Bezeq
Bezeq The Israel Telecommunication Corp. Ltd. is Israel's largest telecommunications provider, delivering fixed-line telephony, broadband internet access, international calling services, mobile communications via its Pelephone subsidiary, and satellite television through YES.[1][2][3]
Established in 1984 by transferring assets from the Ministry of Communications, Bezeq initially operated as a state-owned entity with monopoly status in fixed-line services before privatization and the introduction of competition in the 1990s and 2000s.[4][5]
The company maintains extensive infrastructure across Israel, supporting nationwide connectivity, and is publicly traded on the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange under the ticker BEZQ.TA, with B Communications Ltd. as its controlling shareholder.[6][7][4]
Bezeq has reported steady profitability, earning 1.27 billion shekels in 2024 and projecting growth for 2025 amid regulatory adjustments on fiber optic investments.[8]
Overview
Corporate Profile and Founding
Bezeq, officially Bezeq The Israel Telecommunication Corp. Ltd., was established on August 21, 1980, as a government-owned company to which the telecommunications activities previously managed by Israel's Ministry of Communications were transferred.[9][10] Initially focused on providing fixed-line telephony services, Bezeq served as the foundational infrastructure provider for domestic communications in Israel.[11] Over time, Bezeq evolved from a state entity into a privatized corporation, expanding its scope through subsidiaries to encompass a broad portfolio of services including landline telephony, internet access, and mobile communications.[11] This development positioned Bezeq as Israel's dominant telecommunications operator, serving millions of customers across residential and business segments.[12] As of 2025, Bezeq maintains its status as Israel's largest telecommunications provider, holding approximately 60% market share in the broadband infrastructure sector, with particular leadership in fixed broadband and fiber optic deployments.[8][13] The company continues to operate as the primary fixed-line and international calling services provider, underpinning much of the nation's connectivity needs.[14]Ownership Structure and Governance
Bezeq The Israeli Telecommunication Corp. Ltd. maintains a public ownership structure as a company listed on the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange (TASE: BEZQ), with its controlling interest held by B Communications Ltd., a holding company that owns approximately 21.7% of outstanding shares, equivalent to 601,135,157 shares.[15] This stake provides B Communications with effective control, stemming from its acquisition of a majority position in 2010 from prior owners including the Apax-Saban-Arkin consortium.[4] Institutional investors form the next largest group of shareholders, including Harel Pensions and Gemel Ltd. with 11.9% (330,121,857 shares) and Clal Pension and Gemel Ltd. with 6.55% (181,593,165 shares), alongside others like Migdal Insurance at 6.8% as of June 30, 2025.[15][16] In March 2025, B Communications sold a 5.77% block of shares in Bezeq through an accelerated bookbuild offering at a 4.97% discount to the prior close, reducing its direct holding while retaining control amid broader economic liberalization efforts to diversify ownership.[17] Governance at Bezeq is directed by a board of 13 members, chaired by Tomer Raved, who concurrently serves as CEO of controlling shareholder B Communications and has directed Bezeq subsidiaries since prior to 2023.[18] The board incorporates independent directors, such as David Granot, to promote oversight independent of the controlling entity, reflecting post-privatization reforms initiated after full divestment from state ownership by 2015.[18] Executive leadership includes CEO Nir David, appointed on April 1, 2024, following prior roles in business development within the group; Ilan Sigal as CEO of subsidiaries Pelephone and yes; and Yohai Benita as group CFO.[19][20] While controlling shareholder influence shapes strategic decisions, board composition adheres to Israeli corporate law requirements for external directors, with regulatory supervision by the Ministry of Communications ensuring compliance in a sector marked by historical monopoly transitions to competitive markets.[21]Historical Development
Establishment as State Monopoly
Bezeq was established on April 10, 1980, as a government-owned statutory corporation to consolidate and professionalize Israel's fixed-line telecommunications operations, which had previously been managed inefficiently by the Ministry of Communications alongside postal and telegraph services.[9] This restructuring centralized telecom functions under state control, separating them from postal operations that were spun off to the Israel Postal Authority, thereby enabling dedicated focus on infrastructure development amid Israel's post-independence population growth and economic needs.[22] The formation addressed chronic issues like multi-year waiting lists for telephone connections, which stemmed from fragmented pre-1980 management. Under the legal framework of the Communications (Telecommunications and Broadcasting) Law and related Knesset enactments, Bezeq received exclusive statutory rights to operate the national fixed-line network, functioning as the sole provider of voice telephony and data transmission services.[22] This monopoly status, rooted in state-led industrialization principles, empowered Bezeq to prioritize long-term national connectivity over short-term profitability, with the government funding initial capital through budget allocations and loans. From inception, Bezeq directed substantial state-backed investments toward constructing a copper-wire backbone network, laying thousands of kilometers of lines to connect urban centers, rural kibbutzim, and peripheral settlements.[23] These efforts rapidly expanded access, slashing installation wait times from years to months and fulfilling a universal service mandate that ensured basic landline availability across Israel's diverse geography by the late 1980s.Expansion and Monopoly Dominance (1980s–2000s)
Following its formation as a government-owned enterprise in 1984, Bezeq undertook substantial investments in telecommunications infrastructure during the late 1980s and early 1990s, transforming Israel's fixed-line network from limited capacity to an advanced system supporting widespread connectivity.[24][25] By the mid-1990s, the country achieved comprehensive landline coverage via extensive underground cabling and tunneling, ensuring reliable access across urban and rural areas.[26] This monopoly-driven expansion provided the foundational connectivity that underpinned Israel's emerging technology sector, with Bezeq's network enabling data transmission critical for early high-tech industries.[25] Bezeq introduced dial-up internet services in the 1990s, initially metering access by telephone call duration, which integrated online capabilities into its fixed-line monopoly.[27] Concurrently, in 1994, Bezeq acquired a 50% stake in Pelephone, the pioneering cellular operator established in 1986, extending its dominance into mobile telephony while maintaining control over spectrum and infrastructure until the mid-2000s.[28] Monopoly status facilitated revenue growth through elevated pricing on calls, which exceeded long-run incremental costs, though this structure incorporated cross-subsidies where fixed access fees fell below direct expenses to promote universal service, including in remote regions.[27] Critics highlighted inefficiencies from absent competition, such as persistently high tariffs deterring rapid service innovation, yet proponents argued that monopoly pricing sustained infrastructure rollout and rural penetration without direct government funding.[29] By 2000, Bezeq's fixed-line operations supported millions of subscribers, reflecting near-complete household penetration and solidifying its role as the indispensable backbone for national communications.[30] This era's achievements, while marred by pricing distortions typical of regulated monopolies, empirically correlated with Israel's telecommunications maturity, evidenced by high penetration rates comparable to developed economies.[26]Deregulation and Initial Competition (2000s)
In September 2000, the Israeli cabinet approved a plan to end Bezeq's monopoly on local fixed-line telephone and Internet services, marking the initial step toward liberalization of the domestic market previously dominated by the state-controlled incumbent.[31] This reform, driven by the Ministry of Communications, aimed to foster competition by easing entry barriers, though full implementation faced delays due to regulatory and infrastructural hurdles.[29] While the mobile sector had seen competition since 1994 with licenses granted to Cellcom and Partner alongside Bezeq's Pelephone subsidiary—which maintained a leading position—fixed-line services remained largely exclusive to Bezeq until this period.[29] Subsequent reforms accelerated entry: in 2002, a government committee recommended allowing limited service operators in specific districts, enabling the merged cable operator HOT to launch voice-over-cable services in the domestic fixed-line market after resolving prior disputes.[29] By 2005, the domestic market fully opened via open bids for newcomers, who immediately slashed local call prices by tens of percent, prompting Bezeq to respond with defensive rate reductions and compliance with mandated infrastructure sharing to facilitate rival access.[29] Bezeq's market share in fixed-line domestic telephony eroded from near 100% pre-reform to below 85% in certain segments by 2005 and overall private fixed-line services by 2010, reflecting gradual but measurable competitive pressure.[32][33] These changes spurred broadband adoption, with fixed-line Internet traffic surging from 1,064 million minutes in 1997 to 14,217 million minutes by 2001 amid falling real phone rates—declining 4% annually from 1990 to 2003 for a cumulative 70% drop—and enhanced service bundling.[29] Innovation benefits included uniform nationwide pricing and faster network upgrades, though short-term cons emerged, such as mild service interruptions from union resistance to restructuring and initial quality inconsistencies during rival infrastructure integration.[29] Overall, the reforms prioritized consumer welfare through lower costs over preserving monopoly stability, with empirical evidence of price-driven demand growth outweighing transitional disruptions.[29]Privatization and Ownership Transitions (2005–present)
In May 2005, the Israeli government, through the Government Companies Authority under Eyal Gabbai, sold a 30% controlling stake in Bezeq to the Apax-Saban-Arkin consortium for NIS 3.3 billion, constituting Israel's largest privatization transaction to date and generating substantial state revenue that bolstered foreign exchange reserves.[34] [35] [36] This initial divestment reduced the state's ownership below 50%, shifting Bezeq from public to predominantly private control and aiming to enhance economic competitiveness by ending direct government oversight.[37] By the early 2010s, ownership transitioned to the Eurocom Group, controlled by businessman Shaul Elovitch, through its subsidiary B Communications Ltd., which established a controlling interest via layered holdings and acquisitions from prior owners like the Apax-led group.[38] [39] Eurocom's structure positioned B Communications as Bezeq's primary shareholder, with Eurocom holding a majority in B Communications, though this setup drew scrutiny amid Elovitch's financial debts and related probes.[40] Eurocom entered receivership in April 2018 following insolvency proceedings tied to its debts, prompting governance adjustments including Elovitch family resignations from Bezeq's board, yet B Communications retained its dominant stake.[40] [41] The privatization overall facilitated fiscal gains for the state through share sale proceeds and enabled Bezeq's pivot to investor-driven capital allocation, replacing prior reliance on public funding with market-oriented efficiencies.[37] In March 2025, B Communications divested 160 million Bezeq ordinary shares—equating to a 5.77% stake—in an off-exchange block sale to undisclosed foreign and Israeli institutional buyers, raising approximately ILS 965 million and further diluting its holdings.[42] [43] As of October 2025, B Communications maintains a 26.7% stake in Bezeq, with the remainder publicly traded on the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange.[4]Business Operations
Core Telecommunications Services
Bezeq's primary fixed-line services include voice telephony for domestic and international calls, supporting both traditional circuit-switched and increasingly IP-based connections such as Voice over IP (VoIP). Broadband internet access is delivered via digital subscriber line (DSL) technology alongside a rapid expansion to fiber-optic networks, with the company reporting 924,000 fiber subscribers in the second quarter of 2025.[12] These offerings are bundled for residential and business users, emphasizing high reliability and integrated packages that combine voice, data, and additional features like international roaming support.[44] In pay television, Bezeq provides satellite-based services through its YES platform, offering multi-channel video content as a complement to fixed-line infrastructure for entertainment delivery. Mobile telecommunications are handled via the Pelephone subsidiary, which includes cellular voice, data, and messaging with 5G integration; Pelephone introduced 5G-only subscription packages in January 2025, priced starting at NIS 54.90 monthly for 1,000 GB of data, to drive adoption of advanced mobile broadband.[45] Fixed-line telephony continues its transition to VoIP, reaching 483,000 IP subscribers—including over 100,000 on fiber—by the second quarter of 2025, enhancing efficiency and enabling convergence with data services.[46] Bezeq holds a leading market position in fixed broadband, with approximately 60% share in Israel's infrastructure segment as of 2025, underpinned by millions of active fixed access lines and a focus on service reliability for diverse user needs.[13] Bundled offerings, such as triple-play packages integrating telephony, internet, and TV, cater to both consumer reliability demands and business requirements for scalable connectivity, contributing to core revenues of NIS 979 million in the second quarter of 2025.[47]Infrastructure Development and Technology
Bezeq operates a nationwide hybrid telecommunications network that integrates legacy copper lines with expanding fiber-optic infrastructure, utilizing a fiber-to-the-curb (FTTC) configuration initiated in 2008 to upgrade access speeds while leveraging existing cabling.[22] This hybrid approach has facilitated a phased transition, with fiber deployment accelerating to cover core urban and suburban areas before broader extensions. The company's fiber-optic expansion, part of a multi-year program, targets completion of nationwide rollout by the end of 2025, aiming to pass approximately 2.9 million households, up from 2.7 million in the prior year.[8] This effort includes systematic upgrades in designated priority zones, such as peripheral regions, to enhance connectivity despite ongoing regulatory adjustments on wholesale access pricing.[8] Cumulative capital expenditures for infrastructure over the preceding five years surpassed NIS 9 billion, funding network densification and resilience measures like diversified routing.[48] Bezeq's technological framework adheres to global standards, including passive optical network (PON) protocols, supporting symmetric upload and download speeds reaching up to 25 Gbps via 25G PON trials and deployments.[49] These capabilities stem from investments in advanced optical transport systems, enabling scalable bandwidth for data-intensive applications while phasing toward full fiber replacement of copper by 2030 in line with national policy directives.[50] Such engineering-focused expansions have empirically extended high-capacity access to previously underserved locales, correlating with reduced latency and increased throughput in empirical network performance metrics.[51]Subsidiaries and Group Structure
Bezeq's group structure centers on a parent company overseeing wholly owned and majority-controlled subsidiaries that extend its operations into mobile telephony, satellite television, international connectivity, and ancillary services. Key subsidiaries include Pelephone Communications Ltd. (100% owned), which serves as Israel's pioneering mobile operator, providing voice, data, and advanced 5G services with network coverage reaching 80% of the country as of January 2025.[52][53] Bezeq International Ltd. (100% owned) focuses on wholesale international telecommunications, broadband internet, and data center operations, maintaining facilities in locations such as Petah Tikva and offering disaster recovery services compliant with high security and infrastructure standards.[5][54] D.B.S. Satellite Services (1998) Ltd., operating as YES (with Bezeq holding 49.8% ownership but exercising significant control), delivers direct-to-home satellite pay-TV services, complementing Bezeq's fixed-line broadband offerings through bundled content distribution.[5] Additional entities like Bezeq Online support digital and broadband extensions, while the structure enables operational synergies such as integrated billing and cross-promotion of fixed-mobile convergence packages.[55] Governance flows from Bezeq's board and executive team to subsidiary leadership, with subsidiaries maintaining distinct operational mandates; for instance, since May 2022, a unified CEO oversees Pelephone, YES, and Bezeq International to streamline strategic alignment.[56] Mobile operations under Pelephone face separate licensing and spectrum regulations from Bezeq's fixed-line infrastructure, reflecting Israel's bifurcated telecom framework, while all units consolidate reporting to the parent for group-level decision-making.[1]Regulatory and Legal Framework
Monopoly Dissolution and Market Liberalization
Regulatory reforms in the early 2000s marked the progressive erosion of Bezeq's legal exclusivity in fixed-line services, with key measures focusing on mandated access to its infrastructure to enable competitor entry. Although full local loop unbundling (LLU) regulations were not comprehensively drafted until later, initial steps included requirements for Bezeq to lease elements of its network, as discussed in policy analyses from the late 1990s onward.[27] [22] These reforms, building on the Communications (Bezeq and Broadcasts) Law of 1982 and subsequent amendments, shifted the market from state-sanctioned monopoly toward regulated competition, particularly in domestic voice, data transmission, and emerging broadband segments. By 2010, the entry of cable-based providers like HOT, which leveraged alternative infrastructures for fixed telephony and internet, had reduced Bezeq's dominance, with its private fixed-line telephony market share falling below the 85% threshold that previously restricted bundling of services.[33] This erosion correlated with declining market concentration, as alternative operators captured shares in data communications and fixed broadband, prompting Bezeq to implement cost reductions and accelerate technology investments, such as IP-based networks, to retain competitiveness.[11] Empirical outcomes included substantial price declines; for example, international call rates dropped by approximately 70% following the 1996 opening of that segment, a pattern that extended to domestic fixed services amid intensified rivalry.[57] Broadband penetration rose, though average speeds remained below OECD peers due to persistent infrastructure constraints under the dominant players.[58] Criticisms centered on implementation hurdles, including Bezeq's resistance to equitable access, leading to antitrust probes and court rulings that enforced shared use of facilities to prevent exclusionary practices.[59] [60] Such disputes delayed full liberalization effects but ultimately enhanced consumer welfare through greater service options and downward pressure on tariffs, with competition driving efficiency gains like reduced operational redundancies across the sector.[29] Overall, these changes transitioned Israel from monopoly provision to a competitive framework, where causal evidence from price and penetration metrics indicates net benefits in affordability, albeit with ongoing regulatory needs to address access bottlenecks.[61]Ongoing Regulatory Interactions and Disputes
In August 2025, Israel's Ministry of Communications issued a notice of intent to impose a financial sanction of approximately ILS 10 million on Bezeq for violating regulations on fiber infrastructure deployment in incentivized areas, where the company prematurely rolled out advanced networks before the required five-year exclusivity period granted to other license holders to foster competition.[62][63] This incident underscores ongoing tensions between Bezeq and regulators, as incentive programs aim to balance incumbent infrastructure advantages with market entry for rivals, though such penalties risk deterring rapid network expansions amid Bezeq's reported profit growth.[8] Disputes over wholesale pricing for fiber access have persisted, with the Ministry announcing in July 2025 plans to reduce these tariffs by over 30% to enhance competition and lower consumer internet costs, prompting a hearing to revise the underlying cost model.[64][8] Bezeq has argued for tariffs reflecting actual investments, as prior regulatory frameworks enabled billions of shekels in fiber deployments—spurring national infrastructure upgrades—but also contributed to delays in technologies like 5G in underserved regions due to compliance burdens and spectrum allocation timelines.[65][66] The Ministry of Communications maintains primary oversight through licensing and enforcement, requiring Bezeq to adhere to universal service obligations and wholesale mandates, which have empirically driven competitive investments exceeding NIS 10 billion in broadband since liberalization efforts intensified post-2010s, yet critics note that overly stringent interventions can hinder innovation by imposing punitive measures without equivalent incentives for incumbents.[67] This regulatory dynamic illustrates necessary checks against potential market dominance—preventing abuse of Bezeq's extensive fixed-line assets—while highlighting risks of stifling deployment if disputes escalate, as evidenced by Bezeq's appeals in similar past wholesale cases.[68]Controversies
2017–2018 Corruption Investigations
In 2017, the Israel Securities Authority launched an investigation into Bezeq for suspected fraud, breach of trust, and irregularities in financial reporting related to major corporate transactions.[69] The probe expanded in early 2018 to include police collaboration, focusing on allegations that Bezeq executives provided favorable editorial control over the Walla news website—owned by Bezeq's parent Eurocom—in exchange for regulatory approvals from the Communications Ministry to facilitate the company's 2017 acquisition of satellite TV provider Yes for approximately 1.2 billion shekels.[70] [71] On February 18, 2018, police and the Securities Authority arrested CEO Stella Handler, controlling shareholder and chairman Shaul Elovitch, and several senior executives, including former Bezeq director Amikam Shorer, on charges of bribery, fraud, money laundering, and breach of trust.[69] [72] Courts extended detentions briefly for questioning, with evidence centered on documented communications and decisions granting Bezeq favorable infrastructure and licensing terms despite competitive market conditions.[70] Handler was released under restrictions prohibiting contact with Bezeq for 30 days.[73] Handler resigned on March 19, 2018, effective July 1, citing the investigation's impact while denying wrongdoing.[74] Elovitch and his family stepped down from the board shortly after arrests.[75] By December 2018, investigators concluded there was sufficient evidence for bribery and related offenses against key figures, leading to indictments; Elovitch faced securities fraud charges in 2020, while his company Eurocom reached a 2022 plea deal admitting to all allegations in the case, including bribery facilitation, without corporate fines but with executive disqualifications.[76] [77] [78] Court proceedings and resolutions treated the incidents as actions by individual executives rather than systemic practices, with no findings of revived monopoly dominance; Bezeq maintained regulatory compliance in core operations post-investigation, undergoing board restructuring and independent audits to address governance gaps.[76] [79]Allegations of Political Influence and Bribery
Allegations in Israel's Case 4000 centered on claims that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, as Minister of Communications from 2014 to 2017, granted Bezeq regulatory favors—including approval of its merger with satellite provider Yes, estimated to benefit Bezeq by around 1.8 billion shekels ($500 million)—in return for favorable media coverage on Walla, a news site controlled by Bezeq's then-owner Shaul Elovitch via his Eurocom holding company.[80] [81] Prosecutors asserted this constituted a quid pro quo, with over 1,000 documented requests from Netanyahu's office to alter Walla content, though evidence of full compliance by Elovitch remained contested.[82] Investigations by Israeli police, concluded in December 2018, recommended bribery indictments against Netanyahu, Elovitch, and associates for fostering a "bribe-based relationship," leading to Netanyahu's 2019 charges of bribery, fraud, and breach of trust—his trial ongoing as of 2024 without conviction.[82] [80] Elovitch faced parallel charges, including corporate fraud, with some dropped in 2022 but others reinstated by Israel's High Court in July 2023; no final conviction has been secured against him.[83] These proceedings highlighted individual accountability rather than systemic corporate malfeasance at Bezeq, as probes uncovered no broad evidence of graft embedded in company operations.[84] Corporate repercussions were limited: Eurocom admitted to bribery, fraud, and breach of trust in a 2022 plea deal, incurring a 400,000 NIS fine.[78] Bezeq settled related claims in February 2024 with an 800,000 shekel penalty, avoiding admission of widespread corruption and facing no dissolution or operational halt.[85] Earlier, in March 2018, Bezeq absorbed a securities authority fine tied to disclosure lapses amid the probe, alongside dividend cuts, but these did not impede core activities.[86] Netanyahu has countered that Elovitch's inability to override Walla's editorial staff—due to internal pushback—negated any effective bribery, as coverage shifts were minimal and inconsistent with a deliberate exchange.[87] While the affair drew criticism for potentially compromising regulatory integrity and public confidence in telecom oversight, Bezeq's defenders emphasized routine industry lobbying for approvals in a state-influenced market, with Elovitch's control of Bezeq established since 2010 predating the alleged favors and no disruption to ongoing infrastructure expansions or profitability.[88] Empirical outcomes, including modest fines relative to Bezeq's scale, suggest isolated breaches rather than causal evidence of entrenched political capture.[85]National and Strategic Role
Operations in Israeli Settlements
Bezeq maintains telecommunications infrastructure and provides fixed-line telephony, broadband internet, and related services to Israeli settlements in the West Bank, fulfilling its statutory universal service obligations under Israeli law to serve all Israeli residents regardless of location.[89] These obligations, enshrined in the Communications Law (Telecommunications and Broadcasts), 5742-1982, require Bezeq as the designated fixed-line provider to ensure nationwide connectivity, including to the approximately 500,000 Israeli residents in West Bank communities as of 2023.[90] The company's operations in these areas, permitted under the 1995 Oslo Interim Agreement for Area C settlements, support essential daily communications, economic activity, and security coordination without evidence of resource allocation exceeding proportional needs relative to Israel's core territory.[91] As of 2022, Bezeq owned around 40 properties in West Bank settlements, including exchanges and support facilities integral to service delivery.[92] These assets enable reliable connectivity that underpins civilian life and emergency response, aligning with Bezeq's role as Israel's primary fixed infrastructure operator. Palestinian populations in the West Bank rely on separate providers licensed by the Palestinian Authority, such as Jawwal and Paltel, for local services, though Bezeq handles interconnections for cross-border calls and collects associated revenues per bilateral agreements.[6] International criticism has focused on these operations, with Norway's Government Pension Fund Global divesting its Bezeq holdings in December 2024, arguing that services to settlements—deemed illegal under international law—facilitate their maintenance and expansion.[91] The fund's Council on Ethics recommendation acknowledged Bezeq's services to Palestinian areas but prioritized the settlements issue, a stance critics attribute to selective ethical application influenced by anti-Israel advocacy akin to BDS tactics, given the fund's prior divestments from other Israeli firms on similar grounds while overlooking comparable operations elsewhere.[93] Such actions contrast with Bezeq's compliance with domestic legal mandates and the practical reality that withholding services would isolate Israeli citizens in contested territories without addressing underlying geopolitical disputes.[94]Infrastructure Support During Conflicts and Emergencies
Following the Hamas attacks on October 7, 2023, Bezeq rapidly connected hundreds of bomb shelters across Israel to free internet services to ensure connectivity for civilians during heightened rocket barrages.[48] This initiative was part of broader efforts to maintain essential communications amid surging demand for online services, which spiked significantly as remote work and emergency coordination increased.[48] Bezeq's infrastructure withstood a nationwide escalation in cyberattacks, with Israeli civilian targets facing over 13,000 incidents in the ensuing months, 68% of which targeted critical sectors including telecommunications.[95] Bezeq sustained fixed-line and mobile network operations throughout the Israel-Hamas war, enabling coordination for emergency response, military logistics, and public alerts despite the operational strains.[96] The company's prior investments in redundant fiber optic and backup power systems minimized disruptions, preserving access to voice, data, and broadcasting services that supported national resilience.[48] By mid-2025, Bezeq expanded this effort, launching a nationwide program to connect thousands more public shelters to high-speed internet, addressing gaps exposed in earlier conflict phases.[97] Historically, Bezeq has demonstrated similar reliability during prior Gaza conflicts, such as Operations Protective Edge in 2014 and Guardian of the Walls in 2021, where it maintained core network functionality under rocket fire and temporary infrastructure threats.[98] During the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020–2021, Bezeq's broadband infrastructure handled elevated traffic for remote education and telehealth without widespread outages, underscoring its role in crisis continuity.[96] In response to vulnerabilities revealed post-2023, Bezeq allocated over NIS 1.7 billion in 2024 toward hardened infrastructure, including enhanced cybersecurity protocols and fortified data centers designed for wartime endurance.[98] These upgrades, detailed in the company's 2024 ESG report, prioritize redundancy against physical and digital threats, with 2025 projected as a record investment year to further bolster national emergency preparedness.[99] Such measures have empirically reduced outage risks, facilitating uninterrupted access to 101 emergency lines and financial systems, thereby mitigating broader economic and human costs during escalations.[98]Financial Performance and Recent Developments
Key Financial Metrics and Achievements
In the second quarter of 2025, Bezeq reported core revenues of NIS 979 million, reflecting a 3.1% year-over-year increase primarily driven by growth in broadband subscribers and fiber-optic deployments.[12] [100] Adjusted net profit for the quarter rose 46% to NIS 427 million, supported by higher EBITDA and operational efficiencies in fixed-line services.[12] The company raised its full-year 2025 adjusted net profit guidance to NIS 1.45 billion, citing favorable regulatory adjustments on wholesale fiber costs that reduced deployment expenses.[8] Bezeq's stock experienced a significant rally, with its market capitalization increasing approximately 59% over the year ending October 2025, outperforming broader market benchmarks and reflecting investor confidence in its infrastructure-led growth.[101] This performance positioned Bezeq ahead of regional telecom peers in terms of total returns, amid sustained demand for high-speed broadband and 5G services.[102] Key achievements included record infrastructure investments exceeding NIS 9 billion cumulatively in recent years, with 2025 projected to surpass 2024 levels through expanded fiber-optic rollout reaching 2.8 million households and over 900,000 fiber subscribers.[99] [103] Financial metrics underscored operational strength, with adjusted EBITDA margins expanding to 47.4% in Q2 2025, above the company's guided range of 43-45% for the year, driven by revenue growth outpacing costs in core segments.[12] [104] Net financial debt was managed down to NIS 4.92 billion by mid-2025, a 2.1% reduction year-over-year, enabling sustained capital expenditures of around NIS 1.75 billion annually while maintaining leverage below peer averages.[12]| Metric | Q2 2025 Value | Year-over-Year Change |
|---|---|---|
| Core Revenues | NIS 979 million | +3.1%[12] |
| Adjusted EBITDA Margin | 47.4% | Expansion from prior periods[12] |
| Adjusted Net Profit | NIS 427 million | +46%[12] |
| Net Debt | NIS 4.92 billion | -2.1%[12] |