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CNOOC Limited
Annual Report 2024

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FY2024 Annual Report · CNOOC Limited
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Annual Report
2024
For the 12 months ended 30 June 2024
1	
Board and management overview
11	
Management commentary
20	 Consolidated financial statements
66	 Governance and disclosures
95	
Glossary

1	
Earnings before interest, income tax, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) is a non-GAAP profit measure without a standardised meaning for comparison between companies. 
We monitor EBITDA as a key performance indicator and we believe it assists investors in assessing the performance of the core operations of our business.
2	 3% reduction in electricity use in FY24 against FY23.
3	 39% reduction in scope 1 &2 emissions against our base year of FY20.
4	 As at 31 December.
About this report
Our 2024 Annual Report covers the financial year ended 30 June 2024 (FY24) 
and includes aspects of our environmental, social and governance (ESG) 
performance. For additional ESG reporting, including emissions and climate-
related information, please refer to our separate 2024 Sustainability Report 
and Climate Statements available at company.chorus.co.nz/sustainability.
This report is dated 26 August 2024 and is signed on behalf of the 
Board of Chorus Limited by Mark Cross, Board Chair, and 
Kate Jorgensen, Chair of the Audit & Risk Management Committee.
Mark Cross
Chair
Kate Jorgensen
Chair Audit & Risk Management 
Committee
+3%
+4%
	
REVENUE
	
EBITDA1
-39%
	
SCOPE 1 & 2 EMISSIONS3
-3%
	
ELECTRICITY USE2
+12%
	
DIVIDEND
Overview FY24
-6%
	
CAPITAL EXPENDITURE
CAPITAL EXPENDITURE ($ million)
427
663
672
492
454
FY23
FY21
FY20
FY22
FY24
1,284
1,141
4,426
4,771
1,416
3,997
CORE RAB
FINANCIAL LOSS ASSET
REGULATORY ASSET BASE-RAB ($ million)
2022
2021
2023
EBITDA1 ($ million)
700
648
657
675
672
FY23
FY21
FY20
FY22
FY24
DIVIDEND (cents per share)
47.5
24
25
35
42.5
FY23
FY21
FY20
FY22
FY24
REVENUE ($ million)
FY23
980
FY21
955
FY20
959
FY22
965
FY24
1,010
FIBRE CONNECTIONS
1,084,000
751,000
871,000
959,000
1,031,000
FY23
FY21
FY20
FY22
FY24
4
1
 Chorus Annual Report 2024

 Chorus Annual Report 2024

On behalf of your Board, I’m pleased to report that Chorus has delivered another steady financial result in a challenging macroeconomic 
environment and we maintained solid momentum in our shift to becoming a simpler all-fibre digital infrastructure company.
We’ve announced a final unimputed dividend for the 
year of 28.5 cents per share, bringing total dividends 
for FY24 to 47.5 cents per share. For FY25 we’ve 
provided dividend guidance of a 21% increase to 57.5 
cents per share, unimputed, subject to no material 
adverse changes in circumstances or outlook.
Fibre momentum continues
The OECD has said the shift to a post-pandemic digital future 
requires high-quality broadband networks characterised by 
high speeds, high reliability and low latency. It’s therefore not 
surprising that the OECD reports an accelerating international 
shift to fibre networks, with fibre the dominant fixed network 
technology. By December 2023, 42.5% of total fixed broadband 
subscriptions in OECD countries were on fibre, with cable falling 
to 29.6% and copper falling to 20.3%.5
Fibre now comprises 87% of our total fixed line connections and 
demand for fibre broadband grew to more than 71% of addresses 
passed, up from 69% at the end of FY23. Average monthly data 
usage on fibre was 623 gigabytes in June 2024, above the peaks 
last seen during the COVID lockdowns in 2021. The proportion of 
fibre customers consuming more than 1 terabyte of data (1,000 
gigabytes) a month lifted to 16%. 
Fibre’s capability relative to other technologies is clear when you 
consider the scale of data growth it has absorbed. Total data 
traffic on our combined fibre and copper network has grown 12% 
in the last two years, from 7,140 petabytes (PB) to 7,974 PB. Within 
that total, the proportion carried by our fibre network has grown 
from 87% to 94%. Despite this growth, fibre’s electricity efficiency 
relative to other technologies means we’ve been able to reduce 
our overall electricity consumption and lower our emissions. 
As customers typically have a choice of technologies, we’re 
also very focused on customer experience.  We were therefore 
pleased to see strong improvements in end customer satisfaction 
through the year. A range of initiatives saw satisfaction with fault 
restoration increase from 7.8 to 8.6 out of ten, while satisfaction 
with intact provisioning on an existing fibre connection rose 
from 7.3 to 7.7.
Capital management review 
As I noted in last year’s Annual Report, the prioritisation of long-
term shareholder value, through capital allocation, is one of your 
Board’s most important responsibilities. 
During the year the Board initiated various value maximisation 
initiatives with management. These included a refreshed internal 
investment framework, reflecting a post-rollout operating 
environment, to guide the allocation of cash flows and a review 
of our capital management settings. Other areas of focus are fit-
for-purpose regulatory settings and operating efficiencies as the 
copper network is shut down.
In February 2024 we announced a review to ensure our existing 
capital management framework is fit for purpose, as we prepare 
to enter the new regulatory period in 2025. Our review included 
consideration of regulatory settings, shareholder feedback, 
comparable company benchmarks, macroeconomic factors and 
Chorus’ financial outlook.
Shareholder feedback was that investors value the predictable 
growing dividends that come from the robust cash flows 
generated as an owner-operator of essential infrastructure. 
Investors anticipate a higher proportion of free cash flow 
following the conclusion of the ultra-fast broadband (UFB) rollout 
and the slowing number of fibre installations as a shrinking pool 
of customers are left to migrate from copper. 
Our capital management settings remain largely unchanged 
following the review. We are committed to maintaining a capital 
structure reflective of a regulated utility business and operating 
within the parameters of our investment grade BBB credit rating. 
However, a key conclusion from our review is that we will now 
target a higher dividend payout range of 70% to 90% of our 
net operating free cash flows, after sustaining capex. This is an 
increase from the prior 60% to 80% range and reflects the greater 
clarity we have for cash flows through the next regulatory period 
as fibre investment tapers. 
Our intention is to provide shareholders with a sustainable 
dividend that grows at the rate of inflation. This will ensure an 
appropriate return to shareholders on the significant investment 
made in Chorus’ network since the beginning of the UFB rollout 
in 2011.
The dividend will be accommodated within the revised payout 
range, while continuing to allow for discretionary investment 
such as fibre installations. Discretionary growth investment 
can also be supported by the headroom in our balance sheet 
capacity up to our internal limit of 4.75 times net debt/EBITDA, 
which provides a buffer to our credit rating threshold of 5.0 
times. Any discretionary investment will be subject to our 
internal investment framework and restricted to activities that are 
adjacent to, or have synergies with, our core business.
Dear Investors,
5	 https://www.oecd.org/content/dam/oecd/en/topics/policy-sub-issues/broadband-statistics/data/1-3-fixed-and-mobile-subscriptions-by-technology.xls
2
 Chorus Annual Report 2024


Becoming a simpler all-fibre business by exiting copper 
In 2012, when we began building our fibre network under the 
public-private partnership with government, Chorus had close 
to 1.8 million copper connections. On 30 June 2024 there were 
just 157,000 remaining. Of these, approximately 45,000 were in 
our fibre areas where we will switch off copper in less than two-
and-a-half years. The remainder are in areas where other fibre, 
wireless and satellite network providers now have greater market 
share than Chorus. 
This market fragmentation, together with the shift to regulated 
revenues under the new fibre regime, means Chorus cannot 
cross-subsidise rural network costs with urban revenues. 
Customers are rightly choosing newer, better, technologies and 
copper’s looming obsolescence is evident from global network 
trends. Norway shut its retail copper network in December 2022 
and the European Union is consulting on a 2030 target for the 
complete shutdown of copper networks. Copper networks will 
soon join the long list of other outdated technologies like dial-
up, 2G mobile and analogue TV. 
It’s against this backdrop that the Commerce Commission 
announced an investigation into the potential deregulation of 
copper services. This is expected to be concluded by the end 
of 2025.
We believe that fibre should and could go further to reduce the 
digital divide between urban and non-urban areas. In February, 
we announced plans to extend fibre to 10,000 more homes and 
businesses across 59 communities. About 25% of customers 
in these communities have already registered their interest in 
connecting to fibre following the announcement and interest is 
growing rapidly as work gets underway.
While we believe further expansion of Chorus’ fibre network 
would offer significant benefits to more New Zealanders, we 
are very mindful of the need to exercise capital discipline on 
behalf of our shareholders. Our original regulatory proposal had 
contemplated taking fibre to another 30,000 premises, but we 
chose to put this additional investment on hold in the absence 
of clarity on the pricing, market and regulatory changes needed 
to make the commercial case for further investment. 
The chart below shows just how much Chorus’ network 
environment has changed.
CEO transition and governance
We appreciate the efforts of the wider Chorus team over FY24. 
It has been a period of significant change as the organisation 
evolves into its next phase. 
In April, we said bon voyage to Chief Executive, JB Rousselot, 
who led Chorus from November 2019 through to April 2024. 
During JB’s tenure, Chorus completed the government-
supported UFB rollout, saw fibre connect more than one 
million New Zealand homes and businesses, and navigated 
the challenges of COVID-19. We’re grateful for his passionate 
advocacy of both fibre and customer transparency. 
Mark Aue, previously our Chief Operating Officer, stepped into 
the CEO role in April 2024. Mark joined Chorus in April 2023, 
having previously been the CEO of 2Degrees and, before this, 
the CFO of Vodafone NZ (now One NZ). His deep understanding 
of Chorus and the telecommunications industry, together with 
his proven leadership and innovation track record, make him 
the ideal person to lead Chorus into its next chapter. Mark’s 
immediate focus is on implementing our new operating model, 
in place since February, to deliver key initiatives with better focus 
and prioritisation. 
The Board is working with Mark and his executive team to 
ultimately provide improved customer and shareholder 
outcomes. We look forward to updating you on Chorus’ 
progress at our annual meeting in October.
Board succession is an ongoing focus for us.  Director Miriam 
Dean is scheduled to be up for re-election this year, and Murray 
Jordan will retire after the September meeting. We thank Murray 
for the valuable contribution he has made to the Board over the 
last nine years, and in particular the important work he has done 
as chair of our People, Performance and Culture Committee.  
We were also pleased to welcome our new director, 
Neal Barclay, in August. He brings valuable insights both as an 
experienced CEO and former CFO, and from his work across 
energy and communications infrastructure. He will be up for 
election by shareholders at the annual meeting.
Thank you to our customers, our shareholders, our people and 
my colleagues for your continuing support of Chorus. 
Mark Cross 
Chair
COPPER
FIBRE
0
200,000
FY12
FY13
FY14
FY15
FY16
FY17
FY18
FY19
FY20
FY21
FY22
FY23
FY24
400,000
600,000
800,000
1,000,000
1,400,000
1,200,000
1,800,000
1,600,000
Number of connections
Becoming an all fibre business
3
 Chorus Annual Report 2024


Operating highlights
FY22
FY23 
FY24
Fixed line connections6
1,304,000
1,271,000
1,241,00
Data traffic (petabytes)
7,140 
7,402 
7,974
Average revenue per user
$50.67
$53.25
$55.71
Chorus delivered a strong financial result, underpinned by our first normal operating period 
after the pandemic, workforce and weather challenges of the last few years. 
Demand for fibre broadband grew by another 53,000 connections in the year, while 
copper connections reduced by 83,000 connections. This reflected the acceleration of 
our programme to retire the copper network in our fibre areas and diminishing customer 
demand for copper services in areas where alternative networks are available.
Data demand across our network grew almost 8% in the year to 7,974 petabytes. Our fibre 
network carried 94% of this traffic, with average monthly usage for fibre connections 
growing 6.5% to 623GB through the year. 
Inflation-linked price changes, together with ongoing growth in the uptake of high-speed 
fibre plans, lifted revenues from $980 million to $1,010 million. Average revenue per user 
(ARPU) on GPON fibre services rose from $53.25 to $55.71 through the year.
Tight cost management and reducing copper network costs helped offset inflationary 
pressure across various expense lines. However, operating expenditure of $310 million was 
$2 million higher than FY23, despite the prior period including one-off cyclone-related 
costs of $6 million.
Our operating results produced FY24 EBITDA of $700 million. This was at the top of our 
EBITDA guidance range of $680 million to $700 million and up $28 million from the prior year. 
A net loss after tax of $9 million was reported compared to a profit of $25 million in FY23. 
This was due to a combination of a one-off $15 million non-cash tax expense following 
the removal of deductibility of tax depreciation for buildings, a $14 million increase in 
depreciation from our accelerated depreciation of copper assets, and higher interest costs.
Gross capital expenditure of $427 million was down from $454 million in FY23. This was 
within our guidance range of $400 million to $440 million and reflects the slowdown in 
new property developments from post-COVID highs, as well as reducing fibre installation 
volumes as we pass the peak of copper customer migration. Net capital expenditure was 
$372 million when excluding capital contributions for roadworks, property development 
and government-backed deployment. 
Borrowings at the end of FY24 were 4.42 times net debt/EBITDA and remain well within our 
business tolerance level of 4.75 times and ratings agency threshold of 5.0 times.
6	 Includes several thousand partly subsidised education connections from FY24.
7	 A new measure to calculate fibre uptake was adopted in FY24 to better reflect Chorus’ expanding fibre 
footprint beyond the original UFB rollout areas. It includes addresses outside of local fibre company areas 
that have been passed by Chorus fibre.
1.1 Winning in our core fibre business
FY22
FY23 
FY24
All fibre connections
959,000
1,031,000
1,084,00
Addresses passed   
1,428,000
1,477,000
1,506,000
Fibre uptake 
(% of addresses passed)7
66.7%
69.3%
71.4%
Customer satisfaction: 
fault restoration 
(3 month average)
8.2/10
7.7/10
8.6/10 
(target 8.1)
Customer satisfaction: 
intact provisioning 
(3 month average)
7.3/10
7.3/10
7.7/10 
(target  7.6)
By the end of June, fibre uptake had reached 71.4%, up from 69.3% in FY23, across a 
footprint of 1,506,000 addresses. This footprint grew by 29,000 addresses in FY23, 
compared to 49,000 addresses the year before, due to the end of the UFB rollout and 
slowing new property development.
Our objective is to achieve 80% fibre uptake, and we continue to refine our active 
wholesaler strategy to help achieve this goal. 
Cost-of-living pressures combined with increased retailer marketing saw demand 
for our entry level 50 megabits per second (Mbps) plan grow from 16,000 to 47,000 
connections during the year. This plan provides superior performance to 4G fixed 
wireless technology and enables low data users to experience fibre with the potential 
to upgrade to higher speed plans in the future. 
We continue to see growth in uptake of our gigabit and multi-gigabit plans and they 
now comprise 25% of our customer base, up from 24% last year. This shift underscores 
New Zealanders’ growing appetite for high-speed, reliable connectivity. About 64% of 
residential connections are on our popular 300Mbps plan.
4
 Chorus Annual Report 2024


1.2 Growing new revenues
FY22
FY23 
FY24
Smart locations
+19%
+19%
+16%
Edge Centre
57
57
83
Greenfields – lots passed
22,000
33,000
27,000
Demand for fibre connectivity to street-based devices (e.g. traffic cameras, digital 
billboards) continued to grow. We increased the number of ‘smart locations’ by another 
16% in FY24. Smart city and utility requirements are expected to drive increased demand for 
Internet of Things (IoT) connectivity in the coming years.
The rapid increase seen in demand for large scale data centres in New Zealand is also 
translating into growing interest in our regional network co-location space. We have five 
EdgeCentre co-location sites in our exchange buildings in Auckland, Tauranga, Wellington 
and Christchurch. During FY24 we increased the available space from 57 to 83 racks and we 
are evaluating further expansion of our service.
Legacy enterprise fibre connections are declining as the technology platforms reach end of 
service and customers migrate to alternative services. We had continued growth in direct, 
or dark, fibre connections. Demand for fibre backhaul to cellsites, data centres and other 
network sites also grew.  
We experienced a period of record housing development activity in the wake of the COVID 
pandemic, but this demand slowed during FY24 because of macroeconomic factors. The 
slowdown in demand meant we saw a reduction in the number of lots passed by fibre, 
down by approximately 6,000 lots from FY23.
1.3 Optimising our non-fibre assets
FY22
FY23 
FY24
Copper connections remaining
345,000
240,000
157,000
Withdrawal notices (cumulative)   
10,000
30,000
82,000
Broadband cabinets closed 
(cumulative, in fibre areas)
130
544
1,253
Properties and surplus leases 
exited
14
8
5
Optimisation of our legacy copper network is continuing as we evolve to become a 
simpler all-fibre business. The number of connections on our copper network reduced 
by 35% in FY24 and is down 55% in the last two years. 
Much of this reduction has been driven by the acceleration of our copper withdrawal 
programme. We’ve now provided 82,000 copper customers with at least six months’ 
notice of service withdrawal, with 52,000 notices issued in FY24. This enabled us to 
close another 700 broadband cabinets during the year. We expect to close the copper 
network in our fibre areas by the end of 2026, with just 45,000 connections remaining 
at the end of FY24.
Approximately 92,000 copper connections remain in areas where fibre isn’t available, 
down from 112,000 at the start of FY24. Chorus has a legacy Telecommunications 
Service Obligation (TSO) that requires us to provide Spark with basic telephone services 
for premises connected to the network in 2001. With a dwindling number of rural 
premises connected to copper, and even fewer TSO qualifying premises, we believe the 
regulatory regime is no longer fit for purpose.  
Technology has moved on significantly since 2001. Customers are migrating to satellite 
or government-subsidised fixed wireless providers for improved services. Mobile 
network operators are also partnering with low-earth-orbit satellite providers with a 
view to delivering mobile services well beyond current cellsite coverage. 
In April 2024, the Commerce Commission acknowledged this unprecedented 
technological change, describing satellite services as a “game-changer”, and 
announced an investigation into whether copper services should be deregulated 
outside fibre areas. This is expected to be concluded by the end of 2025.
5
 Chorus Annual Report 2024


1.4 Developing our long-term future
FY22
FY23 
FY24
Health & Safety: 
Recordable injuries
18
8
8
Electricity use (gigawatt hours) 
81
77.4
75.1
Emissions 
Scope 1 & 2 (tonnes CO2e)
10,456*
6,544*
6,387
Waste – tonnes (% recycled)
287 (67%)
368 (87%)
339 (93%)
Gender diversity (all Chorus)
41%F/59%M
42%F/58%M
42%F/58%M
Employee engagement (out of 10)
8.5
8.7
8.6
Details of our work in the Sustainability area can be found in our standalone 2024 
Sustainability Report. This year also marks our first year preparing mandatory Climate 
Statements containing our climate-related disclosures for FY24, (prepared in accordance 
with the requirements of the Aotearoa New Zealand Climate Standards). Copies of our 
Sustainability Report and Climate Statements are available, at company.chorus.co.nz/
sustainability.
We’ve been operating our copper and fibre networks in parallel for some years now. The 
withdrawal of copper services and removal of unused copper network equipment helped us 
reduce electricity usage by another 3% in FY24 (against FY23). The energy efficiency of fibre 
networks meant we achieved this outcome despite our network carrying 8% more data traffic 
than the year before.
The reduction in electricity usage, together with 87% of renewable generation in the 
electricity grid8, saw our Scope 1 and 2 emissions reduce to 6,387 tonnes CO2e in FY24. This 
represents a 39% reduction since our FY20 base year, meaning we are making good progress 
(as shown in Figure 1) towards our science-aligned target of a 62% reduction in our scope 1 
and 2 emissions by FY309, from our FY20 base year.
The number of hours worked by our service companies continued to reduce as fibre network 
activity diminishes following the end of the UFB rollout and the peak of copper migration 
activity. Injury frequency rates remained low, consistent with the year before. Eight injuries 
were recorded across Chorus and our service company people. These were of minor severity 
and included strains, sprains, and lacerations caused by manual handling activities, as well as 
slips, trips, falls, and vehicle accidents. 
Our aspiration is for Chorus to be a diverse and inclusive employer of choice. The 
Board sets measurable objectives to promote diversity and inclusion with an overall 
objective of a 40:40:20 gender ratio. Women represented 42% of all employees in 
FY24, consistent with FY23. At 30 April 2024, women executives increased to 42%, up 
from 14%. Our commitment to diversity, equity, and inclusion was recognised with wins 
in the HRNZ  Awards and the Newmarket Business Association awards, as well as being 
a finalist in the Deloitte Top 200 Awards. 
Employee engagement remained strong, despite the challenge of changes to our 
operating model during FY24. Overall engagement was 8.6 out of ten, down slightly 
from 8.7 in FY23, but we maintained our position within the top 10% of the international 
technology company sector we benchmark ourselves against. Our Net Promoter Score 
was 65, down from 70 in FY23, placing us in the top 5% of the technology sector. 
Digital equity remains a cornerstone of our social sustainability efforts. We continued 
to support approximately 2,800 students by working with the Ministry of Education 
to subsidise internet connections. We also worked with local organisations to support 
digital literacy in under-served communities. This included funding Digital Seniors 
Hubs nationwide (588 hubs across 21 locations) and funding the Hapori Connect 
programme (through Katoa Connect) with 100 people graduating in FY24. 
8	 MBIE, NZ Energy Quarterly, March 2024
9	 Our emissions reduction target is science-aligned, following guidance from the Science Based Targets Initiative 
(SBTi) for the Information Communications Technology (ICT) Sector.
* Prior years emissions  (FY22 and FY23) restated using retrospective emissions factor updates
released by Ministry for the Environment in FY24, and reflecting improved data quality.
6
 Chorus Annual Report 2024

0
10
5
Kilotonnes CO2e
FY20
FY21
FY22
FY23
FY24
Scope 1
Scope 2
Scope 1 & 2 emissions reduction from FY20 base year
Figure 1:

7
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Kiwis keep using more data each year, consistent with bandwidth trends overseas.
Much of that data usage occurs in evening peak times due to activity such as video streaming and gaming. Video
streaming on multiple devices at the same time generates frequent high-volume bursts of data within a household. 
Gaming updates often create above average peak time traffic on the Chorus network.
What are the 
data use trends 
on our fibre 
network?
7
 Chorus Annual Report 2024

Average monthly data usage per connection (GB)
Average daily network traffic per year
Peak traffic days in FY24
Network traffic vs Electricity (GwH)
4
7
3.34 Tbps
Peak days/data
8PM–12AM
2021
2024
2022
2020
2023
12AM
12PM
4AM
4PM
12AM
8PM
8AM
0
1
2
3
4
5
Traffic (Tbps)
Average day
3 November 2023
3 December 2023
24 May 2024
12AM
6AM
6PM
12PM
12AM
Target
FY25
FY28
DEC ‘14
DEC ‘18
DEC ‘16
DEC ‘20
DEC ‘15
DEC ‘19
DEC ‘17
DEC ‘21
DEC ‘22
DEC ‘23
JUN ‘15
JUN ‘19
JUN ‘17
JUN ‘21
JUN ‘16
JUN ‘20
JUN ‘18
JUN ‘22
JUN ‘23
JUN ‘24
0
100
200
300
400
500
700
600
Average monthly data usage (GB) 
FY20
FY21
FY22
FY23
FY24
Copper data usage (PB)
Electricity (GwH) 
Fibre data usage (PB)
Projected electricity use 
0
5,000
4,000
3,000
2,000
1,000
7,000
6,000
8,000
9,000
Data usage (PB)
0
50
40
30
20
10
70
60
80
90
Electricity (GwH) 
0
0.5
1.0
1.5
2.0
2.5
3.5
3.0
Traffic (Tbps)

8
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Advances in customer-facing technology and services, together with new ways to use data and changing 
customer habits, are all combining to drive increased bandwidth demand.
Everything from homes to cars, to factories and hospitals, are becoming digitally smart. This Internet of Things is forecast 
to drive 1 Yottabyte* of data per year within a decade. Fibre is meeting the need for high-quality broadband because of its 
efficiency in carrying more data at multi-gigabit speeds, together with its high reliability and fast response time.
What’s driving  
data growth?
1YB* of data = 1 million trillion megabytes or the amount of data that would fit on DVDs stacked all the way to Mars. (225 million km)
4K ULTRA HD
HIGH DEFINITION 
QUALITY NEEDS 
MORE DATA
IF ALL 
STREAMING 
IS 4K, 
DATA USE 
~1,200GB 
A MONTH
IF ALL TV 
SHIFTS TO 
4K ONLINE, 
DATA USAGE X3 
~2,000GB 
A MONTH
STREAMING
50% OF CHORUS 
TRAFFIC AND GROWING
DAILY ONLINE 
VIDEO REACH 
HAS SURPASSED 
LINEAR TV
60+ AGE GROUP 
STREAMING MORE
SPEED/CAPABILITY
MULTI-GIGABIT 
SERVICES
25% OF 
CHORUS USERS 
ON 1GBPS 
AND 2GBPS+ 
IN MARKET
GOOGLE FIBER 
LAUNCHED 
20GBPS
MULTI-SCREENS
PROFLIFERATION OF 
CONNECTED 
HOUSEHOLD DEVICES
AVERAGE ~20 
CONNECTED 
DEVICES 
PER HOME 
TODAY
NUMBER OF 
DEVICES 
EXPECTED TO 
DOUBLE EVERY 
5 YEARS
+
+
+
+
WIFI ADVANCES
IN-HOME UPGRADES 
TO WIFI 7 REDUCES 
CONSTRAINT ON FIBRE
46GBPS 
THROUGHPUT 
(VS 9.6GBPS 
ON WIFI 6)
UP TO 
100X LESS 
LATENCY 
(THAN WI-FI 6) 
AND 5X MORE 
CAPACITY


Chorus has built an amazing infrastructure asset 
that other countries are now busy replicating with 
their own rollouts. We’re proud of how our network 
connectivity is helping enable both current and future 
generations to grow. 
We’ve exceeded the original expectations for fibre uptake and 
New Zealand is ranked 17th in the world for fibre penetration.10 
That is recognition of Chorus as the great network builder, and 
we’re now shifting our focus to being the great network operator. 
This shift began in FY24 with the transition to a new operating 
model to enable us to execute our strategies more effectively. 
This includes continuing to drive fibre uptake, looking to grow 
new revenues by leveraging our network assets, and retiring our 
legacy copper network. 
The retirement of copper services in our fibre areas is close 
to being realised and in FY25 we’ll be working to shift the 
remaining 45,000 customers who already have our fibre at 
their gate. This is a major step towards our goal of becoming a 
simpler business. 
Our objective remains to achieve 80% fibre uptake. With uptake 
already above 71% and our copper migration activity coming 
to an end, this means we need to work harder to help other 
customers discover the benefits of fibre. We know, for example, 
there is a large group of urban customers who were converted 
to 4G fixed wireless services some years ago when copper was 
their only option. 
While 5G fixed wireless is now a reality in market, Commerce 
Commission reporting shows that 5G’s broadband performance 
is highly variable. Equally, we continue to see the prevalence 
of Low Earth Orbit Satellites (LEOs) with Starlink providing a 
markedly improved alternative to copper based broadband, 
particularly in regional or rural areas. We’ve long acknowledged 
that copper is no longer future fit for purpose and continue to 
encourage regulatory change to enable a managed exit from 
copper in non-fibre areas.  
Whilst there are natural use cases for multiple technologies 
in market, we believe that fibre has both a technological and 
competitive advantage. Our role now shifts the conversation 
to raise awareness and education about fibre. Historically, 
broadband focus has principally been on download speed. This 
needs to shift to attributes of quality, consistency and reliability. 
Fibre displays all of these characteristics, setting it apart from 
other alternatives.
Taking fibre further
We’ve been delighted with the strong pre-registration interest 
we’ve received from communities within the 10,000 addresses 
footprint expansion we started building in early 2024.
We believe that fibre could and should go further, but the 
commercial case for further investment is challenging given 
current regulatory policies and commercial returns. While 
satellite and fixed wireless services can help fill coverage gaps, 
the reality is that they are not fibre-like when it comes to 
reliability and capability. New Zealand shouldn’t short-change 
customers with something that is deemed ‘good enough’ for 
today’s needs, when history tells us future online services will 
demand significantly more. Having broadband technology that 
can scale quickly to rising demand is imperative.
Regulatory reset
FY25 is a significant reset point for Chorus at a regulatory level. 
We are finishing our initial three-year regulatory period under 
the utility-style framework for fibre. During this time, we’ve 
continued to make significant investment in enabling fibre 
services. This helped lift the value of our regulated asset base 
(RAB) from $5.4 billion to $5.9 billion by January 2024. 
The next regulatory period will run for four years from January 
2025 to December 2028. The Commerce Commission has set 
our weighted average cost of capital (WACC) at 7.68%, before 
tax, for this period. This is a significant step up from our initial 
three-year WACC of 4.72%, which was set in the wake of the 
pandemic and reflected all-time lows in risk-free rates.
The larger RAB and an improved WACC means our maximum 
allowable revenue will increase in the new period. The final 
revenue decision is expected later in 2024. The Commission has 
approved $1.14 billion of capital expenditure and $790 million 
of operating expenditure for the next regulatory period. They’ve 
also proposed that regulatory depreciation of some core RAB 
assets may be slowed. This would help smooth revenues into 
future years, given the expected step-up in allowed revenues in 
the short-term. 
Developing our long-term strategy
Our immediate focus in Horizon 1 (FY25) is both cementing 
and leveraging our new operating model, becoming future 
fit for purpose. With the regulatory clarity we now have, 
Horizon 2 (FY26– FY29) will focus on delivering effective asset 
management and prudent, efficient fibre investment. As well as 
driving simplification of our business, we want to identify and 
scale growth in adjacent opportunities where we have a right 
to play. At the same time recognising the need to leverage our 
core assets more effectively and divest from non-core assets as 
rapidly as possible.
Looking further ahead to Horizon 3 (FY30 and beyond), we see 
a single future state technology with the complete retirement 
of our copper network and truly becoming an all-fibre 
infrastructure business.
As Chorus transitions into these new Horizons we’re excited 
about the possibilities of change and the role we play in 
unleashing potential through connectivity and enabling better 
futures for Aotearoa.
 10  Based on FTTH Council Europe data at September 2023.
Mark Aue 
Chief Executive
Outlook
9
 Chorus Annual Report 2024


10
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
We believe New Zealand was fortunate to begin investing in fibre in 2011. 
In the wake of the COVID pandemic, other countries are now making the shift to fibre. 
Demand for high-quality broadband networks - characterised by high speeds, high reliability and low latency – 
continues to grow as data hungry digital applications become integral to economies and daily life.
Looking 
ahead to 
2030
71% FIBRE UPTAKE
ON OUR NETWORK
80% FIBRE UPTAKE
ON OUR NETWORK
MULTI GIGABIT
PLANS HAVE GONE 
MAINSTREAM
1,000GB+
PER MONTH HAS 
BECOME THE NORM 
16% OF FIBRE USERS
CONSUME 1,000GB+ 
PER MONTH 
BROADCAST TV
HAS SHIFTED TO 
STREAMING
ALL–FIBRE
BUSINESS AS DEMAND 
FOR COPPER FADES
25% REDUCTION
IN ELECTRICTY USE 
FROM 2020 AS FIBRE 
ENABLES EFFICIENCY 
25% OF CUSTOMERS
ON 1 GIGABIT PLAN 
OR FASTER
1
GBps
2+
GBps
ELECTRICITY USE
REDUCING AS COPPER 
SWITCHES OFF 
<160,000
COPPER LINES 
REMAINING
STREAMING
50% OF CHORUS TRAFFIC 
IS VIDEO

WHAT’S ON OUR HORIZON FOR 2030
TODAY

12	 In summary
13	 Revenue commentary
14	 Expenditure commentary
15	 Depreciation and amortisation expense
16	 Finance income and expense
17	 Capital expenditure commentary
19	 Long term capital management 
Management  
commentary
11
 Chorus Annual Report 2024

In summary
2024 
$M
2023
$M
Operating revenue
         1,010 
980
Operating expenses
          (310)
(308)
Earnings before interest, income tax, depreciation and amortisation
           700 
672
Depreciation and amortisation
          (462)
(446)
Earnings before interest and income tax
           238 
226
Net finance expense
          (217)
(195)
Net earnings before income tax
             21 
31
Income tax expense
            (30)
(6)
Net (loss)/earnings for the year
             (9)
25
We report earnings before interest, income tax, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) of $700 million for the year ended 30 June 2024 (FY24), an increase of $28 million from reported FY23 EBITDA 
of $672 million.
Revenues increased by $30 million to $1,010 million. This was driven by inflation-related price 
increases to some services and continued growth in uptake of higher value fibre services.
Operating expenses of $310 million were $2 million greater than FY23 on a reported basis, 
or $8 million higher when allowing for extreme weather event costs of $6 million in FY23. 
Although the weather was more favourable in FY24, tight cost management was needed to 
constrain the overall impact of inflationary cost increases across multiple expense lines.
A net loss after tax of $9 million was reported compared to a profit of $25 million in FY23. This was 
due to a combination of a one-off $15 million non-cash tax expense following the removal of 
deductibility of tax depreciation for buildings, an $11 million increase in depreciation from our 
accelerated depreciation of copper assets and higher interest costs.
Capital expenditure was $427 million in FY24. This was a $27 million decrease from FY23, largely 
due to reduced activity for fibre installations and new property development. We will pay a final 
dividend of 28.5 cents per share on 8 October 2024, in line with guidance of a full-year dividend of 
47.5 cents per share.
Connections
Connections
2024
Connections 
2023
Connections 
2022
Fibre broadband (GPON)
1,074,000
   1,021,000 
      949,000 
Fibre premium (P2P)
10,000 
       10,000 
       10,000 
Copper VDSL
55,000 
       83,000 
      118,000 
Copper ADSL
56,000 
       84,000 
      122,000 
Data services over copper
1,000 
         1,000 
         2,000 
Unbundled copper
- 
              -   
         1,000 
Baseband copper
45,000 
       72,000 
      102,000 
Total fixed line connections
1,241,00011 
 1,271,000 
 1,304,000 
11  Includes several thousand partly subsidised education connections.
12
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Management commentary

Revenue commentary
2024
$M
2023
$M
Fibre broadband (GPON)
697 
622
Fibre premium (P2P)
69 
68
Copper based broadband
83 
117
Copper based voice
28 
39
Data services copper
3 
4
Field services products
67 
70
Infrastructure
33 
31
Value added network services
26 
26
Other
4 
3
Total revenue
1,010 
980
Revenue overview
Chorus’ product portfolio encompasses a range of wholesale broadband, data and voice 
services across a mix of regulated and commercial products. Revenues of $1,010 million were up 
$30 million from $980 million in FY23, with strong growth in fibre revenues more than offsetting 
the continued decline in copper connections and associated revenues.
We ended FY24 with total fixed line connections of 1,241,000, down 30,000 lines from the 
prior year. This reduction is largely driven by the migration of copper connections to alternative 
networks in areas where Chorus does not have fibre available.
Fibre broadband (GPON)
Fibre broadband revenue continued to grow and accounted for 69% of total revenues, up from 
63% in FY23. Fibre broadband connections grew by 53,000 to 1,074,000, lifting fibre uptake to 
71.4% of passed addresses from 69.3% in FY23. Average monthly revenue per fibre user grew 
from $53.25 to $55.71 in FY24. An inflation-related price increase was applied to some services in 
October 2023. Uptake of our 50Mbps Home Fibre Starter service, which we held at $35 per month 
given the cost-of-living crisis, grew by 31,000 connections in FY24. Uptake of higher value multi-
gigabit Hyperfibre and 1 Gbps services grew by 1% to 25% of residential fibre connections.
Copper based revenues
Connection revenues across copper broadband and voice services continued to decline as 
customers migrate to fibre or alternative services. A 5.65% inflation-related price increase was 
applied to services in mid-December 2023.
Field services products
Field services products revenues decreased by $3 million compared to FY23. This was driven by 
a slowdown in new property development demand after a post-COVID period of record growth, 
partly offset by an increase in roadworks activity.
Infrastructure
Continued growth in demand for co-location space in exchanges contributed to a $2 million 
increase in revenues.
Data services copper
Data services copper connections continue to decline as customers migrate from legacy services 
to cheaper fibre-based or alternative services.
Other
Other of $4 million was largely the result of ongoing optimisation of our property footprint.
13
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Management commentary

Expenditure commentary
Operating expenses
2024 
$M
2023 
$M
Labour costs
80 
76
Network maintenance
53 
60
Information technology costs
44 
42
Other network costs
37 
37
Rent, rates and property maintenance
27 
26
Electricity
22 
19
Advertising
11 
13
Regulatory levies
9 
9
Consultants
6 
9
Insurance
5 
5
Provisioning
1 
1
Other expenses
15 
11
Total expenditure
310 
308 
Total operating expenses of $310 million in FY24 were up $2 million compared to $308 million 
reported in FY23.
Labour
Labour costs of $80 million represent staff costs that are not capitalised and included a $2 million 
cost for operating model changes.
At 30 June 2024, we had 846 permanent and fixed term employees, in line with FY23. We continue 
to look at opportunities to insource external contractors.
We capitalise labour costs and the associated overheads in relation to fibre build and 
connection activity. About 47% of labour costs were capitalised.
Network maintenance
Network maintenance costs decreased by $7 million, although FY23 included $3 million of extreme 
weather costs. Weather conditions were more favourable in FY24 and the migration of copper 
customers continued to drive total fault volumes down, but savings were partly offset by inflationary 
increases in the cost to repair copper and fibre faults.
Information technology
Information technology costs increased after FY23 benefited from the release of a $2 million 
software provision.
Other network costs
Other network costs were up slightly when allowing for $2 million of extreme weather costs 
recognised in FY23. Activity to exit copper assets increased, lifting network and property 
optimisation spend to $4 million in FY24.
Electricity
Electricity costs were up $3 million due to higher average spot prices. This was despite electricity 
usage falling as legacy network equipment was powered down.
Rent, rates and property maintenance
Inflation and an increase in maintenance work lifted these costs $2 million when adjusting for 
$1 million of extreme weather costs incurred in FY23.
Advertising
Advertising spend was $2 million lower in FY24 due to targeted campaign activity.
Consultants
Consultant spend reduced by $3 million as a result of reduced regulatory related spend, increased 
insourcing and cost management.
Other expenses
Provisions were increased for doubtful debts given macroeconomic conditions and additional long-
term market research was undertaken throughout the year.
14
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Management commentary

Depreciation and amortisation expense
2024 
$M
2023
$M
Estimated useful 
life (years)
Weighted average 
useful life (years)
Depreciation
Fibre cables
135
128
20 – 30
20
Ducts, poles, and manholes
80
64
20 – 50
49
Copper cables
74
76
10 – 25
22
Cabinets
17
18
5 – 20
19
Network electronics
70
67
2 – 25
10
Right of use assets
14
13
4 – 50
19
Other
13
14
4 – 10
15
Buildings
2
4
50
49
Less: crown funding
(31)
(29)
Total depreciation
374
355
Amortisation expense
Software and other intangibles
57
61
Customer acquisition assets
31
30
Total amortisation expense
88
91
Total depreciation and 
amortisation expense
462
446
During FY24, $427 million of expenditure on network assets, software and customer acquisition 
was capitalised.
In FY24, Chorus accelerated the depreciation profile of certain copper duct assets. This drove 
a net $11 million increase of depreciation expense compared to FY23, with $90 million of total 
depreciation across all copper assets in FY24. Copper cables in Chorus UFB areas will be fully 
depreciated by June 2025. Copper cables, copper-related ducts and poles in local fibre company 
areas will be fully depreciated by June 2026. Copper cables and poles in non-fibre areas will be 
fully depreciated by June 2032.
Software and other intangibles largely consist of the software components of billing, provisioning 
and operational systems.
Chorus expects that incremental costs incurred in acquiring new contracts with new and existing 
customers are recoverable. These costs are capitalised as customer acquisition assets and 
amortised against revenue or within amortisation expense, depending on their nature. In the 
period to 30 June 2024, $31 million was recognised as amortisation expense.
The offset of Crown funding against depreciation will continue to amortise as a credit to the 
associated depreciation expense.
The weighted average useful life represents the useful life in each category weighted by the net 
book value of the assets.
15
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Management commentary

Finance income and expense
(Income)/expense
2024 
$M
2023 
$M
Finance income
(5) 
(4)
Finance expense
 
Interest on syndicated bank facility
9 
2
Interest on European Medium Term Notes
88 
93
Interest on Australian Medium Term Notes
19 
–
Interest on fixed rate NZD Bonds
38
32
Other interest expense
25 
35
Capitalised interest
(1)
(1)
Interest costs
178 
161
Ineffective portion of changes in fair value of cash flows hedges
(3)
(7)
Total finance expenses excluding CIP securities (notional interest)
175 
154
CIP securities (notional) interest
47 
45
Total finance expense
222
199
Finance expenses were $23 million higher than FY23 due to higher interest rates and an increase in 
total debt. The weighted effective interest rate increased from 5.40% in FY23 to 5.77% in FY24 and 
AUD300 million medium term notes were issued in September 2023.
Chorus fully hedges the foreign exchange exposure on all foreign debt with cross currency interest 
rate swaps. Approximately 70% of our floating interest rate exposure was hedged with fixed interest 
rate swaps.
Other interest expense includes lease interest of $11 million (FY23: $11 million) and amortisation 
arising from the difference between fair value and proceeds realised from interest rate swap resets 
of $7 million (FY23: $7 million).
Taxation
The FY24 effective tax rate is 143% (FY23: 19%).
Tax expense includes a one-off deferred tax expense of $15 million, following a law change for 
deductibility of depreciation on commercial buildings. Excluding this change, the normalised 
effective tax rate for FY24 was 71% (FY23 normalised: 51%). This is higher than the statutory tax rate 
of 28% due to permanent differences between tax and accounting arising from the tax treatment 
of the grants received for Crown project-related funding.
The interest expense and depreciation credit recognised in the income statement for CIP 
securities are non-taxable as confirmed by binding IRD rulings. Government grants have also been 
received for funding of specific projects. The amortisation of the government grants, along with 
the accounting depreciation recognised in the income statement, are non-taxable and no tax 
depreciation is claimed on the assets.
16
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Management commentary

2024 
$M
2023 
$M
Fibre
344 
355
Copper
23
 33
Common
60
66
Gross capital expenditure
427 
454
Gross capital expenditure in FY24 was $427 million, down $27 million from FY23. Within this 
total, there was $222 million of discretionary growth capital expenditure and $205 million of 
sustaining capital expenditure to maintain, replace or improve an existing copper or fibre asset. 
This investment was supported by $12 million of Crown funding (e.g. government grants for 
regional network upgrades) and $43 million of customer contributions (e.g. roadworks and new 
property development contributions). 
Fibre capital expenditure
2024 
$M
2023 
$M
UFB Communal
– 
5
Fibre installations & layer 2
182
193
Fibre products & systems
12
10
Other fibre & growth
93
105
Fibre sustain
18
12
Customer acquisition costs
39
30
Total fibre capital expenditure
344
355
Fibre-related capital expenditure reduced by $11 million to $344 million. UFB communal network 
spend ended in FY23 and installation spend reduced with about 87,000 fibre installations 
completed nationwide in FY24, down from 92,000 in FY23. The average cost per premises 
installed in UFB areas was $1,132 and was within the FY24 guidance range of $1,100 to $1,250. 
Layer 2 spend of $50 million was driven by increased transport spend to support growing 
bandwidth demand and equipment upgrades to enable multi-gigabit Hyperfibre services.
Other fibre and growth decreased by $12 million compared to FY23. A slowdown in housing 
growth saw new property development spend reduce by $18 million to $50 million, while 
$4 million was invested to begin extending fibre to the approximately 10,000 existing premises 
announced in February 2024.
Fibre sustain spend increased by $6 million to $18 million as a result of lifecycle work on some 
older cable routes, and increased roadworks activity attributable to fibre. About $2 million of 
investment was completed to replace network damaged by Cyclone Gabrielle in February 2023 
and a $3 million accounting provision for network lifecycle activity was released in FY24.
Customer acquisition costs increased by $9 million in FY24 as retailers used our incentive offers to 
grow fibre connections and upgrade customers to higher speed fibre products.
Capital expenditure commentary
17
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Management commentary

Capital expenditure commentary continued
Copper capital expenditure
2024 
$M
2023 
$M
Network sustain
19
27
Copper connections
–
1
Copper layer 2
1
1
Customer acquisition costs
3
4
Total copper capital expenditure
23
33
Copper capital expenditure continued to decrease given the planned shutdown of the copper 
network in our fibre areas by the end of 2026. Network sustain benefitted from the release of a $6 
million accounting provision for network lifecycle activity. The reported $19 million included about 
$12 million of grant-funded rural network upgrades and contribution-funded roadworks activity. 
About $1 million of investment was completed to replace network damaged by Cyclone Gabrielle in 
February 2023.
Common capital expenditure
2024 
$M
2023 
$M
Information technology
40
44
Building and engineering services
20
22
Total common capital expenditure
60
66
Information technology spend and building and engineering services decreased in FY24 following 
lifecycle project spend in FY23.
18
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Management commentary

Long term capital management
We will pay a final unimputed dividend of 28.5 cents per share on 8 October 2024 to all 
shareholders registered at 5.00pm 16 September 2024. The shares will be quoted on an 
ex-dividend basis from 17 September 2024. As the dividend is unimputed, there will be no 
supplementary dividend payable to shareholders outside of New Zealand.
The dividend reinvestment plan will not be available for the final dividend.
Dividend guidance for FY25 has been set at 57.5 cents per share, subject to no material adverse 
changes in circumstance or outlook. The FY25 dividend will be unimputed.
The Board considers that a ‘BBB’ or equivalent credit rating is appropriate for a company such as 
Chorus. It intends to maintain capital management and financial policies consistent with these 
credit ratings. It is Chorus’ intention that in normal circumstances the ratio of net debt to EBITDA 
will not materially exceed 4.75 times. At 30 June 2024, we had a long-term credit rating of 
BBB/stable outlook by Standard & Poor’s and Baa2/stable by Moody’s Investors Service.
Chorus completed a $150 million share buyback programme in September 2023. The programme 
commenced in February 2022 and resulted in the cancellation of 19 million shares.
19
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Management commentary

21	 Independent Auditor’s Report
24	 Consolidated income statement
24	 Consolidated statement of comprehensive income 
25	 Consolidated statement of financial position
26	 Consolidated statement of financial position (continued)
27	 Consolidated statement of changes in equity 
28	 Consolidated statement of cash flows
29	 Consolidated statement of cash flows (continued)
30	 Consolidated statement of cash flows (continued)
31	 Notes to the consolidated financial statements
Consolidated  
financial statements
20
 Chorus Annual Report 2024

Independent Auditor’s Report
To the shareholders of Chorus Limited 
Report on the audit of the consolidated financial statements
Opinion
In our opinion, the accompanying consolidated financial statements of Chorus Limited 
(the ’company’) and its subsidiaries (the ‘Group’) on pages 24 to 65 present fairly, in all material 
respects:
i.	 the Group’s financial position as at 30 June 2024 and its financial performance and cash 
flows for the year ended on that date;
ii.	 in accordance with New Zealand Equivalents to International Financial Reporting Standards 
(NZ IFRS) and International Financial Reporting Standards issued by the New Zealand 
Accounting Standards Board.
We have audited the accompanying consolidated financial statements which comprise:
—	 the consolidated statement of financial position as at 30 June 2024;
—	 the consolidated income statement, statements of other comprehensive income, changes in 
equity and cash flows for the year then ended;and
—	 notes, including a summary of significant accounting policies.
Basis for opinion
We conducted our audit in accordance with International Standards on Auditing (New Zealand) 
(‘ISAs (NZ)’). We believe that the audit evidence we have obtained is sufficient and appropriate to 
provide a basis for our opinion.
We are independent of the Group in accordance with Professional and Ethical Standard 1 
International Code of Ethics for Assurance Practitioners (Including International Independence 
Standards) (New Zealand) issued by the New Zealand Auditing and Assurance Standards Board 
and the International Ethics Standards Board for Accountants’ International Code of Ethics for 
Professional Accountants (including International Independence Standards) (‘IESBA Code’), and 
we have fulfilled our other ethical responsibilities in accordance with these requirements and the 
IESBA Code.
Our responsibilities under ISAs (NZ) are further described in the Auditor’s responsibilities for the 
audit of the consolidated financial statements section of our report.
Our firm has also provided other services to the group in relation to regulatory assurance. Subject 
to certain restrictions, partners and employees of our firm may also deal with the group on normal 
terms within the ordinary course of trading activities of the business of the group. These matters 
have not impaired our independence as auditor of the group. The firm has no other relationship 
with, or interest in, the group.
Materiality
The scope of our audit was influenced by our application of materiality. Materiality helped us to 
determine the nature, timing and extent of our audit procedures and to evaluate the effect of 
misstatements, both individually and on the consolidated financial statements as a whole. The 
materiality for the consolidated financial statements as a whole was set at $9.0 million determined 
with reference to a benchmark of Group revenue. We chose the benchmark because, in our view, 
this is a key measure of the Group’s performance.
Key audit matters
Key audit matters are those matters that, in our professional judgement, were of most significance 
in our audit of the consolidated financial statements in the current period. We summarise 
below those matters and our key audit procedures to address those matters in order that the 
shareholders as a body may better understand the process by which we arrived at our audit 
opinion. Our procedures were undertaken in the context of and solely for the purpose of our 
statutory audit opinion on the consolidated financial statements as a whole and we do not express 
discrete opinions on separate elements of the consolidated financial statements.
Consolidated financial statements
21
 Chorus Annual Report 2024

The key audit matter
How the matter was addressed in our audit
Recoverability of assets
Refer to Note 1 and 2 to the Financial Statements.
Capitalisation and the carrying value of assets are a key 
audit matter due to the significance of assets to the Group’s 
consolidated statement of financial position, and due to the 
judgement involved in determining the carrying value of the 
assets, principally:
	
— decision to capitalise or expense costs relating to the 
network and IT spend. This depends on whether the 
expenditure is to enhance the network (capitalise) or to 
maintain the current operating capability of the network 
(expense);
	
— estimation of the useful life of the asset once the costs are 
capitalised;
	
— obsolescence and impairment risk; and
	
— uncertainty of the impact of ongoing technological change, 
transitioning to a new regulated
	
— model, movement towards a fibre future and retail service 
provider/local fibre company behaviour.
Our audit procedures included: 
	
— examining that the controls to recognise capital projects in the fixed asset register, to monitor labour costs capitalised throughout 
the year and the approval of the asset life annual review are effective.
	
— assessing the nature of costs incurred in capital projects by checking a sample of costs to invoice to determine whether the 
description of the expenditure met the capitalisation criteria.
	
— assessing, on a sample basis, whether internal projects meet the criteria for capitalisation.
	
— assessing whether labour rates applied in capitalising employee and contractor time for a sample of personnel were consistent with 
employee career level and contracts or invoices.
	
— examining, on a sample basis, that labour costs capitalised, at an individual employee/contractor level did not exceed an individual’s 
salary or invoiced time. 
	
— assessing, on a sample basis, whether the accruals recorded for assets under construction were calculated in accordance with the 
progress of construction and the arrangements with external suppliers.
	
— assessing the useful economic lives of the assets, by comparing to our knowledge of the business and its operations and industry 
benchmarks.
	
— ansuring the revised useful lives of identified asset groups and accelerated depreciation is accurately recorded.
	
— performing data analytical procedures over capitalised labour spend for the period and useful lives of assets in the fixed asset register 
to identify any unusual trends.
Chorus Funding
Refer to Note 4, 6, 7 and 19 to the Financial Statements.
At 30 June 2024, Chorus had external borrowings of $2,626 
million (30 June 2023: $2,528 million), Crown funding of 
$929 million (30 June 2023: $948 million), CIP securities of 
$744 million (30 June 2023: $697 million) and net derivative 
financial assets of $27 million (30 June 2023: Net derivative 
financial assets of $65 million).
The external borrowings, CIP securities, cross-currency 
and interest rate derivatives are a key audit matter due to 
their significance to the Group’s consolidated statement of 
financial position and the complexity and judgement involved 
in determining the appropriate valuation and accounting 
treatment for the CIP securities and cross-currency and 
interest rate derivatives.
Our audit procedures included:
	
— engaging our financial instrument specialists to independently value all interest rate derivatives using valuation models and inputs from 
those utilised by management.
	
— agreeing the terms of the derivatives to the confirmation provided by the derivative counterparty.
	
— examining the hedge documentation for new debt instruments and associated derivatives against the requirements of IFRS 9.
	
— evaluating the hedge effectiveness of the interest rate derivatives hedging the EUR and AUD denominated Medium Term Notes, the 
NZD Bond 2028 and the NZD Bond 2030. In all instances, our financial instrument specialists assessed the effectiveness of these 
hedges by independently modelling the future changes in the value of these instruments to assess whether the underlying derivatives 
were effective.
	
— assessing for changes to the accounting treatment of the CIP securities. We read the underlying loan agreement and analysed the 
various features of the loan agreement to determine whether the CIP securities were a debt or equity instrument.
	
— verifying the carrying amount of CIP securities is in-line with the accounting models including current and non-current classification.
	
— confirming debt to external support, sighting repayments and reviewing compliance with covenant requirements.
22
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Consolidated financial statements

Other information
The Directors, on behalf of the Group, are responsible for the other information included in the 
entity’s Annual Report information includes Chorus’ operating, marketing and regulatory overviews, 
management commentary and disclosure relating to corporate governance and statutory information. 
Our opinion on the consolidated financial statements does not cover any other information and we do 
not express any form of assurance conclusion thereon.
In connection with our audit of the consolidated financial statements our responsibility is to read the 
other information and, in doing so, consider whether the other information is materially inconsistent 
with the consolidated financial statements or our knowledge obtained in the audit or otherwise appears 
materially misstated. If, based on the work we have performed, we conclude that there is a material 
misstatement of this other information, we are required to report that fact. We have nothing to report in 
this regard.
Use of this independent auditor’s report
This independent auditor’s report is made solely to the shareholders as a body. Our audit work has been 
undertaken so that we might state to the shareholders those matters we are required to state to them in 
the independent auditor’s report and for no other purpose. To the fullest extent permitted by law, we do 
not accept or assume responsibility to anyone other than the shareholders as a body for our audit work, 
this independent auditor’s report, or any of the opinions we have formed.
Responsibilities of the Directors for the consolidated financial statements
The Directors, on behalf of the Group, are responsible for:
	
— the preparation and fair presentation of the consolidated financial statements in accordance 
with generally accepted accounting practice in New Zealand (being New Zealand Equivalents to 
International Financial Reporting Standards) and International Financial Reporting Standards issued by 
the New Zealand Accounting Standards Board;
	
— implementing necessary internal control to enable the preparation of a consolidated set of financial 
statements that is free from material misstatement, whether due to fraud or error; and
	
— assessing the ability to continue as a going concern. This includes disclosing, as applicable, matters 
related to going concern and using the going concern basis of accounting unless they either intend 
to liquidate or to cease operations or have no realistic alternative but to do so.
Auditor’s responsibilities for the audit of the consolidated financial statements
Our objective is:
	
— to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements as a whole are free from 
material misstatement, whether due to fraud or error; and
	
— to issue an independent auditor’s report that includes our opinion.
Reasonable assurance is a high level of assurance but is not a guarantee that an audit conducted in 
accordance with ISAs NZ will always detect a material misstatement when it exists.
Misstatements can arise from fraud or error. They are considered material if, individually or in the 
aggregate, they could reasonably be expected to influence the economic decisions of users taken on 
the basis of these consolidated financial statements.
A further description of our responsibilities for the audit of these consolidated financial statements is 
located at the External Reporting Board (XRB) website at: 
http://www.xrb.govt.nz / standards‑for‑assurance‑practitioners / auditors‑responsibilities / audit‑report‑1 / 
This description forms part of our independent auditor’s report.
The engagement partner on the audit resulting in this independent auditor’s report is David Gates.
For and on behalf of
KPMG 
Wellington 
26 August 2024
23
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Consolidated financial statements

The accompanying notes 
are an integral part of these 
consolidated financial statements.
Consolidated 
income 
statement
For the year ended 
30 June 2024
Note
2024
$M
2023
$M
Operating revenue
9
 1,010
 980
Operating expenses
10
 (310)
 (308)
Earnings before interest, income tax, depreciation and amortisation
 700
 672
Depreciation
1,7
 (374)
 (355)
Amortisation
2,3
 (88)
 (91)
Earnings before interest and income tax
 238
 226
Finance income
 5
 4
Finance expense
4
 (222)
 (199)
Net earnings before income tax
 21
 31
Income tax expense
14
 (30)
 (6)
Net (loss) / earnings for the year
 (9)
 25
Earnings per share
Basic (loss)/earnings per share (dollars)
17
 (0.02)
 0.06
Diluted (loss)/earnings per share (dollars)
17
 (0.02)
 0.05
Consolidated 
statement of 
comprehensive 
income 
For the year ended 
30 June 2024
Note
2024
$M
2023
$M
Net (loss)/earnings for the year
 (9)
 25
Other comprehensive income
Movements in effective cash flow hedges
19
 (12)
 3
Amortisation of de-designated cash flow hedges transferred to Income statement
19
 5
 5
Movement in cost of hedging reserve
19
 (9)
 (3)
Items that will be reclassified subsequently to Income statement when specific conditions 
are met net of tax
 (16)
 5
Net revaluation of land and buildings
1
 7
 265
Items that will not be reclassified subsequently to Income statement when specific 
conditions are met net of tax
 7
 265
Total comprehensive (loss) / income for the year net of tax
 (18)
 295
24
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Consolidated financial statements

The accompanying notes 
are an integral part of these 
consolidated financial statements.
Consolidated 
statement 
of financial 
position
As at 30 June 2024
Note
2024
$M
2023
$M
Current assets
Cash and call deposits
15
 45
 76
Trade and other receivables
11
 154
 153
Derivative financial instruments
19
 1
 43
Assets held for sale
– 
 1
Total current assets
 200
 273
Non-current assets
Derivative financial instruments
19
 98
 116
Trade and other receivables
11
4
–
Customer acquisition assets
3
 67
 60
Software and other intangible assets
2
 142
 146
Network assets
1
 5,126
 5,213
Land and buildings
1
 375
 357
Total non-current assets
 5,812
 5,892
Total assets
 6,012
 6,165
Current liabilities
Trade and other payables
12
 230
 280
Lease payable
5
 12
 13
Derivative financial instruments
19
– 
 1
Debt
4
 110
 368
Total current liabilities excluding Crown funding
 352
 662
Crown Infrastructure Partners (CIP) securities
6
 160
– 
Crown funding
7
 28
 28
Total current liabilities
 540
 690
25
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Consolidated financial statements

The accompanying notes 
are an integral part of these 
consolidated financial statements.
Note
2024
$M
2023
$M
Non-current liabilities
Trade and other payables
12
 13
 11
Deferred tax liability
14
 386
 363
Derivative financial instruments
19
 72
 93
Lease payable
5
 159
 168
Debt
4
 2,516
 2,160
Total non-current liabilities excluding CIP and Crown funding
 3,146
 2,795
Crown Infrastructure Partners (CIP) securities
6
 584
 697
Crown funding
7
 901
 920
Total non-current liabilities
 4,631
 4,412
Total liabilities
 5,171
 5,102
Equity
Share capital
16
 578
 589
Reserves
1,19
 322
 331
Retained earnings
(59)
 143
Total equity 
 841
 1,063
Total liabilities and equity
 6,012
 6,165
The consolidated financial statements are approved and signed on behalf of the Board.
Consolidated 
statement 
of financial 
position 
(continued)
As at 30 June 2024
Authorised for issue on 26 August 2024
Mark Cross
Chair
Kate Jorgensen
Chair, Audit & Risk Management Committee
26
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Consolidated financial statements

The accompanying notes 
are an integral part of these 
consolidated financial statements.
Note
Share capital
$M
Revaluation 
reserve
$M
Other reserves 
$M
Retained 
earnings
$M
Total
$M
Balance at 1 July 2022
 682
– 
 60
 287
 1,029
Comprehensive income
Net earnings for the year
– 
– 
– 
 25
 25
Other comprehensive income
Movement in cash flow hedge reserve
19
– 
– 
 3
– 
 3
Amortisation of de-designated cash flow hedges transferred to Income statement
19
– 
– 
 5
– 
 5
Movement in cost of hedging reserve
19
– 
– 
 (3)
– 
 (3)
Movement in revaluation reserve
1
– 
 265
– 
– 
 265
Total comprehensive income
– 
 265
 5
 25
 295
Contributions by and (distributions to) owners:
Dividends
16
– 
– 
– 
 (169)
 (169)
Dividend reinvestment plan
16
 9
– 
– 
– 
 9
Share buy-back
16
 (101)
– 
– 
– 
 (101)
Shares issued under LTI scheme
 (1)
– 
 1
– 
– 
Total transactions with owners
 (93)
– 
 1
 (169)
 (261)
Balance at 30 June 2023
 589
 265
 66
 143
 1,063
Comprehensive income
Net loss for the year
– 
– 
– 
 (9)
 (9)
Other comprehensive income
Movement in cash flow hedge reserve
19
– 
– 
 (12)
– 
 (12)
Amortisation of de-designated cash flow hedges transferred to Income statement
19
– 
– 
 5
– 
 5
Movement in cost of hedging reserve
19
– 
– 
 (9)
– 
 (9)
Movement in revaluation reserve
1
– 
 7
– 
– 
 7
Total comprehensive income
– 
 7
 (16)
 (9)
 (18)
Contributions by and (distributions to) owners:
Dividends
16
– 
– 
– 
 (193)
 (193)
Share buy-back
16
 (11)
– 
– 
– 
 (11)
Total transactions with owners
 (11)
– 
– 
 (193)
 (204)
Balance at 30 June 2024
 578
 272
 50
 (59)
 841
Consolidated 
statement of 
changes in 
equity 
For the year ended  
30 June 2024
27
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Consolidated financial statements

The accompanying notes 
are an integral part of these 
consolidated financial statements.
Note
2024
$M
2023
$M
Cash flows from operating activities
Cash was provided from / (applied to):
Receipts from customers
 1,007
 973
Payment to suppliers and employees
 (334)
 (311)
Interest paid
 (165)
 (138)
Interest received
 5
 4
Taxation paid 
– 
 (4)
Net cash flows provided from operating activities
 513
 524
Cash flows applied to investing activities
Cash was provided from / (applied to):
Purchase of network and intangible assets
 (442)
 (495)
Disposal of network and intangible assets 
 1
– 
Capitalised interest paid
 (1)
 (1)
Net cash flows applied to investing activities
 (442)
 (496)
Cash flows from financing activities
Cash was provided from / (applied to):
Payment of lease liabilities
 (16)
 (15)
Crown funding (including CIP securities)
 12
 84
Proceeds from debt 
 574
 811
Repayment of debt
 (468)
 (659)
Repurchase of shares
 (11)
 (101)
Dividends paid
 (193)
 (160)
Net cash flows applied to financing activities
 (102)
 (40)
Net cash flows
 (31)
 (12)
Cash at the beginning of the year
 76
 88
Cash at the end of the year
15
 45
 76
Consolidated 
statement of 
cash flows
For the year ended 
30 June 2024
28
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Consolidated financial statements

The accompanying notes 
are an integral part of these 
consolidated financial statements.
Notes
2024
$M
2023
$M
Net (loss)/earnings for the year
(9)
25
Adjustment for:
Depreciation of network assets
1
405
384
Amortisation of Crown funding
7
(31)
(29)
Amortisation of software and other intangible assets
2
57
61
Amortisation of customer acquisition assets
3
35
33
Movements in tax
14
30
2
Ineffective portion of changes in fair value of cash flow hedges
4
(3)
(7)
Amortisation of non-cash finance expenses
4
10
CIP securities (notional) interest
4
47
45
Other
5
5
540
529
Change in current assets and liabilities:
Increase in trade and other receivables
11
(5)
(27)
(Decrease) / increase in operating trade payables
12
(22)
22
(27)
(5)
Net cash flows from operating activities
513
524
Consolidated 
statement of 
cash flows 
(continued)
Reconciliation of 
net (loss) / earnings to 
net cash flows from 
operating activities
29
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Consolidated financial statements

The accompanying notes 
are an integral part of these 
consolidated financial statements.
Debt
$M
Crown funding
$M
CIP securities
$M
Lease payable
$M
Share capital
$M
Retained earnings
$M
Balance at 1 July 2022
 2,322
 936
 613
 187
 682
 287
Movements from financing cash flows
Payment of lease liabilities
– 
– 
– 
 (15)
– 
– 
Proceeds from debt
 811
 45
 39
– 
– 
– 
Repayment of debt
 (659)
– 
– 
– 
– 
– 
Repurchase of shares
– 
– 
– 
– 
 (101)
– 
Dividends paid
– 
– 
– 
– 
– 
 (160)
Total changes from financing cash flows
 152
 45
 39
 (15)
 (101)
 (160)
Other cash flows
Interest paid on leases
– 
– 
– 
 (11)
– 
– 
Non-cash movements
Movements in fair value (including foreign exchange rates)
 50
– 
– 
– 
– 
– 
Transaction costs and amortisation related to financing
 4
 (29)
 45
– 
– 
– 
Accruals
– 
 (4)
– 
– 
 (1)
– 
Dividend reinvestment plan
– 
– 
– 
– 
 9
 (9)
Lease movements
– 
– 
– 
 20
– 
– 
Net earnings for the year ended 30 June 2023
– 
– 
– 
– 
– 
 25
Balance at 30 June 2023
 2,528
 948
 697
 181
 589
 143
Movements from cash flows
Payment of lease liabilities
– 
– 
– 
 (16)
– 
– 
Proceeds from debt
 574
 12
– 
– 
– 
– 
Repayment of debt
 (468)
– 
– 
– 
– 
– 
Repurchase of shares
– 
– 
– 
– 
 (11)
– 
Dividends paid
– 
– 
– 
– 
– 
 (193)
Total changes from financing cash flows
 106
 12
– 
 (16)
 (11)
 (193)
Other cash flows
Interest paid on leases
– 
– 
– 
 (11)
– 
– 
Non-cash movements
Movements in fair value (including foreign exchange rates)
 (12)
– 
– 
– 
– 
– 
Transaction costs and amortisation related to financing
 4
 (31)
 47
– 
– 
– 
Lease movements
– 
– 
– 
 5
– 
– 
Net loss for the year ended 30 June 2024
– 
– 
– 
– 
– 
 (9)
Balance at 30 June 2024
 2,626
 929
 744
 159
 578
 (59)
Consolidated 
statement of 
cash flows 
(continued)
Reconciliation of 
movements of liabilities 
to cash flows arising 
from financing activities
30
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Consolidated financial statements

Notes to the 
consolidated 
financial 
statements
Reporting entity and statutory base
Chorus includes Chorus Limited together with its subsidiaries.
Chorus is New Zealand’s largest fixed line communications infrastructure business. 
It maintains and builds a network predominantly made up of fibre and copper cables, 
local telephone exchanges and cabinets.
Chorus Limited is a profit-oriented company registered in New Zealand under the 
Companies Act 1993 and is a FMC Reporting Entity for the purposes of the Financial 
Markets Conduct Act 2013. Chorus Limited was established as a standalone, publicly 
listed entity on 1 December 2011, upon its demerger from Spark New Zealand Limited 
(Spark, previously Telecom Corporation of New Zealand Limited). The demerger was 
a condition of an agreement with Crown Infrastructure Partners Limited (previously 
Crown Fibre Holdings) to enable Chorus Limited to provide the majority of the 
Crown’s Ultra-Fast Broadband (UFB). Chorus Limited is listed and its ordinary shares 
are quoted on the NZX main board equity security market (NZX Main Board) and on 
the Australian Stock Exchange (ASX). Chorus has bonds quoted on the NZX and ASX 
debt markets. American Depositary Shares, each representing five ordinary shares 
(and evidenced by American Depositary Receipts), are not listed but are traded on the 
over‑the‑counter market in the United States.
These consolidated financial statements (financial statements) have been prepared in 
accordance with Generally Accepted Accounting Practice in New Zealand (NZ GAAP) 
and Part 7 of the Financial Markets Conduct Act 2013. They comply with New Zealand 
equivalents to International Financial Reporting Standards (NZ IFRS) as appropriate for 
profit-oriented entities, and with International Financial Reporting Standards.
These financial statements are expressed in New Zealand dollars. All financial 
information has been rounded to the nearest million, unless otherwise stated.
The measurement basis adopted in the preparation of these financial statements 
is historical cost, modified by the revaluation of financial instruments and land 
and building assets as identified in the specific accounting policies below and the 
accompanying notes.
Some comparatives have been restated to reflect the current year classification. 
This has led to no impact on working capital, the consolidated statements of 
cash flows, or equity.
Accounting policies and standards
Accounting policies that summarise the measurement basis used which are relevant 
to the understanding of the financial statements are provided throughout the 
accompanying notes.
The accounting policies adopted and methods of computation have been applied 
consistently throughout the periods presented in these financial statements.
No new standards, amendments or interpretations to existing standards that are not 
yet effective have been early adopted by Chorus in these financial statements.
Climate impact
In preparing the financial statements, management has considered climate-related 
matters and disclosed as required when the effect of those matters is material in the 
context of the financial statements taken as a whole. In the year ended 30 June 2024 
there was no material impact from climate related matters.
Accounting estimates and judgements
In preparing the financial statements, management has made estimates and 
assumptions about the future that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities 
at the date of the financial statements and the reported amounts of revenue and 
expenses during the period. Actual results could differ from those estimates.
Estimates and assumptions are continually evaluated and are based on experience 
and other factors, including macro-economic and market factors, and expectations 
of future events that may have an impact on Chorus. All judgements, estimates, 
and assumptions are believed to be reasonable based on the most current set of 
circumstances available to Chorus. The principal areas of judgement in preparing 
these financial statements are set out below.
Network assets (note 1)
Assessing the carrying value of network assets for impairment considerations which 
includes assessing the appropriateness of useful life and residual value estimates of 
network assets, the physical condition of the asset, technological advances, regulation 
and expected disposal proceeds from the future sale of the asset.
31
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Notes to the consolidated financial statements

Land and buildings (note 1)
Land and buildings are recorded at fair value. Fair value relating to land and buildings is determined 
based on a periodic independent valuation using a combination of both an optimised depreciated 
replacement cost and a market valuation approach. The valuation technique applied to each asset is 
determined by the independent valuer, with input and review by Chorus management who are familiar 
with the nature of the assets. Valuations are performed every three years, or more frequently where 
indicators exist that the carrying amount of the asset materially differs from its fair value at the end 
of the reporting period. This may be the result of external factors (e.g. a volatile property market) or 
internal factors. In these instances where indicators of material difference exist, a desktop valuation may 
be obtained to appropriately adjust the carrying value of the assets. The underlying assumptions used in 
the valuation are reviewed at each reporting date to ensure the carrying value is not materially different 
from the fair value.
Customer acquisition assets (note 3)
Assessing the carrying value of customer acquisition assets for impairment considerations which includes 
assessing the appropriateness of useful life, contract terms, revenue and customer connections data.
Leases (note 5)
A significant portion of lease contracts contain options for extension, which in turn require management 
to apply judgement in assessing if these extensions are likely to be exercised.
Crown Infrastructure Partners (CIP) securities (note 6)
On initial recognition, determining the fair value of the CIP securities required Chorus to make 
assumptions on expected future cash flows and discount rates based on future long dated swap curves. 
The associated UFB build was completed in the year ended 30 June 2023.
Financial risk management (note 19 and 20)
Accounting judgements have been made in determining hedge designation and the fair value of 
derivatives and borrowings. The fair value of derivatives and borrowings are determined based on valuation 
models that use forward-looking estimates and market observable data, to the extent that it is available. 
Non-GAAP measures
Chorus uses non-GAAP measures that are not prepared in accordance with NZ IFRS. Chorus believes 
these non-GAAP measures provide useful information to users of the financial statements to assist in 
understanding the financial performance of Chorus. These measures are also used internally to evaluate 
the performance of Chorus and monitored for compliance against debt covenants.
These measures should not be viewed in isolation or as a substitute for measures reported in 
accordance with NZ IFRS as they are not uniformly defined or utilised by all companies in New Zealand 
or the telecommunications industry.
Earnings before interest and income tax (EBIT) and earnings before interest, income tax, 
depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA)
Chorus calculates EBIT by adding back finance expense and income tax to, and subtracting finance 
income from, net (loss) / earnings. EBITDA adds back depreciation and amortisation expense to EBIT. 
A reconciliation of EBIT and EBITDA is provided below based on amounts taken from, and consistent 
with, those presented in the financial statements.
Year ended 30 June
2024
$M
2023
$M
 Net (loss) / earnings for the year reported under NZ IFRS
(9)
 25
 Add back: income tax expense
30
 6
 Add back: finance expense
222
 199
 Subtract: finance income
(5)
 (4)
 EBIT
238
 226
 Add back: depreciation 
374
 355
 Add back: amortisation
88
 91
 EBITDA
700
 672
32
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Notes to the consolidated financial statements

Note 1 – Network assets, land and buildings
Network assets
In the Consolidated statement of financial position, network assets, except land and buildings, are stated 
at cost less accumulated depreciation and any accumulated impairment losses. The cost of additions 
to network assets and work in progress constructed by Chorus includes the cost of all materials used 
in construction, direct labour costs specifically associated with construction, interest costs that are 
attributable to the asset, resource management consent costs, and attributable overheads.
Repairs and maintenance costs are recognised in the Consolidated income statement as incurred. If the 
useful life of the asset is extended or the asset is enhanced then the associated costs are capitalised.
Land and buildings
Land and buildings are carried at a revalued amount. The revalued amount represents the fair value of 
each land and building asset at the date of revaluation less any subsequent accumulated depreciation 
and subsequent accumulated impairment losses. If an asset’s carrying amount is increased as a 
result of a revaluation, the increase is recognised in the Consolidated statement of comprehensive 
income and accumulated within the revaluation reserve in equity. An increase shall be recognised 
in the Consolidated income statement to the extent it reverses a revaluation decrease of the same 
asset previously recognised in profit or loss. If an asset’s carrying amount is decreased as a result 
of a revaluation, the decrease is first recognised in the Consolidated statement of comprehensive 
income (and the revaluation reserve) to the extent any credit balance exists in relation to that asset. 
Any additional decrease in the asset’s carrying amount is recognised in the Consolidated income 
statement as an expense. The attributable revaluation surplus remaining in the asset revaluation reserve 
relating to land or buildings disposed of, net of any related deferred taxes, is transferred directly to 
retained earnings on the derecognition of the relevant asset.
Using the last independent external valuation performed for the year ended 30 June 2023 as a base, 
further work was performed to assess the value at balance date. An increase in the land value of 2.6% 
was adopted based on the QV House Index annual change in prices. There were no other changes to 
key inputs.
Estimating useful lives and residual values of network assets and buildings
The determination of the appropriate useful life for a particular asset requires management to make 
judgements about, amongst other factors, the expected period of service potential of the asset, 
the likelihood of the asset becoming obsolete as a result of technological advances, and the likelihood 
of Chorus ceasing to use the asset in business operations.
Where an item of network assets or buildings comprises major components having different useful lives, 
the components are accounted for as separate items of network assets or buildings.
Where the remaining useful lives or recoverable values have diminished due to technological, regulatory 
or market condition changes, depreciation is accelerated. The assets’ residual values, useful lives, 
and methods of depreciation are reviewed annually and adjusted prospectively, if appropriate.
Depreciation is charged on a straight-line basis to write down the cost of network assets to their 
estimated residual value over their estimated useful life. Estimated useful lives are as follows:
Estimated useful life
Fibre cables
20 – 30 years
Ducts, poles, and manholes
20 – 50 years
Buildings
50 years
Copper cables
10 – 25 years
Cabinets
5 – 20 years
Network electronics
2 – 25 years
Right of use assets
4 – 50 years
Other
4 – 10 years
Other network assets include motor vehicles, test instruments, furniture and fittings, tools, and plant.
An item of network assets and any significant part is derecognised upon disposal or when no future 
economic benefits are expected from its use. Where network assets are disposed of, the profit or loss 
recognised in the Consolidated income statement is calculated as the difference between the sale price 
and the carrying value of the asset.
Non-monetary items that are measured in terms of historical cost in a foreign currency are translated 
using the exchange rates as at the dates of the initial transactions.
Land and work in progress are not depreciated. Work in progress is reviewed on a regular basis to ensure 
that costs represent future assets.
33
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Notes to the consolidated financial statements

Note 1 – Network assets, land and buildings continued
30 June 2024
Fibre 
cables
$M
Ducts, manholes, 
and poles
$M
Copper 
cables
$M
Cabinets
$M
Network 
electronics
$M
Right of use 
assets
$M
Other
$M
Work in 
progress
$M
Land and 
buildings
$M
Total
$M
Gross carrying amount
Balance at 1 July 2023
 2,797
 3,279
 2,426
 748
 1,832
 244
 299
 177
 357
 12,159
Additions
 129
 87
 4
 17
 80
 6
 12
 94
 14
 443
Disposals
– 
 (1)
– 
– 
 (2)
– 
 (2)
– 
– 
 (5)
Transfers from work in progress
– 
– 
– 
– 
– 
– 
– 
 (116)
– 
 (116)
Net revaluations through OCI
– 
– 
– 
– 
– 
– 
– 
– 
 7
 7
Other
– 
– 
– 
– 
– 
– 
– 
 4
 (1)
 3
Balance at 30 June 2024
 2,926
 3,365
 2,430
 765
 1,910
 250
 309
 159
 377
 12,491
Accumulated depreciation
– 
Balance at 1 July 2023
 (1,092)
 (842)
 (2,248)
 (543)
 (1,554)
 (96)
 (214)
– 
– 
 (6,589)
Depreciation
 (135)
 (80)
 (74)
 (17)
 (70)
 (14)
 (13)
– 
 (2)
 (405)
Disposals
– 
– 
– 
– 
 2
– 
 2
– 
– 
 4
Balance at 30 June 2024
 (1,227)
 (922)
 (2,322)
 (560)
 (1,622)
 (110)
 (225)
– 
 (2)
 (6,990)
Net carrying amount
 1,699
 2,443
 108
 205
 288
 140
 84
 159
 375
 5,501
34
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Notes to the consolidated financial statements

Note 1 – Network assets, land and buildings continued
30 June 2023
Fibre 
cables
$M
Ducts, manholes, 
and poles
$M
Copper 
cables
$M
Cabinets
$M
Network 
electronics
$M
Right of use 
assets
$M
Other
$M
Work in 
progress
$M
Land and 
buildings 
$M
Total
$M
Gross carrying amount
Balance at 1 July 2022
 2,663
 3,160
 2,424
 731
 1,762
 234
 295
 141
 184
 11,594
Additions
 134
 119
 2
 17
 78
 7
 7
 158
 5
 527
Disposals
– 
– 
– 
– 
 (8)
 (1)
 (3)
– 
 (1)
 (13)
Transfers from work in progress
– 
– 
– 
– 
– 
– 
– 
 (122)
– 
 (122)
Net revaluations through OCI
– 
– 
– 
– 
– 
– 
– 
– 
 169
 169
Other
– 
– 
– 
– 
– 
 4
– 
– 
– 
 4
Balance at 30 June 2023
 2,797
 3,279
 2,426
 748
 1,832
 244
 299
 177
 357
 12,159
Accumulated depreciation
– 
Balance at 1 July 2022
 (964)
 (778)
 (2,172)
 (525)
 (1,495)
 (84)
 (202)
– 
 (109)
 (6,329)
Depreciation
 (128)
 (64)
 (76)
 (18)
 (67)
 (13)
 (14)
– 
 (4)
 (384)
Disposals
– 
– 
– 
– 
 8
 1
 2
– 
– 
 11
Net revaluations through OCI
– 
– 
– 
– 
– 
– 
– 
– 
 113
 113
Balance at 30 June 2023
 (1,092)
 (842)
 (2,248)
 (543)
 (1,554)
 (96)
 (214)
– 
– 
 (6,589)
Net carrying amount
 1,705
 2,437
 178
 205
 278
 148
 85
 177
 357
 5,570
There are no restrictions on Chorus’ network assets or any network assets pledged as securities 
for liabilities. At 30 June 2024 the contractual commitments for acquisition and construction of the 
network assets was $53 million (30 June 2023: $50 million). 
Land and buildings at historical cost
If land and buildings were stated on an historical cost basis, the amounts would be as follows: 
Year ended 30 June
2024
$M
2023
$M
Land and buildings (at cost)
200
188
Buildings accumulated depreciation
(115)
(113)
Net carrying amount
85
75
Crown funding
Chorus received funding from the Crown to finance the capital expenditure associated with the 
development of the UFB network and continues to receive funding for other services. Where funding is 
used to construct assets, it is offset against depreciation over the life of the assets constructed.
Refer to note 7 for information on Crown funding.
35
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Notes to the consolidated financial statements

Note 1 – Network assets, land and buildings continued
Impairment
The carrying amounts of non-financial assets including network assets, land and buildings, software and 
other intangibles, and customer acquisition assets are reviewed at the end of each reporting period for 
any indicators of impairment.
If any such indication exists, the recoverable amount of the asset is estimated. An impairment loss is 
recognised in earnings whenever the carrying amount of an asset exceeds its estimated recoverable 
amount. Should the conditions that gave rise to the impairment loss no longer exist, and the assets are 
no longer considered to be impaired, a reversal of an impairment loss would be recognised immediately 
in earnings.
The recoverable amount is the greater of an assets value in use and fair value less costs to sell. 
Chorus’ assets do not generate independent cash flows and are therefore assessed from a single 
cash‑generating unit perspective. 
Capitalised interest
Finance costs are capitalised on qualifying items of network assets and software assets at an annualised 
rate of 5.8% (30 June 2023: 4.0%). Interest is capitalised over the period required to complete the 
assets and prepare them for their intended use. In the current year finance costs totalling $1 million 
(30 June 2023: $1 million) have been capitalised against network assets and software assets.
Right of use assets
A right of use asset is recognised on commencement of a lease. The right of use asset is initially 
measured at cost, which is made up of the initial lease liability amount adjusted for any lease payments 
made at or before the commencement date, plus any initial direct costs incurred and an estimate 
of costs to remove the underlying asset or to restore the underlying asset or the site on which it is 
located, less any lease incentives received. The right of use asset is subsequently depreciated using 
the straight‑line method until the assumed end of the lease term. The right of use asset is periodically 
adjusted for certain remeasurements of the lease liability.
Movements in right of use assets for the period are presented below:
Fibre 
cables
$M
Ducts, manholes, 
and poles
$M
Property
$M
Total
$M
Balance 1 July 2022
 7
 48
 95
 150
Additions
–
 4
 3
 7
Disposals
–
–
 (1)
 (1)
Other
–
–
 4
 4
Depreciation charge
 (1)
 (4)
 (7)
 (12)
Balance at 30 June 2023
 6
 48
 94
 148
Additions
– 
 4
 1
 5
Depreciation charge
 (1)
 (4)
 (8)
 (13)
Balance at 30 June 2024
 5
 48
 87
 140
Property exchanges
Chorus has leased exchange space and commercial co-location space owned by Spark which is subject 
to lease arrangements (included within right of use assets). Chorus in turn leases exchange space and 
commercial co-location space owned by Chorus to Spark under an operating lease arrangement.
36
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Notes to the consolidated financial statements

Note 2 – Software and other intangible assets
Software and other intangible assets are initially measured at cost. The direct costs associated with the 
development of network and business software for internal use are capitalised where project success is 
probable and the capitalisation criteria is met. Following initial recognition, software and other intangible 
assets are stated at cost less accumulated amortisation and impairment losses. Software and other 
intangible assets with a finite life are amortised from the date the asset is ready for use on a straight-line 
basis over its estimated useful life which is as follows:
Estimated useful life
Software
2–10 years
Other intangibles
20 –35 years
Other intangibles mainly consists of land easements.
Where estimated useful lives or recoverable values have diminished due to technological change or 
market conditions, amortisation is accelerated.
There are no restrictions on software and other intangible assets, or any intangible assets pledged as 
securities for liabilities.
30 June 2024
Software
$M
Other intangibles
$M
Work in progress
$M
Total
$M
Cost
Balance at 1 July 2023
 955
 6
 28
 989
Additions
 48
– 
 53
 101
Disposals
 (4)
– 
– 
 (4)
Transfers from work in progress
– 
– 
 (48)
 (48)
Balance at 30 June 2024
 999
 6
 33
 1,038
Accumulated amortisation
Balance at 1 July 2023
 (842)
 (1)
– 
 (843)
Amortisation
 (56)
 (1)
– 
 (57)
Disposals
 4
– 
– 
 4
Balance at 30 June 2024
 (894)
 (2)
– 
 (896)
Net carrying amount
 105
 4
 33
 142
30 June 2023
Software
$M
Other intangibles
$M
Work in progress
$M
Total
$M
Cost
Balance at 1 July 2022
 918
 6
 17
 941
Additions
 44
– 
 55
 99
Disposals
 (7)
– 
– 
 (7)
Transfers from work in progress
– 
– 
 (44)
 (44)
Balance at 30 June 2023
 955
 6
 28
 989
Accumulated amortisation
Balance at 1 July 2022
 (788)
 (1)
– 
 (789)
Amortisation
 (61)
– 
– 
 (61)
Disposals
 7
– 
– 
 7
Balance at 30 June 2023
 (842)
 (1)
– 
 (843)
Net carrying amount
 113
 5
 28
 146
At 30 June 2024 the contractual commitment for acquisition of software and other intangible assets was 
$9 million (30 June 2023: $4 million).
37
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Notes to the consolidated financial statements

Note 3 – Customer acquisition assets
Customer acquisition costs are incremental costs incurred in acquiring new contracts with new and 
existing customers that Chorus expects are recoverable and are capitalised as customer acquisition 
assets. These represent various costs including commissions and incentives for customers to connect 
to the fibre network. Following initial recognition, customer acquisition assets are stated at cost less 
accumulated amortisation and impairment losses. Customer acquisition assets have a finite life and are 
amortised from the month that costs are capitalised on a straight-line basis over the average connection 
life which is as follows:
Average connection life
New connections and migrations
1–4 years
Customer incentives
1 year
Customer acquisition assets are amortised to the Consolidated income statement, either as amortisation 
expense or against operating revenue, based on the nature of the specific costs capitalised.
New connections 
and migrations
$M
Customer 
incentives
$M
Total
$M
Balance at 1 July 2022 (net carrying amount)
 58
 1
 59
Additions
 30
 4
 34
Amortisation to amortisation expense
 (30)
– 
 (30)
Amortisation to operating revenue
– 
 (3)
 (3)
Balance at 30 June 2023 (net carrying amount)
 58
 2
 60
Additions
 38
 4
 42
Amortisation to amortisation expense
 (31)
– 
 (31)
Amortisation to operating revenue
– 
 (4)
 (4)
Balance at 30 June 2024 (net carrying amount)
 65
 2
 67
38
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Notes to the consolidated financial statements

Note 4 – Debt
Debt is classified as non-current liabilities except for those with maturities less than 12 months from 
the reporting date, which are classified as current liabilities. Debt is initially measured at fair value, less 
any transaction costs that are directly attributable to the issue of the instruments. Debt is subsequently 
measured at amortised cost using the effective interest method. Some borrowings are designated in fair 
value hedge relationships, which means that any change in market interest and foreign exchange rates 
result in a change in the fair value adjustment on that debt.
The weighted effective interest rate on debt including the effect of derivative financial instruments and 
facility fees was 5.77% (30 June 2023: 5.40%).
Due date
2024
$M
2023
$M
Syndicated bank facilities
 110
– 
Euro medium term notes EUR
Oct 2023
– 
 368
Euro medium term notes EUR
Dec 2026
 488
 473
Euro medium term notes EUR
Sep 2029
 857
 853
Australian medium term notes AUD
Sep 2030
 326
 – 
Fixed rate NZD Bonds
Dec 2027
 200
 200
Fixed rate NZD Bonds
Dec 2028
 502
 500
Fixed rate NZD Bonds
Dec 2030
 160
 153
Less: facility fees
 (17)
 (19)
Total Debt
 2,626
 2,528
Current
 110
 368
Non-current
 2,516
 2,160
Syndicated bank facilities
As at 30 June 2024 Chorus had a $450 million committed syndicated facility on market standard terms 
and conditions (30 June 2023: $450 million). The facility is held with banks that are rated A to AA-, based 
on Standard & Poor’s ratings. As at 30 June 2024 $110 million was drawn down (30 June 2023: nil).
Medium Term Notes (MTN)
Face value
Interest rate
2024
$M
2023
$M
EUR 209 million
1.13%
– 
 368
EUR 300 million
0.88%
 488
 473
EUR 500 million
3.63%
 857
 853
AUD 300 million
5.97%
 326
– 
AUD MTN (AMTN) 2030 issuance
Chorus issued AUD 300 million of AMTN in September 2023 at a fixed interest rate of 5.97% for 7 years. 
Consistent with the Chorus Treasury Policy, the debt has been fully hedged with cross currency interest 
rate swaps to hedge the foreign currency exposure, which entitles Chorus to receive AUD 300 million 
and AUD fixed coupon payments for NZD 325 million principal and NZD floating interest payments.
Euro MTN (EMTN) 2023 tender
The October 2023 EMTN was repaid and settled on 18 October 2023.
Chorus has in place cross currency interest rate swaps to hedge the foreign currency exposure to the 
MTNs. The cross currency interest rate swaps entitle Chorus to receive EUR or AUD principal and EUR or 
AUD fixed coupon payments for NZD principal and NZD floating interest payments.
The EUR 500 EMTN cross currency interest rate swaps (notional amount EUR 500 million) are partially 
hedged for the NZD interest payments using interest rate swaps. The EUR 300 cross currency interest 
rate swaps (notional amount EUR 300 million) are fully hedged for the NZD interest payments using 
interest rate swaps. The AUD 300 cross currency swaps (notional amount AUD 300 million) are partially 
hedged for the NZD interest payments using interest rate swaps.
39
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Notes to the consolidated financial statements

Note 4 – Debt continued
The following table reconciles MTNs at hedged rates to MTNs carrying value based on spot rates as 
reported under NZ IFRS. MTNs at hedged rates is a non-GAAP measure and is not defined by NZ IFRS:
2024
EUR 500
$M
2023
EUR 500
$M
2024
EUR 300
$M
2023
EUR 300
$M
2024
EUR 209
$M
2023
EUR 209
$M
EMTN (at carrying value)
857
853
488
473
– 
368
Impact of fair value hedge
23
38
40
62
– 
4
Impact of hedged rates used
(60)
(71)
(14)
(21)
– 
(44)
EMTN at hedged rates (non‑GAAP measure)
820
820
514
514
– 
328
EMTN at fair value
903
868
497
475
– 
369
2024
AUD 300
$M
2023
AUD 300
$M
AMTN (at carrying value)
 326
– 
Impact of fair value hedge
 3
– 
Impact of hedged rates used
 (4)
– 
AMTN at hedged rates (non-GAAP measure)
 325
– 
AMTN at fair value
339
– 
The fair value of MTNs is calculated based on the present value of future principal and interest cash 
flows, discounted at market interest rates at balance date and is determined using Level 2 of the fair 
value hierarchy as described in note 20.
Fixed rate NZD bonds
Due date
Interest rate
2024
$M
2023
$M
Fixed rate NZD Bonds 
Dec 2027
1.98%
 200
 200
Fixed rate NZD Bonds 
Dec 2028
4.35%
 502
 500
Fixed rate NZD Bonds 
Dec 2030
2.51%
 160
 153
Total fixed rate NZD Bonds
 862
 853
The fixed rate on the 2030 NZD Bonds has been swapped to a floating rate using interest rate swaps, 
creating a fair value hedge which has a fair value of $160 million at balance date (notional amount 
$200 million). This hedging relationship was entered into to comply with the Chorus Treasury Policy 
which does not allow for greater than 70% of term debt to be subject to fixed interest rates beyond a 
three-year time period.
The fixed rate on the 2028 NZD Bonds has been swapped to a floating rate using interest rate swaps, 
creating a fair value hedge which has a fair value of $502 million (notional amount $500 million). 
This hedging relationship was entered into to fix the rate reset with forward start interest rate swaps on 
6 December 2023.
At 30 June 2024, Chorus had $900 million of unsecured, unsubordinated debt securities (30 June 2023: 
$900 million).
40
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Notes to the consolidated financial statements

Schedule of maturities
2024
$M
2023
$M
Current
 110
 368
Due one to two years
– 
– 
Due two to three years
 488
– 
Due three to four years
 200
 673
Due four to five years
 502
– 
Due over five years
 1,343
 1,506
Total due 
 2,643
 2,547
Less: facility fees
 (17)
 (19)
 2,626
 2,528
No debt has been secured against assets, however there are financial covenants and event of default 
triggers as defined in the various debt agreements. During the current year Chorus complied with the 
requirements set out in its financing agreements (30 June 2023: complied).
Refer to note 20 for information on financial risk management.
Finance expense
2024
$M
2023
$M
Interest on syndicated bank facility
9
2
Interest on EMTN
88
93
Interest on AMTN
19
– 
Interest on fixed rate NZD bonds
38
32
Ineffective portion of changes in fair value of cash flow hedges
(3)
(7)
Other interest expense
25
35
Capitalised interest
(1)
(1)
Total finance expense excluding CIP securities (notional) interest
175
154
CIP securities (notional) interest
47
45
Total finance expense
222
199
Other interest expense includes $11 million lease interest expense (30 June 2023: $11 million), 
and $7 million of amortisation arising from the difference between fair value and proceeds realised 
from the swaps reset (30 June 2023: $7 million).
Note 4 – Debt continued
41
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Notes to the consolidated financial statements

Note 5 – Leases
Chorus is a lessee of certain network assets under lease arrangements. For all leases Chorus recognises 
assets and liabilities in the Consolidated statement of financial position, except those determined to be 
short-term or low value. On inception of a new lease, the lease payable is measured at the present value 
of the remaining lease payments, discounted at Chorus’ incremental borrowing rate at that date. Lease 
costs are recognised through interest expense over the life of the lease. The corresponding right of use 
asset incurs depreciation over the estimated useful life of the asset.
Chorus’ discounted cash flows by category are summarised below:
2024
$M
2023
$M
Fibre cables
 10
 11
Ducts, manholes and poles
 53
 52
Property
 108
 118
Total lease payable
 171
 181
Current
 12
 13
Non-current
 159
 168
Extension options
Most leases contain extension options exercisable by Chorus up to one year before the end of the non-
cancellable contract period. Where practicable, Chorus seeks to include extension options in new leases 
to provide operational flexibility. The extension options held are exercisable only by Chorus and not by 
the lessors. Chorus assesses at lease commencement whether it is reasonably certain the extension 
options will be exercised, and where it is reasonably certain, the extension period has been included in 
the lease liability calculation. Chorus reassesses whether it is reasonably certain to exercise the options if 
there is a significant event or significant change in circumstances within its control.
The amounts recognised in the Consolidated income statement and the Consolidated statement of cash 
flows relating to leases are summarised below:
2024
$M
2023
$M
Amounts recognised in Consolidated income statement:
Interest on lease payable
11
11
Amounts recognised in Consolidated statement of cash flows:
Principal payments
(16)
(15)
Lease interest
(11)
(11)
42
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Notes to the consolidated financial statements

Note 6 – Crown Infrastructure Partners (CIP) securities
Ultra-Fast Broadband (UFB)
Chorus received Crown funding to finance construction costs associated with the development of the 
UFB network. Funding was received for every premise passed and certified by CIP.
Funding was received over two phases. Phase one of the build (UFB1) was completed in December 
2019 with a total of $924 million of funding received. Phase two (UFB2 and UFB2+) was completed in 
December 2022 with a total $411 million of funding received.
In return for funding under both phases, CIP equity securities and CIP debt securities were issued. 
Under UFB1 CIP warrants were also issued.
The CIP equity and debt securities are recognised initially at fair value plus any directly attributable 
transaction costs. Subsequently, they are measured at amortised cost using the effective interest 
method. The fair value is derived by discounting the equity securities and debt securities per premises 
passed by the effective rate based on market rates. The difference between funding received and the 
fair value of the securities is recognised as Crown funding. Over time, the CIP debt and equity securities 
increase to face value and the Crown funding is released against depreciation and reduces to nil.
CIP debt securities
CIP debt securities are unsecured, non-interest bearing and carry no voting rights at meetings of holders 
of Chorus ordinary shares. Chorus is required to redeem the CIP debt securities in tranches from 
2025 by repaying the face value to the holder.
The principal amount of CIP debt securities consists of a senior portion and a subordinated portion. 
The senior portion ranks equally with all other unsecured, unsubordinated creditors of Chorus, 
and has the benefit of any negative pledge covenant that may be contained in any of Chorus’ debt 
arrangements. The subordinated portion ranks below all other Chorus indebtedness but above ordinary 
shares of Chorus. The initial value of the senior portion is the present value of the sum repayable on the 
CIP debt securities, and the initial subordinated portion will be the difference between the issue price of 
the CIP debt security and the value of the senior portion.
CIP equity securities
CIP equity securities are a class of non-interest-bearing security that carry no right to vote at meetings of 
holders of Chorus ordinary shares but entitle the holder to a preferential right to repayment on liquidation 
and additional rights that relate to Chorus’ performance under its construction contract with CIP.
For UFB1 equity securities, dividends will become payable on a portion of the CIP equity securities from 
2025 onwards, with the portion of CIP equity securities that attract dividends increasing over time. 
For UFB2 and UFB2+ equity securities, dividends will become payable from 2030.
CIP equity securities can be redeemed by Chorus at any time by payment of the issue price or issue 
of new ordinary shares (at a 5% discount to the 20 – day volume weighted average price) to the holder. 
In limited circumstances CIP equity securities may be converted by the holder into voting preference or 
ordinary shares.
The CIP equity securities are required to be disclosed as a liability until the liability component of the 
compound instrument expires.
43
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Notes to the consolidated financial statements

Note 6 – Crown Infrastructure Partners (CIP) securities continued
CIP warrants
Under UFB1 Chorus issued warrants to CIP for nil consideration along with each tranche of CIP equity 
securities. Each CIP warrant gives CIP the right, on a specified exercise date, to purchase at a set strike 
price a Chorus share to be issued by Chorus. The strike price for a CIP warrant is based on a total 
shareholder return of 16% per annum on Chorus shares over the period December 2011 to June 2036.
At 30 June 2024, Chorus had issued a total 16,407,227 warrants which had a fair value and carrying value 
that approximated zero (30 June 2023: 15,622,325 warrants issued). The number of fibre connections 
made by 30 June 2024 impacts the number of warrants that could be exercised.
At 30 June 2024, the component parts of CIP debt and equity instruments, including notional interest, were:
2024
2023
CIP debt 
securities
$M
CIP equity 
securities
$M
Total CIP 
securities
$M
CIP debt 
securities
$M
CIP equity 
securities
$M
Total CIP 
securities
$M
Fair value on initial recognition
Balance at 1 July
 228
 250
 478
 189
 250
 439
Additional securities recognised at fair 
value
–
–
–
 39
–
 39
Balance at 30 June
 228
 250
 478
 228
 250
 478
Accumulated notional interest
Balance at 1 July
 96
 123
 219
 78
 96
 174
Notional interest
 19
 28
 47
 18
 27
 45
Balance at 30 June
 115
 151
 266
 96
 123
 219
Total CIP securities
 343
 401
 744
 324
 373
 697
Current
 81
 79
 160
–
–
–
Non-current 
 262
 322
 584
 324
 373
 697
CIP at fair value
 351
 444
 795
 320
 375
 695
Key assumptions in calculations on initial recognition 
On initial recognition, a discount rate is used for the CIP debt securities. No CIP debt securities were 
issued in the year (30 June 2023: $39m was recognised using discount rates between 6.16% and 7.36%). 
The discount rate was used for the CIP equity securities and to discount the expected cash flows, based 
on the NZ swap curve. The swap rates were adjusted for Chorus specific credit spreads (based on 
market observed credit spreads for debt issued with similar credit ratings and tenure). The discount rate 
on the CIP equity securities is capped at Chorus’ estimated cost of (ordinary) equity.
44
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Notes to the consolidated financial statements

Note 7 – Crown funding
Funding from the Crown is recognised at fair value where there is reasonable assurance that the funding 
is receivable and all attached conditions will be complied with. Crown funding is then recognised in 
earnings as a reduction to depreciation expense on a systematic basis over the useful life of the asset the 
funding was used to construct.
2024
2023
UFB
$M
WCSNB
$M
RBI
$M
Other
$M
Total
$M
UFB
$M
WCSNB
$M
RBI
$M
Other
$M
Total
$M
Fair value on initial recognition
Balance at 1 July
 860
 42
 242
 16
 1,160
 821
 40
 242
 16
 1,119
Additional funding recognised at fair value
–
 8
– 
 4
 12
 39
 2
–
–
 41
Balance at 30 June
 860
 50
 242
 20
 1,172
 860
 42
 242
 16
 1,160
Accumulated amortisation of funding
Balance at 1 July
 (132)
 (1)
 (69)
 (10)
 (212)
 (112)
–
 (61)
 (10)
 (183)
Amortisation
 (21)
 (1)
 (8)
 (1)
 (31)
 (20)
 (1)
 (8)
–
 (29)
Balance at 30 June
 (153)
 (2)
 (77)
 (11)
 (243)
 (132)
 (1)
 (69)
 (10)
 (212)
Total Crown funding 
 707
 48
 165
 9
 929
 728
 41
 173
 6
 948
Current
 28
 28
Non-current
 901
 920
Crown funding largely comprises project-related government funding for the Ultra-Fast Broadband 
(UFB) build, West Coast Southland Network Build (WCSNB), and Rural Broadband Initiative (RBI) projects.
45
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Notes to the consolidated financial statements

Note 8 – Segmental reporting
An operating segment is a component of an entity that engages in business activities from which it may 
earn revenues and incur expenses and for which operating results are regularly reviewed by the entity’s 
chief operating decision maker and for which discrete financial information is available.
Chorus’ Chief Executive Officer (CEO) has been identified as the chief operating decision maker for the 
purpose of segmental reporting.
Chorus has determined that it operates in one segment providing nationwide fixed line communications 
infrastructure. The determination is based on the reports reviewed by the CEO in assessing 
performance, allocating resources and making strategic decisions.
All of Chorus’ operations are provided in New Zealand, therefore no geographic information is provided.
Three Chorus customers met the reporting threshold of 10 percent of Chorus’ operating revenue in the 
year to 30 June 2024. The total revenue for the year ended 30 June 2024 from these customers was 
$327 million (30 June 2023: $330 million), $193 million (30 June 2023: $198 million) and $219 million 
(30 June 2023: $146 million).
46
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Notes to the consolidated financial statements

Note 9 – Operating revenue
Revenue is measured based on the consideration specified in a contract with a customer and excludes 
amounts collected on behalf of third parties. Chorus recognises revenue when it transfers control of a 
product or service to a customer and cash collection is considered probable. Revenue is presented net 
of rebates and customer incentives.
Chorus services provided to 
customers
Nature, performance obligation and timing of revenue
Fibre and copper connections
Providing access to the Chorus fixed lines network to enable 
connections to the internet. Chorus recognises revenue as it 
provides this service to its customers at a point in time. Unbilled 
revenues from the billing cycle date to the end of each month 
are recognised as revenue during the month the service is 
provided. Revenue is deferred in respect of the portion of 
fixed monthly charges that have been billed in advance.
Value added network services
Providing enhanced access to the Chorus fixed line 
network to enable internet access, through backhaul 
and handover link services to connect across wider areas 
and to higher quality levels. Recognition is the same 
as described for fibre and copper connections above.
Infrastructure
Providing physical storage and site-sharing rental services for co-
location of third party or shared assets. This is billed and recognised 
on a monthly basis, based on a point in time.
Field services
Providing services in the field to protect, strengthen, and increase 
the available network – for example, installation services, wiring 
and consultation services. This is billed and recognised as the 
service is provided over time. Revenue from installation of 
connections is recognised upon completion of the connection.
Revenue by service
2024
$M
2023
$M
Fibre broadband (GPON)
 697
 622
Fibre premium (P2P)
 69
 68
Copper based broadband
 83
 117
Copper based voice
 28
 39
Data services copper
 3
 4
Field services products
 67
 70
Infrastructure
 33
 31
Value added network services
 26
 26
Other
 4
 3
Total operating revenue
 1,010
 980
Amounts collected on behalf of third parties
Revenue above is exclusive of amounts collected on behalf of, and paid to third parties, which totalled 
$13 million in the year (30 June 2023: $19 million). Any amounts collected but not yet passed to the third 
party are recognised within trade and other payables.
47
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Notes to the consolidated financial statements

Note 10 – Operating expenses
2024
$M
2023
$M
Labour
 80
 76
Network maintenance
 53
 60
Information technology costs
 44
 42
Other network costs
 37
 37
Electricity
 22
 19
Rent and rates
 13
 12
Property maintenance
 14
 14
Advertising
 11
 13
Regulatory levies
 9
 9
Consultants
 6
 9
Insurance
 5
 5
Provisioning
 1
 1
Other
 15
 11
Total operating expenses
 310
 308
Labour 
Labour of $80 million (30 June 2023: $76 million) represents employee costs which are not capitalised.
Pension contributions
Included in labour costs are payments to the New Zealand Government Superannuation Fund of 
$226,000 (30 June 2023: $297,000) and contributions to KiwiSaver of $3.1 million (30 June 2023: $3.3 
million).  At 30 June 2024 there were 10 employees in the New Zealand Government Superannuation 
Fund (30 June 2023: 11 employees) and 765 employees in KiwiSaver (30 June 2023: 758 employees). 
Chorus has no other obligations to provide pension benefits in respect of employees.
Charitable and political donations
Other costs include charitable donations of $771,000 towards digital inclusion and health initiatives 
(30 June 2023: $407,000 towards digital inclusion and health initiatives). Chorus has not made any 
political donations (30 June 2023: nil).
Auditor remuneration
Included in other expenses are fees paid to auditors:
2024
$000’s
2023
$000’s
Audit and review of statutory financial statements
 644
 640
Regulatory audit and assurance work12
 645
 490
Total other services
 645
 490
Total fees paid to the auditor
 1,289
 1,130
12 Regulatory audit and assurance work includes $72,000 of assurance fees for climate related disclosures and 
$555,000 in relation to fibre regulation (30 June 2023: regulatory audit and assurance work relates to fibre 
regulation).
48
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Notes to the consolidated financial statements

Note 11 – Trade and other receivables
Trade and other receivables are initially recognised at the fair value of the amounts to be received, plus 
transaction costs (if any). They are subsequently measured at amortised cost (using the effective interest 
method) less impairment losses.
2024
$M
2023
$M
Trade receivables
 100
 98
Other receivables
 48
 44
Prepayments
 10
 11
Trade and other receivables
 158
 153
Current
 154
 153
Non-current
4
– 
Included within other receivables is $43 million of interest receivable (30 June 2023: $37 million).
Trade receivables are non-interest bearing and are generally on terms of 20 working days or less.
Chorus applies the simplified approach in providing for expected credit losses prescribed by NZ 
IFRS 9, which permits the use of the lifetime expected credit loss provision for all trade receivables. 
The provision for impairment losses are either individually or collectively assessed based on number of 
days overdue. Chorus takes into account the historical loss experience and incorporate forward looking 
information and relevant macroeconomic factors.
Chorus maintains a provision for impairment losses when there is objective evidence of its customers 
being unable to make required payments and makes a provision for doubtful debt where debt is more 
than 60 days overdue. There have been no significant individual impairment amounts recognised as an 
expense during the period. Trade receivables are net of allowances for disputed balances with customers.
The ageing profile of trade receivables is as follows:
2024
$M
2023
$M
Not past due
 90
 94
Past due 1 – 30 days
 8
 4
Past due 31 – 60 days
 2
– 
 100
 98
Chorus has a concentrated customer base consisting predominantly of a small number of retail service 
providers. The concentrated customer base heightens the risk that a dispute with a customer, or a 
customer’s failure to pay for services, will have a material adverse effect on the collectability of receivables.
Any disputes arising that may affect the relationship between the parties will be raised by relationship 
managers and follow a dispute resolution process. Chorus has $10 million of accounts receivable 
that are past due but not impaired (30 June 2023: $4 million). The carrying value of trade and other 
receivables approximates the fair value. The maximum credit exposure is limited to the carrying value of 
trade and other receivables.
49
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Notes to the consolidated financial statements

Note 12 – Trade and other payables
Trade and other payables are initially recognised at fair value less transaction costs (if any). They are 
subsequently measured at amortised cost using the effective interest method. Trade and other payables 
are non-interest bearing and are normally settled within 30-day terms. The carrying value of trade and 
other payables approximates their fair values.
2024
$M
2023
$M
Trade payables
 48
 66
Operating expenditure accruals
 74
 79
Capital expenditure accruals
 15
 38
Personnel accruals
 20
 18
Revenue billed in advance
 86
 90
Trade and other payables
 243
 291
Current
 230
 280
Non-current
 13
 11
Note 13 – Commitments
Capital expenditure 
Refer to note 1 and note 2 for details of capital expenditure commitments.
Lease commitments
Refer to note 5 for details of lease commitments.
50
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Notes to the consolidated financial statements

Note 14 – Taxation
Income tax expense
Income tax expense for the current year comprises current and deferred tax, and is recognised in the 
Consolidated income statement, except to the extent it relates to items recognised in the Consolidated 
statement of other comprehensive income or directly in equity.
2024
$M
2023
$M
Recognised in Consolidated income statement
Net earnings before tax
 21
 31
Tax at 28%
 6
 9
Tax effect of adjustments
Other non-taxable items
 9
 7
Deferred tax impact from reversal of depreciation on buildings
15
–
Building life reassessment
– 
 (10)
Tax expense recognised in Consolidated income statement
 30
 6
Comprising:
Current tax expense / (benefit)
– Current year
 12
 5
– Adjustments in respect of prior periods
 1
 (1)
Deferred tax expense
– Adjustments in respect of prior periods
– 
 1
– Depreciation, provisions, accruals, leases & other
 17
 1
 30
 6
Recognised in other comprehensive income
Net movement in hedging related reserves
 (6)
 2
Net revaluation of buildings
 – 
 17
Tax expense recognised in other comprehensive income
 (6)
 19
Deferred tax
Deferred tax is recognised in respect of temporary differences between the carrying amounts of assets 
and liabilities for financial reporting purposes and the amount used for taxation purposes. The amount 
of the deferred tax is based on the expected manner of realisation of the carrying amount of assets and 
liabilities, using the tax rates enacted or substantially enacted at reporting year end. A deferred tax asset 
is recognised only to the extent it is probable it will be utilised.
The movement in the deferred tax assets and liabilities for the period, is presented below.
Deferred tax liability / (asset)
Changes 
in other 
reserves
$M
Lease 
payable
$M
Fixed & 
intangible 
assets
$M
Other
$M
Unused 
tax credits
$M
Total 
deferred 
tax liability
$M
Balance at 1 July 2022
 22
 (50)
 355
 42
 (27)
 342
Prior period adjustment
– 
– 
– 
 1
– 
 1
Recognised in Consolidated income statement
– 
 1
 5
 5
– 
 11
Recognised in Consolidated statement of 
comprehensive income
 2
– 
 17
– 
– 
 19
Building life reassessment
– 
– 
 (10)
– 
– 
 (10)
Balance at 30 June 2023
 24
 (49)
 367
 48
 (27)
 363
Balance at 1 July 2023
 24
 (49)
 367
 48
 (27)
 363
Recognised in the Consolidated statement of 
financial position
– 
– 
– 
– 
 12
 12
Recognised in Consolidated income statement
– 
 3
 1
 (2)
– 
 2
Recognised in Consolidated statement of 
comprehensive income
 (6)
– 
– 
– 
– 
 (6)
Building life reassessment
– 
– 
 15
– 
– 
 15
Balance at 30 June 2024
 18
 (46)
 383
 46
 (15)
 386
Imputation credits
Chorus has an imputation credit account balance of $268,000 as at 30 June 2024 (30 June 2023: 
$135,000). The account balance was positive as at 31 March 2024 and 31 March 2023.
51
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Notes to the consolidated financial statements

Note 15 – Cash, call deposits, and cash overdraft
Cash and call deposits are held with bank and financial institution counterparties rated at a minimum of A, 
based on rating agency Standard & Poor’s ratings.
There are no cash or call deposit balances held that are not available for use. Chorus has a $10 million 
overdraft facility which is used in the normal course of operations.
The carrying values of cash and call deposits approximate their fair values. The maximum credit 
exposure is limited to the carrying value of cash and call deposits.
Cash and call deposits denominated in foreign currencies are translated into New Zealand dollars at 
the spot rate of exchange at the reporting date. All differences arising on settlement or translation of 
monetary items are taken to the Consolidated income statement.
Cash flow
Cash flows from derivatives in cash flow and fair value hedge relationships are recognised in the 
Consolidated statement of cash flows in the same category as the hedged item.
For the purposes of the Consolidated statement of cash flows, cash is considered to be cash on hand, 
in banks and cash equivalents, including bank overdrafts and highly liquid investments that are readily 
convertible to known amounts of cash which are subject to an insignificant risk of changes in values.
52
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Notes to the consolidated financial statements

Note 16 – Equity
Share capital
Movements in Chorus Limited’s issued ordinary shares were as follows:
2024
Number of shares 
(millions)
2023
Number of shares 
(millions)
Balance 1 July 
 435
 446
Dividend reinvestment plan
– 
 1
Share buyback
 (1)
 (12)
Balance at 30 June 
 434
 435
Chorus Limited has 433,887,294 fully paid ordinary shares (30 June 2023: 435,334,308). The issued 
shares have no par value. The holders of ordinary shares are entitled to receive dividends as declared and 
are entitled to one vote per share at meetings of Chorus Limited. Under Chorus Limited’s constitution, 
Crown approval is required if a shareholder wishes to have a holding of 10% or more of Chorus Limited’s 
ordinary shares, or if a shareholder who is not a New Zealand national wishes to have a holding of 49.9% 
or more of ordinary shares.
Chorus Limited issued securities to CIP under its fibre rollout agreement. CIP securities are a class of 
security that carry no right to vote at meetings of holders of Chorus Limited ordinary shares but carry a 
preference on liquidation. Refer to note 6 for additional information on CIP securities.
Should Chorus Limited return capital to shareholders, any return of capital that arose on demerger may 
be taxable as Chorus Limited had zero available subscribed capital on demerger.
Dividends
On 10 October 2023 and 16 April 2024, dividends of 25.5 cents per share and 19 cents per share respectively 
were paid to shareholders. These two dividend payments totalled $193 million (30 June 2023: 38 cents, 
$169 million).
No dividend reinvestment plan was available in the year ended 30 June 2024 (30 June 2023: 1,160,865 
shares, with a value of $9 million, were issued in lieu of dividends).
Share buyback
Chorus completed a $150 million share buyback programme in September 2023. The programme 
commenced in February 2022 and resulted in the cancellation of 18,986,306 shares.
Long-term performance share scheme
Chorus operates a long-term performance share scheme for selected key management personnel 
under which key senior management are issued share-rights.
The scheme is equity settled and treated as an option plan for accounting purposes. Each tranche of each 
grant is valued separately. The absolute performance hurdle is valued using Monte Carlo simulations.
In August 2023, Chorus issued a tranche of share rights under the scheme. The shares have a vesting 
date of 25 August 2026. The grant carries two performance hurdles;
1.	For 50% of the performance share rights to vest, Chorus total shareholder return must equal or 
exceed 23.19% over the vesting period, using a hurdle rate of 7.2% that compounds annually.
2.	For 100% of the performance share rights to vest, Chorus total shareholder return must equal or 
exceed 25.97% over the vesting period, using a hurdle rate of 8% that compounds annually.
A total of 135,719 share rights were issued in the tranche.
The combined option cost for the year ended 30 June 2024 of $290,000 has been recognised in the 
Consolidated income statement (30 June 2023: $524,000).
Reserves
Refer to note 19 for information on the cash flow hedge reserve and cost of hedging reserve.
53
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Notes to the consolidated financial statements

Note 17 – Earnings per share
The calculation of basic earnings per share at 30 June 2024 is based on the net losses for the year of 
$9 million (30 June 2023: net earnings $25 million), and a weighted average number of ordinary shares 
outstanding during the period of 435 million (30 June 2023: 443 million), calculated as follows:
2024
2023
Basic earnings per share
Net (loss) / earnings attributable to ordinary shareholders ($ millions)
 (9)
 25
Denominator – weighted average number of ordinary shares (millions)
 435
 443
Basic (loss)/earnings per share (dollars)
 (0.02)
 0.06
Diluted earnings per share
Net (loss) / earnings attributable to ordinary shareholders ($ millions)
 (9)
 25
Weighted average number of ordinary shares (millions)
 435
 443
Ordinary shares required to settle CIP equity securities (millions)
 108
 95
Ordinary shares required to settle CIP warrants (millions)
 16
 16
Denominator – diluted weighted average number of shares (millions)
 559
 554
Diluted (loss)/earnings per share (dollars)
 (0.02)
 0.05
The number of ordinary shares that would have been required to settle all CIP equity securities and CIP 
warrants on issue at 30 June has been used for the purposes of the diluted earnings per share calculation.
54
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Notes to the consolidated financial statements

Note 18 – Related parties
Subsidiaries
The financial statements include Chorus Limited and it subsidiaries as listed below:
Name of entity
Location
2024 ownership
2023 ownership
Chorus New Zealand Limited
New Zealand
100%
100%
All day-to-day operations of the business occur within Chorus New Zealand Limited including the 
building and maintenance of the network, sales and marketing, and the supporting corporate function. 
Transactions with related parties
Key management personnel are defined as those persons having authority and responsibility for 
planning, directing, and controlling the activities of the Group, directly or indirectly, and include the 
Directors, the Chief Executive, and his direct reports. Certain key management personnel have interests 
in a number of companies that Chorus has transactions with the normal course of business.
Key management personnel compensation
2024
$000’s
2023
$000’s
Short term employee benefits
 8,203
 6,588
Termination benefits
 1,075
– 
Share based payments
– 
 1,638
 9,278
 8,226
2024
$000’s
2023
$000’s
Director’s fees
 1,085
 1,084
The performance hurdles were not met for the long-term performance share scheme and there were 
no share based payments made in the period ended 30 June 2024.
Refer to note 16 for details of long-term incentives.
55
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Notes to the consolidated financial statements

Note 19 – Derivatives and hedge accounting
Chorus uses derivative financial instruments to reduce its exposure to fluctuations in foreign currency 
exchange rates, interest rates and the spot price of electricity. The use of hedging instruments is 
governed by the Treasury Policy approved by the Board. Derivatives are held at fair value with an 
adjustment made for credit risk in accordance with NZ IFRS 9: Financial Instruments. The derivatives are 
considered Level 2 investments as defined in note 20.
Treatment of any fair value gains or losses depends on whether the derivative is designated as a hedging 
instrument. If the derivative is not designated as a hedging instrument, the remeasurement gain or loss is 
recognised immediately in the Consolidated income statement.
Hedge accounting
Chorus designates derivatives held for hedging as either:
	
— Cash flow hedges (of highly probable forecast transactions); or
	
— Fair value hedges (of the fair value of recognised assets, liabilities or firm commitments).
At inception each hedge relationship is formalised in hedge documentation.
Derivatives in hedge relationships are designated based on a 1:1 hedge ratio.  In these hedge 
relationships the main source of ineffectiveness is the effect of the credit risk on the fair value of the 
derivatives, which is not reflected in the change in the fair value of the hedged item attributable to 
changes in foreign exchange and interest rates. 
Hedge accounting is discontinued when the hedge instrument expires or is sold, terminated, exercised, 
or no longer qualifies for hedge accounting. On discontinuation, any cumulative gain or loss previously 
recognised in Other comprehensive income is recognised in the Consolidated income statement either at 
the same time as the forecast transaction, or immediately if the transaction is no longer expected to occur.
Cash flow hedges
Under a cash flow hedge, the effective portion of gains or losses from remeasuring the fair value of 
the hedging instrument is recognised in Other comprehensive income and accumulated in the cash 
flow hedge reserve. Accumulated gains or losses are subsequently transferred to the Consolidated 
income statement when the hedged item affects the Income statement, or when the hedged item is a 
forecast transaction that is no longer expected to occur. Alternatively, when the hedged item results in a 
non‑financial asset or liability, the accumulated gains and losses are included in the initial measurement 
of the cost of the asset or liability.
Differences in the hedged values will flow to finance expense in the Income statement over the life 
of the derivatives as ineffectiveness. Neither the magnitude or direction of these differences can be 
predicted as they are influenced by external market factors. In the current year, ineffectiveness was 
credit $3 million across the hedge relationships (30 June 2023: credit $7 million). Refer to note 4.
As long as the existing cash flow hedge relationships remain effective, any future gains or losses will be 
processed through the hedge equity reserves.
A reconciliation of movements in the cash flow hedge reserve is outlined below:
2024
$M
2023
$M
Balance at 1 July 
 (71)
 (63)
Changes in cash flow hedges
 16
 (3)
Amortisation of de-designated cash flow hedges transferred to Income 
statement 
 (7)
 (7)
Dedesignated swaps reclassified to the income statement
– 
 (1)
Tax expense
 (3)
 3
Closing balance at 30 June
 (65)
 (71)
Fair value hedges
Under a fair value hedge, the hedged item is revalued at fair value in respect of the hedged risk. 
This revaluation is recognised in the Consolidated income statement to offset the mark-to-market 
revaluation of the hedging derivative, except for any adjustment on the hedging derivative relating to 
credit risk.
Once hedging is discontinued, the fair value adjustment to the carrying amount of the hedged item 
arising from the hedged risk is amortised through the Income statement from that date through to 
maturity of the hedged item. If the hedged item is derecognised any corresponding fair value hedge 
adjustment is immediately recognised in the Consolidated income statement.
To hedge the interest rate risk and foreign currency risk on the EUR EMTNs, Chorus uses cross currency 
interest rate swaps. For hedge accounting purposes, these swaps were aggregated and designated as 
two cash flow hedges and a fair value hedge. Chorus hedges the EUR EMTNs for Euro fixed rate interest 
to Euro floating rate interest via a fair value hedge. In this case, the change in the fair value of the hedged 
risk is also attributed to the carrying value of the EMTNs (refer to note 4).
56
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Notes to the consolidated financial statements

Note 19 – Derivatives and hedge accounting continued
To hedge the interest rate risk and foreign currency risk on the AUD AMTNs, Chorus uses cross currency 
interest rate swaps. For hedge accounting purposes, these swaps were aggregated and designated as 
two cash flow hedges and a fair value hedge. Chorus hedges a portion of the AUD AMTNs for AUD fixed 
rate interest to AUD floating rate interest via a fair value hedge. In this case, the change in the fair value 
of the hedged risk is also attributed to the carrying value of the AMTNs (refer to note 4).
Cost of hedging
The cost of hedging reserve captures changes in the fair value of the cost to convert foreign currency to 
NZD of Chorus’ cross currency interest rate swaps on the EUR EMTNs and AUD AMTN.
A reconciliation of movements in the cost of hedging reserve is outlined below:
2024
$M
2023
$M
Balance at 1 July
 6
 3
Change in currency basis spreads (when excluded from the designation)
 13
 7
Dedesignated swaps reclassified to the income statement
– 
 (3)
Tax (benefit) / expense
 (4)
 (1)
Closing balance at 30 June
 15
 6
Derivatives
Interest rate swaps
As at 30 June 2024 Chorus holds all interest rate swaps in designated hedging relationships.
All interest rate swaps which are designated as cash flow hedges are held in effective hedging 
relationships and their unrealised gains or losses are recognised in the cash flow hedge reserve.
Chorus has also entered into four interest rate swaps which are designated as fair value hedges. 
They have a combined face value $700 million and were entered in conjunction with the 10 year NZD 
bonds issued on 6 December 2018 and 2 December 2020, with the intention of swapping the interest 
exposure from a fixed to a floating rate.
Restructured interest rate swaps
Three interest rate swaps have been restructured: two in December 2018 and one in February 2020.
The two December 2018 restructured interest rate swaps have a combined face value of $500 million 
and were reset in conjunction with the resettable NZD fixed rate bond issued in December 2018 to 
hedge interest rate exposure from December 2023. As part of the restructure the original hedge 
relationship was discontinued and on termination there was a net present value of $14 million 
recognised in the cash flow hedge reserve. 
This amount was held in the cash flow hedge reserve as the hedged item still exists and is amortised 
over the original hedge period. The unamortised balance of the original fair values at 30 June 2024 is 
$4 million (30 June 2023: $6 million).
The interest rate swap restructured in February 2020 had a face value of $200 million and was reset 
to be in conjunction with the EUR 300 million EMTN issued in December 2019 to hedge interest rate 
exposure from April 2020. The original hedge relationship was discontinued and on termination had a 
net present value of $27 million. This amount was held in the cash flow hedge reserve as the hedged 
item still exists and will be amortised over the original hedge period. The unamortised balance of the 
original fair values at 30 June 2024 was $8 million (30 June 2023: $12 million).
Cross currency interest rate swaps
Chorus enters into cross currency interest rate swaps to hedge the foreign currency and foreign interest 
rate risks on the EUR and AUD MTNs. Using the cross currency interest rate swaps, Chorus will pay 
New Zealand Dollar floating interest rates and receive EUR or AUD nominated fixed interest with coupon 
payments matching the underlying notes.
In October 2023, Chorus repaid and settled the residual EUR 209 million. Concurrently, an equal 
nominal amount of cross currency interest rate swaps (CCIRS) which hedged the debt were exited to 
ensure the hedging relationship remains fully effective.
Chorus also issued AUD 300 million of AMTN in September 2023 for a term of 7 years at an interest rate 
of 5.97%. Consistent with the Chorus Treasury Policy, the debt has been fully hedged with CCIRS to 
hedge the foreign currency exposure, which entitle Chorus to receive AUD 300 million and AUD fixed 
coupon payments for NZD 325 million principal and NZD floating interest payments.
Chorus continues to hold cross currency interest rate swaps in relation to the EMTN EUR 300 million issued in 
December 2019 and EMTN EUR 500 million issued in September 2022. This is unchanged in the current year.
Chorus designated the MTNs and cross currency interest rate swaps into three-part hedging 
relationships for each issue:
	
— a fair value hedge of EUR or AUD benchmark interest rates,
	
— a cash flow hedge of margin, and
	
— a cash flow hedge of the principal exchange.
Under the cross currency swaps Chorus will pay and receive the following on maturity:
Maturity
Principal – receive leg 
(EUR M)
Principal – receive leg 
(AUD M)
Principal – pay leg 
($M)
EUR EMTN 300
Dec 2026
 300
– 
 514
EUR EMTN 500
Sep 2029
 500
– 
 820
AUD AMTN 300
Sep 2030
– 
 300
 325
57
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Notes to the consolidated financial statements

Note 19 – Derivatives and hedge accounting continued
Hedging instruments used (pre-tax):
Life to date values as at  
30 June 2024
Year to date values recognised during the year ended  
30 June 2024
Carrying amount of the 
hedging instrument
Hedge effectiveness in reserves
Hedge 
effectiveness
Hedge 
ineffectiveness
Currency
Maturity 
years
Average rate
Nominal 
amount of 
the hedging 
instrument
$M
Assets
$M
Liabilities
$M
Change in 
value used for 
calculating 
hedge 
ineffectiveness
$M
Cost of 
hedging 
reserve
$M
Cash flow 
hedge (OCI)
$M
Cash flow 
hedge 
reclassified to 
the Income 
statement
$M
Fair value 
hedge 
recognised in 
the Income 
statement
$M
Recognised 
in the Income 
statement
$M
Cash flow hedges
Interest rate swaps (including forward 
starting)
NZD
2 – 6
2.42%
 1,114
 69
– 
 69
– 
 (20)
– 
– 
– 
Restructured interest rate swaps 2018 
(forward starting)
NZD
5
4.41%
 500
 1
– 
 18
– 
 (1)
 2
– 
– 
Restructured interest rate swap 2020
NZD
3
3.35%
 200
 7
– 
 34
– 
 (7)
 4
– 
 4
Forward exchange rate contracts
NZD:USD
1 – 2
0.6160
 41
 1
– 
 1
– 
 1
 (1)
– 
– 
Electricity futures
NZD
1 – 2
NA
 NA 
– 
– 
– 
– 
 2
– 
– 
– 
Fair value hedges
Interest rate swaps
NZD
4 – 7
Floating
 700
 2
 (39)
 (37)
– 
– 
– 
8
– 
Fair value and cash flow hedges
Cross currency interest rate swaps
NZD:EUR
N/A 
Floating
– 
– 
– 
– 
– 
 (44)
 44
 4
– 
Cross currency interest rate swaps
NZD:EUR
3
Floating
 514
– 
 (33)
 (29)
 (5)
 (6)
 6
 22
– 
Cross currency interest rate swaps
NZD:EUR
6
Floating
 820
 18
– 
 34
 (15)
 (5)
 10
 15
 (1)
Cross currency interest rate swaps
NZD:AUD
7
Floating
 325
 1
– 
 2
 (1)
 4
 (3)
 (3)
– 
Total hedged derivatives
 4,214
 99
 (72)
 92
 (21)
 (76)
 62
 46
 3
Current
 1
– 
Non-current
 98
 (72)
58
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Notes to the consolidated financial statements

Note 19 – Derivatives and hedge accounting continued
Life to date values as at  
30 June 2023
Year to date values recognised during the year ended 
30 June 2023
Carrying amount of the hedging 
instrument
Hedge effectiveness in reserves
Hedge 
effectiveness
Hedge 
ineffectiveness
Currency
Maturity 
years
Average rate
Nominal 
amount of 
the hedging 
instrument
$M
Assets
$M
Liabilities
$M
Change in 
value used for 
calculating 
hedge 
ineffectiveness
$M
Cost of 
hedging 
reserve
$M
Cash flow 
hedge (OCI)
$M
Cash flow 
hedge 
reclassified to 
the Income 
statement
$M
Fair value 
hedge 
recognised in 
the Income 
statement
$M
Recognised 
in the Income 
statement
$M
Cash flow hedges
Interest rate swaps (including forward 
starting)
NZD
1 – 7
2.53%
 1,464
 89
– 
 89
– 
 12
– 
– 
– 
Restructured interest rate swaps 2018 
(forward starting)
NZD
6
4.41%
 500
 2
– 
 19
– 
 11
 2
– 
– 
Restructured interest rate swap 2020
NZD
4
3.35%
 200
 10
– 
 38
– 
 1
 4
– 
 4
Forward exchange rate contracts
NZD:USD
1 – 2
 0.6202
 36
 1
– 
 1
– 
 1
 (6)
– 
– 
Forward exchange rate contracts
NZD:SEK
1 – 2
 0.0315
– 
– 
– 
– 
– 
– 
– 
– 
– 
Electricity futures
NZD
1 – 2
 NA 
 NA 
– 
 (2)
– 
– 
 (2)
 (3)
– 
– 
Fair value hedges
Interest rate swaps
NZD
8
 Floating 
 200
– 
 (45)
 (45)
– 
– 
– 
– 
– 
Fair value and cash flow hedges
Cross currency interest rate swaps
NZD:EUR
<1
 Floating 
 328
 39
– 
 40
 (1)
 22
 (21)
 1
– 
Cross currency interest rate swaps
NZD:EUR
4
 Floating 
 514
– 
 (47)
 (45)
 (2)
 31
 (31)
 (21)
 2
NZD:EUR
7
 Floating 
 820
 18
– 
 22
 (5)
 60
 (71)
 (38)
 1
Total hedged derivatives
 4,062
 159
 (94)
 119
 (8)
 136
 (126)
 (58)
 7
Current
 43
 (1)
Non-current
 116
 (93)
All hedging instruments can be found in the derivative financial assets and liabilities within the 
Consolidated statement of financial position. Items taken to the Consolidated income statement have 
been recognised in finance expenses (refer note 4).
Credit risk associated with derivative financial instruments is managed by ensuring that transactions are 
executed with counterparties with high quality credit ratings along with credit exposure limits for different 
credit classes. The counterparty credit risk is monitored and reviewed by the Board on a regular basis.
59
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Notes to the consolidated financial statements

Note 20 – Financial risk management
Chorus’ activities expose it to a variety of financial risks, including market risk (currency risk, electricity 
price risk and interest rate risk) credit risk and liquidity risk. Financial risk management for currency and 
interest rate risk is carried out by the Treasury function under policies approved by the Board. Chorus’ 
Treasury Policy, approved by the Board, provides the basis for overall financial risk management.
Chorus uses derivatives to hedge its financial risk exposures and does not hold or issue derivative 
financial instruments for trading purposes. The risk associated with these transactions is the cost of 
replacing these agreements at the current market rates in the event of default by a counterparty.
A summary of the financial risks that impact Chorus, how they arise and how they are managed is 
presented below:
Nature and exposure to Chorus
How the risk is managed
Market risk
Electricity price risk
Chorus is exposed to electricity price volatility through the purchase of electricity 
at spot prices. 
Chorus has entered into fixed electricity futures contracts to reduce the exposure to electricity spot price movements. 
These contracts are designated as cash flow hedge relationships. A 10% increase or decrease in the spot price of electricity, 
with all other variables held constant, would have minimal impact on profit and equity reserves of Chorus.
Currency risk
Chorus’ exposure to foreign currency fluctuations predominantly arises from 
foreign currency debt and future commitments to purchase foreign currency 
denominated assets. The primary objective in managing foreign currency 
risk is to protect against the risk that Chorus’ assets, liabilities and financial 
performance will fluctuate due to changes in foreign currency exchange rates.
Chorus has EUR 800 million and AUD 300 million foreign currency debt in the 
form of MTNs. 
Chorus enters into forward foreign exchange contracts and cross currency interest rate swaps to manage the foreign 
exchange exposure.
The EUR and AUD MTNs have in place cross currency interest rate swaps under which Chorus receives principal and 
fixed coupon payments in EUR and AUD for principal and floating NZD interest payments. The exchange gain or loss 
resulting from the translation of MTNs denominated in foreign currency to NZD is recognised in the Income statement. 
The movement is offset by the translation of the principal value of the related cross currency interest rate swap.
As at 30 June 2024, Chorus did not have any significant unhedged exposure to currency risk (30 June 2023: no significant 
unhedged exposure to currency risk). A 10% increase or decrease in the exchange rate, with all other variables held constant, 
would have minimal impact on profit and equity reserves of Chorus.
Interest rate risk
Chorus is exposed to interest rate risk arising from the cross currency interest 
rate swaps converting the foreign debt into a floating rate NZD obligation as well 
as loans under the syndicated bank facility which are subject to floating interest 
rates. Chorus is also exposed to changes in the fair value of the fixed interest 
2030 and 2028 NZD Bond due to fluctuations in the benchmark interest rate.
Where appropriate, Chorus aims to reduce the uncertainty of changes in interest rates by entering into interest rate swaps to 
fix the effective interest rate to minimise the cost of net debt and manage the impact of interest rate volatility on earnings. 
The interest rate risk on a portion of the EUR and AUD cross currency interest rate swaps has been hedged using interest rate 
swaps. Refer to note 19 for further information.
Other risks
Credit risk
In the normal course of business, Chorus incurs counterparty credit risk from 
financial instruments, including cash, trade and other receivables, and derivative 
financial instruments.
Credit risk is managed by entering into contracts with creditworthy financial institutions.
Refer to individual notes for additional information on credit risk.
Chorus has certain derivative transactions that are subject to bilateral credit support agreements that require Chorus or the 
counterparty to post collateral to support the value of certain derivatives. As at 30 June 2024 no collateral was posted.
Liquidity risk
Liquidity risk is the risk that Chorus will encounter difficulty raising liquid funds 
to meet commitments as they fall due or foregoing investment opportunities, 
resulting in defaults or excessive debt costs. Prudent liquidity risk management 
implies maintaining sufficient cash and the ability to meet its financial obligations.
Chorus manages liquidity risk by ensuring sufficient access to committed facilities, continuous cash flow monitoring and 
maintaining prudent levels of short-term debt maturities.
60
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Notes to the consolidated financial statements

Note 20 – Financial risk management continued
Interest rate risk
Analysis of Chorus’ interest rate repricing is outlined below:
30 June 2024
Within 1 
Year
$M
1 – 2 Years
$M
2 – 3 Years
$M
3 – 4 Years
$M
4 – 5 Years
$M
Greater 
than  
5 years
$M
Total
$M
Floating rate
Debt (after hedging)
 545
– 
– 
– 
– 
– 
 545
Fixed rate
Debt (after hedging)
 110
– 
– 
 514
 200
 1,300
 2,124
CIP securities
 160
– 
– 
– 
– 
 584
 744
 815
– 
– 
 514
 200
 1,884
 3,413
30 June 2023
Floating rate
Debt (after hedging)
 370
– 
– 
– 
– 
– 
 370
Fixed rate
Debt (after hedging)
 328
– 
– 
 514
 200
 1,150
 2,192
CIP securities
– 
 150
– 
– 
– 
 547
 697
 698
 150
– 
 514
 200
 1,697
 3,259
Interest rate sensitivity analysis
A reasonably possible change of 100 basis points in interest rates at the reporting date would have 
increased / (decreased) equity and profit or loss by the amounts shown below. This analysis assumes that 
all other variables, in particular foreign currency exchange rates, remain constant.
2024
$M
Profit / ​(loss)
2024
$M
Equity (increase) / ​
decrease
2023
$M
Profit / ​(loss)
2023
$M
Equity (increase) / ​
decrease
100 basis point increase
 1
24
                   1
                   1
100 basis point decrease
(1)
(26)
                 (1)
                 (2)
Credit risk
The maximum exposure to credit risk at the reporting date was as follows:
Notes
2024
$M
2023
$M
Cash and call deposits
15
 45
 76
Trade and other receivables
11
 158
 153
Derivative financial instruments
19
99
 159
Maximum exposure to credit risk
 302
 388
Refer to individual notes for additional information on credit risk.
61
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Notes to the consolidated financial statements

Note 20 – Financial risk management continued
Liquidity risk
Chorus manages liquidity risk by ensuring sufficient access to committed facilities, continuous cash 
flow monitoring and maintaining prudent levels of short-term debt maturities. At balance date, Chorus 
had available $450 million under the syndicated bank facilities (30 June 2023: $450 million). To enable 
Chorus to meet its potential working capital requirements as needed $110 million of the facilities have 
been drawn down as at 30 June 2024 (30 June 2023: nil) and disclosed as a current liability.
The gross (inflows) / outflows of derivative financial liabilities disclosed in the table below represent the 
contractual undiscounted cash flows relating to derivative financial liabilities held for risk management 
purposes and which are usually not closed out prior to contractual maturity. The disclosure shows net 
cash flow amounts for derivatives that are net cash settled and gross cash inflow and outflow amounts 
for derivatives that have simultaneous gross cash settlement (for example forward exchange contracts).
30 June 2024
Carrying 
amount
$M
Contractual 
cashflow
$M
Within 1 
Year
$M
1 – 2 
Years
$M
2 – 3 
Years
$M
3 – 4 
Years
$M
4 – 5 
Years
$M
5+ 
Years
$M
Non-derivative financial liabilities
Trade and other payables
 243
 243
 230
 13
– 
– 
– 
– 
Leases (net settled)
 171
 285
 23
 21
 20
 19
 17
 185
Debt
 2,626
 2,423
 80
 80
 377
 275
 558
 1,053
CIP securities
 744
 1,335
 171
– 
– 
– 
– 
 1,164
Derivative financial liabilities
Interest rate swaps
Outflows
 39
 48
 7
 7
 8
 8
 7
 11
Cross currency interest rate 
swaps:
Inflows
– 
 (568)
 (5)
 (5)
 (558)
– 
– 
– 
Outflows
 33
 600
 37
 33
 530
– 
– 
– 
Forward exchange contracts:
Inflows
– 
 (20)
 (17)
 (3)
– 
– 
– 
– 
Outflows
– 
 19
 16
 3
– 
– 
– 
– 
30 June 2023
Carrying 
amount
$M
Contractual 
cashflow
$M
Within 1 
Year
$M
1 – 2 
Years
$M
2 – 3 
Years
$M
3 – 4 
Years
$M
4 – 5 
Years
$M
5+ 
Years
$M
Non derivative financial liabilities
Trade and other payables
 291
 291
 280
 11
– 
– 
– 
– 
Leases (net settled)
 181
 310
 24
 23
 22
 21
 19
 201
Debt
 2,528
 2,114
 751
 31
 31
 328
 226
 747
CIP securities
 697
 1,338
– 
 171
– 
– 
– 
 1,167
Derivative financial liabilities
Interest rate swaps
Outflows
 45
 55
 10
 9
 7
 6
 6
 17
Cross currency interest rate 
swaps:
Inflows
– 
 (589)
 (5)
 (5)
 (5)
 (574)
– 
– 
Outflows
 47
 635
 39
 36
 31
 529
– 
– 
Forward exchange contracts:
Inflows
– 
 (13)
 (13)
– 
– 
– 
– 
– 
Outflows
– 
 12
 12
– 
– 
– 
– 
– 
62
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Notes to the consolidated financial statements

Note 20 – Financial risk management continued
Master netting arrangements
Chorus enters into derivative transactions under the International Swaps and Derivatives Association 
(ISDA) master agreements. The ISDA agreements do not meet the criteria for offsetting in the Statement 
of financial position, as Chorus does not currently have any legally enforceable right to offset recognised 
amounts. Under the ISDA agreements the right to offset is enforceable only on the occurrence of 
future events such as a default on the bank loans or other credit events. The potential net impact of 
this offsetting is shown below. Chorus does not hold, and is not required to post, collateral against its 
derivative positions.
Net derivatives after applying rights of offset under ISDA agreements are as opposite:
30 June 2024
Gross amounts 
of financial 
instruments in 
the statement of 
financial position
$M
Related financial 
instruments that 
are not offset
$M
Net amount
$M
Financial assets
Other investments including derivatives
Interest rates swaps
 71
 (39)
 32
Cross currency interest rate swaps
 19
 (33)
 (14)
Restructured interest rate swaps
 8
– 
 8
Forward exchange contracts
 1
– 
 1
 99
 (72)
 27
Financial liabilities
Interest rates swaps
 (39)
 39
– 
Cross currency interest rate swaps
 (33)
 33
– 
 (72)
 72
– 
30 June 2023
Financial assets
Other investments including derivatives
Interest rates swaps
 89
 (45)
 44
Cross currency interest rate swaps
 57
 (47)
 10
Restructured interest rate swaps
 12
– 
 12
Forward exchange contracts
 1
– 
 1
 159
 (92)
 67
Financial liabilities
Interest rates swaps used for hedging
 (45)
 45
– 
Cross currency interest rate swaps
 (47)
 47
– 
Restructured interest rate swaps
 (2)
– 
 (2)
 (94)
 92
 (2)
63
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Notes to the consolidated financial statements

Note 20 – Financial risk management continued
Fair value
Financial instruments are either carried at amortised cost, less any provision for impairment losses, 
or fair value. The only significant variances between instruments held at amortised cost and their fair 
value relate to the EMTN and the 2030 NZD Bond.
For those instruments recognised at fair value in the statement of financial position, fair values are 
determined as follows:
Level 1
Fair value is determined using unadjusted quoted prices from an active market for identical 
assets and liabilities. A market is regarded as active if quoted prices are readily and regularly 
available from an exchange, a dealer, a broker, an industry group, a pricing service or 
a regulatory agency and those prices represent actual and regularly occurring market 
transactions on an arm's length basis.
Level 2
Fair value is determined using observable inputs – financial instruments with quoted prices 
for similar instruments in active markets or quoted prices for identical or similar instruments 
in inactive markets. Where quoted prices are not available, the fair value of financial 
instruments is valued using models where all significant inputs are observable. 
Level 3
Fair value is determined using significant non-observable inputs. Financial instruments are 
valued using models where one or more significant inputs are not observable.
All financial instruments held at fair value are Level 2 instruments. Relevant financial assets and financial 
liabilities and their fair values are detailed in note 19.
Valuation of level 2 derivatives
The fair values of level two derivatives are determined using discounted cash flow models. The key 
inputs in the valuation models are:
Instrument
Valuation input
Cross-currency interest rate swaps Forward curve for the relevant interest rate and foreign 
exchange rate
Interest rate swaps
Forward interest rate curve
Electricity swaps
ASX forward price curve
Foreign exchange contracts
Forward foreign exchange rate curves
Hedge accounting
Chorus designates and documents the relationship between hedging instruments and hedged items, 
as well as the risk management objective and strategy for undertaking various hedge transactions. 
At hedge inception (and on an ongoing basis), hedges are assessed to establish if they are effective in 
offsetting changes in fair values or cash flows of hedged items.
Hedges are classified into two primary types: cash flow hedges and fair value hedges. Refer to note 19 
for additional information on cash flow and fair value hedge reserves.
Capital risk management
Chorus manages its capital considering shareholders’ interests, the value of its assets, and credit ratings. 
The capital Chorus manages consists of cash and debt balances.
The Chorus Board’s broader capital management objectives include maintaining an investment 
grade credit rating with headroom. In the longer term, the Board continues to consider a ‘BBB’ rating 
appropriate for a business such as Chorus.
64
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Notes to the consolidated financial statements

Note 21 – Contingent liabilities
There are no contingent liabilities as at 30 June 2024.
Note 22 – Subsequent events
Dividends 
On 26 August 2024 Chorus declared a unimputed dividend of 28.5 cents per share in respect of the year 
ended 30 June 2024.
65
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Notes to the consolidated financial statements

67	 Corporate governance 
framework
67	 Our Board
76	 Board committees
77	 Ethical standards
78	 Reporting and 
disclosure
79	 Remuneration and 
performance
87	 Risk management
88	 Auditors
89	 Shareholder rights 
and relations
89	 Additional disclosures
95	 Glossary
Governance  
and disclosures
66
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
66

Corporate governance framework
This statement outlines the key aspects of our corporate governance 
framework. It is current at, and was approved by our Board on, 
23 August 2024. 
As a New Zealand company listed on the NZX, our corporate governance policies and 
practices meet or exceed the standards of that market. We have adopted and fully followed 
the recommendations set out in the NZX Corporate Governance Code (NZX Code).
Our Board regularly reviews and assesses our governance policies, processes and practices 
to identify opportunities for enhancement.
Chorus is, for the fourth year, publishing its sustainability report (Sustainability Report), 
reflecting our ambition to support New Zealand in its transition to be more sustainable. 
The Sustainability Report contains information on our sustainability strategy, including our 
environmental focus, our commitment to strengthening the digital capability in Aotearoa, 
and our commitment to helping our people thrive.
Aotearoa has also implemented a new mandatory climate‑related disclosures regime. 
Chorus Limited is a climate reporting entity under the new regime for the purposes of 
the Financial Markets Conduct Act 2013 (FMCA). A copy of the group Climate Statements 
prepared by Chorus is available at company.chorus.co.nz/sustainability.
Our corporate governance practices and reporting against the recommendations set out 
in the NZX Code, are outlined on the following pages (refer to the index below), in our 
Sustainability Report and available at company.chorus.co.nz/about/governance.
NZX Corporate Governance Code Principles
Pages
Principle 1
Ethical Standards
77
Principle 2
Board Composition & Performance
69 – 75, 84
Principle 3
Board Committees
76 – 77
Principle 4
Reporting & Disclosure
78
Principle 5
Remuneration
79 – 86
Principle 6
Risk Management
87–88
Principle 7
Auditors
88
Principle 8
Shareholder Rights & Relations
89
Our Board’s role
Our Board is appointed by shareholders and has overall responsibility for strategy, culture, 
health and safety, governance and performance.
Board membership
Our Board’s skills, experience and composition support effective governance and decision 
making, positioning it to drive shareholder value.
Our Board regularly assesses its composition utilising a skills matrix and annual evaluation 
processes. Training is provided or recruitment undertaken if new or additional skills or 
experience are required. This ensures diversity of thought, skills and expertise and that our 
Board remains aligned with our strategic direction.
Our constitution provides for a minimum of five and a maximum of 12 directors.
As at 30 June 2024 we had seven directors all of whom are independent directors. We have 
four male directors and three female directors. Our CEO is not a director on our Board.
Directors are not appointed for specified terms. However, the NZX listing rules require 
that no director’s term exceeds three years, requiring all directors to stand for re‑election 
before their third anniversary. Due to Chorus’ succession planning, Chorus has at least one 
director standing for re‑election each year. Kate Jorgensen and Jack Matthews both stood 
for re‑election in 2023.
Miriam Dean is due to stand for re‑election in 2024.
Murray Jordan has decided to retire from the Board, effective as at 30 September 2024 
after serving on the Board for nine years.
Our Board
67
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Governance and disclosures

0–3 YEARS
2
2
3
4–6 YEARS
6+ YEARS
MALE
FEMALE
28.5%
28.5%
43%
Director
tenure
Independence
100%
Expertise and experience matrix
The following table reflects the strengths of the current Board based on a mix of  
key skills and experiences that are currently relevant for Chorus.
Skill/experience
Description
Combined Board
Capital markets 
and investment
Capital markets, market regulation, capital investment and the 
investor experience
Communications 
connectivity and 
technology
Communications connectivity, adopting new technologies, 
leveraging and implementing technologies
Governance – 
financial, audit, 
legal, listed company
High corporate governance standards including in listed companies
Understanding financial business drivers, and/or experience 
implementing or overseeing financial accounting, external 
reporting and internal financial controls
Physical infrastructure 
and operations 
including contracting, 
safety and risk
Physical infrastructure operations, including contracting
Commitment and experience in management of workplace safety
Experience anticipating and identifying key risks and monitoring 
the effectiveness of risk management frameworks and controls
Governance – 
executive experience 
in large businesses
Executive experience in leading large businesses, developing and 
implementing strategy and strategic objectives, assessing business 
plans and driving execution
Infrastructure 
regulation
Current and developing regulatory environment, complexities and 
actual and potential impacts
Expertise identifying and managing legal, regulatory, public policy 
and corporate affairs issues
Customer 
experience
Customer‑led transformation, customer focus (at both a retailer 
and customer level) and/or customer centric organisations in 
competitive industries
SOME EXPERIENCE
MODERATE EXPERIENCE
SUBSTANTIAL EXPERIENCE
57%
43%
Board gender 
diversity
68
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Governance and disclosures

Board composition and performance
(NZX Code Recommendations 2.1 – 2.10)
Board Charter
(NZX Code Recommendation 2.1)
The Board has a written charter outlining the roles and responsibilities of the Board and management. A copy of the Board Charter is available at company.chorus.co.nz/about/governance
Summary13 of our Board’s roles and responsibilities:
Strategic objectives and 
financial performance
•	 Approving strategies developed by Management in support of Chorus’ purpose to achieve its strategic objectives
•	 Monitoring the execution of strategies by Management
•	 Approving the annual budget and financial plans
•	 Approving major corporate initiatives
•	 Approving expenditure or actions that exceed the limits delegated to the CEO
Culture
•	 Overseeing the effectiveness of Management plans to build and support a corporate culture that champions a safe, fair and inclusive workplace
•	 Receiving reports from Management regarding Chorus’ culture, including employee wellbeing
Risk management
•	 Overseeing the process for identifying significant risks facing Chorus
•	 Overseeing systems of risk management and internal control and compliance (including compliance with Chorus’ legal and regulatory obligations)
•	 Ensuring that appropriate controls, monitoring and reporting mechanisms are in place
•	 Overseeing the effective monitoring and management of health and safety
Financial reporting
•	 Approving Chorus’ financial statements
•	 Overseeing the integrity of Chorus’ accounting and corporate reporting systems including liaising with Chorus’ external auditor
Monitoring Management’s 
performance and succession 
planning
•	 Considering the appointment, replacement and performance of the CEO
•	 Considering the appointment and replacement of the CFO and the General Counsel
•	 Overseeing succession plans for the CEO and their direct reports
Board performance and 
succession planning
•	 Reviewing the needs, size, independence, qualifications, skills, experience and composition of the Board to ensure the right Directors with the right skills sit 
around the boardroom table
•	 Identifying and nominating or appointing Director candidates and overseeing Director induction and ongoing professional development
•	 Carrying out Board succession planning, including for the Board Chair
•	 Establishing, developing and overseeing evaluation processes to annually assess Board, Board Committee and individual Director performance
Continuous Disclosure
•	 Overseeing the process for making timely and balanced disclosure of all material information concerning Chorus
Remuneration
•	 Approving Chorus’ remuneration policy and framework and satisfying itself that Chorus’ remuneration policy is aligned with Chorus’ purpose, values, strategic 
objectives, and risk appetite
•	 Approving material changes to employee short and long term incentive plans
Governance and Sustainability
•	 Monitoring the effectiveness of Chorus’ governance policies and practices including ensuring that an appropriate framework exists for information to be 
reported by Management to the Board
•	 Approving Chorus’ sustainability strategy
•	 Overseeing the social, ethical, and environmental impact of Chorus’ activities
Stakeholder Management
•	 Monitoring the relationships between Chorus and key stakeholders to ensure they are productive and healthy.
13	 Summary primarily drawn from the Board Charter.
69
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Governance and disclosures

Our Board and management are committed to ensuring our people act 
ethically, with integrity and in accordance with our policies and values.
Our Board
(NZX Code Recommendation 2.4)
Mark Cross
Joined: 1 November 2016
Last elected: 2022 Annual Meeting
Status: Independent
Chorus role: Chair (October 2022)
Experience: Mark is an experienced director 
with more than 20 years of international 
experience in corporate finance and 
investment banking
Chartered Fellow Institute of Directors NZ, 
Member of Chartered Accountants A&NZ, 
Member, Australian Institute of Company 
Directors
Previous roles: Chair – Milford Asset 
Management; Director – Z Energy, Genesis 
Energy, Argosy Property
Current roles outside Chorus: Director 
and Audit & Risk Management Committee 
Chair – Xero; Board member and investment 
committee chair – Accident Compensation 
Corporation (ACC); Director and Audit & Risk 
Committee Chair – Fisher & Paykel Healthcare 
(effective 1 October 2024).
Miriam Dean
Joined: 27 October 2021
Last elected: 2021 Annual Meeting
Status: Independent
Chorus role: Non-executive director / member 
of People, Performance and Culture 
Committee
Experience: As a King’s Counsel and 
independent director, Miriam has extensive 
experience in commercial dispute resolution 
and governance, with a specialty in 
competition, consumer and regulatory law. 
Miriam also has significant experience in the 
infrastructure and regulatory sectors
Previous roles: Director – Crown 
Infrastructure Partners; Chair – NZ on Air; 
Deputy chair – Auckland Council Investments; 
Deputy chair – Commerce Commission
Current roles outside Chorus: Director 
– Crown Infrastructure Delivery; Chair – 
Banking Ombudsman Scheme; Deputy 
chair – Real Estate Institute of New Zealand; 
Member of a number of central and local 
government‑related advisory boards.
Will Irving
Joined: 26 October 2022
Last elected: 2022 Annual Meeting
Status: Independent
Chorus role: Non-executive director / member 
of Audit and Risk Management Committee
Experience: Will has more than 25 years of 
telecommunications industry experience 
having held a range of senior roles in the 
telecommunications industry in Australia 
ranging across strategy, wholesale, small and 
medium business customer sales and service, 
and as a lawyer
Previous roles: Interim CEO – Telstra InfraCo; 
Group Executive – Telstra Wholesale; Group 
Managing Director – Telstra Business. Prior to 
his commercial management roles, Will was 
Group General Counsel of Telstra
Current roles outside Chorus: Chief Strategy 
and Transformation Officer – NBN Co Limited 
(company established to design, build and 
operate Australia’s wholesale broadband 
access network).
Sue Bailey
Joined: 31 October 2019
Last elected: 2022 Annual Meeting
Status: Independent
Chorus role: Non-executive director / member 
of People, Performance and Culture 
Committee
Experience: Sue is an experienced director 
with a career of more than 30 years in 
telecommunications spanning fixed 
telephony, mobile and broadband services. 
Responsibilities included product and 
brand marketing, customer lifecycle 
management, strategy and leading large scale 
transformation
Member of the Australian Institute of 
Company Directors
Previous roles: Member of the Executive 
leadership team – Optus. CEO – Virgin Mobile 
Australia. Senior Vice President – Virgin 
Mobile USA
Current roles outside Chorus: Director – 
Careflight. 
70
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Governance and disclosures

Murray Jordan
Joined: 1 September 2015
Last elected: 2021 Annual Meeting
Status: Independent
Chorus role: Non-executive director / Chair 
of the People, Performance and Culture 
Committee
Experience: Murray has extensive experience 
in the management of highly customer 
focused organisations (such as Foodstuffs), 
and management in the property investment 
and development sectors
Previous roles: Managing director – 
Foodstuffs North Island
Current roles outside Chorus: Director – 
Deakin TopCo Pty Ltd (trading as Levande), 
Metlifecare, Metcash Limited, Southern 
Cross Medical Care Society, Southern Cross 
Healthcare Limited, and Stevenson Group.
Jack Matthews
Joined: 1 July 2017
Last elected: 2023 Annual Meeting
Status: Independent
Chorus role: Non-executive director / member 
of the Audit and Risk Management Committee
Experience: Jack is an experienced 
director who has held a number of senior 
leadership positions within the media, 
telecommunications and technology 
industries in Australia and New Zealand
Previous roles: Director – Crown 
Infrastructure Partners, Plexure Group, 
The Network for Learning, APN Outdoor 
Group and Trilogy International. CEO – 
TelstraSaturn, Fairfax Media’s Metro Division, 
Fairfax Digital. Chief Operating Officer – 
Jupiter TV (Japan)
Current roles outside Chorus: Chair – 
Lodestone Energy.
Kate Jorgensen
Joined: 1 July 2020
Last elected: 2023 Annual Meeting
Status: Independent
Chorus role: Non-executive director / Chair of 
the Audit and Risk Management Committee
Experience: Kate has extensive experience 
in strategic, commercial, financial, and 
audit matters, with several senior leadership 
positions held in NZ’s telecommunications, 
infrastructure, and construction industries. 
Kate holds a Masters in Technological Futures 
and a Bachelor of Business. Member of 
Chartered Accountants A&NZ, and Chartered 
Member of the Institute of Directors NZ
Previous roles: CFO – Vodafone NZ, KiwiRail, 
and Fletcher Building’s infrastructure division
Current roles outside Chorus: Director 
– Kiwibank. Director – Suncorp NZ (Vero 
Insurance, Vero Liability and Asteron Life).
Our Board and management are committed to ensuring our people act 
ethically, with integrity and in accordance with our policies and values.
Our Board 
71
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Governance and disclosures

Our Board continued
Director
Appointed
Last elected at ASM
Miriam Dean
2021
2021
Murray Jordan
2015
2021
Mark Cross
2016
2022
Sue Bailey
2019
2022
Will Irving
2022
2022
Kate Jorgensen
2020
2023
Jack Matthews
2017
2023
Miriam Dean is retiring by rotation and standing for re-election 
at our 2024 Annual Shareholders’ Meeting (ASM). Murray Jordan 
has decided to retire from the Board, effective as at 
30 September 2024.
Our Board has determined that collectively its directors have 
the requisite range of strategic, financial, and industry skills and 
experience in the key areas set out on page 68.
A summary of current directors skills, experience 
and qualifications is set out on our website at 
company.chorus.co.nz/about/governance/board-of-directors.
As the Chorus business evolves, so too does the Board. Chorus’ 
beginnings were focused on infrastructure build and project 
management. With the success of the build, we are now focused 
on connecting customers, delivering excellent customer 
experience as well as future connectivity and non-regulated 
revenue opportunities. The Board is also focused on the 
increasing risks and opportunities of climate change, and how 
that fits into Chorus' overall strategy. The Board considers it is 
important to balance both specialist expertise and the ongoing 
need for strong general commercial expertise.
Appointment
(NZX Code Recommendations 2.2 & 2.3)
Our Board may appoint additional directors to our Board or 
to fill a casual vacancy. Any director appointed by the Board is 
required to stand for election at the next ASM.
The independence, qualifications, skills and experience needed 
for the future and those of existing Board members are reviewed 
by the Board before appointing new directors. External advisors 
are also engaged to identify potential candidates.
To be eligible for selection, candidates must demonstrate 
appropriate qualities and satisfy our Board they will commit the 
time needed to be fully effective in their role.
Appropriate checks are undertaken before a candidate is 
appointed or recommended for election as a director, including 
as to the person’s character, experience, education, criminal 
record and bankruptcy history.
Shareholders may also nominate candidates for appointment 
to our Board. In addition, under our UFB agreements, CIP is 
entitled to nominate one person as an independent director. 
CIP have never exercised this entitlement. Should this occur, 
our Board must consider this nomination in good faith, but the 
appointment (and removal) of any such person as a director is to 
be made by shareholders in the same way as other directors.
We have written agreements with each non-executive 
director setting out the terms of their appointment, including 
obligations and responsibilities, compliance with our policies 
(including code of ethics and securities trading) and ongoing 
professional development.
No person who is an ‘associated person’ (as defined in Chorus’ 
Constitution) of a telecommunications services provider in 
New Zealand may be appointed or hold office as a director.
Minimum shareholding policy
Chorus’ Minimum Shareholding Policy sets the expectation on 
directors to hold, at a minimum, shares equal in value to one 
year’s director base fee (after tax). If not held at their date of 
appointment, the policy expects directors to accumulate this 
holding over the first three years from that date.
Diversity, equity and inclusion policy 
(NZX Code Recommendation 2.5)
Information about Chorus’ approach to diversity, equity and 
inclusion is found on page 84 of this report.
72
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Governance and disclosures

Director induction and professional development 
(NZX Code Recommendation 2.6)
Our director induction programme ensures new directors 
are appropriately introduced to management and our business, 
provides directors with relevant industry knowledge and familiarises 
them with key governance documents and key stakeholders.
Our directors are expected to continue ongoing professional 
development to ensure they maintain appropriate expertise to 
effectively perform their duties.
We hold dedicated Board education sessions covering a range of 
topical matters, both technical and cultural.
Visits to our operations, briefings from key management, 
industry experts and key advisers, together with educational and 
stakeholder visits, are also arranged for our Board.
Review and evaluation of Board performance 
(NZX Code Recommendation 2.7)
Our Board evaluates its performance each year. As part of this 
process our chair meets with directors individually to discuss 
their performance. The Board undertook a formal Board 
performance evaluation in late 2023 with an external consultant. 
The review confirmed that the board is operating well with 
actions identified to further enhance our governance focus 
and outcomes.
Our Board also formally engages in annual reviews of our Board 
chair, and chairs of our standing Board committees.
In addition to Board performance reviews, our Board takes a 
future focused approach to future Board capability, composition 
and the potential contribution of each existing director.
Independent advice
A director may, with our chair’s prior approval, obtain 
independent professional advice (including legal advice) 
and request the attendance of advisers at Board and Board 
committee meetings. No external advice was sought this year.
Independence 
(NZX Code Recommendations 2.4 & 2.8)
As at 30 June 2024, all our directors, including our Board chair, 
are independent directors.
When assessing independence, our Board will consider whether 
a director is free of material relationships with Chorus (other 
than as a director) and other relationships that could influence, 
or could reasonably be perceived to influence, the director’s 
capacity to bring an independent view to decisions about Chorus.
Our Board has not set financial materiality thresholds for 
determining independence, but considers materiality in the 
context of each relationship and from the perspective of the 
parties to that relationship.
Delegation of authority
Our Board has overall responsibility for strategy, culture, health 
and safety, governance and performance.
Implementation of our Board approved strategy, business plan 
and governance frameworks, and responsibility for developing 
our culture and health and safety practices, is delegated by the 
Board to management through the CEO.
As such our CEO (with the support of his executive team) is 
responsible for Chorus’ day-to-day management, operations 
and leadership, reporting to the Board on key performance, 
management and operational matters.
Our CEO sub-delegates authority to his executive team and they 
sub-delegate their authority to other Chorus employees within 
specified financial and non-financial limits.
Formal policies and procedures govern the parameters and 
operation of these delegations.
Our CEO is not a director on our Board.
Our Board continued
73
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Governance and disclosures

Director interests and trading
(NZX Code Recommendation 2.4)
As at 30 June 2024, directors had a relevant interest (as defined in the Financial Markets Conduct Act 2013) in approximately 0.069% of shares as follows:
Current Directors
Interest as at 30 June 2024
Transactions during the reporting period
Director
Shares
Interest
Number of shares
Nature of transaction
Consideration
Date
Mark Cross
40,711
Beneficial owner as beneficiary of Alpha Investment Trust; 
power to exercise voting rights and acquire/dispose of 
financial products as director of trustee.
10,000
On market acquisition
$79,045
28 February 2024
Sue Bailey
50,000
Registered holder and beneficial owner
2,048
On market acquisition
$15,629
8 September 2023
2,952
On market acquisition
$21,938
11 September 2023
5,000
On market acquisition
$36,252
27 October 2023
5,000
On market acquisition
$35,290
30 October 2023
Miriam Dean
10,000
Registered holder and beneficial owner of ordinary shares 
as trustee and beneficiary of the Miriam Dean Trust
5,000
On market acquisition
$38,500
26 September 2023
Will Irving
40,000
Registered holder and beneficial owner
10,000
On market acquisition
$78,824
28 February 2024
Murray Jordan
124,010
Registered holder and beneficial owner of ordinary shares 
as trustee and beneficiary of Endeavour Trust
–
–
–
–
Kate Jorgensen
12,975
Registered holder and beneficial owner
–
–
–
–
Jack Matthews
19,881
Registered holder and beneficial owner
–
–
–
–
As at 30 June 2024, directors had a relevant interest (as defined in the Financial Markets Conduct Act 2013) in approximately 0.024% of Chorus’ NZX bonds maturing December 2028 as follows:
Interest as at 30 June 2024
Transactions during the reporting period
Director
Bonds
Interest
Number of bonds
Nature of transaction
Consideration
Date
Miriam Dean
20,000
Registered holder and beneficial owner as trustee and 
beneficiary of the Miriam Dean Trust
–
–
–
–
Murray Jordan
100,000
Registered holder and beneficial owner as trustee and 
beneficiary of Endeavour Trust
–
–
–
–
74
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Governance and disclosures

Changes in Director interests to 30 June 2024
Mark Cross
None
Sue Bailey
None
Miriam Dean
None
Will Irving
None
Murray Jordan
None
Kate Jorgensen
None
Jack Matthews
Became a director of Lodestone Solar 2 Limited1
Became a director of Lodestone Retail Limited2
Became a director of Lodestone Nominee Limited3
Notes:
1	
From 13 December 2023.
2	
From 7 May 2024.
3	
From 21 November 2023.
Board chair 
(NZX Code Recommendations 2.9 & 2.10)
Our chair is elected by the Board and must be a non-executive, independent director.
The chair’s responsibilities include:
•	 Leading the Board;
•	 Setting the agenda for Board meetings in consultation with the CEO;
•	 Facilitating the effective contribution of all directors;
•	 Promoting constructive relationships between directors and management; and
•	 Leading stakeholder relationships
The chair’s other commitments must not hinder his or her effective performance in the role.
Board and Board committee meeting attendance in the year ended 30 June 2024
(NZX Code Recommendation 2.4)
Regular Board 
meetings
Other Board 
meetings1
ARMC
PPCC
Regulatory 
Sub‑Committee3
Total number of 
meetings held
8
4
4
4
1
Mark Cross2
8
4
1
Sue Bailey
8
4
4
1
Miriam Dean
8
4
4
1
Will Irving
8
4
4
1
Murray Jordan
7
3
4
1
Kate Jorgensen
8
4
4
1
Jack Matthews
8
4
4
1
Notes:
1	 Includes dedicated Board education, and strategy and business planning, meetings. Directors also have health and 
safety site visits each year.
2	 Mark Cross, as Board chair, attends all Board committee meetings. As he is no longer a formal member of the ARMC 
or PPCC (following his appointment as Board Chair in October 2022), that attendance is not noted in the table.
3	 The Regulatory Sub-Committee was disestablished in the first quarter of FY24, with regulatory responsibilities now 
being undertaken by the Board.
Director interests and trading continued
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Board committees
(NZX Code Recommendations 3.1 – 3.6)
Two standing Board committees assist our Board in carrying out its responsibilities. Some Board 
responsibilities, powers and authorities are delegated to those committees.
Board committees assist our Board by focusing on specific responsibilities in greater detail than is 
possible for the Board as a whole. Each standing Board committee has a Board approved charter 
and chair. Committee members are appointed by our Board. Chorus employees attend Committee 
meetings at the invitation of the Committee.
Other committees may be established and specific responsibilities, powers and authorities 
delegated to those committees and/or to particular directors.
(NZX Code Recommendations 3.4)
The Nominations and Corporate Governance Committee was disestablished in 2022, with its’ 
responsibilities for director appointment, evaluation, succession planning, education and Board 
governance now undertaken by the Board. It was disestablished to streamline the governance 
framework following an internal review of the committees.
The Regulatory Sub-Committee was disestablished in the first quarter of FY24, with regulatory 
responsibilities now being undertaken by the Board.
Our 
Shareholders
Chorus 
Limited Board
CEO
Executive 
Team
Our 
People
Audit and Risk 
Management Committee
People, Performance and 
Culture Committee
Audit and Risk Management Committee (ARMC)
(NZX Code Recommendations 3.1)
Role
Our ARMC assists our Board in overseeing our risk and financial management, 
accounting, audit and financial reporting
Members
Kate Jorgensen (chair), Jack Matthews, Will Irving
Independence
All committee members are non-executive independent directors. The Board chair 
cannot also be the ARMC chair.
Responsibilities
•	 Overseeing the quality and integrity of external financial and non-financial 
reporting, financial management, internal controls and accounting policy 
and practice
•	 Regularly reviewing principal risk reporting
•	 Recommending to our Board the appointment, and if necessary removal, 
of the external auditor
•	 Assessing the adequacy of the external audit and independence of the 
external auditor
•	 Reviewing and monitoring the internal audit plan and reporting
•	 Overseeing the independence and objectivity of the internal audit function
•	 Reviewing compliance with applicable laws, regulations and standards
•	 Overseeing and monitoring progress in the implementation of Chorus' climate 
strategy, including oversight of climate-related risks and opportunities and 
reviewing Chorus’ compliance with the climate-related disclosures regime.
People, Performance and Culture Committee (PPCC)
(NZX Code Recommendation 3.3)
Role
Our PPCC assists our Board in overseeing people, culture and related policies 
and strategies
Members
Murray Jordan (chair), Miriam Dean, Sue Bailey
Independence
All committee members are non-executive independent directors
Responsibilities
•	 Reviewing people and remuneration strategies, structures and policies
•	 Approving annual remuneration increase guides and budgets
•	 Reviewing candidates for, and the performance and remuneration of, our CEO
•	 Approving, on the recommendation of our CEO, the appointment of our 
CEO’s executive direct reports (except our CFO and General Counsel whose 
appointment is approved by our Board)
•	 Reviewing our CEO’s performance evaluation of his executive direct reports
•	 Developing and annually reviewing and assessing diversity, equity and inclusion 
and its reporting
•	 Overseeing recruitment, retention and termination policies and procedures for 
senior management
•	 Making recommendations (including proposing amendments) to our Board with 
respect to senior executive (including CEO) incentive remuneration plans / policies
•	 Annually reviewing non-executive director remuneration. 
76
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Governance and disclosures

Board committees continued
Takeovers protocol
(NZX Code Recommendation 3.6)
We have a takeovers protocol setting out the procedure to be followed if there is a takeover 
offer, including managing communications between insiders and the bidder and engagement 
of an independent adviser. The protocol includes the option of establishing an independent 
takeover committee, and the likely composition and implementation of that committee.
Ethical standards
Codes of ethics
(NZX Code Recommendation 1.1)
Directors and employees are expected to act honestly and with high standards of personal 
integrity. Codes of ethics for our directors and employees set the expected minimum standards for 
professional conduct. These codes facilitate behaviours and decisions that are consistent with our 
values, business goals and legal and policy obligations, including in respect of:
•	 Conflicts of interest;
•	 Gifts and personal benefits;
•	 Anti-bribery and corruption;
•	 Use of corporate property, opportunities and information;
•	 Confidentiality;
•	 Compliance with laws and policies; and
•	 Reporting unethical behaviour.
We have communicated our codes of ethics and provided annual training to our directors and 
employees. Our people are also encouraged to report any unethical behaviour, including annual 
reporting of any potential conflicts. 
This process is subject to internal audit. All reported breaches are investigated.
Chorus has a dedicated whistle-blower email address and phone number monitored by PwC as 
part of our risk management framework to allow confidential reporting of serious misconduct or 
wrongdoing and suspected fraud or corruption. For more information, see the ‘Thriving People’ 
section of our Sustainability Report available at https://company.chorus.co.nz/sustainability.
Trading in Chorus securities
(NZX Code Recommendation 1.2)
All trading in Chorus securities by directors and employees must be in accordance with our Securities 
Trading Policy. That policy prohibits trading in Chorus securities while in possession of inside 
information and requires, amongst other things:
•	 Directors to notify, and obtain consent from, the chair (or in the chair’s case, the ARMC chair) 
before trading; and
•	 Employees identified as potentially coming across market sensitive information in the course of 
their employment (“restricted persons”), to obtain consent from our General Counsel (or in our 
General Counsel’s case, our Board chair) before trading.
Trading in Chorus shares or NZX listed bonds by directors is disclosed to our Board, the NZX and 
ASX. Trading by “senior managers” as that term is defined in the FMCA, is disclosed to the NZX.
(NZX Code Recommendations 1.1 & 1.2)
77
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Governance and disclosures

Reporting and disclosure
(NZX Code Recommendations 4.1 – 4.4)
Chorus reviews its disclosure regularly as a key measure of 
good governance. 
The Board’s aim is to improve our disclosures each year, 
including our remuneration reporting, based on market research 
and feedback from investors and other stakeholders. 
Market disclosures
(NZX Code Recommendation 4.1)
We are committed to providing timely, factual and accurate 
information to the market consistent with our legal and 
regulatory obligations.
We have a Board approved Disclosure Policy and a CEO 
approved Market Disclosure Policy setting out our disclosure 
practices and processes in more detail.
Our disclosure policies are designed to ensure:
•	 Roles of directors, executives and employees are clearly set out.
•	 Appropriate reporting and escalation mechanisms 
are established.
•	 There are robust and documented confidentiality protocols in 
place where appropriate.
•	 Only authorised spokespersons comment publicly, within the 
bounds of information which is either already publicly known 
or non-material.
Key Governance Documents
(NZX Code Recommendation 4.2)
Chorus’ website has a dedicated governance section that 
contains information about our Board, the Board committees 
(including the Board and committee charters) and key policies 
that outline our core governance structures and processes. 
These include policies and codes covering areas such as ethics, 
health & safety, modern slavery, diversity, equity and inclusion, 
compliance, remuneration, risk management and whistle 
blowing. The governance section can be found at 
https://company.chorus.co.nz/about/governance.
Reporting
(NZX Code Recommendation 4.3)
Chorus’ financial reports are prepared in a manner that is 
balanced, clear and objective. The financial statements in this 
Annual Report are prepared in accordance with NZ GAAP and 
comply with NZ IFRS.
Non-financial disclosures 
(NZX Code Recommendation 4.4)
In addition to the Annual Report containing our financial statements, 
we publish a Sustainability Report which contains information 
on our sustainability strategy, including our environmental focus, 
our commitment to strengthening the digital capability in Aotearoa, 
and our commitment to helping our people thrive. 
This year also marks our first Climate Statements prepared under 
the new mandatory climate-related disclosures regime. Copies 
of our Climate Statements and the Sustainability Report can be 
found at https://company.chorus.co.nz/sustainability.
Our approach to tax
We take our tax obligations seriously and work closely with 
Inland Revenue to ensure we meet our tax obligations.
We obtain external advice and Inland Revenue’s views (through 
informal correspondence, determinations or rulings) in respect 
of unusual or material transactions.
As we operate only in New Zealand all our tax is paid in 
New Zealand at the prevailing corporate tax rate (currently 
28%). We have paid all taxes we owe and all tax compliance 
obligations are up to date.
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Remuneration and performance
Our remuneration model
(NZX Code Recommendation 5.1)
Our remuneration model is designed to enable the achievement of our strategy, whilst ensuring 
that remuneration outcomes are aligned with employee and shareholder interests. The PPCC 
assists the Board in overseeing Chorus’ people, culture and related policies and strategies.
There were no material changes to Chorus’ remuneration strategy or policy in FY24. The policy is 
designed around six guiding principles: 
Our remuneration policy sets out our approach to remuneration for both directors and employees 
(including the CEO and his direct reports).
(NZX Code Recommendation 5.2)
The CEO and members of the executive leadership team have the potential to earn a short term 
incentive (STI) and a long term incentive (LTI). Both STI and LTI are deemed at risk because the 
outcome is determined by performance against a combination of pre-determined financial and 
non-financial objectives.
Fixed remuneration 
Fixed remuneration (not at risk) consists of base salary and other benefits including KiwiSaver. 
Fixed remuneration is adjusted each year based on data from independent remuneration 
specialists. Employees’ fixed remuneration is based on a combination of their own performance 
and their current position when compared to the market.
Short term incentive 
Senior employees were invited to participate in the FY24 STI scheme. The FY24 STI is an at risk 
component payment, that is set as a percentage of base remuneration, from 15% to 30% based 
on the complexity of the role. The CEO’s STI is set at a higher percentage of base remuneration 
(currently 50% - see page 82 for CEO performance measures). STI payments are determined 
following a review of company and individual performance and paid out at an individual multiplier 
of between 0x and 1.25x for the CEO and executive leadership team, and between 0x and 1.4x for 
all other employees.
Company performance goals are set and reviewed annually by our Board to align with shareholder 
value with a continued emphasis on customer experience and revenue growth for the FY24 STI 
measures. See figure 1.
A gateway goal is fundamental to the STI structure. This ensures a preliminary threshold of financial 
success and affordability, before any other measures can be considered for potential STI payments. 
If the gateway goal is not achieved, no STI is payable.
The STI payment is at the ultimate discretion of the Board and is based on performance against key 
financial and non‑financial measures. Some of the non-financial measures include implementing 
and leveraging the new operating model, progressing the long term rural strategy, delivering on 
growth opportunities and implementing our sustainability plan. Separate Board targets associated 
with D,E&I and health & safety are also considered.
As an example of how the STI is calculated, an employee with base remuneration of $100,000 and 
an STI element of 15% may receive between $0 and $29,400 depending on the level of company 
performance (0x to 1.4x multiplier) multiplied by their individual performance (0x to 1.4x multiplier). 
Individual performance is assessed by what employees achieve within their role and how they 
perform their role.
(NZX Code Recommendations 5.1 – 5.3)
79
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Governance and disclosures
1
2
3
4
5
6
Fair to all – employees and shareholders, 
sharing in the success of Chorus.
Supports a Performance focused culture.
Valued by our people.
Simple to understand and administrate.
Market — aligned with our competitors.
Point of difference — how we know it is 
Chorus.
Commitment to pay equity and alignment with 
our shareholders’ expectations.
Rewards aligned with performance.
We have a diverse workforce and aim to provide 
an appropriate suite of rewards that provide value, 
now and in the future.
Simplicity promotes understanding, clarity and 
perceptions of fairness.
We ensure we are not over or underpaying our 
people through robust market analysis that guides 
our decisions on remuneration.
Supports Chorus’ strategy, values, purpose and 
employee value proposition.
Remuneration principles 
What does this mean?

Long term incentives 
Chorus offers an executive LTI share scheme to align the interests of executives and 
shareholders and encourage longer term decision making. This at risk payment is 
described in Note 16 of the financial statements on page 53. 
To further align executive and shareholder interests,a minimum shareholding policy was 
introduced in 2019. Executives are expected to hold a minimum of 25% of their after tax 
base remuneration in Chorus shares. The CEO is expected to hold 30% of his/her after tax 
base remuneration in Chorus shares.
The LTI scheme for the 2023 grant is an absolute rather than a relative return based 
scheme. A blended total shareholder return rate was adopted which primarily reflects 
the regulated WACC set for Chorus’ fibre assets. This incorporates a weighted cost of 
equity calculation, proportional to the regulated versus non-regulated components of the 
business and based on relative enterprise value. A 0.75% stretch percentage was added to 
the weighted cost of equity calculation to determine the three-year performance hurdle.
As a result of the independent review of the 2023 grant the Board decided to remove the 
retesting provision. The vesting method was changed from cliff vesting where a grant 
100% vests on reaching the performance hurdle, to progressive vesting where the grant 
vests in stages on meeting agreed hurdles.
Remuneration and performance continued
Figure 1:
FY24 STI Targets and Results
80
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Governance and disclosures
Targets
FY24 target
FY24 actual
FY24 achieved
40%
EBITDA: gateway hurdle of $649m EBITDA. Year end target aligned with objective of modest underlying 
EBITDA growth.
$690m
$700m
Exceeded target
20%
Strategy and execution: qualitative assessment by Board based on long‑term business initiatives including 
implementing and leveraging the new operating model, progressing the long term rural strategy, delivering on 
growth opportunities and implementing our sustainability plan.
Various
As assessed 
by the Board
Met target
20%
Revenue growth: grow FY24 revenue by at least 3%
$980m 
+3%
$1,010m 
+3.1%
Exceeded target
10%
Customer experience: intact fibre connection as measured by average customer scores (target of 7.6 
over three months to 30 June)
7.6
7.7
Exceeded target
10%
Customer experience: fibre fault restoration as measured by average customer scores (target of 8.1 over 
three months to 30 June)
8.1
8.6
Exceeded target

Chief Executive Officer employment agreement and remuneration 
(NZX Code Recommendation 5.3)
With J B Rousselot stepping down as CEO in April 2024, Mark Aue’s appointment as CEO took 
effect from 15 April 2024. His employment agreement reflects standard conditions that are 
appropriate for a senior executive of a listed New Zealand company. The employment agreement 
may be terminated by:
	
— either he or Chorus giving six months’ notice in writing;
	
— Chorus without notice in the case of serious misconduct, serious breach (including substantial 
non-performance) or other cause justifying summary dismissal; or
	
— Chorus immediately, if the Board forms the view that substantial incompatibility and/or 
irreconcilable differences have developed with him, or the Board otherwise wishes to terminate 
his employment when he is not at fault (including a redundancy situation or medical incapacity).
Our CEO has a significant portion of his remuneration linked to performance and at risk. His total 
remuneration is determined using a range of external factors, including advice from remuneration 
specialists, and is annually reviewed by the PPCC and Board. During the CEO appointment process 
PwC was commissioned by the Board to provide external market benchmarking advice that was 
reflected in the remuneration package offer.
CEO remuneration package
The scenario chart below demonstrates the elements of the CEO remuneration design for 
Mark Aue for FY25. Compared to the previous CEO, Mark Aue’s remuneration package has been 
rebalanced with a higher weighting to LTI. The on-plan scenario includes on-target STI and the 
threshold payment for the LTI. The maximum scenario includes maximum STI (both individual and 
company multiplier) and 100% LTI vesting.
CEO remuneration for FY23 and FY24 was:
CEO
Fixed remuneration
STI
LTI
Total remuneration
Mark Aue14 
FY24 
$274,939
$194,89315
–
$469,832
J B Rousselot
FY24
$1,766,150
$1,253,07015
–
$3,019,220
J B Rousselot
FY23
$1,338,750
$1,138,60716
$532,36917
$3,009,726
Other benefits paid to Mark Aue: Chorus KiwiSaver contribution FY24 $8,215. 
Other benefits paid to J B Rousselot: Chorus KiwiSaver contribution FY24 $52,097.
As JB Rousselot was CEO for the majority of FY24 (until 14 April 2024), the Board agreed that he 
would be granted ‘good leaver’ status for the 2024 STI and the 2021 LTI (due to vest in August 2024 
subject to meeting the 2021 LTI hurdle). Both the STI and the 2021 LTI (if it vests) will be paid in 
FY25. Mr Rousselot forfeited both the 2022 and 2023 LTI grants.
Five year summary of CEO remuneration:
CEO
Total remuneration 
% STI awarded 
against maximum
% LTI awarded 
against maximum
Span of LTI 
performance period
Mark Aue
FY2418 
$469,832
82%
n/a
—
J B Rousselot
FY24
$3,019,220
69%
n/a
—
FY23
$3,009,726
65%
100%
2019–2022
FY22
$2,442,500
67%
—
—
FY21
$2,018,750
47%
—
—
FY2019 
$1,425,253
66%
—
—
14	 Pro-rated from start date of 15 April 2024
15	 FY24 STI was earned in FY24 but due to be paid in FY25
16	 FY23 STI was earned in FY23 but paid in FY24
17	 The 2019 LTI grant of $319,829 worth of share rights vested in August 2022 at a value of $532,369
18	 Pro-rated from start date of 15 April 2024
19	 Pro-rated from start date of 20 November 2019.
Remuneration and performance continued
3,500,000
3,000,000
0
FIXED
ON-PLAN
MAXIMUM
2,500,000
2,000,000
1,500,000
1,000,000
500,000
 100%
56%
28%
 16%
 41%
36%
23%
Base
STI
LTI
81
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Governance and disclosures

CEO STI & LTI Schemes
Mark Aue (CEO from 15 April 2024)
The table below outlines Mr Aue’s STI scheme for the period ending 30 June 2024.20 No LTI has 
been granted to the CEO since his appointment took effect on 15 April 2024. His first grant as 
CEO will be in August 2024, with the grant value equivalent to 55% of base salary. Mr Aue received 
a grant in November 2023 in his capacity as Chief Operating Officer. This is not due to vest until 
August 2026.
Description
Performance measures
% achieved 
STI
Set at 50% of base 
remuneration. Based 
on key financial 
and non‑financial 
performance measures.
•	 Company performance – see FY24 STI 
Targets on page 80 for weightings. 
•	 Individual performance – based on 
business fundamentals (both financial and 
non-financial), customer experience and 
strategic initiatives including health and 
safety, sustainability and D, E & I.
82%
20 The STI payment earned in FY24 will be paid in FY25 and is pro-rated for the period Mark Aue was CEO.
Remuneration and performance continued
Description
Performance measures
% achieved 
STI
Set at 75% of base 
remuneration. Based on 
key financial and non-
financial performance 
measures.
•	 Company performance – see 
FY24 STI Targets on page 80 
for weightings. 
•	 Individual performance 
– based on business 
fundamentals (both financial 
and non-financial), customer 
experience and strategic 
initiatives including health and 
safety, sustainability and DE&I.
69%
LTI – 2019
Three-year grant 
made November 2019, 
equivalent to 33% of 
base remuneration.
•	 Chorus TSR performance over 
grant period must exceed 
10.35% on an annualised basis, 
compounding.
100% vested in 
August 2022.
LTI – 2020 Three-year grant made 
August 2020, equivalent 
to 33% of base 
remuneration.
•	 Chorus TSR performance over 
grant period must exceed 
9.65% on an annualised basis, 
compounding.
Did not meet the 
performance hurdle in 
August 2023. Subject to 
retesting23 up to August 
2024.
LTI – 2021
Three-year grant made 
August 2021, equivalent 
to 33% of base 
remuneration.
•	 Chorus TSR performance over 
grant period must exceed 
6.2%22 on an annualised basis, 
compounding.
Assessed August 2024 
with possible retesting23 
up to August 2025.
21 The STI payments earned in FY24 will be paid in FY25.
22	A blended rate which incorporates a weighted cost of equity calculation proportional to the regulated versus 
non regulated components of the business, based on relative Enterprise Value has been used. A 0.75% stretch 
percentage is added to determine the three-year performance hurdle.
23	If the performance hurdles are not met by the initial vesting date, they are assessed monthly for a period of 12 
months (noting the hurdle continues to increase).
JB Rousselot (CEO to 14 April 2024)
The table below outlines JB Rousselot’s STI and LTI schemes for the period ending 14 April 202421:
82
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Governance and disclosures

Executive shareholding
For the year ended 30 June 2024, Chorus executives held shares in Chorus as shown in the table below. 
Executive
Current Holdings24
 Shares Rights Eligible to Convert in 202425 
Elaine Campbell
28,589
34,769
Ewen Powell
76,914
31,567
Mark Aue26 
–
–
Julian Kersey26
–
–
Jo Mataira26
–
–
Darren McLean26
–
–
Kristel McMeekin26
–
–
Anna Mitchell26
–
–
Mike Shirley26
–
–
Katrina Smidt26
–
–
Marcus Wofinden26
1,175
–
Total
106,678 
66,336
Remuneration and performance continued
24 As at 30 June 2024.
25 The 2020 LTI grant did not meet the 2020 LTI hurdle on the vesting date (August 2023). It is re-tested each month 
for a period of 12 months (ending August 2024), noting that the compounding performance hurdle continues to 
increase each month. If the 2021 LTI hurdle is met, those share rights will be converted to shares in Q2 FY25. In 
addition, this will also include any share rights in lieu of dividends not yet distributed. The re-testing regime has 
been removed for the 2023 and all future grants.
26 A number of new executives were appointed in FY24 so have received one grant of share rights under the LTI 
that are not eligible to convert into shares until 2026. Given the recent appointments, new executives are not yet 
required to hold a minimum number of Chorus shares,
83
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Governance and disclosures
Total Shareholder Return (TSR) performance
The graph above shows Chorus’ TSR performance against the NZX50 between 30 June 2019 and 30 June 2024. For an LTI 
grant to vest, Chorus’ TSR performance over the three year grant period must meet or exceed the LTI performance target 
on an annualised basis, compounding.
30 June 
2019
30 June 
2020
30 June 
2021
30 June 
2022
30 June 
2024
30 June 
2023
Chorus
 
NZX50
Percentage return
-50.00
0.00
50.00
100.00
150.00

Diversity, Equity and Inclusion
(NZX Code Recommendation 2.5)
Chorus’ Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Policy (available in the Governance section of our website) 
provides a framework for our current and future diversity and inclusion initiatives. Each year, 
the Chorus Board approves measurable objectives to promote diversity, equity and inclusion (D, E 
& I). An overview of the agreed FY25 D, E & I measures and the outcomes achieved can be found in 
our Sustainability Report.
We had four male and three female directors at 30 June 2024 (30 June 2023: four male and three 
female directors).
Our executive team comprising of the CEO and his leadership team had six males and five females 
at 30 June 2024 which achieves our measure of 40:40:20 gender ratio (30 June 2023: six males 
and one female).
Based on the annual review of effectiveness of our Diversity, Equity & Inclusion (D, E & I) Policy 
and our measurable diversity metrics and objectives, our Board considers that overall we continue 
to make good progress towards achieving our D, E & I objectives, including meeting our gender 
ratio target of 40:40:20 at Board and Executive level and continuing to reduce our gender pay gap. 
Further evidence of our commitment has been the external recognition received over the course 
of the year in relation to our progress. The Board believe that we have performed well against the 
policy generally and look forward to our continued focus in the year ahead as we foster a culture 
of equity and inclusion where everyone can thrive at Chorus.
Median Pay Gap
The median pay gap is 10.2 times and represents the number of times greater the CEO’s base salary 
of $1,300,000 (annualised) is to an employee paid $128,000 (i.e. the median of all Chorus employees). 
The gap is 15.2 times when including the FY24 STI target for the CEO.
Gender pay equity
We monitor and report on remuneration outcomes by gender to ensure pay equity at Chorus and 
have supported pay gap campaigns led by “Mind the Gap” and Global Women.
We conduct gender pay equity analysis for like positions each year and no indications of gender 
bias across similar positions were identified in FY24.
We report on gender pay gap via two different methods. First, at a total company level, where 
we compare the median hourly rate for women to the rate for men – irrespective of role. By this 
measure, as of 30 April 2024, the median, gender pay gap was an aggregate total of -18.4%, 
compared to -19.0% in the same period last year.
The second method is by career level, comparing the median hourly rate for women to the rate 
for men, across our nine career levels (salary bands). Our target is a pay gap no greater than -2% at 
each career level. We achieved this in six of the nine career levels. In five of the nine career levels, 
on average females are paid higher than males.
We’ve committed to report our ethnicity pay gap publicly once a standard, consistent 
methodology is determined in Aotearoa.
Remuneration and performance continued
Figure 2:
Gender by role - FY22 - FY24 (as of 30 April 2024)
84
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Governance and disclosures
20%
40%
60%
80%
100%
0
2024
2023
14
2022
2024
2023
2022
2024
61
39
2023
2022
2023
2024
2022
59
41
42
58
58
42
14
4
57
43
64
36
86
86
14
14
57
43
57
43
ALL CHORUS
EXECUTIVE
PEOPLE LEADERS
DIRECTORS
61
39
55
45
57
43

Remuneration and performance continued
Employee remuneration range during the year ended 30 June 2024
The table to the right shows the number of employees and former employees who received 
remuneration and other benefits in excess of $100,000 during the year ended 30 June 2024. 
This includes STI and LTI paid during FY24, as well as other benefits such as insurance and a 
broadband concession. The table excludes any benefits that do not have an attributable value and 
contributions employees may receive towards:
	
— the Marram Trust - a community healthcare and holiday accommodation provider 
	
— the Government Superannuation Fund - a legacy benefit provided to a small number of 
employees
	
— KiwiSaver accounts - 3% of gross earnings
The remuneration paid to, and other benefits received by, JB Rousselot in his capacity as CEO 
until his resignation effective 14 April 2024 and Mark Aue’s CEO remuneration from 15 April 2024 – 
30 June 2024 are detailed on page 81.
Chorus does not have any permanent employee earning less than the 2023/2024 Living Wage of 
$27.80 per hour. 
Actual Payment
Count
2,620,000 – 2,630,000
1
1,230,000 – 1,240,000
1
1,050,000 – 1,060,000
1
780,001 – 790,000
1
650,001 – 660,000
1
640,001 – 650,000
1
460,001 – 470,000
1
450,001 – 460,000
1
440,001 – 450,000
1
430,001 – 440,000
1
420,001 – 430,000
2
410,001 – 420,000
1
400,001 – 410,000
1
390,001 – 400,000
1
380,001 – 390,000
1
370,001 – 380,000
2
360,001 – 370,000
5
350,001 – 360,000
1
320,001 – 330,000
2
310,001 – 320,000
6
300,001 – 310,000
3
Actual Payment
Count
290,001 – 300,000
4
280,001 – 290,000
4
270,001 – 280,000
6
260,001 – 270,000
5
250,001 – 260,000
8
240,001 – 250,000
14
230,001 – 240,000
22
220,001 – 230,000
12
210,001 – 220,000
21
200,001 – 210,000
17
190,001 – 200,000
15
180,001 – 190,000
18
170,001 – 180,000
28
160,001 – 170,000
31
150,001 – 160,000
45
140,001 – 150,000
55
130,001 – 140,000
56
120,001 – 130,000
60
110,001 – 120,000
63
100,000 – 110,000
49
Grand Total
568
85
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Governance and disclosures

Remuneration and performance continued
Director remuneration
(NZX Code Recommendation 5.1)
Fee structure
Total remuneration available to directors (in their capacity as such) in the year ended 30 June 2024 
was fixed at our 2019 annual shareholders’ meeting at $1,169,042. The PPCC recommended and 
the Board approved a 5% increase in director and committee base fees in the year to 30 June 2024. 
This increase fell within the total fee pool of $1,169,042.
The Regulatory Sub-Committee was disestablished in FY24. Compared to FY23, the net effect of 
the 5% increase and removal of the Regulatory Sub-Committee fees was a reduction in individual 
base fees.
Annual fee structure
Year ended 30 June 2024 $
Year ended 30 June 2023 $
Board fees:
Board chair
234,833
223,650
Non-executive director
119,700
114,000
Board committee fees:
Audit and Risk Management Committee
Chair
34,230
32,600
Member
17,115
16,300
People, Performance and Culture Committee
Chair
24,045
22,900
Member
12,337
11,750
Regulatory Sub-Committee (per meeting)
Chair
–
–
Member
2,400
2,400
Notes:
1	 The Board chair receives Board chair fees only. Other directors receive committee fees in addition to their Board fees. 
There was a 5% increase in director and committee base fees in the year to 30 June 2024. 
2	 Directors do not participate in a bonus or profit-sharing plan, do not receive compensation in share options, and do 
not have superannuation or any other scheme entitlements or retirement benefits.
3	 Directors were paid $2,400 per meeting of the Regulatory Sub-Committee. There was one meeting in FY24.
The Regulatory Sub-Committee was disestablished in FY24.
4	 Directors may be paid an additional daily rate of $2,400 for additional work as determined and approved by our 
chair and where the payment is within the total fee pool available. There were no such fees paid in the year to 
30 June 2024.
Fees paid to Directors (in their capacity as such) in the year ended 30 June 2024
Director
Total fees $
 Board fees
ARMC
PPCC
Regulatory  
Sub-Committee
Mark Cross
234,833
234,833
–
–
–
Sue Bailey
134,438
119,700
–
12,338
2,400
Miriam Dean
134,438
119,700
–
12,338
2,400
Will Irving
139,215
119,700
17,115
–
2,400
Murray Jordan
146,145
119,700
–
24,045
2,400
Kate Jorgensen
156,330
119,700
34,230
–
2,400
Jack Matthews
139,215
119,700
17,115
–
2,400
1,084,613
953,033
68,460
48,720
14,400
Notes:
1	
Amounts are gross and exclude GST (where applicable).
2	 Mark Cross was appointed as chair, effective 26 October 2022. As a result, he received Board Chair fees only from 
that date. 
3	 Directors did not receive any fees or other benefits for additional work during the year ended 30 June 2024.
4	 Directors are entitled to be reimbursed for travel and incidental expenses incurred in performance of their duties in 
addition to the above fees.
5	 The total fee pool available to directors is $1,169,042.
6	 The Regulatory Sub-Committee was disestablished during the year ended 30 June 2024.
Fee structure from 1 July 2024
Our PPCC reviews non-executive director remuneration annually based on criteria developed by 
that committee including internal benchmarking analysis. At the date of this Annual Report, a market 
review of Director fees is being carried out by PwC for the Board. The outcomes of this review 
will determine whether an increase to the fee pool (last increased in 2019) will be sought at the 
forthcoming Annual Shareholders’ Meeting in October.
86
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Governance and disclosures

Risk management
Like all businesses, we are exposed to a range of risks. 
Our risk management activities aim to ensure we 
identify, prioritise and manage key risks so we can 
execute our strategies and achieve our goals.
Risk management
(NZX Code Recommendation 6.1)
No business can thrive without taking on risk. Effective risk 
management is about informed risk taking and appropriate and 
active management of risks.
We seek to understand and respond to our current and future 
business environment, and to actively seek and robustly evaluate 
opportunities and initiatives which protect and achieve our business 
strategies. We strive to understand, meet and appropriately balance 
stakeholders’ expectations to deliver value to shareholders and a 
sustainable environment for Chorus in the long term.
Our Board
Our Board is ultimately responsible for risk management 
governance:
•	 Annually setting risk appetite and determining principal risks;
•	 Participating in discussions concerning elements of risk 
including emerging and unforeseen risks;
•	 Approving and regularly reviewing our Managing Risk Policy 
and supporting framework;
•	 Promoting a culture of managing risk; and
•	 Through our ARMC, providing risk oversight and monitoring.
Risk appetite
Our risk appetite sets our tolerable levels of risk. It forms 
a dynamic link between strategy, target setting and risk 
management and sets boundaries for day-to-day decision 
making and reporting.
Risk management processes
Our Managing Risk Policy sets out how we manage  
our risks, including by:
•	 Having a single risk management framework;
•	 Providing the CEO and executive team with discretion to 
manage risk within the guidance provided in our framework;
•	 Balancing the level of control implemented to mitigate 
identified risks with our commitment to comply with external 
regulation and governance requirements and Chorus’ value 
and growth aspirations; and
•	 Meeting good practice standards for risk management 
processes and related governance.
Principal risks
Principal risks are owned by relevant executives. This promotes 
integration into operations and executives planning and a culture 
of proactive risk management. Notwithstanding individual 
ownership, our CEO and executive hold collective responsibility 
for considering how risk and events interrelate and for managing 
our overall risk profile.
Principal risks are reported to our ARMC quarterly and, if 
necessary, also by exception. Principal Risk owners support 
the regular reporting from the Head of Risk, Internal Audit 
& Compliance by providing updates on the risks they own. 
Our ARMC reports to our Board.
Principal risks are assessed with each responsible executive and 
collectively with the executive team before being reported to 
the ARMC. This allows for constructive challenge and debate. 
Underlying risk assessment and monitoring practices are 
undertaken by each principal risk owner with assistance from 
our Risk, Internal Audit & Compliance team.
Our Board also receives management and other internal and 
external reporting over risk positions and our risk management 
operation (including from internal audit plans approved by the 
ARMC) through our overall governance framework.
Principal risks are our key risks to the achievement of our 
strategy. These are assessed on a risk profile identifying 
likelihood of occurrence and potential severity of impact. 
Current principal risk categories are identified via a 
comprehensive enterprise risk management framework 
encompassing financial and non-financial risks. 
They include anticipating and responding to:
•	 Health, safety and wellbeing risks: Working to keep safe the 
people we owe duties to. 
•	 Commercial and financial sustainability risks: Maintaining 
appropriate capital management and credit settings.
•	 Core services risks: Core service availability and network 
resilience.
•	 People and skills risks: Ensuring Chorus attains and retains 
employees with the capabilities to achieve its strategic 
objectives.
•	 Legal, regulatory and contractual risks: Working within the 
regulatory and legal environment.
•	 Stakeholder and customer confidence / reputation risks: 
Attaining and retaining a positive reputation with key 
stakeholders and customers.
•	 Innovation risks: Identify and pursue innovation and 
opportunities that will enhance Chorus.
(NZX Code Recommendations 6.1 & 6.2)
87
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Governance and disclosures

In addition to Principal Risks, the Chorus Board or ARMC 
regularly receive updates on, and discuss with the Executive: 
•	 Unforeseen risks which are ‘black swan’ events which 
have not been otherwise identified through normal risk 
processes; 
•	 Emerging risks which are risks that are known to some degree 
but are not likely to materialise or have an impact in the near 
term; 
•	 Business unit risks which are risks to the achievement of 
functional area strategies. The risks are managed at the 
business unit level and reported to the ARMC if a material 
risk is out of risk tolerance level.
Chorus’ climate related risk and opportunity framework 
uses the same approach, principles, tolerances, impact 
and likelihood scales used in Chorus’ enterprise-wide risk 
management processes, and in line with the risk management 
policy endorsed by the Chorus Board.
Our climate-related risks and opportunities (as well as Chorus’ 
other climate-related disclosures) are available in our Climate 
Statements available at company.chorus.co.nz/sustainability.
(NZX Code Recommendation 6.2)
Reporting on our management of health and safety risks is 
included in our Sustainability Report at company.chorus.
co.nz/sustainability.
Auditors 
(NZX Code Recommendations 7.1 – 7.3)
External auditor
(NZX Code Recommendation 7.1)
Our Board and ARMC monitor the ongoing independence 
and quality of our external auditor (KPMG). Our ARMC also 
meets with our external auditor without management present 
at least once per year. Our ARMC charter and External Auditor 
Independence Policy amongst other things:
•	 Prohibit the provision of certain non-audit services by our 
external auditor;
•	 Require ARMC approval of all audit and permitted non‑audit 
services;
•	 Require our client services partner and lead/engagement 
partner to be rotated every five years (with a five year cooling 
off period) and other audit partners to be rotated every seven 
years (with a two year cooling off period);
•	 Require our ARMC to review our external auditor’s fees half 
yearly (including the ratio of fees for audit vs. non-audit 
services); and
•	 Impose restrictions on the employment of former external 
audit personnel.
KPMG provided a limited assurance review of our Scope 1, 2 and 
3 emissions inventory for the FY24 period for the purposes of 
our FY24 Climate Statements. In addition, KPMG has provided 
Regulatory audit and assurance work in relation to fibre 
regulation 2023/24.
KPMG did not provide any other non-audit assurance services 
in the year to 30 June 2024. Any additional non-audit services 
would be provided in accordance with our ARMC charter and 
External Auditor Independence Policy. They should not affect 
KPMG’s independence, including because:
•	 They are approved only where we are satisfied the services 
would not compromise KPMG’s independence; and
•	 They do not involve KPMG acting in a managerial or 
decision‑making capacity.
KPMG confirm their independence via independence 
declarations every six months.
(NZX Code Recommendation 7.2)
Our external auditors attend our ASM each year.
Internal audit
(NZX Code Recommendation 7.3)
We operate a co-sourced internal audit model with our Head of 
Risk, Internal Audit & Compliance and her team supported by 
external advisors PricewaterhouseCoopers to provide additional 
resource and specialist expertise as required.
The responsibilities of our internal audit function include:
•	 Assisting our ARMC and Board in their assessment of internal 
controls and risk management;
•	 Developing an internal audit plan for review and approval by 
the ARMC each year;
•	 Executing the plan and reporting progress against it, 
significant changes, results and issues identified; and
•	 Escalating issues as appropriate (including to our ARMC and/or 
Board chairs).
Our executive team and ARMC monitor key outstanding internal 
audit issues and recommendations as part of regular reporting 
and review, including the timeliness of resolution.
Our ARMC has direct and unrestricted access to our internal 
audit function. The ARMC or the Head of Risk, Internal Audit & 
Compliance can request a meeting without management present.
Our Head of Risk, Internal Audit & Compliance has a 
management reporting line to our General Counsel and a direct 
reporting line to our ARMC, attending every ARMC meeting.
Our ARMC reviews the remuneration and incentive 
arrangements of our Head of Risk, Internal Audit & Compliance 
and our Risk & Assurance Manager each year.
Risk management continued
88
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Governance and disclosures

Shareholder rights and relations
We are committed to fostering constructive and open relationships with shareholders:
•	 Communicating effectively with them;
•	 Giving ready access to balanced and understandable information;
•	 Making it easy for shareholders to participate in general meetings; and
•	 Maintaining an up to date website providing information about our business.
Our investor relations programme is designed to further facilitate two-way communication 
with shareholders, provide them and other market participants with an understanding of our 
business, governance and performance and an opportunity to express their views. As part of 
this programme we enable investors and other interested parties to ask questions and obtain 
information. We meet with investors and analysts and undertake formal investor presentations. 
Our annual and half year results presentations are made available to all investors via webcast.
Our website
(NZX Code Recommendation 8.1)
Our key financial, operational and governance information is available at 
company.chorus.co.nz/investors.
Annual shareholder’s meeting
(NZX Code Recommendations 8.2 & 8.3)
Since 2020 we have encouraged shareholder participation in the annual shareholders meeting 
by providing a webcast to enable shareholders to watch proceedings online, as well as vote and 
ask questions.
We enable shareholders to vote by proxy ahead of meetings without having to physically attend 
or participate in those meetings and adopt the one share one vote principle, conducting voting 
at shareholder meetings by poll.
We consider that shareholders should be entitled to vote on decisions which would change the 
essential nature of our business.
Shareholders are also able to ask questions of, and express their views in respect of, our Board, 
management and auditors (including via appointed proxies) at and before annual meetings.
We encourage shareholders to communicate with us and our share registrar electronically, 
including by providing email communication channels and online contact details and 
instructions on our website.
Additional disclosures
Group structure
As at 30 June 2024, Chorus Limited has one wholly owned subsidiary: Chorus New Zealand Limited 
(CNZL).
Chorus Limited
Chorus New Zealand Limited
Chorus Limited is the entity listed on the NZX and ASX. It is also the borrowing entity under the 
group’s main financing arrangements and the entity which has partnered with the Crown for the 
UFB build.
CNZL undertakes (and is the contracting entity for) Chorus’ operating activities and is the 
guarantor of Chorus Limited’s borrowing. CNZL also employs all Chorus people. CNZL has its own 
constitution but its Board is the same as the Chorus Limited Board.
Disclosures in respect of CNZL are set out in the “Subsidiaries” section on page 94.
Indemnities and insurance
Chorus indemnifies directors under our constitution for liabilities and costs they may incur for 
their acts or omissions as directors (including costs and expenses of defending actions for actual 
or alleged liability) to the maximum extent permitted by law. We have also entered into deeds of 
indemnity with each director under which:
•	 Chorus indemnifies the director for liabilities incurred in their capacity as a director and as 
officers of other Chorus companies.
•	 Directors are permitted to access company records while directors and after they cease to hold 
office (subject to certain conditions).
Deeds of indemnity have also been entered into on similar terms with certain senior employees 
for liabilities and costs they may incur for their acts or omissions as employees, directors of 
subsidiaries or as directors of non-Chorus companies in which Chorus holds interests.
We have a directors’ and officers’ liability insurance policy in place covering directors and senior 
employees for liability arising from their acts or omissions in their capacity as directors or 
employees on commercial terms. The policy does not cover dishonest, fraudulent, malicious or 
wilful acts or omissions.
(NZX Code Recommendations 8.1 – 8.3)
89
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Governance and disclosures

Director changes
There were no director changes in the year to 30 June 2024. Murray Jordan has decided to retire 
as a director, effective as at 30 September 2024.
Director restrictions
No person who is an ‘associated person’ of a telecommunications services provider in 
New Zealand may be appointed or hold office as a director. NZX has granted a waiver to allow this 
restriction to be included in our constitution.
Securities and security holders
Ordinary shares
Chorus Limited’s shares are quoted on the NZX and on the ASX and trade under the ‘CNU’ ticker. 
There were 433,887,294 ordinary shares on issue at 30 June 2024. Each share confers on its 
holder the right to attend and vote at a shareholder meeting (including the right to cast one vote 
on a poll on any resolution).
Constitutional ownership restrictions
As part of the establishment of Chorus we inherited an obligation to obtain Crown approval prior 
to any person:
• Having a relevant interest in 10% or more of our shares; or
• Other than a New Zealand national, having a relevant interest in more than 49.9% of our shares.
On each request the Crown has provided approval, currently:
• L1 Capital Pty Ltd can hold a relevant interest in up to 15% of our shares.
• AMP Capital Holdings Limited can hold a relevant interest in up to 15% of our shares, and
• UniSuper Limited can hold a relevant interest in up to 20% of our shares.
If our Board or the Crown determines there are reasonable grounds for believing a person has 
a relevant interest in our shares in excess of the ownership restrictions, our Board may, after 
following certain procedures, prohibit the exercise of voting rights (in which case the voting 
rights vest in our chair) and may force the sale of shares. Our Board may also decline to register a 
transfer of shares if it reasonably believes the transfer would breach the ownership restrictions.
NZX has granted waivers allowing our constitution to include the power of forfeiture, the 
restrictions on transferability of shares and our Board’s power to prohibit the exercise of voting 
rights relating to these ownership restrictions. ASX has also granted a waiver in respect of the 
refusal to register a transfer of shares which is or may be in breach of the ownership restrictions.
Shareholder distribution as at 30 June 2024
Holding
Number of holders Total number of shares held
% of shares issued
1 to 999
9,977
4,074,857
0.94
1,000 to 4,999
6,238
14,563,239
3.36
5,000 to 9,999
1,730
11,466,916
2.64
10,000 to 99,999
1,260
26,072,511
6.01
100,000 and over
80
377,709,771
87.05
Total
19,285
433,887,294
100.00
Unmarketable Parcels 
Minimum Parcel Size
Holders
Units
Minimum $1,000.00 parcel at $7.6900 per unit
131
629
35,823
Substantial holders
As at 30 June 2024, we have received substantial product holder notices from shareholders as 
follows:
Notices received as at 30 June 2024
Number of 
ordinary shares held
% of shares on 
issue
UniSuper Limited
57,893,644
13.34%
L1 Capital Pty Ltd
45,287,235
10.44%
Additional disclosures continued
90
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Governance and disclosures
Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group, Inc
22,196,561
5.12%

Additional disclosures continued
Twenty largest shareholders as at 30 June 2024
Rank
Holder name
Holding
%
1
Citicorp Nominees Pty Limited
55,484,447
12.79
2
BNP Paribas Nominees Pty Ltd 
46,245,717
10.66
3
JP Morgan Nominees Australia Limited
45,350,473
10.45
4
HSBC Custody Nominees (Australia) Limited
40,659,253
9.37
5
BNP Paribas Nominees (NZ) Limited – NZCSD 
25,469,431
5.87
6
BNP Paribas Noms Pty Ltd
14,940,991
3.44
7
Citibank Nominees (New Zealand) Limited – NZCSD 
12,902,156
2.97
8
Accident Compensation Corporation – NZCSD 
12,613,884
2.91
9
HSBC Nominees (New Zealand) Limited – NZCSD 
12,413,659
2.86
10
Custodial Services Limited 
9,019,101
2.08
11
Forsyth Barr Custodians Limited <1-Custody>
8,863,471
2.04
12
New Zealand Depository Nominee Limited 
8,859,032
2.04
13
ANZ Wholesale Australasian Share Fund – NZCSD 
8,067,850
1.86
14
Generate Kiwisaver Public Trust Nominees Limited  

7,888,438
1.82
15
Tea Custodians Limited Client Property Trust Account – NZCSD 

7,664,684
1.77
16
JBWere (NZ) Nominees Limited 
7,059,704
1.63
17
HSBC Nominees A/C NZ Superannuation Fund Nominees Limited 
– NZCSD 
5,023,907
1.16
18
FNZ Custodians Limited
4,788,352
1.10
19
Simplicity Nominees Limited – NZCSD
4,486,249
1.03
20
National Nominees Limited
4,161,277
0.96
Total Top 20 Holders Of Ordinary Shares
341,962,076
78.81
Total Remaining Holders Balance
91,925,218
21.19
Twenty largest bondholders (December 2027) as at 30 June 2024
Rank
Holder name
Holding
%
1
Custodial Services Limited 
60,832,000
30.42
2
FNZ Custodians Limited
25,402,000
12.70
3
Tea Custodians Limited Client Property Trust Account – NZCSD 

17,881,000
8.94
4
BNP Paribas Nominees (NZ) Limited – NZCSD 
15,324,000
7.66
5
Forsyth Barr Custodians Limited <1-Custody>
14,167,000
7.08
6
HSBC Nominees (New Zealand) Limited – NZCSD 
8,600,000
4.30
7
Pin Twenty Limited 
7,000,000
3.50
8
JBWere (NZ) Nominees Limited 
4,720,000
2.36
9
FNZ Custodians Limited 
4,446,000
2.22
10
JBWere (NZ) Nominees Limited 
4,322,000
2.16
11
Investment Custodial Services Limited 
3,187,000
1.59
12
Forsyth Barr Custodians Limited 
2,176,000
1.09
13
HSBC Nominees (New Zealand) Limited A/C State Street – NZCSD 

2,000,000
1.00
14
Forsyth Barr Custodians Limited 
1,778,000
0.89
15
Adminis Custodial Nominees Limited
1,545,000
0.77
16
Custodial Services Limited 
1,529,000
0.76
17
ANZ Wholesale NZ Fixed Interest Fund – NZCSD
1,499,000
0.75
18
JBWere (NZ) Nominees Limited 
1,400,000
0.70
19
NZX WT Nominees Limited 
1,327,000
0.66
20
FNZ Custodians Limited 
1,115,000
0.56
Total Top 20 Holders Of 1.98% Fixed Rate Bonds 02/12/2027
180,250,000
90.13
Total Remaining Holders Balance
19,750,000
9.88
91
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Governance and disclosures

Additional disclosures continued
Twenty largest bondholders (December 2028) as at 30 June 2024
Rank
Holder name
Holding
%
1
Custodial Services Limited 
109,584,000
21.92
2
Forsyth Barr Custodians Limited <1-Custody>
92,154,000
18.43
3
JBWere (NZ) Nominees Limited 
40,985,000
8.20
4
HSBC Nominees (New Zealand) Limited O/A Euroclear Bank – 
NZCSD 
30,359,000
6.07
5
FNZ Custodians Limited
26,946,000
5.39
6
Tea Custodians Limited Client Property Trust Account – NZCSD 

24,034,000
4.81
7
BNP Paribas Nominees (NZ) Limited – NZCSD 
17,686,000
3.54
8
Citibank Nominees (New Zealand) Limited – NZCSD 
15,074,000
3.01
9
JBWere (NZ) Nominees Limited 
15,000,000
3.00
10
Forsyth Barr Custodians Limited 
9,623,000
1.92
11
Generate Kiwisaver Public Trust Nominees Limited  

9,187,000
1.84
12
ANZ Bank New Zealand Limited – NZCSD 
5,817,000
1.16
13
JBWere (NZ) Nominees Limited <44625 A/C>
4,600,000
0.92
14
HSBC Nominees (New Zealand) Limited A/C State Street – NZCSD 

4,250,000
0.85
15
JBWere (NZ) Nominees Limited <44626 A/C>
4,000,000
0.80
16
Forsyth Barr Custodians Limited 
3,570,000
0.71
17
JBWere (NZ) Nominees Limited 
3,334,000
0.67
18
RGTKMT Investments Limited
3,000,000
0.60
19
FNZ Custodians Limited 
2,988,000
0.60
20
NZX WT Nominees Limited 
2,640,000
0.53
Total Top 20 Holders Of 6.38% Fixed Rate Bonds 06/12/2028
424,831,000
84.97
Total Remaining Holders Balance
75,169,000
15.03
Twenty largest bondholders (December 2030) as at 30 June 2024
Rank
Holder name
Holding
%
1
Custodial Services Limited 
46,157,000
23.08
2
FNZ Custodians Limited
19,753,000
9.88
3
Accident Compensation Corporation – NZCSD 
17,500,000
8.75
4
Tea Custodians Limited Client Property Trust Account – NZCSD 

16,537,000
8.27
5
ANZ Bank New Zealand Limited – NZCSD 
16,509,000
8.25
6
BNP Paribas Nominees (NZ) Limited – NZCSD 
12,727,000
6.36
7
Forsyth Barr Custodians Limited <1-Custody>
9,772,000
4.89
8
HSBC Nominees (New Zealand) Limited – NZCSD 
9,561,000
4.78
9
Citibank Nominees (New Zealand) Limited – NZCSD 
7,204,000
3.60
10
NZPT Custodians (Grosvenor) Limited – NZCSD 
5,100,000
2.55
11
HSBC Nominees (New Zealand) Limited O/A Euroclear Bank – 
NZCSD 
5,000,000
2.50
12
CML Shares Limited
2,800,000
1.40
13
FNZ Custodians Limited 
2,326,000
1.16
14
Forsyth Barr Custodians Limited 
2,083,000
1.04
15
Investment Custodial Services Limited 
2,072,000
1.04
16
JBWere (NZ) Nominees Limited 
1,858,000
0.93
17
ANZ Wholesale NZ Fixed Interest Fund – NZCSD
1,735,000
0.87
18
Mint Nominees Limited – NZCSD 
1,647,000
0.82
19
Queen Street Nominees Acf Pie Funds – NZCSD
1,500,000
0.75
20
Forsyth Barr Custodians Limited 
1,155,000
0.58
Total Top 20 Holders Of 2.51% Fixed Rate Bonds 02/12/2030
182,996,000
91.50
Total Remaining Holders Balance
17,004,000
8.50
92
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Governance and disclosures

Additional disclosures continued
Debt listings
Chorus Limited has the following bonds on issue:
•	 $200 million bonds traded on the NZX debt market (the NZDX) maturing December 2027;
•	 $500 million bonds traded on the NZX debt market maturing December 2028;
•	 $200 million bonds traded on the NZX debt market maturing December 2030;
•	 EUR 209 million EMTNs traded on the ASX maturing October 2023; 
•	 EUR 300 million EMTNs traded on the ASX, maturing December 2026;
•	 EUR 500 million EMTNs traded on the ASX, maturing September 2029; and
•	 AUD 300 million wholesale AMTNs, maturing 18 September 2030.
American depositary receipts
American Depositary Shares, each representing five shares and evidenced by American Depositary 
Receipts, are not listed but are traded on the over-the-counter market in the United States under 
the ticker ‘CHRYY’ with Bank of New York Mellon as depositary bank. As at 30 June 2024 Chorus 
had 849,198 ADRs on issue.
NZX bondholder distribution as at 30 June 2024
December 2027 maturity
Holding
Number of holders
Total number of bonds held
% of bonds issued
1 – 5,000
9
45,000
0.02
5,000 to 9,999
10
69,000
0.03
10,000 to 99,999
139
3,959,000
1.98
100,000 and over
63
195,927,000
97.96
Total
221
200,000,000
100.00
Unmarketable Parcels 
Minimum Parcel Size
Holders
Units
Minimum $1,000.00 parcel at $0.8900 per unit
1,124
0
0
December 2028 maturity
Holding
Number of holders
Total number of bonds held
% of bonds issued
1 – 5,000
51
255,000
0.05
5,000 to 9,999
25
203,000
0.04
10,000 to 99,999
963
28,724,000
5.74
100,000 and over
161
470,818,000
94.16
Total
1,200
500,000,000
100.00
Unmarketable Parcels 
Minimum Parcel Size
Holders
Units
Minimum $1,000.00 parcel at $1.0500 per unit
953
0
0
 
December 2030 maturity
Holding
Number of holders
Total number of bonds held
% of bonds issued
1 – 5,000
9
45,000
0.02
5,000 to 9,999
6
49,000
0.02
10,000 to 99,999
224
6,506,000
3.25
100,000 and over
48
193,400,000
96.70
Total
287
200,000,000
100.00
Unmarketable Parcels 
Minimum Parcel Size
Holders
Units
Minimum $1,000.00 parcel at $0.8400 per unit
1,191
0
0
Unquoted securities
Crown Infrastructure Partners (CIP) Securities
The terms of issue for the CIP1 and CIP2 securities are set out in the subscription agreements 
between Chorus Limited and CIP. These terms are summarised in note [6] of our consolidated 
financial statements and on our website at company.chorus.co.nz/reports.
Security
Number issued in the year 
ended 30 June 2024
Total on issue at 
30 June 2024
Holder
Percentage held
CIP1 equity securities
–
462,052,071
CIP
100%
CIP1 debt securities
–
462,052,071
CIP
100%
CIP1 equity warrants
744,902
16,407,227
CIP
100%
CIP2 equity securities
–
306,423,177
CIP
100%
CIP2 debt securities
–
104,852,093
CIP
100%
93
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Governance and disclosures

Additional disclosures continued
Other disclosures
New NZX listing rules
NZX updated its listing rules from 24 May 2024.
NZX waivers
On 28 March 2019 Chorus applied for the continuation of existing and still required waivers and 
rulings. On 3 April 2020 a waiver from NZX listing rule 2.3.2, 4.1.1, 4.1.2, 4.2.1, 4.14, 6.6.1, 8.1.5 and 
a ruling from NZX on listing rule 4.9.1 were granted.
A summary of all waivers relied on by Chorus in the 12 months ending 30 June 2024 is available 
on our website at company.chorus.co.nz/investors/services/your-shareholding
Non-standard designation
NZX has attached a ‘non-standard’ designation to Chorus Limited because of the ownership 
restrictions in our constitution (described above).
ASX disclosures
Chorus Limited and its subsidiaries are incorporated in New Zealand. Chorus has a ‘foreign 
exempt’ listing on ASX, meaning our primary obligation is to comply with the NZX listing rules 
(as our home exchange).
Chorus Limited is not subject to Chapters 6, 6A, 6B and 6C of the Australian Corporations Act 
2001 dealing with the acquisition of shares (including substantial shareholdings and takeovers).
Our constitution contains limitations on the acquisition of securities, as described above.
For the purposes of ASX listing rule 1.15.3 Chorus Limited continues to comply with the NZX 
listing rules.
Registration as a foreign company
Chorus Limited has registered with the Australian Securities and Investments Commission 
as a foreign company and has been issued an Australian Registered Body Number (ARBN) of 
152 485 848.
Net tangible assets per security
As at 30 June 2024, consolidated net tangible assets per share was $1.23 (30 June 2023: $1.60).
Net tangible assets per share is a non‑GAAP financial measure and is not prepared in accordance 
with NZ IFRS.
Revenue from ordinary activities and net profit
In the year ended 30 June 2024:
•	 Revenue from ordinary activities increased 3.1% to $1,010 million (30 June 2023: $980 million); 
and
•	 Profit from ordinary activities after tax, and net profit, attributable to shareholders decreased 
136% to a loss of [$9] million (30 June 2023: $25 million).
Subsidiaries
Chorus New Zealand Limited (CNZL)
Directors as at 30 June 2024: Mark Cross, Miriam Dean, Murray Jordan, Jack Matthews, Sue Bailey, 
Kate Jorgensen, Will Irving.
Current CNZL directors are also Chorus Limited directors and do not receive any remuneration in 
their capacity as CNZL directors.
Other subsidiaries
Chorus Limited has no other subsidiaries.
94
 Chorus Annual Report 2024
Governance and disclosures

Glossary
AMTN
Australian Medium Term Notes.
Backbone network
Fibre cabling and other shared network 
elements required either in the common 
areas of multi-dwelling units to connect 
individual apartments/offices, or to serve 
premises located along rights of way.
Backhaul
The portion of the network that links 
local exchanges to other exchanges 
or retail service provider networks.
Baseband
A technology neutral voice input service 
that can be bundled with a broadband 
product or provided on a standalone basis.
Board
Chorus Limited’s Board of Directors.
Chorus
Chorus Limited and it’s subsidiary 
Chorus New Zealand Limited.
CIP
Crown Infrastructure Partners, 
the Government organisation that 
manages New Zealand’s rollout of 
Ultra-Fast Broadband infrastructure.
Commission
Commerce Commission – 
the independent Crown entity 
whose responsibilities include 
overseeing the regulation of the 
telecommunications sector.
Constitution
Chorus Limited’s Constitution.
Direct fibre access
Also known as ‘dark’ fibre, a fibre service 
that provides a point to point fibre 
connection and can be used to deliver 
backhaul connections to mobile sites.
Director
A director of Chorus Limited.
EBITDA
Earnings before interest, income tax, 
depreciation and amortisation.
EMTN
European Medium Term Notes.
FY
Financial year – twelve months 
ended 30 June. e.g. FY24 is from 
1 July 2023 to 30 June 2024.
Gbps
Gigabits per second. A measure of 
the average rate of data transfer.
Gigabit
The equivalent of 1 billion bits. Gigabit 
Ethernet provides data transfer rates 
of about 1 gigabit per second.
GPON
Gigabit Passive Optical Network.
IT
Information Technology.
Layer 2
The data link layer, including broadband 
electronics, within the Open Systems 
Interconnection model. Layer 1 is the 
physical cables and co‑location space.
Mbps
Megabits per second – a measure of 
the average rate of data transfer.
NZ IFRS
International Financial Reporting 
Standards – the rules that the financial 
statements have to be prepared by.
P2P
Where two parties or devices are 
connected point‑to-point via fibre.
Petabyte
One million gigabytes (GB), which 
is a measure of data volume.
RAB
Regulatory Asset Base refers to 
the value of total investment by a 
regulated utility in the assets which 
will generate revenues over time.
RBI
Rural Broadband Initiative – refers to 
the Government programme to improve 
and enhance broadband coverage in 
rural areas between 2011 and 2016.
Share
Means an ordinary share in Chorus.
TSO
Telecommunications Services Obligation – 
a universal service obligation under which 
Chorus must maintain certain coverage 
and service on the copper network.
TSR
Total shareholder return.
UFB
Ultra-Fast Broadband refers to the 
Government programme to build a fibre 
to the premises network. UFB1 refers to 
the original phase of the rollout to 75% of 
New Zealanders. UFB2 and UFB2+ were 
subsequent phases announced in 2017.
VDSL
Very High Speed Digital Subscriber Line – 
a copper‑based technology that provides 
a better broadband connection than ADSL.
95
 Chorus Annual Report 2024

96
This annual report:
•	 May contain forward looking statements. These statements are not guarantees or predictions 
of future performance. They involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors, 
many of which are beyond Chorus’ control, and which may cause actual results to differ 
materially from those expressed in the statements contained in this annual report.
•	 Includes statements relating to past performance. These should not be regarded as reliable 
indicators of future performance.
•	 Is current at its release date. Except as required by law or the NZX and ASX listing rules, Chorus 
is not under any obligation to update this annual report or the information in it at any time, 
whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise.
•	 Contains non‑GAAP financial measures, including EBITDA. These measures may differ from 
similarly titled measures used by other companies because they are not defined by GAAP. 
Although Chorus considers those measures provide useful information they should not be used 
in substitution for, or isolation of, Chorus’ audited financial statements.
•	 May contain information from third parties Chorus believes reliable. However, no 
representations or warranties are made as to the accuracy or completeness of such information.
•	 Should be read in the wider context of material previously published by Chorus and released 
through the NZX and ASX.
•	 Does not constitute investment advice or an offer or invitation to purchase Chorus securities.
Disclaimer
96
 Chorus Annual Report 2024

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