Showing posts with label KPN. Show all posts
Showing posts with label KPN. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 26, 2023

KPN Capital Markets Day, 7 November 2023: preview

KPN is organizing a Capital Markets Day on November 7. We expect the board to unveil plans for the period up to and including 2026 and to provide a glimpse into the years to come, possibly up to 2030. The fiber optic renovation is nearing completion, which will have a major positive impact on the financials. However, the network is never finished and further evolution is on its way. Partnerships will be central to this. In the meantime, competition is and remains the greatest risk.

Competition in mobile consists of the other two mobile operators and possibly entrants in Private Wireless. In fixed, fiber optic brings new players to the market. Consolidation is obvious, but there are different scenarios. In services, OTT still drives cord cutting, mostly or communications, but or TV/video as well.

Partnerships are likely to be central in areas where KPN is too small or lacks knowledge to develop solutions itself: ultra-rural coverage, cybersecurity, venture capital and developing a network-as-a-service platform. Where KPN lacks scale, such as in ICT customization (tailored solutions and serving verticals such as healthcare and transport), acquisitions are an obvious solution.

KPN's previous Capital Market Days focused on growth and simplification:
  • May 2011: Strengthen - simplify – grow
  • February 2014: Building on strong fundamentals
  • March 2016: Raising the bar
  • November 2018: Organic sustainable growth
  • November 2020: Accelerate to grow
  • November 2023: Building for the future???
General strategy
  • Netwerk evolution:
    • Fixed: FTTP and a partnership (e.g. Starlink) to cover the remaining ~30k ultra rural addresses.
    • Mobile: 5G/3.5 GHz plans, following the 2024 auction, will mostly be about upgrading the 5G network's capacity. Ultra-low latency may form the basis for new services, e.g. in IoT.
    • A jump on the AI bandwagon could look quite differently, if SKT is followed, or rather Iliad.
    • New tech such as digital twins and virtualisation will serve network control and maintenance, help enable zero-touch and cloud-native networks.
      • Network are increasingly seen as platforms-of-platforms (or: network-as-a-platform), for traditional (telephony, television) and new (IoT, etc.) services. Network API's are coming to market to allow developers and enterprises to take advantage of network and subscriber data, see e.g. TIM, DT/Ericsson, Nokia/Dish and BT/Google Cloud.
    • Services:
      • In fixed, most telcos have embraced the Super Aggregator status for access to and billing of media services (streaming video, music, other). In mobile, it's still early days. Proximus is trying to translate the Super Aggregator to a Super App strategy, for all 'daily services' (Proximus+).
        • Some telcos are modestly in the business of developing apps themselves (Proximus, Orange, Verizon). The entry-barrier is low, but it remains a challenge to compete with Big Tech and specialised developers. Maintenance is complicated for a roster of apps (for a range of operating systems) that need to be updated regularly.
          • Cybersecurity and quantum computing are very important areas and could involve partnering with other telcos. After all, it makes no sense for each telco to develop these solutions on their own.
          • Branding could use a little more clarity, now that a single-brand strategy has been abandoned, with current brands KPN, Youfone (takeover pending), Solcon, Simyo, XS4ALL (no longer for new subscribers), Cam IT Solutions, Inspark.
          • What is so hard devising a proper loyalty program?
        • Financial targets:
          • KPN's fiber renovation is finally nearing completion. Taking around 30 years in all, it must be regarded a once-in-a-century operation. Benefits will need to be updated, in terms of opex (maintenance, energy, support), revenues (ARPU, customer wins) and capex. When the fiber program was relaunched (Capital Markets Day 2018), KPN said it aimed for 80 percent coverage, which excluded the coverage at the time by third parties (mainly Delta Fiber and other cablecos). With KPN increasingly overbuilding competing fiber operators (such as in Oss), the 20% figure will drop to a lower level.
          • The fiber impact will be positive for revenues, margins and free cash flow, exacerbated by sunsetting more legacy systems (copper, 2G, 3G, PSTN, ISDN, etc.). Capex will likely drop below EUR 1b per annum (currently EUR 1.26b), net free cash flow (after interest and tax) may rise above EUR 1b per annum (currently EUR 860m). Still, the impact of higher interest rates on the interest bill is not to be overlooked.
        Threats and opportunities:
        • New entrants
          • Mobile: the 2024 3.5 GHz auction will set aside 100 MHz for Private Wireless. Citymesh is a likely candidate to enter the market.
          • Fixed:
            • Wholesale-only operators (neutral hosts) of the active layer in fiber networks have already entered (Fiber Crew/Jonaz, Fiber Operator, Weserve).
            • Delta and ODF could team up to build the Third Digital Infrastucture. This would put pressure on occupancy rates, but with fierce competition price increases would be unlikely. Ultimately, a shake-out would follow.
            • Alternatively, Delta and ODF could acquire Ziggo's HFC-network to construct a Second National Fiber Operator. In this scenario, VodafoneZiggo's retail operations would be combined with its mobile network, mirroring Odido (formerly TMNL).
            • FWA is increasingly likely to compete with FTTH, especially in ultra rural areas and in places where KPN deploys PON technology (no physical unbundling and instead high wholesale tariffs). Odido would be very well positioned.
        • Disintermediation:
          • Communications (Meta, Microsoft) and content (Netflix, Amazon, Disney, WBD, etc.) have already largely gone OTT.
          • Hyperscalers have claimed large sections of the cloud market.
          • Smart TV manufacturers offer an alternative TV-platform.
        • There's always the risk of NOT doing something. New opportunities that must not be missed may include the Super App (Proximus+), speed-based pricing in mobile or FWA.
        • Outsourcing carries the risk of losing indepth network knowledge and capabilities. Perhaps KPN needs to clarify where it stands.
        • Selling real estate, even if this is not core business, is not wise. It exposes the company to hefty annual price increase and gives it a fake sense of independence. Migrating to a different real estate owner may be possible in theory, but the lock-in is such that this is near impossible. Selling real estate only makes sense in case of an immediate need for cash.
        • Structural separation is meant to create two businesses that can each improve their growth profiles. It can be implemented in two different ways: NetCo/wholesale versus ServCo/retail, or Fixed/wholesale versus Mobile/retail. The latter is becoming harder for KPN, now that it is integrating fixed and mobile at the core network level.
        • APG could, from a value point of view, swap its 50% Glaspoort stake for roughly a 10% stake in the entire fixed-line network. Who knows, what could happen from there.
        • Areas where KPN lacks scale or capabilities:
          • ICT (Tailored Solutions).
          • Verticals: health (KPN Health), possibly transportation.
          • KPN Ventures: its portfolio is of limited size. Theoretically it would be better to participate in a larger and similar investment portfolio, such as DTCP.
          • Cybersecurity is of the utmost importance and it doesn't seem to make sense for every telco to develop a cybersecurity unit on its own. Perhaps a partnership would be preferable.
        • Takeover
          • An LBO can be ruled out, theoretically resulting in a share price discount. It was tried by EQT and KKR, but it only led to KPN creating the option to issue preference shares with high voting power, combined with government oversight.
          • Only a friendly takeover will be realistic.

        Friday, September 22, 2023

        A scenario for the Dutch boadband market, leading up to the inevitable end-game of two fiber networks

        There's a fascinating development unfolding in the Dutch broadband market, characterized by a surplus of fiber infrastructure in the access networks. This situation envisions a strategic collaboration between fiber operators Delta Fiber and Open Dutch Fiber, alongside the HFC-network of VodafoneZiggo.

        This proposed scenario serves multiple purposes:

        1. It presents an exit opportunity for current investors, contingent upon the interest of potential new investors in this venture.
        2. It aligns with the economic dynamics of the market by consolidating the number of high-speed broadband networks to just two.
        3. A potential split-up of VodafoneZiggo could offer a means to alleviate its debt burden.
        4. With reduced competition, the new owner(s) would be well-positioned to gradually upgrade the Ziggo HFC network to a full-fiber infrastructure over the next few years. During this transition period, VodafoneZiggo Retail (the ServCo, including the mobile network) could offer services not only over the Ziggo HFC network but also through the fiber networks of Delta and ODF.

        There are potentially four networks in the Netherlands, one from VodafoneZiggo (HFC/Docsis) and the other fiber-based from KPN (4.2m lines, aiming for 6.5m), Delta Fiber (EQT/Stonepeak, 1.5m lines, aiming for 2m) and Open Dutch Fiber (KKR/DTCP, 900k lines, aiming for 2m).

        Underlying dynamics:

        • VodafoneZiggo is overleveraged, plans a Docsis 4.0 upgrade in due course.
        • KPN will ultimately be nationwide, although rural areas remain uncertain because overbuidl is less likely. The latest overbuild plan is for Oss, where E-Fiber (Open Dutch Fiber) already finished.
        • Delta Fiber's view is a hybrid market structure with reciprocal wholesale access deals (network sharing). It avoids overbuilding KPN or Open Dutch Fiber. Castricum was cancelled, since E-Fiber (Open Dutch Fiber) had a network already. It started off in white and grey areas (no Ziggo), but increasingly ventures into Ziggo-territory, where also a KPN overbuild is looming.
        • Open Dutch Fiber started off in the largest cities but now does any project with sufficient scale (the latest containing just 4k premises). It avoids overbuilding KPN or Delta.
        Concluding:
        • Geographic fits still exist between KPN and ODF and between Ziggo and Delta.
        • With each new overbuild by KPN, the value for KPN of Delta Fiber or Open Dutch Fiber decreases. If KKR/DTCP want to sell ODF to KPN, they better be quick, because KPN will not be willing to pay for any network doubling (such as Oss). This puts the negotiation powers clearly in the hands of KPN.
        • If overbuild goes out of control and a sale to KPN is unsuccessful, then Delta Fiber and Open Dutch Fiber may want to hook up to create a Third Digital Infrastructure. Three national networks, however, is a challenge: low occupancy and low returns, with any of two outcomes: price increases (unlikely, if clearly necessary, in a competitive market) or a shake-out (consolidation).
        • Delta/ODF could make an offer for the VodafoneZiggo cable network. This would reduce competition to basically two infrastrcutures, but being open networks. Delta has ample experience in upgrading HFC to FTTP. At the same time, a VodafoneZiggo carve-up may be the only scenario for its parents (Liberty Global, Vodafone Group) to somehow make the debt load more manageable.
        • VodafoneZiggo would be split according to examples in the UK (Openrach vs. BT Retail/EE), Italy (NetCo vs. ServCo/mobile) and New Zealand (Chorus vs. Spark), where a split is made between fixed (inlc. wholesale) and mobile (incl. retail and mobile wholesale), rather than between networks and services, as is the case in Denmark (TDC NET vs. Nuuday).
        • Finally: in a market that is de facto deregulated, ACM's main powers are in competition law. That may stand in the way of any deal. However, one has to acknowledge that, with a dual legacy of copper and coax, a single network (natural monopoly) is not an option for the Dutch market. Having two full fiber networks would be a luxury.


        Monday, July 10, 2023

        A perfect storm is building for VodafoneZiggo - can management steer the company into calmer waters?

        VodafoneZiggo is feeling the impact of high inflation and rising interest rates. It is safe to say that the company is over-leveraged, but does this mean that the company is at risk? Too much debt led to rescue operations in many previous occasions, including at KPN (twice!). When a perfect storm happens, even bankruptcy cannot be ruled out, as we have witnessed some 20 year+ years ago at UPC. Since Liberty Global and the Vodafone Group each hold 50% of the shares, it seems a far-fetched scenario for VodafoneZiggo (unless some financial engineering is developed and tax reasons come into play). For now however, the company will depend on autonomous growth to ease the pressure of its balance sheet.

        Let's first look at what is happening under the hood:

        • The dividend will be roughly halved to around EUR 250 million over 2023E, as opex, tax and interest are rising dramatically. More potential costs are on the horizon and could wipe out the remainder of the dividend: sports rights (Eredivisie, UEFA), mobile (3.5 GHz band auction, network densification) and fixed (a very expensive Docsis 4.0 upgrade). At the same time, competitor KPN is looking to raise its pay-out to over EUR 1 billion annually (TBA at the Capital Market Days towards the end of the year).
        • Leverage is up and the cash position is at a historic low of just EUR 21 million (!) at 23Q1 - while no dividend was paid in the quarter. Interest cover is just 0.33. Operating free cash flow on a trailing twelve month basis is coming down from a peak of EUR 1.13 billion in 21Q1 to EUR 890 milllion in 23Q1. Net free cash flow (after interest and tax) is currently just EUR 140 million over twelve months, from a peak of EUR 650 million in 19Q1. There goes the source for paying out a dividend!
        • Liberty Global's CFO Charlie Bracken openly admits that VodafoneZiggo is over-leveraged. Net debt over trailing EBITDA currently stands at around 6.8x. He also recently halved his stock holdings in Liberty Global. This could be part of pre-existing plans but the timing is awkward, to say the least.

        Here are some options and strengths the company has, but none of them is a walk in the park:

        • VodafoneZiggo rolled out gigabit broadband across its footprint and leads the broadband and fixed-line markets, but T-Mobile and Delta Fiber are starting to make inroads.
        • Price increases are taking effect, lastly 8.5% in fixed as of July 1st. However, it remains to be seen if this can drive overall revenue growth above 2%.
        • Shareholder pay-outs since incorporation (2017) total EUR 7 billion (this includes dividends and joint venture fees, but not interest on parent loans which totals around EUR 100 million per year). As stated above, the dividend pay-out is being reduced dramatically.
        • KPN could acquire Open Dutch Fiber, to ease the tension on the broadband market. VodafoneZiggo would welcome this but the regulator will open an antitrust investigation and may block such a move.
        • There is really just one big asset available for sale: the mobile tower sites. This could reduce debt by possibly up to EUR 1.5 billion. However, it will raise the opex and lower the EBITDA margin.

        Furthermore, interest rates, inflation and other problems have led credit ratings institutes to lower the ratings and/or outlook for Sunrise, Tele Columbus, Altice France and others.

        All this limits VodafoneZiggo's room to maneuver and make investments. Sure, the current dividend provides a buffer that can be eaten up, but:

        • Additional investments (content, mobile, fixed) are increasingly difficult to finance.
        • An IPO looks very difficult. The current enterprise value (equity value + net debt) equals the (adjusted) net debt, at most - based on a multiples comparison with KPN.
        • Acquiring Delta Fiber (which could carry an enterprise value of EUR 3 billion, according to a back-of-the-envelop calculation) seems hard. A transaction in stock seems out of the question, assuming the equity carries no value (see bullet above).

        All in all, VodafoneZiggo is still a very cash-generative company, with strong positions in broadband and postpaid mobile. The problem is the cash-out, due to rising opex, tax and interest costs. Charlie Bracken stated that the group is "laying the foundations for future growth" for VodafoneZiggo. Given the above, this is hard to see happening in the current competitive and low-growth market, but it cannot be ruled out and may steer the company into calmer waters. Maximising sales while minimising costs is the simple recipe. Elements in this strategy that are missing so far are entering the fixed-line wholesale market (allowing the hollandsnieuwe brand to enter the fixed-line market would test the waters) and launching a cost reduction program.


        Sunday, May 09, 2021

        Week 18 in Telecoms, Internet, Media

        CORPORATE

        • KPN: Bloomberg: EQT/Stonepeak offered to add EUR 4b to capex, to merge with Delta Fiber, to offer >3 EUR/share; now willing to offer more    
        • TIM: Reuters: government Italy abandons network merger plan with Open Fiber; TIM denies
        • MasMovil (KKR, Cinven, Providence): Sells 51% stake in rural FTTH network (1.1m HP in >1000 towns) to Onivia (= Macquarie), rumored price EUR 390m incl option for 100k HP more; to acquire Lycamobile España
        • Cordiant Digital Infrastructure: Acquires towerco (660 for mobile & RTV) from České Radiokomunikace from Macquarie Asset Mgt; acquires fiberco Norway
        • Orange Belgium: Orange expands stake to 76.97% (46,191,064 shares) as 14,368,307 shares (23.94%) tendered
        • Verizon: Sells 90% of Verizon Media (Yahoo, AOL) to Apollo Global Mgt, $5b ($4.25b cash, $750m in prefs), to close 21H2; to be renamed Yahoo, Guru Gowrappan remains CEO - Moody's: no impact on ratings or outlook
        • Vivendi and Mediaset waive all litigation & claims, Dailymotion settles with Mediaset (RTI, Medusa), pays EUR 26.3m, Vivendi to reduce mediaset stake by 19.2 pp in 5 yr (for 2.75-3.10 EUR/share), to hold 4.61%; Fininvest (Berlusconi, 44%) to raise stake by 5 pp at 2.70 EUR/share
        • Canal+ Polski (Vivendi, Liberty Global, TVN): Suspends IPO plan (IPO price max PLN 60)
        • Amazon
          • CEO Jeff Bezos sold shares 210503-04; started with 53,209,269, ended with 52,470,237 shares [sold 739,032 shares at average ~3350 $/share = $2.48b]
          • CEO Jeff Bezos sold shares 210505-06; started with 52,468,037, ended with 51,731,205 shares [sold 736,832 shares at average ~3300 $/share = $2.43b]

        EARNINGS

        • Liberty Global: 21Q1; guidance 2021: return to rev growth (overcoming regulatory headwinds), to capture GBP 15m costs in 21H1, adj EBITDA stable, OpFCF decline LSD
        • VodafoneZiggo (Vodafone, Liberty Global): 21Q1 prelim, COVID-19 impact: rev -13m (roaming/OoB, VR, handset sales), adj EBITDA -3m (roaming, handset, personnel, marketing); maintains guidance 2021: adj EBITDA growth 1-3%, capex/sales 19-21%, cash distribution EUR 550-650m
        • Sunrise UPC (Liberty Global): 21Q1
        • RTL: 21Q1; maintains outlook 2021: rev EUR 6.2b, adj EBITDA EUR 975m (incl streaming startup losses EUR 150m)
        • ViacomCBS: 21Q1; Paramount+ net adds 6m; total streaming subs 35.9m; Pluto TV reaches <50m MAU; Paramount+ to premiere 1 film/week from 2022, to double originals spending in 2021; Paramount+ to lower price of AVOD tier form 6 to 5 $/mo from June 2021; Paramount+ plans expansion to Australia/NZ 210811 (to rebrand 10 All Access), 9 aud/MO, 20k
        • Cegeka: 2020: rev EUR 640m

        NETWORKS

        Copper switch-off

        • KPN: KPN NetwerkNL switched off copper access lines (40k) in Amsterdam IJburg, Bennekom, Bergeijk, Eersel, Eibergen, Zwolle Stadshagen 210401 (Project KoperUit), KPN Wholesale ended MDF-access, WBA/VULA over koper, WLR/CPS, WEAS over koper, ILL 2 Mbit/s services (small number of copper lines remain, with VULA, WBA, WEAS), adjust migration process for speedier transition to fiber; large scale copper switch-off from 2023
        • TIM launches copper switch-off, first in Trento

        FTTH Netherlands

        5G

        SERVICES

        • Vodafone: Expands Google GCP partnership: to build data platform Nucleus (incl Dynamo system to drive data); combined 1000 employees in US, UK, ES; developed >700 use cases to deliver new products & services quickly across markets, support fact-based decision-making, reduce costs, remove duplication of data sources, simplify & centralise operations
        • Ericsson launches Ericsson Wireless Office subscription service (pay-as-you-go) in US, from 100 $/employee/mo: virtual workspace (office-in-a-box, Workspace as a Service), cloud-based (removes the dependency of in-house IT expertise, physical installments, devices), 5G-ready, automates desktop provisioning and software license management, embedded security framework, cloud storage; distr deal with Telarus for marketing; technology based on StratusWorX acquisition
        • SPI International: Launches linear channel FilmBox in NL, first distr partner Canal Digitaal (Canal+) (first in DTH at channel 14, IPTV to follow)
        • Cinemark partners with 5 majors (Warner Bros Picture Group, Walt Disney Co, Paramount Pictures, Sony Pictures Ent (previouslu Universal Pictures [see 200116])) on shorter theatrical window
        • Facebook Workplace (software for internal business social network to communicate with employees) reaches 7m paid subs, adds features (live Q&A, Microsoft 365 integration, Google G Suite integration)
        • Twitter
          • Acquires Scroll (software platform to read content only from multiple participating subscriptions, without ads, 5 $/mo; also Nuzzel, email newsletter of top stories shared in Twitter feed), to develop subscription service, to close down Nuzzel
          • Content deals with NBCU, MLB, Genius, Billboard, Tastemade, NHL, Vice Media Group’s Refinery29, Riot Gams
          • Launches Tip Jar to make donations to creators using Bandcamp, Cash App, Patreon, PayPal, Venmo (on Android: also Spaces), Twitter takes no cut
        • Snap: Plans to launch Creator Marketplace, allowing creators to partner with marketers

        Streaming video

        REGULATORY

        FTTH coordination: ACM report (Update markstudie uitrol van glasvezel in Nederland)

        • positive on accelerated fiber roll-out (at current tempo nationwide by 2030), worried about some duplication (disruption from digging, deters some investors), considers geographic coordination with munis & operators & MinEZK (suggests co-investment)
        • ACM has no power to prohibited roll-out (but will act on anti-competitive behavior)
        • duplication improves competition
        • ACM considers new access regulation (replacing WFA, complementing KPN's voluntary wholesale offering)
        • estimated 20k rural addresses will not have fiber (operators are not applying for state support for white spots)
        • ACM suggests SOK (samenwerkingsovereenkomst = convenant) on trench depth, locations of cabinets & PoPs, muni may want to prevent cherry-picking, reciprocal access conditions can't be forced by ACM), operators have limited interest in trench sharing
        • KPN and T-Mobile NL positive on cooperation

        Net neutrality: New York AG report: US ISPs flooded FCC with fake comments ahead of abolishing NN regulation (2017)

        WFH: Google: Googlegeist (annual employee survey; total 110k in 170 cities in 60 countries): 70% positive about WFH, 15% negative - Expects 20% of employees to work from home permanently, 40% to work from normal office several days a week, 20% to work from other offices


        Monday, May 03, 2021

        Week 17 in Telecoms, Internet, Media

        CORPORATE

        • KPN: FT: KPN rejected approaches from EQT/Stonepeak (offered 3 EUR/share = EUR 12.5b) and KKR interested in offer - KPN rejects both (EQT/Stonepeak gave no offer price), adds nothing to strategy
        • Orange: Moody's assigns Baa3 to perpetual 8-year non-call deeply junior subordinated hybrid bonds (EUR 500m)
        • Orange Belgium: Orange expands stake to 74.68%, extends offer to 210504
        • VOO: To be put up for sale (50% + 1 share or 75% minus 1 share) May 2021, shortlist 210721, to sell by end 2021; Nethys (= Enodia) to hold controlling stake
        • Sunrise UPC (Liberty Global): Plans 450 job cuts (13.5% of 3350 FTE) + 150 through attrition
        • BT: Rumor: plans part sale of BT Sports, Amazon, DAZN, Disney, CVC, Silverlake interested - Confirms
        • Verizon: WSJ: plans sale of Verizon Media assets (AOL, Yahoo), $4-5b - Bloomberg: to sell to Apollo Global Mgt, up to $5b
        • Mediaset: Relaunches plan to establish MediaForEurope HQ in Amsterdam
        • Apple: To invest $430b in US in 5 yr incl dozens of Apple TV+ productions in 20 states, add 20k jobs; plans new campus in N Carolina
        • Endeavor: IPO price $24, trading starts 210429, symbol EDR - First trade $27.00, closes at $25.20

        EARNINGS

        • Proximus: 21Q1; confirms guidance 2021: domestic rev flat, EBITDA EUR 1.750-1.775m, capex <EUR 1.2b (excl spectrum, football rights), net debt/EBITDA <1.6x, div 1.20
        • Swisscom: 21Q1; Raises outlook 2021: net rev CHS 11.3b (o/w Fastweb 2.4b), EBITDA 4.3-4.4b (o/w Fastweb 800m), capex 2.2-2.3b (o/w fastweb 600m), div 22 CHF/share; Partners with Salt on FTTH (P2MP), non-exclusive: Salt to have Layer 1 access (already in P2P) also in p2MP: to invest in own feeder & splitter (with IRU; reclassified from PPE to direct cost) and own drop (with IRU, reduces capex) based on dark fiber (classified as financial lease, lease payments to be wholesale rev), Swisscom in charge of construction & maintenance, postive for wholesale rev (+++), Op FCF (+++), EBITDA (+), FCF (+), negative for opex (--), capex (--)
        • Telenet (Liberty Global): 21Q1
        • Spotify: 21Q1
        • Sony: 21Q1; aggressively pursuing investment in music segment
        • Comcast: 21Q1; Peacock reaches 42m sign-ups; plans international roll-out, possibly with Sky
        • Discovery: 21Q1; discovery+ reaches 13m subs (15m total D2C subs globally)
        • Alphabet: 21Q1, YouTube ad rev $6.01b (+49% yoy; 2021E $29.7b based on analyst estimates), used by 81% of US adults, total usage 1b hr/days (Netflix 400m, based on analyst estimate); plans $50b SBB (Class C)
        • Amazon: 21Q1, >175m Prime Video users, Twitch 35m DAU ; guidance 21Q2: rev $110-116b (growth 24-30%), oper income 4.5-8.0b (incl 1.5b costs related to COVID-19 and Prime Day to take place during 21Q2)
        • Apple: 20/21Q2, total >660m paying subs (video, music, games, news)
        • Microsoft: 20/21Q3; Teams 145m DAU, LinkedIn ad rev TTM >$3b, Xbox hardware rev +232% yoy
        • Facebook: 21Q1; Instagram plans monetisation tools for creators
        • Twitter: 21Q1; outlook 21`Q2: rev $980-1080m, GAAP oper loss 170-120m; outlook 2021: SBC $600m, capex 900-950m
        • Pinterest: 21Q1
        • Nokia 21Q1; total 160 commercial 5G deals o/w 63 live networks (ReefShark: 44% 5G shipments market share); maintains outlook 2021 (oper margin high-end of 7-10% range)

        NETWORKS

        • Broadband
          • German BMVI Ministry expands BB funding (currently in white spots (max <30 Mb/s) to grey areas (max <100 Mb/s)
          • CEBR for Ofcom (UK): FTTP will help 1m pops return to workforce in UK; nationwide FTTP would boost productivity by GBP 59b by 2025, Gross Value Added (GVA) impact GBP 25bn (1.3%)
          • Ofcom: no-internet HH dropped to 6% (from 11% March 2020)
        • 5G: GSA 5G Market Snapshot: 435 operators in 133 countries invest in 5G o/w 162 in 68 countries commercially launched (o/w 153 in 64 countries mobile, 54 in 30 countries FWA); 8 operators launched 5G SA (36 are planning to); total 5G devices 703 (incl 351 phones = 50%, FWA CPE 19%) o/w 431 commercially available
        • FWA: Carmel Group report (Liftoff!) on FWA in US

        SERVICES

        • Video
          • HBO Max (WarnerMedia)

          • SPI/FilmBox: Launches Filmstream app for Samsung TV Plus for Galaxy platform in UK
          • The Teaching Co plans to launch Wondrium SVOD service (ad-free): factual, life-long learning (films, docu series, other; 7500 hr of content)
          • Allen Media Group: distr deal for Local Now (local news, info, entertainment, weather from The Weather Channel; content from Reuters, AP, Lionsgate, Cinedigm, Pattrn, Cheddar, Bloomberg, Kevin Hart’s LOL, People.TV) with Verizon (FiOS STB integration)
        • Music/audio/podcasts/radio
          • Spotify

        • Hardware: Amazon: Launches new tablets: Fire HD 10 (32 or 64 GB, from $150), Fire HD 10 Plus (4 GB RAM; $180), Fire HD 10 Kids (incl Amazon Kids+, case, parental controls, 2-yr guarantee; $200), Fire Kids Pro (incl Amazon Kids+, protective case, 2-yr guarantee; from $100); launches  Fire HD 10 Productivity Bundle (Fire HD 10 or 10 Plus + detachable keyboard case, Microsoft 365 Personal subscription, $220)

        REGULATORY

        • Platforms: EP adopts law forcing platforms to remove terrorist content within an hour of it being flagged
        • Apple
          • Sued in Germany in antitrust case over privacy settings of iPhones by 9 associations (representing Facebook, Axel Springer, etc)
          • EC starts antitrust investigation over abuse of control over the distribution of music-streaming apps via Apple App Store (functioning as gatekeeper in mobile ecosystem), possible fine max 10% of annual rev
          • Case by Epic Games starts 210503, over 30% App Store fees on in-app purchases - Epic claims App Store oper. margin 78% in 2019, Apple disagrees


        Sunday, April 25, 2021

        Week 16 in Telecoms, Internet, Media

        CORPORATE

        • General
        • Ratings
        • Results
          • VodafoneZiggo: Impact Report 2020; 100% green energy, net CO2 emissions zero, 7501 employees, total 4572 towers, 118m IoT connections, uptime mobile 99.8%, uptime fixed 99.9%, NPS: Vodafone converged consumer +27, Ziggo converged consumer +7, hollandsnieuwe +22, Vodafone converged business +6, Ziggo converged business -4; Launches CSR targets 2025 (People Planet Progress): halve environmental impact, support 2m people in society
          • Eurofiber: 2020; 38300 network km, adds 40 km/week, 32932 customer connections, 215 datacenters, NPS +33, market share corporate fiber 26%, 100% renewable energy, total invested EUR 820m (50% of annual revenues)
          • Vodafone Ireland: Vodafone IE 2020/21, total 1020 employees
          • Orange Belgium: 21Q1; maintains guidance 2021: rev growth LSD, EBITDA AL EUR 320-340m, capex EUR 200-220m (incl MWingz 50/50 JV with Proximus)
          • Orange: 21Q1
          • Telia: 21Q1; outlook 2021 unchanged: SR flat-LSD, adj mEBITDA flat-LSD, capex SEK 14.5-15.5b; outlook 2021-2023 unchanged: SR LSD growth, adj EBITDA LSD-MSD growth, capex/sales 15% by 2023
          • Tele2: 21Q1; book value T-Mobile NL stake (25%) SEK 7.163b, profit contribution 21Q1 SEK -3m; proposes extraordinary dividend 3.00 SEK/share = SEK 2.1b
          • AT&T: 21Q1; outlook 2021: rev growth 1%, EPS stable, capital investment $22b o/w capex $17b, FCF $26b, div pay-out ratio high 50s
          • Verizon: 21Q1
          • EQT: 21Q1
          • Netflix: 21Q1; highlights:
            • net additions 21H1 slow due to pull forward and delayed slate dynamics plus typical seasonality (not new competitors); biggest competitors linear TV & YouTube, no material effect expected from economies reopening after corona virus pandemic
            • Targets 2021: to spend >$17b cash on content (2020: $11.8b), oper margin 20%, to maintain $10-15b in gross debt, to launch SBB $5b 21Q2, password sharing crackdown will not be aggressive; plans movies based on Sony IP based on distr deal [see 210408]
            • Viewing stats first 28 days: series Firefly Lane 49m, Cobla Kai season 3 45m,  Fate: The Winx Saga 57m, Ginny & Georgia season 1 52m, movies I Care A Lot 56m, YES DAY 62m, Outside the Wire 66m, To All the Boys I’ve Loved Before (final movie) 51m, foreign productions  Below Zero (Spain) 47m, Space Sweepers (S Korea) 26m, Squared Love (Poland) 31m, Who Killed Sara? (Mexico) 55m, Lupin (France) 76m
          • Snap: 20Q1; outlook 21Q2: rev $820-840m, adj EBITDA between -20m and zero

        • CSR
          • Telia
            • Launches new sustainability goals: empower societies in the Nordics & Baltics to achieve zero CO2 & waste by 2030, reach 1m people through digital inclusion initiatives by 2025, implement winning privacy & security strategies by 2023 to gain & maintain customers’ trust
            • Accenture report for Telia The Shift: The Role of Telcos in the Circular Economy: applying circular principles unlocks values of $45-80b annually

          • Orange PL sets climate goals: CO2 reduction, increase in renewable energy
          • Akamai: New sustainability goals: 5 goals in 3 areas (Akamai intelligent edge platform, communities in which it lives, works & operates, global supply chain): 100% Renewably-sourced Energy, 50% More Energy-Efficient Platform, 100% Platform Emissions Mitigationm Responsible Supply Chain Management, Global Expansion of 100% Electronic Waste Recycling Program
          • Amazon: The Climate Pledge reaches >100 signatories (5m employees in 16 countries), incl Elisa, Telefónica
        • WFH

        NETWORKS

        • FTTH
          • Netherlands

        SERVICES

        • Telecoms
          • Telenet launches ONE (to replace WIGO and YUGO): internet access (fixed & mobile & WiFi, no data cap), pricing speed-based pricing (at home 150 Mb/s or 1 Gb/s; away from 30 Mb/s), dependent on household; TV as add-on (managed via TV-box or OTT via Flow app); free extra data SIM (optionally for Minimodem: hotspot for max 10 devices)
        • Video
          • Pathe Thuis: Reaches 1m active users; usage 2021: total 7m films, average 2.2 viewers per film; distr deal with KPN from 210701: access to 3700 titles
          • Samsung: Expands Samsung TV Plus (on Samsung smart TVs) to NL, BE, LU, SE, FI, NO, DK, IE, PT; total 23 countries; also for Galaxy smartphones & tablets
          • Sony: Plans to trial PlayStation Plus Video Pass (15 movies, 6 series) in Poland, free for PlayStation Plus subs
          • Walt Disney: Content deal with Sony for Disney+, Hulu, ABC, Disney Channels, Freeform, FX, NatGeo in US for new theatrical releases & library titles 2022-2026 for Pay 1 TV window (after Netflix)
          • MTS plans OTT service Kion 210420 (to add AVOD tier end 2021)
        • Music, audio, podcasts
          • Apple
            • Launches Podcast Subscriptions in 170 countries per creator, price set by creator (from 49 c/mo in US; with Family Sharing)
            • Apple takes 30% in first year, 15% thereafter
            • Launches Apple Podcasters Program for creators, 20 $/mo
          • Spotify: WSJ: plans podcast subscription, creators keep 100% of fees (currently hosts 2.2m podcasts)
          • SoundCloud: Reaches 100k creators
          • Reddit: Launches Reddit Talk for subreddits, with moderators [a la Clubhouse]
          • Facebook: Plans new audio services in 3-6 mo
            • Soundbites (recorded audio messages)
            • Podcasts (discovery)
            • Live Audio Rooms (in Groups in Facebook & Messenger) [a la Clubhouse]
            • establishes Audio Creator Fund
            • partners with Spotify to integrate music (Project Boombox)
        • Hardware
          • Google: Fitbit launches Luxe, $150 (incl 6 mo Fitbit Premium): fitness tracker
          • Apple: Spring Loaded event
            • Launches new iPad (with M1 processor)
            • new Apple TV (with A12 Bionic processor, 4K, new Siri remote control)
            • AirTags (with U1 chip; keychain device for locating devices)
            • iOS 14.5
            • new iMac computer (with M1 chip) with new Magic Keyboard (with Touch ID)
            • launches Apple Card Family (to build joined credit)
            • launches podcast subscriptions

        REGULATORY

        • Spectrum auctions
          • Slovenia raises EUR 164m from multiband auction (700, 1500, 2.1, 2.3, 3.5, 26) from Telekom Slovenia (EUR 52m), Telemach (EUR 52m), A1 (EUR 42m), T2 (EUR 18m)
          • Energistyrelsen (DK) raises DKK 2.08b from multiband auction (1.5, 2.1, 2.3, 3.5, 26 GHz); pops coverage demands 3.5 GHz band: 60% YE 2023, 75% YE 2025
            • TDC Net 45 MHz in 1,500 MHz band, 40 MHz in 2,100 MHz band, 40 MHz in 2,300 MHz band, 130 MHz in 3.5 GHz band, 1,250 MHz in 26 GHz band for DKK 795m
            • Hi3G 40 MHz in 2,100 MHz band, 120 MHz in 3.5 GHz band, 1,000 MHz in 26 GHz band for DKK 541m
            • TT-Network (Telia, Telenor) 45 MHz in 1,500 MHz band, 40 MHz in 2,100 MHz band, 140 MHz in 3.5 GHz band (incl 60 MHz with a leasing obligation), 600 MHz in 26 GHz band for DKK 741m
          • ACMA (Australia) raises AUD 648m from 26 GHz auction; Dense Air 2 lots for AUD 28.7m, Mobile JV 86 lots for AUD 108m, Optus Mobile 116 lots for AUD 226m, Pentanet 4 lots for AUD 7.90m, Telstra 150 lots for AUD 277m

        • Platforms
          • EC proposes harmonised rules on AI; list of high-risk use cases (critical infrastructure, college admissions, loan applications) subject to supervision and standards for development & use; fine on violations max 6% of annual global revenues; to be approved by European Council & European Parliament
          • US Senate antitrust hearing with Apple, Google over app store fees [monopoly rents]

        Sunday, April 11, 2021

        Week 14 in Telecoms, Internet, Media

        CORPORATE

        • KPN: WSJ: EQT & Stonepeak Infrastructure Partners plan offer, >3 EUR/share (>EUR 12.6b); preparing due diligence, offer spring 2021
        • Orange BE (Orange 53%)
          • Orange launches offer until 210423
          • Degroof Petercam expert opinion: DCF equity value per share EUR 18.5 = 4.7x EBITDA 2020 = 5.1x adj EBITDA 2020 = 12.0x FCF (EBITDA - capex) 2020 = 13.0x FCF (adj EBITDA - capex excl spectrum) 2020; CCA (comparable company analysis): equity value per share EUR 21.0 at midpoint based on EV/EBITDA, EUR 17.2 based on EV/FCF (overall midpoint EUR 19.2)
        • Iliad: Acquires 12% of Unieuro (retailer Italy) - Rumor: to launch fixed-line services in IT within weeks
        • PPF: Considers European acquisitions in telecoms & media
        • Virgin Media UK (Liberty Global): Plans GBP 10b investments in 5 yr for 5G & FTTP expansion (1.14 Gb/s); to add 1m fixed (FTTP) HP by YE 2021 to total 16m if merger approved (CMA to rule May 2021), to add 7m long-term fixed-line addresses if merger approved; could add wholesale services
        • HMD Global (Nokia branded smartphone manufacturer) plans MVNO HMD Mobile in UK on EE (BT); from 6.50 GBP/mo for unlimited calls/texts + 1 GB data
        • Microsoft: Rumor: plans offer for Nuance (speech-recognition tech; 7100 employees), 56 $/share = $16b (23% premium) 
        • Twitter: Co-invests in ShareChat (social media, short video; India, 160m MAU), $502m with Snap, others at $2.1b valuation
        • Box: Raises $500m equity from KKR via convertible & SBB (current equivalent 14%)
        • Patreon: Raises $155m at $4b valuation

        NETWORKS

        FTTP

        • T-Mobile NL (DT 75%, Tele2 25%)
          • partners with ODF (Open Dutch Fiber; = KKR Global Infrastructure Investors Funds majority, DTCP Infra (DT Capital Partners) rest): to roll out OA FTTH (1-10 Gb/s, passive only) in urban & high dense areas; to avoid uneconomical overbuild; ODF to be led by founders Jordi Nieuwenhuis (Reggefiber co-founder) & Uwe Nickl (formerly Deutsche Glasfaser co-CEOs), Michael Griffioen CEO
          • to launch 21Q2, fully funded, construction agreements in place, to invest >= EUR 700m (capex) for >= 1m lines in 5 yr
          • T-Mobile NL anchor tenant with own active layer; 

        5G

        • T-Mobile US launches Home Internet (FWA over 5G or 4G, un-carrier move): 65 $/mo (60 with autopay); coverage 30m HH (o/w/ 10m rural), 50-100 Mb/s, possible throttling during peak hours - To hire 2500 hometown experts for T-Mobile Hometown retail stores
        • Ucell (Uzbekistan) launches 5G in Tashkent

        SERVICES

        General data usage: AMS-IX New traffic peak 210407: 10.012 Tb/s

        Video

        Music

        Web services

        • Facebook: Trials Hotline (developed by NPE Team, public beta, led by Eric Hazzard of former tbh [see 171016]): Q&A with creators, audio-only or video [a la Clubhouse & Instagram Live]
        • Reddit: Trials moderator-run voice chats [a la Clubhouse]

        Hardware

        REGULATORY

        • Google
          • Noyb (Max Schrems) files complaint at CNIL (France) over user tracking in Android (using Android Advertising ID (AAID)) violating EU privacy law (ePrivacy Directive), urges investigation
          • Filing in antitrust case led by Texas
            • Google operated program (Project Bernanke) giving its own ad-buying system an advantage over competitors, amounts to insider trading [Google operates exchange, represents buyers & sellers and acts as ad buyer for Search, YouTube]
            • commercial deal with Facebook (Jedi Blue, required Facebook to spend >= $500m in Google’s Ad Manager or AdMob auctions in year 4 of the agreement) enabled Facebook to identify 80% of mobile users & 60% of desktop users (excl users of Apple’s Safari web browser) in ad auctions 
        • Platforms