Vivendi chief Rene Fourtou is nursing the group back to health
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French media giant Vivendi has turned in narrower losses, in a sign that its recovery from near-collapse two years ago is still on track.
The company said it made a net loss of 6 million euros in the first quarter, down sharply from 319 million euros in the same period last year.
The improvement reflected a stronger performance in its telecoms, film and television operations.
Investors welcomed the news, marking Vivendi shares up 2% in early trade.
Vivendi said healthy operating profits in its telecoms, film and television businesses had outweighed sharply higher losses at its ailing electronic games division.
Payback
Its Universal Music subsidiary - home to U2 and Eminem - also finished in the red, but its losses shrank to 16 million euros from 28 million euros one year ago.
Vivendi said in a statement that the figures showed "significant progress".
Vivendi, originally a staid French water utility, transformed itself into the world's second-biggest media conglomerate during a late 1990s acquisition spree led by former chief executive Jean-Marie Messier.
But the takeover binge racked up huge debts which precipitated a financial crisis and cost Mr Messier his job two years ago.
In 2002, Vivendi crashed to a full-year loss of 23.3 billion euros, the biggest in French corporate history.
New chief executive Jean-Rene Fourtou has focused on repaying Vivendi's debts by selling off assets - including some of Mr Messier's most high-profile acquisitions.
Earlier this month, he negotiated the sale of Vivendi's prized entertainment assets - including the iconic Universal Studios movie empire - to NBC, the television arm of General Electric.
Vivendi said it now had outstanding debts of 7 billion euros, down from 11.6 billion euros at the end of March.
Analysts gave the latest figures their seal of approval.