on investments in associates and joint ventures, net losses (gains) on investments, early debt redemption costs, impairment of assets and discontinued operations, net of tax and non-controlling interest (NCI).

We use adjusted net earnings and we believe that certain investors and analysts use this measure, among other ones, to assess the performance of our businesses without the effects of severance, acquisition and other costs, net mark-to-market losses (gains) on derivatives used to economically hedge equity settled share-based compensation plans, net equity losses (gains) on investments in associates and joint ventures, net losses (gains) on investments, early debt redemption costs, impairment of assets and discontinued operations, net of tax and NCI. We exclude these items because they affect the comparability of our financial results and could potentially distort the analysis of trends in business performance. Excluding these items does not imply they are non-recurring.

The most directly comparable IFRS financial measure is net earnings attributable to common shareholders.

The following table is a reconciliation of net earnings attributable to common shareholders to adjusted net earnings on a consolidated basis.




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($ millions)
Q2 2024  Q2 2023
Net earnings attributable to common shareholders 537 329
Reconciling items:
Severance, acquisition and other costs 22 100
Net mark-to-market losses (gains) on derivatives used to economically hedge equity settled share-based compensation plans 23 (1)
Net equity losses on investments in associates and joint ventures 93 377
Net losses (gains) on investments 2 (79)
Early debt redemption costs - 1
Impairment of assets 60 -
Income taxes for above reconciling items (25) (5)
NCI for the above reconciling items - -

Adjusted net earnings
712 722

Free cash flow – Free cash flow is a non-GAAP financial measure and it does not have any standardized meaning under IFRS. Therefore, it is unlikely to be comparable to similar measures presented by other issuers.

We define free cash flow as cash flows from operating activities, excluding cash from discontinued operations, acquisition and other costs paid (which include significant litigation costs) and voluntary pension funding, less capital expenditures, preferred share dividends and dividends paid by subsidiaries to NCI. We exclude cash from discontinued operations, acquisition and other costs paid and voluntary pension funding because they affect the comparability of our financial results and could potentially distort the analysis of trends in business performance. Excluding these items does not imply they are non-recurring.

We consider free cash flow to be an important indicator of the financial strength and performance of our businesses. Free cash flow shows how much cash is available to pay dividends on common shares, repay debt and reinvest in our company. We believe that certain investors and analysts use free cash flow to value a business and its underlying assets and to evaluate the financial strength and performance of our businesses. The most directly comparable IFRS financial measure is cash flows from operating activities.












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The following table is a reconciliation of cash flows from operating activities to free cash flow on a consolidated basis.

($ millions)
Q2 2024 Q2 2023
Cash flows from operating activities 2,137 2,365
Capital expenditures (978) (1,307)
Cash dividends paid on preferred shares (45)
     (46)
Cash dividends paid by subsidiaries to NCI (28)
     (1)
Acquisition and other costs paid 11
        5
Free cash flow 1,097    1,016

Non-GAAP Ratios
A non-GAAP ratio is a financial measure disclosed in the form of a ratio, fraction, percentage or similar representation and that has a non-GAAP financial measure as one or more of its components.

Below is a description of the non-GAAP ratio that we use in this news release to explain our results.

Adjusted EPS – Adjusted EPS is a non-GAAP ratio and it does not have any standardized meaning under IFRS. Therefore, it is unlikely to be comparable to similar measures presented by other issuers.

We define adjusted EPS as adjusted net earnings per BCE common share. Adjusted net earnings is a non-GAAP financial measure. For further details on adjusted net earnings, refer to Non-GAAP Financial Measures above.

We use adjusted EPS, and we believe that certain investors and analysts use this measure, among other ones, to assess the performance of our businesses without the effects of severance, acquisition and other costs, net mark-to-market losses (gains) on derivatives used to economically hedge equity settled share-based compensation plans, net equity losses (gains) on investments in associates and joint ventures, net losses (gains) on investments, early debt redemption costs, impairment of assets and discontinued operations, net of tax and NCI. We exclude these items because they affect the comparability of our financial results and could potentially distort the analysis of trends in business performance. Excluding these items does not imply they are non-recurring.

Total of Segments Measures
A total of segments measure is a financial measure that is a subtotal or total of 2 or more reportable segments and is disclosed within the Notes to BCE's consolidated primary financial statements.

Below is a description of the total of segments measure that we use in this news release to explain our results as well as a reconciliation to the most directly comparable IFRS financial measure.

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Adjusted EBITDA – Adjusted EBITDA is a total of segments measure. We define adjusted EBITDA as operating revenues less operating costs as shown in BCE's consolidated income statements.

The most directly comparable IFRS financial measure is net earnings.

The following table is a reconciliation of net earnings to adjusted EBITDA on a consolidated basis.

($ millions)
Q2 2024 Q2 2023
Net earnings
Severance, acquisition and other costs
Depreciation
Amortization
Finance costs
    Interest expense
    Net return on post-employment benefit plans
Impairment of assets
Other expense
Income taxes
604
22
945
325

426
(17)
60
101
231
397
100
936
296

359
(27)
-
311
273
Adjusted EBITDA 2,697 2,645

Supplementary Financial Measures
Supplementary financial measure is a financial measure that is not reported in BCE's consolidated financial statements, and is, or is intended to be, reported periodically to represent historical or expected future financial performance, financial position, or cash flows.

An explanation of such measures is provided where they are first referred to in this news release if the supplementary financial measures' labelling is not sufficiently descriptive.

KEY PERFORMANCE INDICATORS (KPIs)
We use adjusted EBITDA margin, blended ARPU, capital intensity, churn and subscriber (or customer or NAS) units to measure the success of our strategic imperatives. These key performance indicators are not accounting measures and may not be comparable to similar measures presented by other issuers.

About BCE
BCE is Canada’s largest communications company14, providing advanced Bell broadband Internet, wireless, TV, media and business communications services. To learn more, please visit Bell.ca or BCE.ca.

Through Bell for Better, we are investing to create a better today and a better tomorrow by supporting the social and economic prosperity of our communities. This includes the Bell Let's Talk initiative, which promotes Canadian mental health with national awareness and anti-stigma campaigns like Bell Let's Talk Day and significant Bell funding of community care and access, research and workplace initiatives throughout the country. To learn more, please visit Bell.ca/LetsTalk.
_______________________
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14 Based on total revenue and total combined customer connections.

Media inquiries:
Ellen Murphy
media@bell.ca

Investor inquiries:
Thane Fotopoulos
514-870-4619
thane.fotopoulos@bell.ca

CAUTION REGARDING FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS
Certain statements made in this news release are forward-looking statements. These statements include, without limitation, statements relating to BCE’s financial guidance (including revenue, adjusted EBITDA, capital intensity, adjusted EPS and free cash flow), BCE’s 2024 annualized common share dividend, the potential for continued growth in mobile phone net additions due to population expansion, the proposed disposition of Northwestel and certain benefits expected to result from such transaction, BCE’s network deployment plans and related planned capital expenditures, BCE’s business outlook, objectives, plans and strategic priorities, and other statements that are not historical facts. Forward-looking statements are typically identified by the words assumption, goal, guidance, objective, outlook, project, strategy, target, commitment and other similar expressions or future or conditional verbs such as aim, anticipate, believe, could, expect, intend, may, plan, seek, should, strive and will. All such forward-looking statements are made pursuant to the ‘safe harbour’ provisions of applicable Canadian securities laws and of the United States Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995.

Forward-looking statements, by their very nature, are subject to inherent risks and uncertainties and are based on several assumptions, both general and specific, which give rise to the possibility that actual results or events could differ materially from our expectations expressed in or implied by such forward-looking statements and that our business outlook, objectives, plans and strategic priorities may not be achieved. These statements are not guarantees of future performance or events, and we caution you against relying on any of these forward-looking statements. The forward-looking statements contained in this news release describe our expectations as of August 1, 2024 and, accordingly, are subject to change after such date. Except as may be required by applicable securities laws, we do not undertake any obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements contained in this news release, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise. We regularly consider potential acquisitions, dispositions, mergers, business combinations, investments, monetizations, joint ventures and other transactions, some of which may be significant. Except as otherwise indicated by us, forward-looking statements do not reflect the potential impact of any such transactions or of special items that may be announced or that may occur after August 1, 2024. The financial impact of these transactions and special items can be complex and depends on the facts particular to each of them. We therefore cannot describe the expected impact in a meaningful way or in the same way we present known risks affecting our business. Forward-looking statements are presented in this news release for the purpose of assisting investors and others in understanding certain key elements of our expected financial results, as well as our objectives, strategic priorities and business outlook, and in obtaining a better understanding of our anticipated operating environment. Readers are cautioned that such information may not be appropriate for other purposes.
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Material Assumptions
A number of economic, market, operational and financial assumptions were made by BCE in preparing its forward-looking statements contained in this news release, including, but not limited to the following:

Canadian Economic Assumptions
Our forward-looking statements are based on certain assumptions concerning the Canadian economy. In particular, we have assumed:
•Modest economic growth, given the Bank of Canada’s most recent estimated growth in Canadian gross domestic product of 1.2% in 2024, representing a decrease from the earlier estimate of 1.5%
•Easing consumer price index (CPI) inflation as monetary policy works to reduce inflationary pressures
•Easing labour market conditions
•Growth in consumer spending as lower interest rates ease debt payments
•Business investment growth underpinned by easing financial conditions and the overall growth of the economy
•Interest rates expected to remain at or near current levels
•Population growth resulting from immigration
•Canadian dollar expected to remain near current levels. Further movements may be impacted by the degree of strength of the U.S. dollar, interest rates and changes in commodity prices.
Canadian Market Assumptions
Our forward-looking statements also reflect various Canadian market assumptions. In particular, we have made the following market assumptions:
•A higher level of wireline and wireless competition in consumer, business and wholesale markets
•Higher, but slowing, wireless industry penetration
•A shrinking data and voice connectivity market as business customers migrate to lower-priced telecommunications solutions or alternative over-the-top (OTT) competitors
•The Canadian traditional broadcast TV and radio advertising market is experiencing a slowdown consistent with trends in the global advertising market, with improvement expected in the medium term, although visibility to the specific timing and pace remains limited
•Declines in broadcasting distribution undertaking (BDU) subscribers driven by increasing competition from the continued rollout of subscription video on demand (SVOD) streaming services together with further scaling of OTT aggregators

Assumptions Concerning our Bell CTS Segment
Our forward-looking statements are also based on the following internal operational assumptions with respect to our Bell CTS segment:
•Increase our market share of national operators’ wireless mobile phone net additions
•Increased competitive intensity and promotional activity across all regions and market segments
•Ongoing expansion and deployment of 5G and 5G+ wireless networks, offering competitive coverage and quality
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•Continued diversification of our distribution strategy with a focus on expanding direct-to-consumer (DTC) and online transactions
•In the BCE 2023 Annual MD&A, we disclosed our assumption of moderating growth in mobile phone blended ARPU. We are now assuming declining mobile phone blended ARPU, due to a higher-than-anticipated level of competitive pricing pressure which intensified progressively in the first quarter of 2024, that has carried over from the seasonally more intense Q4 2023 selling period.
•Continuing business customer adoption of advanced 5G, 5G+ and Internet of Things (IoT) solutions
•Improving wireless handset device availability in addition to stable device pricing and margins
•Further deployment of direct fibre to more homes and businesses within our wireline footprint, but at a slower pace than during any of 2020 to 2023
•Continued growth in retail Internet and IPTV subscribers
•Increasing wireless and Internet-based technological substitution
•Continued focus on the consumer household and bundled service offers for mobility and Internet customers
•Continued large business customer migration to IP-based systems
•Ongoing competitive repricing pressures in our business and wholesale markets
•Continued competitive intensity in our small and medium-sized business markets as cable operators and other telecommunications competitors continue to intensify their focus on business customers
•Traditional high-margin product categories challenged by large global cloud and OTT providers of business voice and data solutions expanding into Canada with on-demand services
•Increasing customer adoption of OTT services resulting in downsizing of TV packages
•Growing consumption of OTT TV services and on-demand video streaming, as well as the proliferation of devices, such as tablets, that consume large quantities of bandwidth, will require ongoing capital investment
•Realization of cost savings related to operating efficiencies enabled by our direct fibre footprint, changes in consumer behaviour and product innovation, digital adoption, product and service enhancements, expanding self-serve capabilities, new call centre and digital investments, other improvements to the customer service experience, management workforce reductions including attrition and retirements, and lower contracted rates from our suppliers
•No adverse material financial, operational or competitive consequences of changes in or implementation of regulations affecting our communication and technology services business

Assumptions Concerning our Bell Media Segment
Our forward-looking statements are also based on the following internal operational assumptions with respect to our Bell Media segment:
•Overall digital revenue expected to reflect continued scaling of our Strategic Audience Management (SAM) TV and demand-side platform buying platforms, expansion of Addressable TV, as well as DTC subscriber growth, contributing towards the advancement of our digital-first media strategy
•Leveraging of first-party data to improve targeting, advertisement delivery including personalized viewing experience and attribution
•Continued escalation of media costs to secure quality content
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•Continued scaling of Crave through optimized content offering, user experience improvements and expanded distribution
•Continued support in original French content with a focus on digital platforms such as Crave, Noovo.ca and iHeartRadio Canada, to better serve our French-language customers through a personalized digital experience
•Ability to successfully acquire and produce highly-rated and differentiated content
•Building and maintaining strategic supply arrangements for content across all screens and platforms
•No adverse material financial, operational or competitive consequences of changes in or implementation of regulations affecting our media business

Financial Assumptions Concerning BCE
Our forward-looking statements are also based on the following internal financial assumptions with respect to BCE for 2024:
•An estimated post-employment benefit plans service cost of approximately $215 million
•An estimated net return on post-employment benefit plans of approximately $70 million
•Depreciation and amortization expense of approximately $5,050 million to $6,000 million
•Interest expense of approximately $1,700 million to $1,750 million
•Interest paid of approximately $1,750 million to $1,800 million
•An average effective tax rate of approximately 25%
•Non-controlling interest of approximately $60 million
•Contributions to post-employment benefit plans of approximately $55 million
•Payments under other post-employment benefit plans of approximately $60 million
•Income taxes paid (net of refunds) of approximately $700 million to $800 million
•Weighted average number of BCE common shares outstanding of approximately 912 million
•An annual common share dividend of $3.99 per share

Assumptions underlying expected continuing contribution holiday in 2024 in the majority of our pension plans
We have made the following principal assumptions underlying the expected continuing contribution holiday in 2024 in the majority of our pension plans:
•At the relevant time, our defined benefit (DB) pension plans will remain in funded positions with going concern surpluses and maintain solvency ratios that exceed the minimum legal requirements for a contribution holiday to be taken for applicable DB and defined contribution (DC) components
•No significant declines in our DB pension plans’ financial position due to declines in investment returns or interest rates
•No material experience losses from other events such as through litigation or changes in laws, regulations or actuarial standards

The foregoing assumptions, although considered reasonable by BCE on August 1, 2024, may prove to be inaccurate. Accordingly, our actual results could differ materially from our expectations as set forth in this news release.






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Material Risks
Important risk factors that could cause our assumptions and estimates to be inaccurate and actual results or events to differ materially from those expressed in, or implied by, our forward-looking statements, including our 2024 financial guidance, are listed below. The realization of our forward-looking statements, including our ability to meet our 2024 financial guidance targets, essentially depends on our business performance, which, in turn, is subject to many risks. Accordingly, readers are cautioned that any of the following risks could have a material adverse effect on our forward-looking statements. These risks include, but are not limited to: the negative effect of adverse economic conditions, including a potential recession, elevated inflation, high interest rates and financial and capital market volatility, and the resulting negative impact on business and customer spending and the demand for our products and services; the negative effect of adverse conditions associated with geopolitical events; regulatory initiatives, proceedings and decisions, government consultations and government positions that negatively affect us and influence our business including, without limitation, concerning mandatory access to networks, spectrum auctions, the imposition of consumer-related codes of conduct, approval of acquisitions, broadcast and spectrum licensing, foreign ownership requirements, privacy and cybersecurity obligations and control of copyright piracy; the inability to implement enhanced compliance frameworks and to comply with legal and regulatory obligations; unfavourable resolution of legal proceedings; the intensity of competitive activity and the failure to effectively respond to evolving competitive dynamics; the level of technological substitution and the presence of alternative service providers contributing to disruptions and disintermediation in each of our business segments; changing customer behaviour and the expansion of cloud-based, OTT and other alternative solutions; advertising market pressures from economic conditions, fragmentation and non-traditional/global digital services; rising content costs and challenges in our ability to acquire or develop key content; high Canadian Internet and smartphone penetration; the failure to evolve and transform our networks, systems and operations using next-generation technologies while lowering our cost structure, including the failure to transition from a traditional telecommunications company to a tech services and digital media company and meet customer expectations of product and service experience; the inability to drive a positive customer experience; the inability to protect our physical and non-physical assets from events such as information security attacks, unauthorized access or entry, fire and natural disasters; the failure to implement an effective data governance framework; the failure to attract, develop and retain a diverse and talented team capable of furthering our strategic imperatives and high-tech transformation; the potential deterioration in employee morale and engagement resulting from staff reductions, cost reductions or reorganizations and the de-prioritization of transformation initiatives due to staff reductions, cost reductions or reorganizations; the failure to adequately manage health and safety concerns; labour disruptions and shortages; the risk that we may need to incur significant capital expenditures to provide additional capacity and reduce network congestion; service interruptions or outages due to network failures or slowdowns; events affecting the functionality of, and our ability to protect, test, maintain, replace and upgrade, our networks, information technology (IT) systems, equipment and other facilities; the failure by other telecommunications carriers on which we rely to provide services to complete planned and sufficient testing, maintenance, replacement or upgrade of their networks, equipment and other facilities, which could disrupt our operations including through network or other infrastructure failures; the complexity of our operations and IT systems and the failure to implement or maintain highly effective processes and IT systems; in-orbit and other operational risks to which the satellites used to provide our satellite TV services are subject; the inability to access adequate sources of capital and generate sufficient cash flows from operating activities to meet our cash requirements, fund capital expenditures and provide for planned growth; uncertainty as to whether dividends will be declared or the dividend on common shares will be increased by BCE’s board of directors; the failure to reduce costs and adequately assess investment priorities, as well as unexpected increases in costs; the inability to manage various credit, liquidity and market risks; the failure to evolve practices to effectively monitor and control fraudulent activities; new or higher taxes due to new tax laws or changes thereto or in the interpretation thereof, and the inability to predict the outcome of government audits; the impact on our financial statements and estimates from a number of factors; pension obligation volatility and increased contributions to post-employment benefit plans; our dependence on third-party suppliers, outsourcers and consultants to provide an uninterrupted supply of the products and services we need; the failure of our vendor selection, governance and oversight processes, including our management of supplier risk in the areas of security, data governance and responsible procurement; the quality of our products and services and the extent to which they may be subject to defects or fail to comply with applicable government regulations and standards; reputational risks and the inability to meaningfully integrate environmental, social and governance (ESG) considerations into our business strategy and operations; the failure to take appropriate actions to adapt to current and emerging environmental impacts, including climate change; pandemics, epidemics and other health risks, including health concerns about radio frequency emissions from wireless communications devices and equipment; the inability to adequately manage social issues; the failure to develop and implement sufficient corporate governance practices; the adverse impact of various internal and external factors on our ability to achieve our ESG targets including, without limitation, those related to greenhouse gas emissions reduction and diversity, equity, inclusion and belonging; and the completion of the proposed disposition of Northwestel is subject to closing conditions, including the purchaser securing financing, the completion of confirmatory due diligence, and the receipt of the Competition Bureau’s approval and, as such, there can be no assurances that the proposed disposition will ultimately be consummated or that it will be consummated on the terms and conditions currently contemplated.
17




We caution that the foregoing list of risk factors is not exhaustive and other factors could also adversely affect our results. We encourage investors to also read BCE’s 2023 Annual MD&A dated March 7, 2024 and BCE’s 2024 First and Second Quarter MD&As dated May 1, 2024 and July 31, 2024, respectively, for additional information with respect to certain of these and other assumptions and risks, filed by BCE with the Canadian provincial securities regulatory authorities (available at Sedarplus.ca) and with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (available at SEC.gov). These documents are also available at BCE.ca.

18

EX-99.5 6 a2024-q2xbellxselectedxsum.htm BELL CANADA UNAUDITED SELECTED SUMMARY FINANCIAL INFORMATION Document

Exhibit 99.5


NOTICE OF RELIANCE
SECTION 13.4 OF NATIONAL INSTRUMENT 51-102 CONTINUOUS DISCLOSURE OBLIGATIONS

To:
Alberta Securities Commission
British Columbia Securities Commission
Manitoba Securities Commission
Financial and Consumer Services Commission, New Brunswick
Office of the Superintendent of Securities, Newfoundland and Labrador
Nova Scotia Securities Commission
Ontario Securities Commission
Department of Justice and Public Safety, Financial and Consumer Services Division, Prince Edward Island
Autorité des marchés financiers
Financial and Consumer Affairs Authority of Saskatchewan
        Toronto Stock Exchange

Notice is hereby given that Bell Canada relies on the continuous disclosure documents filed by BCE Inc. pursuant to the exemption from the requirements of National Instrument 51-102 – Continuous Disclosure Obligations (“NI 51-102”) provided in Section 13.4 of NI 51-102.


The continuous disclosure documents of BCE Inc. can be found for viewing in electronic format at www.sedarplus.ca.


Attached to this notice and forming part thereof is the consolidating summary financial information for BCE Inc. as required by Section 13.4 of NI 51-102.

Dated: August 1, 2024
                                                                                                                                    BELL CANADA
By:
(signed) Thierry Chaumont
Name:
Thierry Chaumont
Title: Senior Vice-President,
Controller and Tax







image_1a.jpg image_2a.jpg





BELL CANADA

UNAUDITED SELECTED SUMMARY FINANCIAL INFORMATION (1)
For the periods ended June 30, 2024 and 2023
(in millions of Canadian dollars)

BCE Inc. fully and unconditionally guarantees the payment obligations of its 100% owned subsidiary Bell Canada under the public debt issued by Bell Canada. Accordingly, the following summary financial information is provided by Bell Canada in compliance with the requirements of section 13.4 of National Instrument 51-102 (Continuous Disclosure Obligations) providing for an exemption for certain credit support issuers. The tables below contain selected summary financial information for (i) BCE Inc. (as credit supporter), (ii) Bell Canada (as credit support issuer) on a consolidated basis, (iii) BCE Inc.’s subsidiaries, other than Bell Canada, on a combined basis, (iv) consolidating adjustments, and (v) BCE Inc. and all of its subsidiaries on a consolidated basis, in each case for the periods indicated. Such summary financial information for BCE Inc. and Bell Canada and all other subsidiaries is intended to provide investors with meaningful and comparable financial information about BCE Inc. and its subsidiaries. This summary financial information should be read in conjunction with BCE Inc.’s audited consolidated financial statements for the year ended December 31, 2023 and the unaudited consolidated interim financial report for the six months ended June 30, 2024.

For the periods ended June 30:

BCE INC.
("CREDIT SUPPORTER") (2)
  BELL CANADA CONSOLIDATED
(“CREDIT SUPPORT ISSUER”)
   SUBSIDIARIES OF BCE INC.
OTHER THAN BELL CANADA (3)
CONSOLIDATING ADJUSTMENTS (4)
BCE INC.
CONSOLIDATED
2024 2023 2024 2023 2024 2023 2024 2023 2024 2023 2024 2023 2024 2023 2024 2023 2024 2023 2024 2023
Three months Three months Six months Six months Three months Three months Six months Six months Three months Three months Six months Six months Three months Three months Six months Six months Three months Three months Six months Six months
Operating revenues 6,005 6,066 12,016 12,120 6,005 6,066 12,016 12,120
Net earnings from continuing operations attributable to owners 583 375 1,032 1,146 1,001 748 1,438 1,506 37 43 82 90 (1,038) (791) (1,520) (1,596) 583 375 1,032 1,146
Net earnings attributable to owners 583 375 1,032 1,146 1,001 748 1,438 1,506 37 43 82 90 (1,038) (791) (1,520) (1,596) 583 375 1,032 1,146

As at June 30, 2024 and December 31, 2023, respectively:
BCE INC.
("CREDIT SUPPORTER") (2)
  BELL CANADA CONSOLIDATED (“CREDIT SUPPORT ISSUER”)
   SUBSIDIARIES OF BCE INC.
OTHER THAN BELL CANADA (3)
CONSOLIDATING ADJUSTMENTS (4)
BCE INC.
CONSOLIDATED
June 30,
2024
Dec. 31,
2023
June 30,
2024
Dec. 31,
2023
June 30,
2024
Dec. 31,
2023
June 30,
2024
Dec. 31,
2023
June 30,
2024
Dec. 31,
2023
Total Current Assets 657 772 11,350 10,472 65 646 (3,490) (3,992) 8,582 7,898
Total Non-current Assets 23,180 23,307 59,286 57,655 21 21 (16,822) (16,941) 65,665 64,042
Total Current Liabilities 3,747 3,521 12,784 12,496 81 81 (3,490) (3,991) 13,122 12,107
Total Non-current Liabilities 396 329 40,152 38,378 567 569 41,115 39,276
(1) The summary financial information is prepared in accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) and is in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles issued by the Canadian Accounting Standards Board for publicly-accountable enterprises..
(2) This column accounts for investments in all subsidiaries of BCE Inc. under the equity method.
(3) This column accounts for investments in all subsidiaries of BCE Inc. (other than Bell Canada) on a consolidated basis.
(4) This column includes the necessary amounts to eliminate the intercompany balances between BCE Inc., Bell Canada and other subsidiaries and other adjustments to arrive at the information for BCE Inc. on a consolidated basis.

EX-99.6 7 a2024-q2xearningsxcoverage.htm EXHIBIT TO 2024 SECOND QUARTER FINANCIAL STATEMENTS - EARNINGS COVERAGE Document



Exhibit 99.6
BCE Inc.

EXHIBIT TO 2024 SECOND QUARTER FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

EARNINGS COVERAGE


The following consolidated financial ratios are calculated for the twelve months ended June 30, 2024, give effect to the issuance and redemption of all long-term debt since July 1, 2023 as if these transactions occurred on July 1, 2023, and are based on unaudited financial information of BCE Inc.

June 30, 2024
Earnings coverage of interest on debt requirements based on net earnings attributable to owners of BCE Inc. before interest expense and income tax:    
2.4 times
Earnings coverage of interest on debt requirements based on net earnings attributable to owners of BCE Inc. before interest expense, income tax and non-controlling interest: 2.5 times