OT Story on wireless tower companies.
=DJ Wireless Tower Companies Shine Amid Telecom Malaise
(This article was originally published Wednesday) By Dena Aubin Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES NEW YORK (Dow Jones)--That sound you hear is the buzz in the high-yield bond market swirling around the wireless tower sector. While much of the once-favored telecom universe has been losing its firepower, bonds of companies that build towers for cellular, paging and mobile radio services have been on a tear over the past year. "It's a play on innovation and all the wireless technologies we've been seeing, but not necessarily hitching to one in particular," said Stephen Weiss, a high-yield analyst who covers the sector for Bear Stearns & Co. Among the best high-yield performers: Pinnacle Holdings Inc. (BIGT) and SBA Communications Corp. (SBAC), whose bond prices have surged from the mid-50s a year ago to the 70s currently. Pinnacle's 10% discount notes, for example, were trading at 54 1/2 in August a year ago and have advanced to 72 now. Yield spreads meanwhile tightened from 7.75 percentage points over Treasurys a year ago to 5.30 percentage points this week. SBA's 12% senior discount notes have soared from a price of 54 to 75 since last August, while yield margins tightened from about 9.0 percentage points over Treasurys to about 5.9 percentage points now. High-Octane Real Estate Towers are the backbone of the wireless universe, transmitting cell phone calls, wireless Internet and paging messages across the airwaves. By investing in the tower business instead of the wireless companies themselves, bondholders in essence have a form of high-octane real estate - a wireless telecom play with hard assets, notes Jim Kourkoulakos, senior analyst for OppenheimerFunds Inc. "Anything that's wireless is going to require equipment and antenna space to put that equipment on," said Kourkoulakos. With the growth of wireless voice communication and a so-called 3G or third-generation broadband wireless network coming on line in the next few years, "tower companies are one of the winners," said Kourkoulakos. Companies that operate towers didn't look like a slam dunk two years ago, when they began showering the junk bond market with debt after buying towers at steep prices. But several quarters of positive performance have shored up investor confidence that demand for tower space will generate ample cash-flow and boost overall margins, analysts say. "This is a backdoor way to play the growth of wireless and get into a business model that's very high-margin," said Brian Hessel, a high-yield portfolio manager for J. & W. Seligman & Co., New York. Unlike wireless companies themselves, tower companies have minimal maintenance and operating expenses. Just one tenant can pay for the cost of a tower, meaning rent from each additional tenant drops straight to the bottom line. And adding tenants should be no problem. Demand has been exploding for technologies that use towers - cellular phones, PCS services, paging and SMR (specialized mobile radio). And community opposition has made it difficult to build new towers, ensuring plenty of business for existing companies. Though towers have been around for years, in the past most were owned by wireless companies themselves. But wireless carriers have been getting out of the tower business, a time-consuming chore that distracts from their core pursuits. Easy Money May Be Over SBC Communications Inc. (SBC), for example, last week announced that it's selling the leasing rights to 3,900 of its towers to SpectraSite Holdings Inc. (SITE) for $1.3 billion, a deal that will make SpectraSite the largest tower operator in the country. And because SpectraSite can sublease the towers to other wireless companies, it stands to earn a healthy return on its investment. "There are a lot of deals like that still out there," said Hessel of J. & W. Seligman. "Economically, everyone wins. The tower operator earns a nice return on invested capital and the wireless company gets to outsource this noncore business." One drawback to the sector is that the easy money may be a thing of the past. "My overall sense is that the market's grown more efficient and the returns going forward are not going to be what they were over the last year," said Bear Stearns' Weiss. Tower companies also are still a long way from de-leveraging and seeing improved credit ratings, Weiss said. Indeed, both Moody's Investors Service and Standard & Poor's Corp. placed SpectraSite on watch for a possible downgrade, pending details on how the company will finance its purchase of SBC leasing rights. But Hessel believes if SpectraSite uses an appropriate mix of debt and equity, its ratings shouldn't be harmed. "It's still a pretty good sector to have involvement in, and you can probably do well buying new issues," said Bear Stearns' Weiss. That's because new issues tend to come to market at a discount and trade up in the secondary market. No new deals have been announced, but analysts expect more issuance from the sector later this year. "There's still going to be a pretty strong appetite for capital and the high-yield market will probably have a pretty solid role, as it has in the past, in helping these companies finance themselves," said Weiss. -By Dena Aubin, Dow Jones Newswires; 201-938-2189 dena.aubin@dowjones.com (END) DOW JONES NEWS 08-31-00 08:15 AM - - 08 15 AM EDT 08-31-00 |