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BCE Inc BCE


Primary Symbol: T.BCE Alternate Symbol(s):  T.BCE.PR.A | BCPPF | T.BCE.PR.B | T.BCE.PR.C | BCEPF | T.BCE.PR.D | T.BCE.PR.E | BCAEF | T.BCE.PR.F | T.BCE.PR.G | BECEF | T.BCE.PR.H | T.BCE.PR.I | T.BCE.PR.J | T.BCE.PR.K | BCEXF | T.BCE.PR.M | T.BCE.PR.N | T.BCE.PR.Q | T.BCE.PR.R | BCEIF | T.BCE.PR.S | T.BCE.PR.T | T.BCE.PR.Y | BCEFF | T.BCE.PR.Z | T.BCE.PR.L

BCE Inc. is a Canada-based communications company. The Company provides wireless and fiber networks. The Company operates through one segment: Bell Communication and Technology Services (Bell CTS). Bell CTS segment provides a range of communication products and services to consumers, businesses and government customers across Canada. Its wireless products and services include mobile data and voice plans and devices and are available nationally. Its wireline products and services comprise data (including Internet access, Internet protocol television (IPTV), cloud-based services and business solutions), voice, and other communication services and products, which are available to its residential, small and medium-sized businesses and large enterprises customers primarily in Ontario, Quebec, the Atlantic provinces and Manitoba. This segment includes its wholesale business, which buys and sells local telephone, long-distance, data, and other services from or to resellers and other carriers.


TSX:BCE - Post by User

Post by flush777on Nov 04, 2024 10:12am
434 Views
Post# 36295113

GLOBE ARTICLE, A GOOD READ ... RE ZIPLY (lets say zippy? LOL

GLOBE ARTICLE, A GOOD READ ... RE ZIPLY (lets say zippy? LOL

Bell Canada parent BCE Inc. 

BCE-T -8.12%decrease
 
 is expanding into the United States by acquiring internet provider Ziply Fiber for $5-billion, while also putting dividend hikes on hold in order to help fix its balance sheet.

 

With the acquisition, announced Monday, Canada’s largest telecommunications company will operate in four U.S. states in the Pacific Northwest – Washington, Oregon, Montana and Idaho – and provide fiber internet services to 1.3 million residential and business locations. BCE hopes to upgrade more of Ziply’s copper wire network to faster fiber over the next four years, bringing its total fiber connections to three million.

BCE chief executive officer Mirko Bibic said in an interview that the acquisition shows the company is on its “front foot.” But the deal is also a gamble, considering investors have worried about BCE’s ability to afford its dividend and pay down debt. Because there is so much financial uncertainty, BCE’s shares have lost 10.8 per cent, including dividends, over the last year, while the S&P/TSX Composite Index has delivered a 25.7-per-cent total return.

Ziply is currently owned by a group of private equity funds led by Searchlight Capital, and to fund its purchase, Montreal-based BCE will use $4.2-billion of cash generated from the sale of its 37.5-per-cent stake in Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment, the owner of Toronto’s professional hockey, basketball, soccer and football teams. In doing so, BCE is swapping an asset it treated as an equity investment – which meant MLSE’s cash flows did not flow through to BCE’s bottom line – for an operating business whose revenues and profits will merge with BCE’s.

The integration matters because investors tend to judge the riskiness of a company’s debt load by comparing it to annual cash flows: “This is a great trade, in sports terms,” Mr. Bibic said.

However, many investors and analysts expected BCE to put a good chunk of its MLSE proceeds toward debt repayment considering BCE’s debt rating was downgraded by two different rating agencies this summer. Although Ziply generates cash flow, it is currently owned by private equity backers – including three Canadian pension funds – and they have put $2-billion of net debt on its balance sheet.

In all, BCE’s total debt level will remain roughly where it is now.

To show fiscal restraint, BCE will not hike its dividend in 2025, marking a significant change for the telecom giant. BCE has raised its dividend annually for the past 16 years, and this track record has won over yield-seeking investors, including retail buyers who are nearing retirement or are in retirement.

The pause on dividend hikes is also an about-face from Mr. Bibic, who has said BCE could still increase dividends, just at a slower rate than normal.

The CEO said in the interview that the institutional investor community likely will not be surprised by the pause. BCE’s dividend yield is currently 8.9 per cent, and a number of investors and analysts had suggested that such a pause – or even a cut – was necessary.

The share prices of Canada’s three-largest telcos - BCE, Rogers Communications Inc. and Telus Corp. – have all struggled of late. After years of easy wins, the companies find themselves in a new era of tepid growth driven by lower immigration levels, aggressive discounting for cable and internet services and cord-cutting.

Until recently, the telcos could count on rising immigration to drive revenue growth – in 2023, the Canadian population increased by nearly 1.3 million people – but Ottawa has since changed course, and sales to newcomers won’t be as robust.

Aggressive discounts have also upended the market, particularly for wireless services. Typically, the telcos only compete with heavy discounts during certain times of the year, such as back-to-school or around Black Friday. But the discounting driven by smaller rivals such as Freedom Mobile has been persistent for more than a year, and it is putting sustained pressure on revenues.

As for cord-cutting, or the act of Canadians cancelling their cable television services, the trend has plagued the sector for years. But lately, it’s hit with more intensity, as streaming services capture additional market share.

Each telco also has its own unique challenges. In BCE’s case, the company has bet heavily on its fibre buildout. Under Mr. Bibic’s watch, BCE has borrowed heavily to upgrade its fibre networks – total debt now sits at $39-billion – with the expectation that customers will eventually pay more for faster speeds.

However, the build out has taken years, and the aggressive discounting is making it harder to recoup these investments.

At the same time, some analysts recently discovered that BCE’s dividend was arguably more costly than expected. Once certain costs are factored in, the telco has been paying out more than 140 per cent of its free cash flow each year, which is unsustainable.

After the debt rating downgrades the year, BCE’s decision to sell its MLSE stake suggested the company was prioritizing debt repayment. Mr. Bibic, though, said Ziply’s owners approached him near the end of those negotiations. While he couldn’t say much publicly, he figured the MLSE sale “was either going to allow us to significantly reduce debt or seize the growth agenda that we had in mind.”

Searchlight Capital acquired Ziply in 2019 for US$2-billion. Three Canadian pension funds – the Public Sector Pension Investment Board, British Columbia Investment Management Corporation and Canada Pension Plan Investment Board – are co-owners of the business, along with U.S. telecom-focused private equity fund WaveDivision Capital, LLC.

The purchase marks a return to the United States for BCE after purchasing long-distance carrier Teleglobe Inc., which had significant U.S. operations, in 2000. Teleglobe filed for creditor protection in 2002 after the dot-com bust, and BCE wrote down billions of dollars.

COMMENTS

As a shareholder, I am okay with this, for the medium to long term.
BCE us getting their house in order, and it was not a dividend cut.
However, I trust they know what they are doing when they take on more debt with the purchase while trying to increase profitability and clean up their balance sheet

It's not an unreasonable move. Bell now has quite a bit of experience and I'm guessing economies of scale to roll out underground fiber; I know our neighborhood was upgraded quickly and with minimal disruption. So now they are going to do the same thing in the US where the CRTC is not going to force them to share the infrastructure with no-value-add reseller competitors. With higher speeds come higher bills, (We pay for 1.5gb fiber ourselves). Just have to wonder how long it will take before we see any revenue/profits from this expansion. The market doesn't like it though, atm share price is down 7-8%
Also to mention Bell currently has 4.7m internet customers, this gives 1.3 million more. That's a ~25% increase in billable customers.

 

I like the move. Unload sports assets at a premium valuation. Recycle that capital back into core infrastructure assets with attractive growth profile (cloud and Ai should continue to drive data volumes for years to come). Suspending dividend growth was long overdue. Would be happy to see the dividend stay flat until FCF payout ratio is comfortably inside 100% and credit metrics improve.

The immigration rate hasn't been reduced yet. It's the telcos and banks that have lobbied the govt for higher and higher immigration levels. They then have more cheaper labour to use - the type that won't ask for raises. Now the GDP per capita has fallen due to this and housing demand will outstrip supply for decades.

Positive move --- it's difficult to find growth opportunities as a "utility", thus, growth via acquisitions while increasing economies-of-scale is a sound strategy. I would expect BCE to continue to grow in this regard. I was hoping for a dividend cut though, as the yield is too high and the cash could be better deployed.
 

No argument there. But Telus and Bell fit together naturally and they’re protect by government. Entwhistle is a more capable leader than anyone at BCE. He grew up in MTL and knows the culture.
Of course if the CPC has developed a telecom policy that may shake things up. But what does that look like?

This doesn’t feel like a prudent move. There was a chance here to make a significant dent in the outstanding debt. Instead they chose to add more risk.

"Ziply is currently owned by a group of private equity funds led by Searchlight Capital,"
In other words, BCE overpaid.

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