WORLD BONDS-Telecoms spending cuts may have silver lining
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By Dena Aubin NEW YORK, April 16 (Reuters) - After binging on debt during the New Economy heyday, many U.S. telecommunications companies are putting their capital spending plans on a diet, and that could bode well for bondholders, some strategists say. A drop in capital spending could give companies a chance to improve their balance sheets and credit quality, adding luster to their out-of-favor bonds. "The telecom sector arguably over-invested at peaks in the economic cycle, which has undermined returns," Morgan Stanley wrote in a recent report. "The good news is that we believe many telecom operators are showing signs of exercising capital discipline." Bonds of investment-grade telecom companies already have outperformed the corporate bond market, Morgan Stanley said. While corporate bonds overall have weakened by about one basis point relative to Treasuries over the last month, yield spreads relative to Treasuries on comparable-maturity telecom bonds have tightened about 11 basis points, Morgan Stanley said. Investors can expect about 10 basis points more relative outperformance over the next three to six months, said Morgan Stanley telecom analyst Doug Colandrea. Among the strongest performers in recent weeks were Qwest Communications International Inc. , Sprint Corp. , and AT&T Corp. unit AT&T Wireless, which remain among Morgan Stanley's top picks in the sector. "The sector for the first time in many, many years is exercising capital discipline, and that's good for free cash flow," Colandrea said. DEFICITS REACH $206 BILLION Capital spending by the largest U.S. players, which grew at the breathtaking rates of 32 percent in 1999 and 25 percent in 2000, should see a growth rate of just 2 to 3 percent this year and decline by that amount in 2002, Morgan Stanley said. Spending was due for a pullback. Since 1996, the year Congress deregulated the phone markets, telecom companies have run through $206 billion in deficit spending, financed with public debt and equity, a recent report by Lehman Brothers said. But as companies competed to deliver Internet access, wireless and traditional phone services, prices fell and returns on investment fell short, sending shares into a tailspin. Strategists now are reasoning that as investors pull back, funding will be rationed to the strongest players, who stand to benefit from a shakeout of telecom upstarts. Lehman Brothers equity analyst Blake Bath, among those warning about the industry's over-investment last fall, sees a healthier sector going forward. Bath is predicting "sharply improved profitability in 2001" for established local phone companies, known as regional Bells, as their cash flow improves and competitors retrench. One reason Bath is bullish: a Bush administration may be friendlier to mergers between regional Bell operating companies and long-distance carriers, which would result in major cost savings and reduce their capital spending requirements. INVESTORS REMAIN SKEPTICAL That doesn't mean the sector as a whole is getting an all-clear signal. Telecom upstarts, financed mostly in the junk bond market, are still cratering under mountains of debt, slowing revenue, fierce competition and tight capital markets. Even with much lower capital spending, emerging U.S. telecom companies won't likely turn profitable by 2002, said Bath. Losses by that group will likely total nearly $10 billion next year, Bath estimates. Another problem is that the investment pullback cuts both ways. To trim capital spending, some companies will have to slow the roll-out of promising new wireless and Internet-access services, delaying revenues from these high-potential areas. "You haven't seen a tremendous amount of excitement from the buyside, just because there's still a tremendous amount of concern about what a slowdown in the economy is going to mean for some of these companies,"said Robert Schiffman, telecom analyst for Credit Suisse First Boston. Even if the largest waves of debt issuance are over, companies still have sizable funding needs, he added. "The supply risks we have aren't the same as six months ago, when multiple companies had jumbo deals to do, but there are still plenty of companies lined up to borrow money," he said. Deutsche Banc Alex. Brown also is cautious about the sector. "While we fundamentally like the industry, we're not sure all the investment will pan out, how much demand will materialize, and what products and services you and I will pay for," said Deutsche Banc telecom analyst Gary Jacobi. Deutsche Banc has been encouraging investors to slightly underweight large-cap telecom carriers. Those bullish about telecom say these risks are already priced into bonds, at least in the investment-grade arena. The biggest pressures on telecom bonds last year -- waves of debt that weighed on credit ratings and balance sheets -- are also reflected in prices, some say. Citing generous yields and a light calendar of debt issuance, Merrill Lynch & Co. recently urged investors to overweight high-grade telecom bonds, calling the sector a short-term trading opportunity. "Sometimes the best time to buy something is when it is universally out of favor," Merrill Lynch wrote in a recent report. 859-1673, dena.aubin@reuters.com)) REUTERS Rtr 11:15 04-16-01 |